Wednesday, January 9, 2013

Just another update.

So its time for an update. Why? because I'm sure you're wondering "where the f**k is the music". Well I don't have much to tell. I've been busy, it was the holidays, and shit happens. Its only been a month, but dot worry Its coming. Until than I've found some wonderful tutorials by a guy named George A. Sanger.

Now I'm sure some of you are like "why don"t you do this your self?"... That easy, I'm learning how to do this myself. So which would you rather have, a video by a noob or someone who actually knows whats what.
Anyway enjoy the videos, for now I have sound to create

Thursday, January 3, 2013

The more the merrier

So last night as I was making my BOSE IE2 headphone bump inside my ears, I started to become a little disappointed. The sound I was creating wasn't quite what I wanted. Not all of them at least. So I decide to look at what else KORG had to offer me. What else could I use in my musical adventure... And just like the finding the master sword in Zelda, I had found two new weapon's. KORG's iELECTRIBE and the iMS-20. I wont talk to much about the iMS-20, for the most part its just like the iPolysix. The difference though is obvious the second you open the app.On the right side of the synth there are rows (there are all 2 rows at the top) of 1/4 inch audio jacks, all labeled an with a propose. I can connect them with yellow cords and produce new sounds with different effects. The biggest difference is relieved once you start using the keys, the sound much more modern. Well the iPolysix makes a pre-80's sound (which its designed to do and does it well) the iMS-20 creates the sounds we hear today from artistes like Skrillex, Shiny Toy Guns, NETSKY, Moby, David Guetta and so on.
iELECTRIBE... At 1st it seem like a whole new device when compared to the other three. I'm greeted with just one screen, most red background with different sliver knobs and battens. Starting from the top left, there is a LCD screen with at large knob which allows for selecting between per-made beats and sounds.(about 96 total with 62 more free ones) Below that are two smaller knobs for master volume and tube gain and next to them are 6 buttons ( two rows of three) labeled  browser, tempo, lock, write, settings and utility. I don't think I really need to explain what they do. Move down more we have 8 buttons (four rows of two) for are mute, solo, tap, pattern set, record, stop, play and repeat. Head  to the middle of the screen I see three knobs. A large on at the top with different effects label's surrounding it, 8 in total. Each one changing the sound it its own unique way. Under the large one are the 2 smaller once, simply labeled FX edit 1 & 2. It takes me awhile to figure these two out, at 1st all they seem to do is adjust the offset and formant. It's only after I change the preset sounds and adjust the effect I notice a change. Depending on selected effect, the two knobs will control diffident elements. If reverb is in effect then the knobs control time & level, if filter is selected then cutoff & resonance is controlled.
Move right and up, I see the oscillator with three small switches (pitch, mod depth and mod speed) and two buttons for wave & mod type. Luckily from using the iPolysix I'm already familiar with these. Each effect the sound (like everything else), but more its wave length or the path it follows as apposed to the sound its self. Below this is the Motion seq. (off, smooth, trig hold) and be side this the AMP controls. Four nobs for decay, level, pan and low boost. Finally after this I am met with two rows of buttons, the bottom row simply labeled 1-16 (with the help of two arrow buttons just above to the left) 17-32, 33-48 and 49-64. above all this (next to the arrows) are 12 buttons. Fx send and accent, witch allow be to turn the effects on/off for a specific button. Then flutter (which opens up a kross pad) with cross just below it. Finally the last 8 are left for synth 1-4 and some basic drum sounds. All in all this is a fun app and actually easier to use then the rest, and now I have sound to create

Tuesday, December 18, 2012

Just an update

So I've finely entered the creation process. I've been combining different sounds and effects, making short beast and discovering a song that is growing inside me. I'm unsure how this 1st song will sound or if I should even call it that. It would be more proper to call it "A sample of what it is going to become". The reason for that is the more I do, the more I learn and the more I learn, the more the song becomes. It almost seems like everything I do is awaking and unknown force, a force that whats nothing more then to be heard.
I look forward to meeting this force, hearing it for the 1st time. What will others think about it? What will they say? Will they enjoy it? For I cant really say. I doubt the 1st infant version of it will have a great following. But it is my hope that the final form it is to become will be loved, if only by a few. Who knows, maybe it will be the next big thing, the next chart topper...Or maybe not. It doesn't really matter, just as long as people enjoy it. That's really all I have for now, besides I have sounds to create.

