roboctopus wrote:
Derris-Kharlan wrote:

Finish a fucking album

52 song album!

FML.... he'll probably want me to mix / master it - so it better be less than 12!  :-P

Poppi wrote:

My audio interface, editing software, trackpad and mouse are all fucked. ......  They say "bad things come in threes", in my case it's more like seven or eights.

Wooahhh!  That's quite a combo to all be happening at once.  Double rent is so frustrating - I've been in that situation before and it's exceedingly draining.  Hang in there.

On the positive note we will hopefully be getting a couple of bonus weeks from you at the start of 2013.  Am looking forward to hearing some tunes when you do jump on board :-)

Had my Beyerdynamic's on from 6pm - 2am... hardly noticed.... it certainly has comfortable covered :-)  Ears are a little warm though (mine are the closed model) but not enough for me to notice until I took em off.

BlondieBrunetti wrote:

Man I didn't really realize this was all so electronic-oriented!

That's the interesting thing - because I think a lot of us do play musical instruments outside of our electronics... but some of us are a little out of practice because we have fallen into the electronic void!!  I restrung my acoustic last week and couldn't even play a bar chord without buzzing where 10 years ago I was playing shows weekly.  So week one (for me) was about delivering something within my safety zone.  As we go I'm sure more and more people will pick up their old beloved instruments.   :-)

Depends on time (lacking this week - tonight was my night off!).  Would love to get the Rockit8bit going

CC DELIVERED!  But it's more personal pref than anything... you know me too well! :-P

151

(33 replies, posted in Site Help)

boomlinde wrote:

listened to and/or commented on (by yourself)? Maybe even three color keys for listened to/commented on/listened to

Yeah - this would be handy!  I still don't know if I've listened to everyones tune.  I'm pretty sure I have though because it's been 6 1/2 hours of listening.

Other than this I've gotta say the site is really functional.

152

(7 replies, posted in General Discussion)

As Lazerdad days... def come down to Blip and check out the workshops.  LSDJ is surprisingly cool once you spend a few days with it!  It's great to have a standalone pocket-fitting sequencer as well - you can take it anywhere and there is no need for any MIDI controlling or complex hook ups :-)

And don't worry about Sydney not having a scene... (hehehehehe ... just had to stop typing here to check if God In Pants had responded!!!)  Come hang at Blip and you'll get to meet lots of Melb and Syd crew alike.  The Sydney guys are really great fun - despite their apparent 'tude in posting flyers for Melbourne shows they've played at.  They sometimes play in Sydney too....

ps. Homemade Electronic Music looks good but it's pretty expensive.  There are lots of sites out there with good introductions to simple oscillators, etc.  Check out some of the simple synth kits as well!

Well, I've had my 6 hours sleep and got my coffee.  Watchin' that count down.  Now we get to see how Trash 80's code fares ;-)

Great to hear everyone's feedback (keep it flowing!!) and nice to know that we've all (even little-scale) had an adventure during week one.

Poppi wrote:

I have unsolvable hardware AND software issues, so that's me out (I think the universe is trying to tell me something...).

Oh no!  What happened?  Surely you could use a built in mic or even do something acoustic on a basic recorder or something?  Hope you get something though... I'm looking forward to hearing what you come up with :-]

Mr Gray wrote:

I had three ideas which I turned into one good track and then I got sidetracked after I found some killer string samples....

Tell me about it!  A thing that's boggling my brain is having to come back to a track I've started within the same week often when I'm in a completely different head-space.  I hardly ever do that.  You can hear my tune take a dramatic change in vibe and style for whole sections.  You can only start so many tunes before having to commit to one and finish it.

I know of at least 2 other people who had "first week luck"!!  I'm curious if anyone else ran into problems of the "facepalm" kind on this first week??

For instance, I put the whole of today aside to finish my tune YET I actually spent most of today wiggling a old EMS cart around trying to get it to bloody read in any gameboy!   

Cart has been working fine for weeks and today it just died (displaying "NINTEND-" with the O missing) Cleaned contacts on both sides, and then found that it randomly worked in an old clear gameboy that is in the worst condition and not modded in any way... but it ONLY worked on that one device and none of the 6 other gameboys.  I had to finish the tune with a camping light strapped to my head shining on the display so I could see it... = ended up a frustrating day where normally I would have given up and just ordered a new cart.  As far as it's effect on the tune - it was mainly sequencing a second bridge in the middle and working on a better ending last 8 bars which I ran out of time for.   And the recording is just raw headphone socket.

