MTF Semester 2 – Week 1 – 26/07/07

First lecture back after the break and we found ourselves with a new lecturer. Welcome David Grice. David took this class for Sound Engineering-Studio last semester. Although most of us knew abit about Dave’s background, he went into a little more detail about who he is and what led him to where he is today.

Apparently when our Dave was little he was a singing protégé. I mean, I’ve looked at Dave and thought that he could be a member of the Soprano family but I never imagined that he was ever a boy soprano.

Dave then explained what we would be doing this semester. We are going to visit some studios and see where these skills we’ve been learning can be put into practise. This week coming we are going to Mixmasters studio at Hawthorndene. I am very interested to see some of their lovely, expensive gear in action and in particular Ken brought up the old analogue Vs digital debate and as Mixmasters has a lot of analogue gear maybe we could hear the difference. We could also be visiting The Film Corp, Disk Edits, Nova and Paradise Studios.

This Semester we have to continue blogging, develop a portfolio and present our portfolio.

Later in the class we went on to listen to our mixes from last semesters Sound Engineering – Studio course.

Rowans master of Introduction to Death.
Bens master of 18 Wheels
Brendans master of Everyone Come
My master of Personal Pilot
Scott H’s master of Paranoid
Joshs master of Holy Diver
Laurens master of unsociable

Downloads are available by going to the EMU blogs page.

Hit this link

References:

Music Technology Forum – Adelaide University, Electronic Music Unit.
Lecturer: David Grice

Sound Engineering (Studio) A - Project

Recording Notes - Personal Pilot and Marvin By Meredith Riley ( and Band )

Date/s of Recording
28/05/07, 30/05/07, 06/06/07
Song Titles
Personal Pilot, Marvin
Format
Sampling Rate 44.1khz Bit Depth 16 Bit
Duration: Personal Pilot - 4m’07sec, Marvin - 3m'57sec.

The first recording session the band came in there was a small bit of confusion about times. The drummer, Jarred, had thought that it was an hour later. It was no big deal as I was setting up mics for his kit anyway. He is playing in the live room with Josh, the Bass player, who is playing straight in via a DI box. Meredith is singing and playing guitar in the “Dead Room”. She is doing this mainly as guide for the others but if it works well that would be great also. We had already decided that if we could get the rhythm section down in this session we would be happy. Marvin, has quite a long guitar and vocal intro we thought it would be good to have a click to guide Meredith in this session and if she had to record both Guitars and Vocals again. Jarred was happy to tap the click using his drumsticks for the intro instead of the click track. As it turned out Meredith and I didn’t need to re-record these at the second session just some backing vocals for this track. At the second session Meredith sung in the “Live Room”. I preferred her voice in this space as the natural reverb was evident. The third session was arranged because Sara, a violinist, could not make the second session and was playing some violin on Marvin. She was recorded also in the live room with two Neumann U87 set up like overhead mics in stereo. She had to concentrate a fair bit to remain fairly still for recording levels. I thought that at least if she did move around with the Left/Right panning that I planned to apply to the mics it would sound realistic. Everything went into ProTools with no issues. Also at the second session I had several mics set up on Merediths guitar and it was also plugged into the patch bay from her pickup. It was the best sounding pickup straight from an acoustic guitar that I’ve ever heard. Everything went into ProTools with no issues. The main problem that was faced as it was being recorded is that the band was receiving the same mix through the headphones and different people wanted less of this and more of that. If it was my studio or if we were allowed to mess with the configuration of the studio busses or sends would send out individual mixes via an able headphone amplifier. The vocals and Guitar for Personal Pilot were re-recorded.

You can hear the MP3s of these songs by following the link below.

Marvin By Meredith Riley

Personal Pilot By Meredith Riley

Audio Studies A - Creative Project

Rocket
Stuart Johnston
3 Minutes ‘23 Seconds

This is taken from a song recorded by me on my Tascam 2488 recorder. I exported these as wave files and brought them into Uni. I imported individual wave files Peak LE and chopped them up saving them to the desktop. I got really good at the keyboard shortcuts for copy, new, paste and save as in Peak LE. I then dragged the samples into a ProTools session and begun looping and arranging. My main aim was to get four or five complementary sections to fit together and then add vocal parts to suit. I encountered several issues as I set about this task. The main one was that ProTools could not auto backup at one stage because one guitar riff couldn’t be found. It wouldn’t even let me scroll without the error appearing. I thankfully had been saving as I went anyway so little work was lost when I had to pull the plug and force a close to that session. That just left a fair mess to sort out in my audio files folders.

With the song I was really happy how sections were looped but if I had a fair bit more time I would have improved on the tempo transitions between sections. I had to time compress some vocals to fit in with some sections as the original song was not played to a click track.

