Archive for the 'Music' Category

-image-Odeo Mío

Friend, and one time radio collaborator Minusbaby has just got into Odeo. You need to check it out!!

Odeo Mío: “My latest semi-obsession is ODEO . I made a channel.

Vocal Intros and Breaks in Popular Music
‘I’m recording sections of songs and transcribing them. Voice(s) in a song which are without musical accompaniment and don’t reference the song they’re a part of harmonically, rhythmically or melodically.

They’re just talking.’

That’s what the channel is about. Maybe you’ll dig it.
There are 21 clips up there as of this writing.

My Odeo Channel

(Via ?.)


-image-DeMudi

Well the posts have been slowing down again, probably because I started at Vizrt this Monday, all going well so far. Will probably post more stuff regarding that when I am more settled.

Anyways, before I moved to Bergen I was looking through my cupboards getting rid if excess so that I didn’t have to take unwanted items when I found that I basically had enough bits of computer to build a complete new one. I managed to cobble together a Athlon 1.4 Thunderbird, an Abit Motherboard (with RAID and all sorts of unwanted features), an Nvidia Quadro 2 graphics card, 512Mb of Ram, 80Gb of harddrive, a case, a Hauppage card (from my long gone MythTV box) and most interestingly a Terratec 24/96Khz card that I used to use to make music.

So what possible use could I put this too, well not having a spare Windows license, and a liking to Linux I wanted to see what applications Linux had for making music.

I came across documentation on the excellent Linuxsampler project.
This project, is very much like Tascams gigasampler in that it can stream multiple gigabyte samples from harddisk for music. Linuxsampler supported the gigasampler format which I happened to have a couple of demos for including a 4×1Gb piano files.

Linux Sampler

Having read in the past quite alot about making music on Linux I was faced with too choices:

  1. Install Debian, custom to build a Kernel to get audio latency to a minimum, and get the sound card working
  2. Install an audio distro and hope that it was as nice as Debian

Now I must admit that I didn’t want to spend months on the project so I choose DeMudi, a project from agnula. It was a distro with the low latency kernel plus it was based on my favoured Debian. Best of both worlds?

DeMudi

Well almost. In fact the installation was easier than Debian, and it took me right to a GUI and it all looked very sweet. On logging in to a gnome desktop there was a read me that helped to get a really nice drum machine (hydrogen) working with Jack. It supported my soundcard very well and the latency is better than my fast lean Windows PC.

DeMudi

So on to linuxsampler. A look at the packages installed showed it was there but the frontend wasn’t and this is when the trouble started. I have no idea why they didn’t have a version of QSampler installed from the off, but Agnula if you reading this put it in the next version. So downloaded the source for QSampler, but DeMudi doesn’t come with any tools to compile let alone the libraries required.

The standard package source doesn’t have them so I ended up pointing it to debian’s and tried getting everything that I needed. I must have wasted hours trying to get the correct libraries and so forth, and then while I was waiting for yet another library to come down, I happened to find a binary already built for debian on the web ( a quick google should show where).

This installed very quickly, started no problem and started Linux Sampler with no problem. Once that was running I used Jack to setup the audio and then setup a Midi interface connecting everything together with a MOTU midi interface running on my PC. After loading the Gigasample in, I had a nearly prefect piano.

In fact the only thing wrong with it was that I hadn’t looked at it properly and in fact each 1Gb file was a velocity layer making the whole thing a 4Gb file! Once loaded I had a play and it sounded fantastic, except when I went completely mad and used up a lot of polyphony, the Linux box worked perfectly with really low latency.

Qsampler

All I think DeMudi should have is the development tools installed plus QSampler and then it would be complete, but for now I have a fantastic piano sound.


-image-TweakBench

Wow! I have been testing out quite a few plugins for cubase recently, to complement my established synths and effects and I am loving the Tweakbench VST effects and VSTi’s go download some now:

TWEAKBENCH free vst instruments and effects


-image-Labradford

Currently listening to Fixed::Content by Labradford perfect for a sunday morning - or what would have been my Sunday morn if the clocks hadn’t gone forwards, utterly pointless idea I think.


-image-bjork now playing

Just going to play the new Bjork album, Medulla on humhum radio for a bit. Its the first time that I have listened to it aswell, but I have heard that it is good!

  1. Pleasure Is All Mine
  2. Show Me Forgiveness
  3. Where Is The Line?
  4. Vokuro
  5. Oll Birtan
  6. Who Is It
  7. Oceania
  8. Submarine
  9. Sonnets/Unrealities XI
  10. Desired Constellation
  11. Ancestors
  12. Mouths Cradle
  13. Mivikudags
  14. Triumph Of A Heart

And if you like it, buy it: Bjork - Medulla.


-image-Now playing!

For the next couple of hours, whilst doing some work, I am going to be playing some tunes on HumHum Radio so catch a listen if you can, I haven’t had alot of time to spend on it recently, but I am playing some jazz, blues, northern soul;


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