T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2452.1 | the HOUSE m-m-mouse | JOCKEY::SADLERP | | Tue Oct 02 1990 17:20 | 19 |
| Ahhh so grasshopper you been wistning to Jellbean wately?
Notice that other spatially interesting trick of altering the reverb on
various rhythm parts as the mix progresses, like I tried last night eg:
clap, clap, clap plus massive reverb.
It sounds bloody wicked in the final mix and is a little less obvious
than the "lets break back to the beat then bring the bass back in"
cliche. (CONFESSION:which I also used last night!)
Another interesting source of stunning production tricks other than
Master Jellybean, is the Art of noise - musically they can be
irritating but (and this is probably why) they do introduce no end of
slick production tricks.
Hah well, TUNE, huh? Hmmm now where'd I leave that dictionary.............
|
2452.2 | | IGETIT::BROWNM | Are you WARPed yet? | Thu Oct 04 1990 08:08 | 5 |
| It was the KLF's `What Time Is Love' that brought it to mind. On
Saturday I'm going to put a House pattern (hi hat, open then
closed, and a bass drum) through a Wah Wah pedal!
matty
|
2452.3 | THE MESSAGE IS IN THE MUSIC | USCTR2::EGRAHAM | | Fri Nov 02 1990 13:03 | 43 |
|
I'm no professional producer or else I wouldn't be here. But I have
some experience working at all levels of the recording medium (24, 16,
8, 4 trk). And I've been doing it activily for about 5-6yrs.
I've found that the best thing to do around production is to start off
with a good song. No amount of production will make a bad song good.
So work on something that you feel you can live with...I mean really
live with.
From there start to identify what you like in other songs and try to
figure out how they did what it is that you liked. If a cowbell is
doing something that you like and you have a song that will accomidate
that type of pattern, put it in. Same goes for drum patterns. The
idea is to start off with something you know and inadvertantly you'll
add some things that will make it unique to you.
Be aware that you are limited by your musicianship and the technology
you're working with. If you want to do a break down section similar
to the one that Jam and Lewis have in "Rhythm Nation", be prepared to
have a *nice* sequencer, some sort of musicianship, and lots of
patience. If on the other hand you're working a house tune, be
creative with your samples, string and rhythm arrangemets.
I guess these aren't techniques per se. You could call them
fundamentals. But as a producer, these things are extremely important.
Get them down and you start to move into eq-ing instruments and
vocals onto tape, using alternate compressions on not only vocals
but kick drums and grand pianos, or using effects for doubling
parts or creating new sounds. I love to do stuff like that, using
the eq and effects units to create a new sound or add depth to a
kick/snare combination. But I hardly ever have the time cause I'm
still trying to get the fundementals to a point where its second
nature to me.
Most of all, experiment and do whatever *you* want, because you'll
find out what works best for you. I read an article on engineer/
producer Chris Lord Alge (?), where he said "If it doesn't sound
good to you, it probably isn't". If you've got the time, don't
settle for anything but the best that you feel you can do.
Good Luck, Gene
|
2452.4 | | IGETIT::BROWNM | BASS-ICly WARPed!!! | Tue Nov 06 1990 08:50 | 13 |
| A follow up question to of you out there;
I find it hard to write on my guitar (I'm into House music and
therefore keyboards). I can't compose on the keyboard I have, only
play one sound live and sing. The sounds are pretty awful.
If feel that when I get a good keyboard and have the ability to compose
on a computer, I will be able to write till my heart is content.
Am I kidding myself, or will it really be easier?
matty
|
2452.5 | It' Still Hard Work, But.... | AQUA::ROST | Dennis Dunaway Fan Club | Tue Nov 06 1990 10:39 | 22 |
|
Will it be easier? Well, yes and no.
The whole hype of computer-aided music is that you need no musical
ability, and that's BS. You need to have an ear for melodies, an ear
for harmony (however simple or complex depends on the style you want to
pursue) and enough sense to know when a song is really working or is
just a pile of cliche licks.