Thanks to Sascha, Mark and Hamish for the performance. Otherwise known as Hamisphere

You can hear a copy of Rocket by following this link

Screenshot of Rocket - Edit Window



Screenshot of Rocket - Mixer Window

MIDI Studies A – Creative Project

WE ARE ALL HERE
Stuart Johnston
3 Minutes ’57 Seconds

In my Proposal I wanted to an ambient rock/dance piece. Well as it turned out the rock was the intro part with some crazy snare patterns along with hi-hat and bass drum that were inputted with the drawing tools. I settled on 110bpm. All drums were entered using this method. I stuck to my plan and step inputted the bass guitar. The ambient keyboard sounds were entered in real time using the modulator on the interface. Some of these were layered up with some special effects to create more interest. I believe that the special effects are hooks that would keep some people coming back for another listen.

As the song built I used a pop drum kit and a break beat drum kit together to fatten the sound.
I wanted to keep that “up” feeling and really thumped the bass drum home by using gnome toy effect on the bass and snare parts near the end to create a plodding type effect.

Humans laughing with the monkeys heard in the background suit the theme and the kids signal the hard bass intro. Volume and panning were automated; effects were also added to particular tracks and automated. Automation data was inputted using real time and drawing tools. The track was mixed with in a 0.1 of the peak and the master on the global faders used to finish.
I thought that the piece should build and sway
With such a large sound it seemed a very small crowd applause was suitable at the finish.

You can hear the MP3 of "We are all Here" by following this link.


We are all Here - MIDI Creative Project - Arrange Window


We are all Here - MIDI Creative Project - Mixer Window

MTF Week 12 31/05/2007

Class Remix Presentations

Today, In Music Technology the class continued to present our remixes originating from the Real World Records remixed competition.

"The Big Room" at Real World Studios. "Oh Yeah!"
http://realworldremixed.com/

Ken presented “What you are” by Joi. Ken used different programs to add effects and bounce for files to use in his ProTools session. He not only liked to plug-ins that the other programs offered but after he bounced the tracks he could then continue his arrangement without endlessly “tweaking” the effects. Ken also said that he tried to keep the main building blocks of the original.

Lisa chose “My secret Bliss” by The Afro Celts Sound System. I thought her mix showed good creativity with the breaking up of the original drums. I like how she took the catchy guitar riff and looped it for the last half of the song. Lisa commented on how a friend had suggested that he just loops things for 8 repeats then has a change; she said she pretty much did this. This could get predictable but maybe that’s what you’re after.

Josh explained in good detail how he set about remixing “Shock the Monkey” by Peter Gabriel. Josh thought that everything clashed on the original so he set about simplifying it. He elimated what he didn’t want to hear which he admits was pretty much most of it. Could help thinking that the “Shock the Monkey” vocal was used too much.

Brendan did an Industrial version of “If I had my way” by Little Axe. He started by distorting the vocals and adding reverb. Drums were treated with Amplitude then bass and vocals were layered on top. I was impressed how Brendan tried a “Kylie” inspired effect by double tracking the vocals and pitch shifting.

Skip McDonald"Little Axe"

Lauren went for a drum and bass feel with her mix of "Peoples Colony No.1". She used volume automation and did some doubling and panning with slight delay.

It was interesting how different people interpreted the assignment.

Steve suggests, “ Use what attracts you to the song and stretch it into a new direction. That is a good place to start with a remix.”


References:

Music Technology Forum – Adelaide University, Electronic Music Unit.
Lecturer: Steve Fieldhouse

Presentations: Ken, Lisa, Josh, Brendan and Lauren.

MTF Week 11 24/05/2007

Class Remix Presentations

Today, In Music Technology the class presented our remixes originating from the Real World Records remixed competition.

http://realworldremixed.com/

Scott H. presented his mix of “If I had my way” by Little Axe. Unfortunately some of the plug-ins in the lab weren’t on the presenting computer. This is a very mellow song and I feel it would have sounded larger with Amplitude as intended.

Ben also presented the “If I had my way” by Little Axe. I was really impressed how he used reverb to create a gospel effect. Ben left space so the contents of each region could sink into the listener. I like the song but twice in a row I was ready for a nap.

Scott P presented “What you are” by Joi. Scott aimed for a dance feel and was successful in the feeling of the piece building as it went.

I presented “My secret Bliss” by The Afro Celts Sound System. My production notes, screenshots, analysis and research are featured below. I concentrated on the arrangement feature of this remix exercise as my samples were of very good quality. I really enjoyed putting together this mix and was pretty happy with the outcome.

