Saturday, 20 August 2011

Web 2.0 social networking: Sound cloud.

Ahoy and welcome to another enthralling post!



So ... Im sure we have all heard of sound cloud 'the music sharing site for any musician!'

The site offers a chance for musicians of any level with a varying quality tracks, to upload their music follow and be followed by musicians. The artist can create a free profile where they can upload 120minutes of music, simple waveform widget to share via Facebook and your other favourite social networking sites.

Sound cloud offers more than just a chance for upcoming artists and producers, it also it a site for venues, managers and promoters where people can listen to the tracks that others represent and can assess the quality of the business managing the bands.



Features:   Sound Cloud features a number of ways to connect with your friends and fellow musicians via many social networking/ blog sites. It also allows the artist to upload their tracks from their phones with over 100 apps to chose from. 



Monday, 15 August 2011

Key players in MIDI.




One of, if not the biggest contributor to electronic music software/ hardware. The company began in 1995 in a small home office in Berlin-Kreuzberg. Here is where the vision of a new kind of musical instrument was born and turned into reality. Enter Stephan Schmitt, a hardware engineer by trade who developed mixing desks at the time. An active live musician and synthesiser player, Stephan Schmitt had reached the point where he felt profoundly limited by the instruments that were available to him. Hardware synthesizers seemed not only overly bulky and expensive but also very much limited in terms of sonic potential and musical expressiveness.

In his search for a solution, Stephan Schmitt realized that standard personal computers could be used as powerful musical instruments. The ever-growing computational power brought real-time software synthesis into the realm of possibility, and Stephan Schmitt envisioned a computer-based sound-generation platform that could leave existing limitations far behind. Together with programmer Volker Hinz, he developed the concept of the first modular software synthesizer, which was eventually called GENERATOR. A radically innovative approach, GENERATOR allowed for the construction of virtually any kind of sound generation and sound-processing device from a set of basic building blocks, and offered a sonic flexibility that was literally unheard of.  

They offer a massive range of products: (excuse the pun as one of their plugin synths is named massive.) Software such as traktor/ absynth/ massive and hardware such as Mashine (a midi controller.)

However you see it native instruments have made some major advancements and created some of the best quality products on the market today.

(stay tuned for reviews of these products in new posts.)

for now 3spada out!

Sunday, 14 August 2011

MOAR MIDI... :P

Midi.... well a midi cable is designed to transport digital bytes (128). with this 0 is counted a number so the volume can be expressed as 0-127.

this means that the maximum amount of data that can flow through at once is 128 bytes. Of course now most midi controllers are connected via usb 'which allows a lot more traffic' but midi still only allows 128, it has been this way from the very beginning. (hence the earlier reference about midi surviving the ages.)

Midi... The platform that survived!

                                  Midi: Musical instrument digital interface.






Midi is the standard electronic language 'spoken' between electronic instruments and the computerized devices which control them during performances. Developed in the early 1980s, MIDI technology allows a keyboardist to kick off a drum synthesizer with one key or a computer to store a sequence of composed notes as a MIDIfile, for example. The keyboard, drum synthesizer and computer all recognize the same set of binary code instructions.


Brief history:


Before midi in the early 1970's electronic musical devices were becoming increasingly common and affordable although there was no compatibility between manufacturers. 


In 1981, Dave smith(an audio engineer) proposed  digital standard for musical instruments at the Audio Engineering Society show in New York. By the time of the January, 1983 Winter NAMM Show, Smith was able to demonstrate a MIDI connection between his Prophet 600 (a later version of the groundbreaking Prophet 5 analog synthesizer) and a Roland JP-6. The MIDI Specification 1.0 was published in August 1983. 


MIDI brought an unprecedented state of compatibility which revolutionized the market by ridding musicians of the need for excessive hardware. In the early 1980s, MIDI was a major factor in bringing an end to the "wall of synthesizers" phenomenon in progressive rock band concerts, when keyboard performers were often hidden behind huge banks of analog synthesizers and electric pianos. Following the advent of MIDI, many synthesizers were released in rack-mount versions, which meant that keyboardists could control many different instruments (e.g., synthesizers) from a single keyboard.