For the type of music you want to do, a sequencer can help, because to
my ear most house music is built up from a drum track, then a bass
line, etc. This type of song construction is well suited to
sequencing. Plus, the style actually depends to some extent on nearly
obsessive repetition, again, well suited to sequencing 8^) 8^).
Look at it this way...if you can hum or sing out the parts you hear in
your head, and play them (however wobbly) one at a time on your
keyboard, then you should be OK. That's what quantizing is for
8^) 8^)
Brian
|
2452.6 | If it ain't fun I don't bother with it.... | ULTRA::BURGESS | Mad man across the water | Tue Nov 06 1990 12:48 | 27 |
| re <<< Note 2452.5 by AQUA::ROST "Dennis Dunaway Fan Club" >>>
> -< It' Still Hard Work, But.... >-
> The whole hype of computer-aided music is that you need no musical
> ability, and that's BS. You need to have an ear for melodies, an ear
> for harmony (however simple or complex depends on the style you want to
> pursue) and enough sense to know when a song is really working or is
> just a pile of cliche licks.
Agreed, seconded, etc. But there is hope {there ARE hope ?}
I'm learning a lot with Bars and Pipes (tm) right now, I'm
enjoying it. .....it ain't easy, it can be fun, it can be rewarding,
it can produce a midi-morass of multi part trash, I usually learn
something about the need for more space between the notes when it
does. I seem to be improving my ability to handle the traditional
human/instrument interface {keyboard chops}. I'm not trying to make
any sort of commercially successful "thing".
I don't think it would be a lot of fun to scan in a lead
sheet, hit a couple of mouse clicks for "style" and get instant midi
files (or test press CDs) out. I see no reason why such a product
should not appear RSN (-:, (-:
Reg
|
2452.7 | A rare note from me in favor of realtime stuff.... | RANGER::EIRIKUR | Eir�kur Hallgr�msson | Tue Nov 06 1990 14:31 | 8 |
| In my experience, a keyboard, or SGU, that can really make the sounds
that you hear in your head made a lot of difference. Really having
the thick string sound that I needed made the difference between
effortlessly improvising the parts I wanted and my former state of not
knowing where to start to build them up.
Eirikur
|
2452.8 | ears | VICE::JANZEN | Tom MLO21-4/E10 223-5140 | Tue Nov 06 1990 14:51 | 10 |
| If you practice ear training, you won't need a physical instrument to compose.
You just listen to it in your head and write it down on paper or a scoring
program. That's how I wrote music when I wrote music. Perfecting your
imaginative ear gives you the liberty to imagine any instrument or combination.
Including things you can't play yourself because you're not an orchestra,
or a violinist, or an oboist.
First comes ear training, then harmony, then counterpoint, in there
instrumentation, orchestration, form. It's difficult to imagine an
improvement on a conservative but open-minded musical education.
TOm
|
2452.9 | | RICKS::SHERMAN | ECADSR::SHERMAN 225-5487, 223-3326 | Tue Nov 06 1990 16:23 | 20 |
| If I might add to Tom's excellent observation, I found that (shortly
before I was sans MIDI) I got to where I would think up a tune away
from the keys and could basically step up and start plinking it out.
I found that even the pitch became automatic in that I would more often
than not have the pitches "correct" and wouldn't have to transpose
between my head and the keys. Most composition occurs (for me) away
from the keyboards. The comment about having equipment good enough to
match what's in your head is true. If the equipment can't even come
close it's worthless. This also hits close to home as to how
MIDIholics get hooked ... The thing to really watch out for is
equipment that suggests the melodies and such. Remember all the
"breathy" ads on TV when the D50 came out? So much of the music was
suggested by the technology/built-in patches that it all started
sounding about the same, ready to throw into the disco bin. If you
don't put thought into it, it won't be lasting (although the CDs might
go platinum if you include payola or sell your body). As John Cage has
proven (to me anyway), you might enjoy listening to it -- once.
Steve
Steve
|
2452.10 | Oh dear | IGETIT::BROWNM | BASS-ICly WARPed!!! | Wed Nov 07 1990 07:56 | 41 |
| Last night I was trying to write a Techno/electro piece. I started
with a dead simple drum track in my head and recorded that. My PSS680
only has the ability to record 2 bars, which loop, so the rhythm is
either on or off.