Jake also did “My secret Bliss” by The Afro Celts Sound System. I was really impressed with his work. He has a somewhat unique angle and is very passionate. He also could not use some of his effects due to the constraints of the plug-ins on the presenting machine. I really wanted to hear the effect he described as “being underwater”. Whilst his arrangement was totally different to mine we both ended on the same small ambient sample.

Daniel filled us in on his hatred for vocals and his techno tastes. This was evident in the arrangement of the same Afro Celts song.

Simon did “What you are” by Joi. He said that it was the least like “world music”. He also not a fan of fade outs so it was interesting to hear the sounds he actually did like.

Overall the songs presented this week bore no resemblance to the original arrangement. It was a very enjoyable exercise for me and the research that influenced decisions on this project helped to expand most people’s horizons.

References:

Music Technology Forum – Adelaide University, Electronic Music Unit.
Lecturer: Steve Fieldhouse

Presentations: Scott H, Ben, Scott P., Jake, Daniel, Simon

Music Technology Forum Mix Project

Remixing : Afro Celts Sound System - My Secret Bliss

MTF Mix – Production Note

I have decided to remix Afro Celts Sound System - My Secret Bliss.
First of all I imported all of the samples to the region list of my Protools session and set about listening to them and providing myself with a description of the regions such as whether some are variations of others (see analysis). I started to think about what regions would go with others. Afro Celts Sound System now known as Afro Celts has a definite world music flavour to them and I thought it would be fun to do this track keeping an ambient dance feel to it.

I referenced (see research) my track to Machine Translations’ song “Amnesia”.
I liked:
• the level where the vocals sat when they were clean
• the Bassy busyness of some parts particularly the end
• the way the electronic elements created interest and hooks
The drums in particular the hi-hats were very bright and prominent. This is a sound I was not after.

As Greg Rule suggests (see research) I concentrated on the vocal arrangement then found a complementary drum beat to loop. I also liked the idea of an intro drum rhythm with some fills.

I found as Fatboy Slim did (see research) that I could use the backing vocals in place of keyboard or guitar as a pad. So I used the backing vocals swapping with the mono guitar below the main vocal line with the whistle providing a high melody. I added random keyboard sounds to create interest (see research: “The Mixing Engineers Handbook” by Bobby Owsinski)

I used a stretched reverse cymbal to firstly highlight the groove after the first change and then to facilitate the second change. This was also used to accentuate ambient sounds.

Mid song I wished to make sure all elements were represented. Drums and Bass Synth. are the foundation, with keyboards providing the pad. Rhythm is percussion. Leading is vocals and I think stereo guitars are important to uplift this part. A fill is the Kora and abstract keyboards either side provide interest also.

As I was happy with specific combinations I locked the regions in place using click, Apple key + L. (see research)

As I sought to align regions the difference when zoomed right in was phenomenal. Parts that looked aligned when zoomed were all over the place. Snapping to grid or markers helped this.

I used edited stereo guitars and reverse cymbals to accentuate vocals and random sounds. Through out samples were looped as aliases.

ProTools Screen Shots





Analysis

Afro Celts Sound System song, My Secret Bliss interested me as the sounds are very spacious and the drums really cruise along. There is percussion and keyboards, which I really like. The song belongs to an Ambient Dance genre and I will approach it from this point of view. It has good sound quality with lots of effects already added. I documented the samples and gave them descriptions that gave me something to recognise them by.
“Afro Celt Sound System was formed in 1995 as a collaborative effort between traditional African and Celtic musicians and several respected figures from the UK music scene. Much of the recording of the group’s first album, Volume 1: Sound Magic, took place during the 1995 Recording Week at Peter Gabriel’s Real World Studios in Bath.”[6]
Members are: Simon Emmerson, James McNally, Iarla O'Lionaird, Martin Russell (core members) with Johnny Kalsi, N'faly Kouyate, Emer Mayock, Moussa Sissokho, Ian Markin, Francis Hylton (and occasional guests!)