Monday, December 17, 2012

The Tools... Part 2

So yesterday I told you all about the KORG iKaossilator. A wonderfully designed music app, easy to use and very welcoming. Today is another story though, today we open the iPolysix. A full digital synthesizer, so finely made that you could pick up the real thing with out issue. In fact it even a full replica of the Polysix polyphonic synthesizer from the 80 and it lets you know the second you open it.

Once you open the app you're greeted with an image of the original analog Polysix. After a short second you're brought to the 1st screen, knobs, switches, levers and a full keyboard fill the screen. But thats not all, unlike the iKaossilator this app comes with a how to right from that start. As well as a full manual. The 1st tip it gives me is to tap small tab revealing the sub bar. From there I'm given access to another screen, this one full of black and white buttons and a new tip telling me I can drag a key bar on the side to change the zones. (both screens are then repeated) I decide to return to the 1st screen and take heed to the next tip, tapping an LCD screen (or what would be one on the real thing) which opens another screen full of boxes and labels. Upon pressing play (btw there is a 1" bar at the top of the app with a Synth, Drums, Mixer, area full direct up load to soundcloud, file save, play & record, song, and of course settings buttons) the app takes off and play me a prerecord song as if trying to show me what I can do. I then move to the next tip on the previous screen and once again I'm given another screen, this one with kaoss pads. I know find my self wondering... What the hell are kaoss pads and what are they for?
So I let my finger do the learning and to my surprise I'm greeted by a familiar, the pads appear to be smaller versions ( or earlier) of the iKaossilator. Each with its own orange spear that follows my finger and changes a sound that its paired with. But don't be fooled, these pads are different. I quickly learn that the 1st pad and not act unless the 2nd already is and it becomes clear that the 1st is made to affect the sound of the 2nd. For now I decide to back off and return to the original screen once again. Now I tap on what appears to be my last tip (I'll otherwise shortly after) I'm told to hold down a knob and it opens something called the Automation, another screen.
Before I start to explore though, I begin to think about the app more. Just how big is it, what more does it have for me, will I be able to figure it all out on my own or is it to much. I knew from the start this wasn't going to be the same app as yesterday but I was aware of the all round size and complexity. Still I find my self excited to learn and dive into the app.
Now I decide to move to the drum screen. At 1st glance it seems simple but just as complex as the synth screen. Most of it is taken up by rows and rows of buttons, and at the 6 small pads. Labeled drum 1-6 and each with its own sound. A kick, snare, high hat, clap, tom, and disco bass. I play around for a bit, but no matter what I do the only reactions I get are from the 6 pads. Unsure if I can change the drum or not I decide to move on to the mixer.
 At this point I have never been more lost. The screen is simple 8 rows of 3 knows (red, white, and yellow in that order) 2 gray buttons labeled solo and mute, then a lever ranging from 10 down to zero (most likely a volume control) Just like the other screen I play around trying to learn anything I can or make a sound. No matter what I do however I get nothing, no tips, no new screens and no sounds. "So what now?" I ask myself. Whats my next move? Am I doing something wrong? Unsure again as what to do, I move on... Or back in away. Returning to the screen, I dive deeper into it. Something feels right about this area, like I'm supposed to be here. Perhaps this is where I'll create most my work and the other two screens are there for my support. As I probe around I find something new. Next to one of the knobs is a screen (sort of like an old calculator) that opens up to a list once tapped. In the list a find words/names such as slicer, phaser, drive,  EQ, HPF, talking mob and many more.(about 28 in total) Each one of these reveal a new key board of sounds, some very different from other, well others are almost the same as some. I search even deep into the Pandora like device in my hand, flipping switches, turning knobs and just missing around with anything that will let me. More and more new sound flow into my ears and attack my mind. Where before I was unsure, now I feel like Howard Carter peering in King tuts tomb for the 1st time. With ever action I make the device response with a new sound or new form of the previously discovered one. I find it hard to pull myself away now but I have no choice as I suddenly notice the clock as moved forward several hours. Perhaps If I find time I can search the manual for more clues but that's a later task, for now I have sound to create