I then picked 2 chords (D and F), simply changing to the other chord at
the end of each bar. Then I had this great bleepy, really fast melody
which fitted the chords. Then came the bassline, it wasn't a melodic
bassline, just bass to the chords. I then made a lead synth type of
sound and invented a melody, that I intended to play over the top.
Now I had 2 problems. I had run out of tracks on my `Sequencer'
(Melody banks really) and I only had 255 notes on each bank to play
with, making it very hard not to be repetitious. By this time I had
given up, sick of the sounds on the keyboard, and sick of not having a
computer sequencer.
The only `fun' I'm getting out of keyboard is when I work out the
chords to a song I like (it could be a Heavy Metal song), and I can
play Strings or Piano instead and sing along.
The other side of the coin is - recently I was on a 4 week course
learning how to use a D20, 4 track, Midiverb etc.
I picked this great warm choir/string sound (Soundtrack), layed down a
few Minor to Major chord changes, then put some raspingly breathy
voices over the top. I liked it, my Mum, my sister, my brother, and
even mates who are into Metal and House liked it!
I really feel I can DO something when I get the something good.
There's nothing worse than having soething good in my head, then
playing it on my PSS680 and giving up 'cause it sounds naff.
As a footnote - in March the DEC building where I worked burned down.
To cheer me up I when and spent 450 pounds on a guitar and practice
amp. Why didn't I get a new keyboard???
matty
|
2452.11 | | WEFXEM::COTE | Can't touch this... | Wed Nov 07 1990 15:01 | 8 |
| Look at the high side. With your decidedly "low-tech" gear you wrote
a song!!
Exploit what you have, and buy more as you NEED it, not want it.
Buying a Synclavier won't help if you don't have any ideas to begin
with.
Edd
|
2452.12 | | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Unix:Familiarity breeds contempt | Wed Nov 07 1990 16:32 | 30 |
| I agree that Tom's observations are excellent, but there's a pragmatic
problem, and, most of what he said just wouldn't work for me.
I don't WANT to write pieces that can't be "realized" with what is
available to me.
I might imagine a great part for a glockenspiel, but if I didn't have
(and couldn't get) a glockenspiel sample, I'd write for a different
instrument.
My goal is to have a finished product that I can listen to myself, play
for others, etc. I would find it very frustrating and unsatisfying to
have written something that I can't record.
My writing is frequently influenced by sounds. Both in terms of
inspiration for the song itself, and in terms of individual parts.
I find that riffs, phrases, etc either "work" or "don't work" with
particular sounds.
In my COMMUSIC VII submission, I had this organ patch and was going to
do the organ solo a particular way. Then one day I accidentally hit
the mod wheel and played a slur at the high end of the keyboard and
went "wow - that sounds like a screamin' Hammond" and so I ended up
doing a "screamin' Hammond organ" solo instead with lots of slurs,
certain chord forms (5+7 chords) and I think it worked MUCH better.
The piece I've been working on recently was entirely inspired by a
sorta toy piano patch and a riff that just seemed to be "right" for
that patch.
|
2452.13 | | IGETIT::BROWNM | BASS-ICly WARPed!!! | Thu Nov 08 1990 07:13 | 24 |
| Even the demo sounds naff on my keyboard.
Re. The `sound matches a riff concept';
I can play some great riffs on my electric guitar, but they sound naff
on a piano, or my classical guitar. But the thing with the guitar, is
that because of my lack of ability on it, it would sound twice as good
with somone bashing a drum kit, and playing bass.
RE-2. I f feel I can't just add this as I need them - that is, untill
I get a good base to start from.
If I buy a D70, what can I do then that I can't know? (sounds apart)
I want to be able to write and record a song, then play it to death on
tape, so I can decide if I like it. A Computer based sequencer would
enable me to quickly and easily record my ideas.