So while I'm 95% happy with the tune this has highlighted to me the challenge of submitting a track "NO MATTER WHAT"... because I wouldn't have uploaded it in it's current form if it wasn't for the deadline!!

midimachine wrote:

Endorphin is an amazing free master compressor, just sayin'

Actually all of that guy's plugins are fan-freakin'-tastic. And free!

Agreed.  I use them still along side the other plugs I own!!  It's my main goto compressor for dialoge tracks in documentary mixing - just seems to work.

If you want something which will nag you occasionally but work amazingly in an unlimited demo version, check out Reaper.  I now have a Nuendo box sitting and getting dusty on my shelf as Reaper has changed my entire approach to audio.  Personal version is nothing (like $60?) and the compressors are look ahead and react solidly if you set them well.  The EQ is the best thing I've ever used and fully tweak-able.  The plugs are really functional too although nothing is pretty... it's all about being a performance program so they don't waste memory on flashy looking interfaces.   Their manual has some great explanations too - as does the Waves manual (which used to be an incredible read as an introduction to what the various elements do).  Can't recommend Reaper enough.

Phil Harmonic wrote:

on the low end.. you really just have to use your ears and move the shelf around a bit until it sounds right.. but usually its somewhere between 30hz and 60hz depending on how much energy you have down there.

In regards to rolling off low end, I do this on a track by track level.  I find it's really important to solo a track, listen and look at your spectral analyzer to see what's happening in way of low end wobble.  With some bass instruments I find that I use a bass extender to put back in struggling frequencies, say <50hz...   This is tooootally frowned on but I don't care - with the right tool you can define a compression ratio for that sub bass and get it sounding pretty punchy.  Sometimes it works really well, sometimes it just falls flat.  You can't really do it to the whole mix - just some of the problematic bass instruments.

Generally I do 2 layers of mastering at the end.  One in Reaper (usually just EQ) to get it sounding clean and solid and I A/B my tune with something comercial turned down to get a feel for if my balance is right(ish).  Usually my mids are a little lacking at this point but I hit that up later.  I usually set up a temp mastering chain (EQ, MultiComp, Limiter) after I've written my first chorus or so... that way it sounds nice while I'm composing / mixing and also protects my speakers (instead of mixing at say -15dB where a 0db glitch out destroys tweeters - yes, I've seen/heard it happen!)  I take off the temp mastering chain and tweak the mix before pumping it out to a WAV file with about 2db headroom or so.

Once I've exported my final WAV, I take it into Audition 1.5 (effectively Cool Edit) for a FFT based Lowpass Filter (under 28hz at stupidly high precision), add soft look ahead compression - usually to pull the kicks back a bit, apply analog EQ (a plugin) almost always to add mids and deal with upper highs, and then tickle the final mix with a hard limiter.  Sections that are quiet or are building up I sometimes go back and compress harder so the kick ins are more predominant.  Sometimes I push up the kick in's by a dB or two just for the first second - so when they are slammed by the limiter they have more power.  I find that it's really important to be able to see what you are doing - which is why I do all of this in a dedicated waveform editor and not just in a chain of effects on the master channel of my multitrack program.

That said, don't think I'll be mastering up too many of the tunes here with that much precision ;-)

I'm on Beyerdynamic DT770's and love them.  Recently borrowed a pair of T5p's where are also amazing (until I give them back in March!).  Everything is crystal clear on both pairs and they will sit for 7 hours at a time on my head before I get hungry and realize I've spent that long in the K-hole.  The T5s have a little more magic in the way they handle the low end (so clean) but the 770's are stll very solid and hardly leak a thing (which is great for tracking... in the recording sense!).  Both are flat-ish as far as I'm aware; and certainly are fine for mixing and composition.

One of the big factors I found is driving them correctly.  I use a Musical Fidelity X-Can Class A valve pre which I got off ebay for $120.  Needed new caps but it's been incredible.  Just plug the DMG / Atari straight in.  I also use it from the line out of my USB sound card and use it to boost the output from the Mac.  Nothing quite powers cans in the same way as a high end preamp.  It has a transparent pass-though too and some of them have dedicated zero latency DACs in them too.

159

(40 replies, posted in General Discussion)

idevourstatic wrote:

I make music for childrens TV

Wow!  It must be fun seeing the compositions line up to the picture (if they don't cut the stems around in post).

Oh and I used to go to Cornwall for holidays as a kid, so big greetings from Australia!

Random facts:

- 59 people...
- 3068 tracks...
- Over 6 days (without sleep) of listening by 2013 if average track length is 3 min! **

** little-scale points out that there are 24 hours in a day and not 12 (!)