Archive: April, 2012

An Orthographic Projection of All My Instruments

Right, so this isn’t a new track, it’s a picture. And a slightly artistic one at that, in the sense that it’s a photo-manipulated picture. Not much, though.

Orthographic Instruments

I bought a guitar yesterday. And today I wanted to see how it looked lying next to all of my other instruments. I have used the perspective tool in GIMP to create an orthographic projection (or at least the closest I could get), which makes it … well, some would say easier, others wouldn’t … to compare the instruments by size. However, don’t let yourself be fooled by the fact that the violin is lying horizontal and the guitar vertical. The guitar has almost twice the length. The recorder (flute) on the far left doesn’t really work, but I like its looks, and it can be used for some effects. But that requires heavy amplification. In case you’re wondering what the Moog instrument is, it’s a theremin. Go look it up on Wikipedia or summat.

One of the things that keeps shocking me, despite the fact that I have seen it so many times, is the size of the alto saxophone. It’s really small. It is almost as small as the flute, djembe, and violin, which are instruments I consider small. But I tend to consider the alto saxophone a medium sized instrument, inarguably due to its tonal range and timbre. Of course, now I’m just comparing the instruments by height which is by no means fair because the alto saxophone is curved. And if it were to be straightened out, it would be as long as the guitar, which justifies its deeper pitch (fortunately). But from a purely visual perspective, it really doesn’t appear very big to me.

The Prophecy of the Machine

“I don’t mean to be mean, but you’re a broken machine!”

Exams are finally over, so, I’m back! I have a couple of partially finished tracks that I’m working on, but I felt this one was ready to go. I have tried to retain the same atmosphere as in “Surrounded by Strangers”, using piano, organ, bass, and drums. But I couldn’t resist adding a mean sax solo. I played on an old, used reed to get those screechy sounds that you normally don’t want, but I thought they fit into the style quite nicely. Definitely not for everyone, but the music everybody likes is typically quite boring IMHO.

(Remastered, 16 April 2012)

Surrounded by Strangers

“Their faces seem familiar, their eyes seem fixed on me. What do they want? What do they want from me?”

I must confess. This recording was not entirely done in one go. The ending features a high-pass filter and some sound effects which were added later in Audacity. This time I wanted to do something a bit darker and slightly more poetic. The tempo is a bit slower, and the chord changes aren’t Dorian at all, in contrast to the previous tracks. I was thinking of adding a really grungy guitar, but since I don’t play guitar, and guitar synths just don’t capture the sound properly, I decided to keep it as it is. (If you play guitar and would like to provide me with a nice sample, I might consider doing a new version, though). Hope you like it.

Dear Juno

“Dear Juno, did you know that there’s so much snow when you go? And I don’t know how to say no?”

Dear Juno is actually the first time I have ever recorded myself singing vocals. I didn’t originally plan to add vocals, the plan was to have a long solo with a classic Juno-106 soundfont, hence the title, but as I was playing the solo I suddenly played this one line, which I was really digging, and decided to just loop it over and over again. And shortly thereafter the vocals emerged as the natural next step. The style is a bit more pop-rock than I normally like, but I must admit that I truly adore this track myself, despite the somewhat shaky vocals.

Inside the Flying House

“Inside the Flying House you can see the sound.”

All samples for this track were actually recorded at a much slower rate, but after playing around, I realised it was a bit too dark and down-tempo, so I sped up everything by a factor of 1.42. The result is a slightly jazzy track suitable for background music in many situations. Enjoy.

Welcome to Accidental Notes

Hello everyone, and welcome to Accidental Notes.

First of all, let me thank gnufs and starchild for suggesting that I start this blog, and ecadre for the ingenious title[1].

Now, you are probably not wondering what the heck this is about, because, frankly, in the modern world more people read blogs than newspapers[citation needed]. However, while this is indeed a blog, it is a Special Blog™, and not just because it is my blog (which is the largest contributing factor), but because the content is special. So what makes this blog special? Good question. This blog is about music. “Bleh,” I hear you say, “that’s not special”. “Au contraire!” I reply, “this blog is about my music, and my music is special.” Case closed.

Enough with the ramblings, let’s cut straight to the cheese. I make music, and I want to share it with the rest of the world. I have for a long time been fascinated by making music on a computer, but in the past, every time I tried, although the result was somewhat acceptable, I did not enjoy the process. To me, music is about improvisation, on the fly modifications. It’s about being in the groove, and using past experiences (intuition) to guide your way forward.

The methods I had previously experimented with on a computer incorporated parts of that. I tried recording samples, and then arranging them in Audacity. Or Ardour. But both of these methods lacked the kind of direct feedback that jamming with other people or alone has. You imagine how something should sound, then arrange it in some order, and if it’s not right, then you rearrange. The feedback has a delay of about 2-10 seconds, depending on what you’re doing. Not feasible. To me, that method felt like giving instructions to some worker units, who then had to execute the task for me. I didn’t like that.

This was about three-four years ago. Roughly a year later, I tried to do almost the same, except I invented the entire song in my head, then recorded entire layers and got the final result (i.e., no sampling). That didn’t work out too well. It was boring and laborious.

Shortly thereafter, I discovered terminatorX. Intrigued by the prospect of scratching on samples, I construct a small turntable (a mouse mounted on top of an old record). Together with a couple of friends, we extended the turntable to be belt driven, allowing for friction while scratching, as well as some other minor features. I found a ton of samples on ccMixter and freesound.org, but I couldn’t get terminatorX to accept mouse input on my primary computer, and thus had to use my Eee for scratching. I used the turntable during a couple of live gigs with my band, Quantum Jazz, where I scratched on some female vocals, and it was a success, but the fragile design of the turntable eventually led to its demise, and I abandoned the idea.

A year later, I decide to try programming songs in LMMS (Linux Multimedia Studio). It lets you loop parts of your song while editing. Acceptable feedback. But there’s something about LMMS that I don’t like. First of all it crashes rather often, the recording of MIDI events fails miserably from time to time, and the user interface is too messy. I’m not a fan of overlapping windows. It has nice oscillator features, though, and good support for plugging in to various instrument plugins, so I’m sure LMMS can be used to create very good music. Not my preferred environment, though.

And then about a week ago, I decided to try and build a new turntable. The new turntable is a record mounted on a canvas. Instead of having a mouse nailed to the turntable, this design uses the adhesion of painting tape, and two nails on either side of mount-point of the mouse, to let you place a mouse on top of the record and turn it, whilst the mouse stays perfectly still.

I then went on to program a drum pattern in Hydrogen, loop it in terminatorX, and while it was looping, I used fluidsynth to create a bassline and recorded in Audacity. And while the drums were still looping, I added a new turntable in terminatorX, threw in the bassline and I had a beat. I played on the keyboard using a Rhodes soundfont, found a very simple chord progression, recorded it, and threw it in terminatorX. I wanted some flute, so I took my flute and recorded a simple riff, routing the input through Jack-Rack to get the desired chorus effect. And I could continue, but I eventually got the samples for “Inside the Flying House”, and I really enjoyed the process. It wasn’t at all like live jamming, but it was fun in a different way, and it felt organic.

As I have previously stated, I am not a huge fan of arranging samples, so the way I create final tracks from samples is by recording the output from terminatorX. It takes a couple of attempts before I get the desired result, but the process feels more real, and although I may not be playing an instrument, turning knobs, pressing buttons, and starting and stopping samples gives me the impression that I am really making music instead of programming it.

  1. [1] The title was derived from a suggestion by starchild: Daily Notes.