Writing this has got me thinking. Maybe the answer would be to buy a
computer and sequncing package, and use that with my PSS680. It would
be less of a lay out that spending on a D70 or whatever. I could add
that later. IS THIS A GOOD IDEA??? I'll have to check my MIDI spec
tonight!
matty
|
2452.14 | BEYOND 495 PRODUCTIONS | USCTR2::EGRAHAM | | Thu Nov 08 1990 10:46 | 29 |
|
Hey Matty,
From the production side of things I still believe that you ought to
stick to getting those songs together. That awful sounding keyboard
shouldn't hold back your capabilities as a songwriter. Now, you've
chosen a difficult genre (House) to work with because like someone
else mentioned, you *have* to have a sequencer for that sort of stuff.
You want to hear your stuff perfect, ready to go, immediately.
Unfortunately, it doesn't sound like you have the
equipment/money/patience/or whatever to make your house tunes. Check
it out! Its gonna take some time before you get to hear your songs
the way you want to hear them. Even in SSL land, people have to slug
it out with other musicians, engineers, producers, and label execs.
before they come out with product that they like. And sometimes the
end result isn't the one that they wanted.
Take another look at what you want to do. If you want killer house
tommorrow, go out and buy that equipment today. If you can't do that
then concentrate on songwriting while you aquire the equipment. By the
time you've got the equipment, you'll probably have gone through a
couple of different writing phases. You'll be more mature and focused
about it (and I'm not saying that you're not mature now). And you'll
have grown into your technology. All this learning will get you to the
point where your demos will sound the way you want them to sound.
Little Gene Jr., from Beyond 495 Productions
|
2452.15 | | IGETIT::BROWNM | BASS-ICly WARPed!!! | Thu Nov 08 1990 12:50 | 21 |
| Yeah, I think you're right.
So back to the base note (sort of). What's the simplest way to write
a plain old song. What I do at present (on the guitar) is;
Pick some nice chord changes, probably between only 3 and 6 chords (I
only know about 12 chords on the guitar at present).
I then try and make a tunes that fits those chords. I do this my
humming or trying make the lyrics up.
The problem I get is that because of my limited chord knowledge I end
up with something that sounds like it's from the 60's (Beatles or Buddy
Holly or something).
Tonight I'll try humming a tune, then trying to fit chords afterwards.
Good night from Cheshire,
matty
|
2452.16 | Throw in some new ones. | RANGER::EIRIKUR | Eir�kur Hallgr�msson | Thu Nov 08 1990 14:02 | 9 |
| I know about the "chords that I know" problem. Try a chord book or
list play some of them, adding them to your mental stock. Also just
play things on the keyboard and when you have something that you like,
figure out what it is in notational terms. My Maj9sus4 stuff comes
from that. I wish Practica Musica (Mac program) was better at
analyzing complex chords. Lassitude....
Eirikur
|
2452.17 | IF IT WORKED FOR BUDDY, IT'LL WORK FOR YOU! | USCTR2::EGRAHAM | | Thu Nov 08 1990 14:42 | 21 |
| RE. 15
Whats good for Buddy Holly is good for us. Just don't get on an
airplane anytime soon (I know, that was in bad taste).
Seriously, bang out those chords until you think you got a song.
I'm really prone to verse/bridge/chorus, verse/bridge/chorus, verse
as a solo section/bridge/chorus out. Then theres verse/chorus,
verse/chorus, bridge/verse as a solo section, then chorus out.
Bridges should change musically and build so that whatever you
go back into is some way dramatic. House tunes tend not do any
of these things. They stay with a base line and simple chord
structure. The melody/vocal/sample arrangement and mix make up
the house song. Take the Buddy Holly song and strip to 2 chords
and imagine the house beat behind it all. Use slang terms to come
up with your vocal hook. And don't be afraid of the 60's. Dee-Lite
just cashed in on the trend and the B-52s sold a couple of million
records on the strength of "Love Shack". You couldn't get more
60's.
Good luck, LGJ
|
2452.18 | This happened once before! | BAHTAT::KENT | peekay | Fri Nov 09 1990 03:32 | 10 |
|
Most of the best songs ever written (pop songs that is) have very
simple chord structures...
Don't get put of by the pseudo-muso-technologist's need to play all
those complex chords...