Samples and Descriptions:
Drums

1 Beat with Hiccup Vocal
2 Beat without
3 Beat 1 shorter with Tom Fills
4 Normal 1 with Fills
5 Break Down off beat with Hiccup, Fills, Banging
6 New with Fills
Whistle
1 Complementary with vocal higher build up
2 Up Beat Rhythmic high build up then repeat
Backing Vocals
1
2
Bodran and Pere (Percussion)
2 Tabla – Brush on Snare
3 Tabla – Brush on Snare
4 Tabla – Brush on Snare
5 Cymbal, Bells, Shaker
6 5 with Tabla then Cymbal
7 Reverse Cymbal and Percussion
8 Tabla and Reverse Cymbal
9 Shaker, Reverse Cymbal and Tabla
10 All
Guitar
1 Picking Low Rhythm
2 High Melodies – Off Beat
3 Rhythm Verse
4 Single Picking then Strumming clean ongoing
5 Picking with strumming comes in hard
Bass
1 Bass riff as reg Keys
2 1 with variation
3 Travelling with slide change
4 Build up to 2nd riff
5 Mellow Funk Bass
6 5 with slides
7 1 alternating
8 1 key change
10 Picking with slide
11 Low Rumble
Regular Keyboard
1 Funk Bass Synth.
2 Slightly shorter, same bass, louder Synth.
3 Breakdown Synth. Ambient
4 Similar to 3
5 Breakdown w/bass, little Synth.
6 Repeating Bass sound, changing Synth. chords
7 Slightly changing Bass and Synth.
Abstract Keyboard
1 Bum Bum
2 Til Bum Bum
3 Rhythmic mouth harp sound, panning Synth.
4 Bum Bum Bum Til Bum.( hehehe Yes True)
5 One Short Burst
6 Background static noise cycling
7 Cycling with harp bouncy
8 Build up
9 Like 8 but different cycling speeds
Kora
1 2nd Bass Riff
2 1 with shorter bursts
3 High picking
4 Bassy fast picking
5 4 with variation
6 Short burst ring out x 2
7 3 with variation
8 3 with variation
9 3 with variation
Main Vocals and extras
Larla 1 Whoo-foreign language. Then- Return, Like Children, we stumble, into the sun
Larla 2 Return, like children, we stumble, recall the reason, together, we stare into the sun
Sevara 1 Short high wailing – rhythmic end
Sevara 2 High wailing then silence, dreamy whispered wail then rough rap sounding.
Rev. Cym. Reverse Cymbal
Lots to work with here.

Research for my mix includes the 5 references below.

At www.globaldance.com Greg Rule explains how he builds a track “So once you get your (tempo) from there I generally start building (the remix) up from the bottom with my drums and my percussion tracks. I'll just have the vocal playing by itself and then I'll start layering in the beats.”[1]

This is how I started by listening and getting a feel for the vocals then looped up a cool beat with a variation for the intro. With my readings for this research I have found heaps of other producers remixing or creating a track talking about arranging around the vocals.

I then set about gathering the elements I found most appealing and layering complementary samples. With these samples being very produced and quite layered in by themselves I found no need for extra effects.

In the book “The Mixing Engineers Handbook” by Bobby Owsinski, he says that “great mixers think in three dimensions – Tall, Deep and Wide.” “Tall” being the frequency range, “Deep” is adding ambient elements to the mix and “Wide” is achieved by panning.

He also mentions six elements of a great mix:
Balance – the volume level relationship between musical elements.
Frequency Range – having all frequencies properly represented.
Panorama – placing a musical element in the sound field.
Dimension – adding ambience to a musical element.
Dynamics – controlling the volume envelopes of track or instrument
Interest – making the mix special

Whilst mixing the Fatboy Slim 2004 release Palookaville, Norman Cook (aka Fatboy Slim) noticed that the guest Blur singer Damon Albarn's vocals could be the pad (long sustaining note or chord) in the mix for two of his songs.

“The backing vocals fulfill what normally you would have a guitar or keyboard doing rhythmically.” Cook says.

I use this in my track: the backing vocals are in at the start, as they come to the end of the 1st section the mono guitar comes in. The mono guitar then leads to the second section of backing vocals.

In the Book “Editing Digital Audio in ProTools” by David Franz a shortcut I picked up and used after highlighting a region is Apple key +L. This locked the region in position and would give a warning window if you were adjusting it. This gave me a lot of piece of mind that the parts I had exactly lined up would stay that way.

I found a couple of tips on referencing the sound of your mix to an existing CD. One was to import directly into the ProTools session using a wave file so that the output is through the signal path to create a level playing field [5]. Two other things to be careful of are:
1 - Don't try to match your mix the volume of the reference CD. It's already been mastered. The mix that THEY used for mastering was not as loud as their final CD, and neither should yours. [5]
2- Don't try to match their compression. Additional compression was likely added in mastering. If you squash your mix, you will be stuck with whatever you did.. Mastering is usually a better time and place for that. [5]


References:

[1] -http://www.globaldance.com/InterviewGregRule2.htm
Keyboard Magazine's GREG RULE! - Part 2

[2] -“The Mixing Engineers Handbook” by Bobby Owsinski

[3] -Remix Mag article DEVIL MAY CARE on the recording of Fatboy Slims’ Palookaville. Oct 1, 2004 by Ken Micallef

[4] -“Editing Digital Audio in ProTools” by David Franz

[5] - Mark Dann Recording MIXING TIPS FROM THE TRENCHES
http://www.markdannrecording.com/Mixing_Tips.html

[6]http://www.myspace.com/afrocelts