Thursday, 11 August 2011

Web 2.0 ........ next edition! .... BELIEVE IT!

Welcome!


So not as many commented as hoped ... never mind i shall  and continue any way.

Well to beging the web 2.0 really opened up many gateways 'some good, some bad'  depending on who's side of the music industry you sympathise with. Moving on the web 2.0 really made its big leaps with sites like google and myspace, where a user could not only read information but interact with the site (not so much google, although it interacts with you as in tailors a search criteria on previous things you have searched and believes will suit you.) Social mediums such as myspace and facebook allow us to connect with a large number of people where we can talk about our selves and share our interests with anyone in the world that has an account.

These sites in relation to musicians have been extremely useful in many ways. The normal way for a musician to be heard just over a decade ago was to play regular gigs, hire managers and publicists etc. on the off chance they would be heard by a record label and get picked up and make it big. This is all a way of the past almost every band i know has an online presence of sorts to up load music, videos, information or even just an update of what is happening in their lives.

if i may contradict myself here just a wee bit, i said that the 'record label' option is a way of the past which in essence is incorrect to say but what i mean is it has taken a step back to these alternative options for an artist to establish themselves. having said this these record labels are taking advantage of the social media as well, they are browsing through these sites listening to tracks determining who the next star could be... as i believe the famed Justin Beiber was discovered via Youtube.


Two little video's to help any musicians out!

Wednesday, 10 August 2011

Internet evolution ..... GO! Web 2.0

First of all excuse the pokemon pun, :P

But seriously, How many of us know of us actually know what the term 'Web 2.0' means?.... Well it is to my understanding that this term explains the change of the internet, from when websites were once just a page filled with information for us to read 'much like a Word document,' and are now a immeasurable network of connections which allow us to interact with the internet and the pages it contains.
Before i post any more of my thoughts i would be really interested to see others views on the effects of the Web 2.0 on the music industry.

also here is a link to a cool little power point i found online about this topic: http://www.slideshare.net/djwesty/web-20-effecting-the-music-industry

Saturday, 6 August 2011

History of the guitar: Video

This a just a short video i found on the history of guitars it does not give loads of detail although it is an interesting video, i do recommend watching it. (leave a comment on what you think)

History of the guitar:


H3llo all,
Welcome i intend to be moving in some sort of direction with this blog as of now.
I will be flowing through a series of time and and historical events that have led the technology in music to where it is today.
First of all Guitars: where did they come from?
Guitar-like instruments have existed since ancient times, but the first written mention of the guitar is from the 14th century. In its earliest form it had three double courses (pairs) of strings plus a single string (the highest). The guitar probably originated in Spain, where by the 16th century it was the counterpart among the middle and lower classes of the aristocracy’s vihuela, an instrument of similar shape and ancestry with six double courses. 
In the mid-18th century the guitar attained its modern form, when the double courses were made single and a sixth string was added above the lower five. Guitar makers in the 19th century broadened the body, increased the curve of the waist, thinned the belly, and changed the internal bracing. The old wooden tuning pegs were replaced by a modern machine head.
Another popular theory is that the guitar could have been invented by the classical-era Greeks. This is due to confusion, however, mainly with the similarity of its name with the Kithara. The Kithara was in fact a type of harp or lyre, which bears little resemblance with the guitar other than in name.
The guitar as we know today appears to be an ancestor of the lute. The lute had four strings which would be plucked, not strummed as with a guitar. The body was oval in shape and had a rounded back. The downside of this construction was that the lute was not a very loud instrument, meaning it could not be played along side other instruments. Although missing many of the elements of today’s guitar, it is an important step in the guitars evolution.

Welcome!

Hello all i new to the whole blogging craze but ill do my best!

I would first like to offer a link to a band i am in that has a few recordings: ColourBlind

In this blog i will be mainly focussed on the technology side of music where i will explore the wonderful world and its many advancements over the past years!