Paul.
|
2452.19 | use it! | NSDC::SCHILLING | | Fri Nov 09 1990 04:57 | 16 |
|
re .16
Ahhhh...chord book! That's what I am looking for. I went into the
local music store a while ago and asked if they had a book containing
the description of all those complex chords and the system of their
notation and - ziltsch. Can anyone recommend a good book of this kind?
And I agree with .18, since you're the one who's creating this music,
it should sound good to you. Even with very simple chords you can do
amazing things when you put your soul behind it. If you keep on doing
the best with what you know now, it will just grow and grow...
Paul
Paul
|
2452.20 | GOOD SONGS ARE HARD TO COME BY | USCTR2::EGRAHAM | | Fri Nov 09 1990 08:21 | 11 |
|
Hi Again,
One thing about a good song. If its good, then you could use it as a
fast song or a slow song, acoustic or industrial. So when you come up
with a new song, see if you can hear it in other environments besides
the one in which you created it. This isn't a make or break type of
thing because I doubt if "Groove in the Heart" could be played
acoustically, but you'll know that you've got a "special" song when it
starts to jump musical genres.
|
2452.21 | | DNEAST::BOTTOM_DAVID | Reelect nobody! | Fri Nov 09 1990 09:19 | 5 |
| I occasioanlly use a chrod structure to write "on" occasionally I get a
melody or lyric that I try to build chords around. The former is the
easier for me, but the latter tends to be more inspired.
dbii
|
2452.22 | | RICKS::SHERMAN | ECADSR::SHERMAN 225-5487, 223-3326 | Fri Nov 09 1990 09:37 | 12 |
| Seems to me that there was a program that came out for the Mac that
could be used to construct chord progressions. It did it on a grid
of some kind. I know that lots of folks do the chords first and take
it from there. Me, I like to work the melody first and then work out
the chords. This is because I'm always spotting melody in speech and
nature. Once you have the melody there is usually a chord progression
or two implied. What's neat is exploring the various chord
progressions that can fit the same melody. I also like to work on the
chorus before the verses, if I use that type of structure. Much better
to know where you're going at the climax.
Steve
|
2452.23 | | IGETIT::BROWNM | BASS-ICly WARPed!!! | Mon Nov 12 1990 13:08 | 13 |
| I had a good weekend. I `wrote' the chords to a song, verse, bridge
and chorus. It's only four chords, but it goes at 2 different tempo's,
which I've always liked when someone else has done it. I just need to
come up with some words that don't sound cliched, or about love or
something similar.
Has anyone ever tried listening to music backwards? I have a Walkman
that plays beckwards (the auto reverse is broken). You can get some
great melodies out of backwards songs. I listened to the whole of
Madonna's `Like A Prayer' LP this way. I'm serious!
matty
|
2452.24 | reverse | VICE::JANZEN | Tom MLO21-4/E10 223-5140 | Mon Nov 12 1990 16:49 | 6 |
| I deliberately munged an old reel-reel deck to play backwards (still have it).
I like my music backwards. ;-)
I have heard that Phoebe Snow is singing backwards so to speak on Laurie
Anderson's Sharkey's Day.
but did not verify that.
Tom
|
2452.25 | psycho-delic | GLOWS::COCCOLI | a sack of throbbing gristle | Mon Nov 12 1990 17:23 | 12 |
|
I often experiment with backwards recording. Drop down a couple
of tracks on 1+2 of the four-track, then flip the tape and play
'em back on three and four. I've gotten quite a few interesting
rhythm patterns this way, not to mention some early Hendrix psychedelia
guitar effects.
RichC
|
2452.26 | Reverse events | PAULJ::HARRIMAN | open mouth, insert action item | Tue Nov 13 1990 10:31 | 21 |
|
Yeah, I do that with the sequencer, and with the sampler as well.
i.e. with KCS, there is a "reverse track" and "reverse sequence"
pulldown. Of course, attacks, etc. aren't reversed, just the order
of events. Nifty though, you get to hear your melodies and/or
accompaniments "backwards"....
with the EPS, I sampled good old "Number Nine" off the White Album,
made a layer copy, and turned that copy backwards, and put it on
the program change key. So you can get "Number Nine" or "Turn me on,
deadman" depending on whether or not you're depressing the prog change
key...