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

The Tools...Part 1

Ok so last night marked the start of my journey and with me are two great products made by KORG. My 1st tool is the iKaossilator, a fun user-friendly app. When you 1st open the app your greeted with a quick welcome screen, followed by the main interface. A simple design, A 6" by 4" box with multicolored lights blinking together in each corner. Below that there is a row of 5 circles with arrows at the top, each with its own color (yellow, blue, pink, red, orange and green. Also the color of the lights) beside then on the left a number ranging from 1-50. In the center and stacked on top of each other are a large round record and play button, beside them on the lift a scale and key, then tempo under that. To the right something for the lead (whatever that means) and below something for the note length. Oh, and on the very top a small bar for your setting, picking the loop list (the apps pre-made sounds) a clear button and a new,save,export and export as a wav button.... I have little to no idea what half of this does or how to actually use it. But that is what this blog is for so more on that later... All in all, its a very fun look app, welcoming even. Like its asking me to come outside and play with it, and I do.
The 1st move I make it to hit the play button and see what happens. Instantly the app takes off with a simple dub beat and I start to understand this is much more here then meets the eye. The little cones atop the five circles begin to spin at different rates (I should mention the colors for the circles are yellow, blue, pink, blue and red, in that order) at the same time the 6"by 4" box is lit up with moving spears, each matching one of the circles. Each spear seems to follow a set course that it repeats with out mistake. Some just appear at different points with the box, well others move from side to side or spin around. At this point I notice that the play button is now a count down that repeats its self with the beat, well all other buttons around remain the same. I also note that one of the circles are glowing, and as I tap the one beside it (or any of the others) it begins to glow instead. Clearly this is telling me I've taken control of this circle and its spear, but how?
I decide to touch the box and as I do this I suddenly feel like a child about to touch something in a fine china shop. The very second I make contact the corresponding spear to whatever circle I have control of jumps to my finger, It follows it where ever I wish and the sound changes with it. Depending on where I move the sound speeds up or slows down, sometimes a new element comes in or it pitch changes. The true nature of the app has been revealed to me. Its a multi-beat/sound touch pad and it does what I ask with out question.
The more I poke around the more I learn, everything has a purpose. I touch the tempo and an over lay appears giving me control of the tempo, the same is said about everything else. When I hit record the app remembers whatever my finger made the spear do and the sounds with it. The app is easy to use and yet there is so much about. I soon learn there are 50 preset samples, each with five parts (one for each circle) The samples are each labeled, some are dub, other are chill, a few are trance and so on. I can mix and match every part, I can take a circle from a Reggae and put it into a Nu Disco.
I cant wait to learn more about this, to gain skills and tricks, to make my 1st little sample. But this is not my only tool, there is another. More on that tomorrow though, I have sounds to create for now

Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Creation of sound

Music, its everywhere. It can be created with or on almost anything. Animals do it, people do it and with modern times even machines and computers do it. It has become increasingly easier to create as well. Once you had to carve a drum body out of maple, then stretch animal hide over the top. Now you can simple tap a screen, download an app and have every sound you ever wanted. Anyone can create anything, and many are. 

So I've decided to do it to. Beside a deep love for all music and playing the sax in high school, I know very little about making a song. But with the use of my iPad and a few hours of free time every night, I plan to teach myself how. I'll be mixing and matching sounds, drum beats, vocals, bass drop and everything else in the hopes of making a song someone can enjoy. I'm not aiming for fame or money. I just want to create something to share my love of music.