Every once in awhile I'll take a two track demo and run it backwards
through the deck, just to hear what it's like. Sometimes music isn't
that much different backwards....
/pjh
|
2452.27 | Try this one | NSDC::SCHILLING | | Thu Nov 15 1990 04:25 | 8 |
|
Record your voice speaking/singing on tape and then listen to it back-
wards and rehearse this until you have it down.
Then speak/sing 'backwards' onto tape and listen to that backwards!
Better than any voice-simulator/vocoder effect!
Paul
|
2452.28 | ... amazing feets ... | DOOLIN::HNELSON | Evolution in action | Thu Nov 15 1990 10:59 | 9 |
| There was a woman who could do this in real time, on Carson or
Letterman. They'd give her a sentence; she'd say it backwards; then
they'd play a tape of her speech reversed. It was incredible. Nearly as
amazing as the guy on NPR who could do a round of Row, Row, Row Your
Boat by himself, by humming one part and whistling the other.
And all I can do is type (somewhat well).
- Hoyt
|
2452.29 | Credit to Motto | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Unix:Familiarity breeds contempt | Thu Nov 15 1990 11:09 | 19 |
| One one of Tom Benson's COMMUSIC submissions ("Noel Noel") he recorded
the reverb to a vocal backwards and it sounded extremely cool.
That is you get reverse reverb that builds up and cuts out when the
vocal comes IN. Sorta like what T-40 folks are doing with reverse
gated snare ("Knocked Out" by Paula Abdul has this).
I've also recorded crash symbol reverb this way and really liked it.
I also created this sampler patch where you have a crash cymbol that
starts in reverse and then goes back to fwd play.
The general idea behind all these is that you have something where the
reverse part sorta "builds up to" the actual sound.
Extremely cool. Can't wait til that new affordable Tascam 8-track
comes out so I can do a lot more of this.
db
|
2452.30 | spx backwards reverb | VICE::JANZEN | Tom MLO21-4/E10 223-5140 | Thu Nov 15 1990 12:02 | 3 |
| The spx90 can do backwrads reverb without any tape tricks.
Among other things.
Tom
|
2452.31 | | KEYS::MOELLER | What's 'disingenuous' mean ? | Thu Nov 15 1990 12:32 | 7 |
| Some time back someone posted a nice trick to emulate a mallet rolled
cymbal from a sampler or drum machine.. I've looked for it and can't
find it.
Pointer or replication, please ?
thx karl
|
2452.32 | Only ex post facto reverb | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Unix:Familiarity breeds contempt | Thu Nov 15 1990 12:57 | 4 |
| > The spx90 can do backwrads reverb without any tape tricks.
It can't do the tricks I described unless it knows what I'm going
to sing or play before I do it.
|
2452.33 | Anticipatory reverb? | FULCRM::PICKETT | David - Brahms Berman Requiem? | Thu Nov 15 1990 13:01 | 5 |
| Maybe the SPX-90 is much smarter than people give it credit...
;^)
dp
|
2452.35 | The impossible done while you wait! | LNGBCH::STEWART | Instant gratification takes 2 long! | Thu Nov 15 1990 20:28 | 13 |
| re: .32
> > The spx90 can do backwrads reverb without any tape tricks.
> It can't do the tricks I described unless it knows what I'm going
> to sing or play before I do it.
Sure it can. It delays your signal while it fabricates the
reverse reverb. The DSP family does the same trick. Makes
it tough to stay in the groove, though. Fortunately, it's
not the kind of effect you'd really want to use for any length
of time
|
2452.36 | Not really | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Unix:Familiarity breeds contempt | Fri Nov 16 1990 09:50 | 1 |
| Try doing that at a gig
|
2452.37 | | KEYS::MOELLER | What's 'disingenuous' mean ? | Mon Nov 19 1990 12:21 | 4 |
| .. would work nice with a sequencer - just advance the track to hwere
it hits on time with reverse reverb..
karl
|