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Videos (43) | Sift Talk (1) | Blogs (1) | Comments (70) |
Videos (43) | Sift Talk (1) | Blogs (1) | Comments (70) |
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Tape Tapping
Meh, I buy it. He has to work within the limits of the tensioner, and how to get the velocity across the head reasonable and consistent seems like a hard problem to solve. I think there's probably more going on than just hooking some reel-to-reels up to a mixer, and it would be very interesting to know how he does it. Neat, though.
ed:
Could be he's just getting clicks and pops from some of the recorders and feeding that into an electronic drum trigger module.
tapes stretch. looks fake.
CarbonCure’s Concrete Innovation
Didn't you watch the video?! Josh and Diane put down their briefcases and hold up tubes to a huge CO2 tank and the concrete mixer.
I assume they have trained other Josh and Diane's to do this work as well.
Its as simple as that!
Why more pop songs should end with a fade out
That is what I thought the fade out was for, it allowed better overlap of going from song A to song B on the radio. I also figured it might have to do with physical records, making it easier to go from song A to song B, but couldn't figure out a really reasonable reason on why they'd have to do that, so figured most of it was for radio reasons.
It does sound very odd to have a hard stop and start to a song, and without the fade out, you manually have to move the volume of the songs on the mixer... of course most sons on the radio are done via digital methods, so they can setup an automatic fade, and automatic gain if needed. That or you add a second of silence between tracks.
Fade-outs are (were) done for radio play (when not for artistic reasons), so that songs can overlap or someone can start speaking over the end. Youtube videos have a defined beginning and an end so it makes sense the music should go that way too.
The nice thing about fade-outs is they sometimes hold easter eggs, but mostly I find them annoying. For in-car listening I either make them louder or cut them short or both.
What I took away from all this is that a long version of "Life during wartime" is available sans fade-out, scratching a 30 year itch.
Also made me remember 70s singles which skipped on the last groove of the record - except I dont remember which ones those were...
Hey, man. Did you touch my drum set?
I can't blame the kid. Putting that mixer on that table? Really?
Permeable Concrete? It's like magic!
One would think, like a fine filter, dirt would build up fairly quickly and clog it.
I must say, the mixer dumping out the water looked like witchcraft...
First Bob Ross Episode (posted by his channel to YT)
Life lessons garnered:
"YOU can paint a picture."
You don't need to "go to school half your life."
You don't need to be "blessed by Michelangelo at birth."
You don't need 1500 colors. 8 will do.
"You just need a dream in your heart and some practice."
Your base needs to be firm. "If you start with a thin, loose paint, you're going to become a mud-mixer."
Large strokes live in your mind. Details live in your brush. "You just need to push them out."
Don't lose the trees for the forest. Think about the small world that lives in your painting and it will be much richer. "This is where they live [these creatures]... In these bushes"
Painting will teach you to look at Nature and see things that have been there all your life, and you've never noticed. "Look around, look at what we have. Beauty is everywhere."
"In the time you sit around worrying about it and trying to plan a painting, you could have completed a painting already. Let it happen."
"We need dark in order to show light."
DJ Vekked - DMC Online World Finals Submission 2015
Huh. Haven't seen someone swap left/right around for the crossfader and level's before.
Normally people have left channel of the mixer assigned to the left turntable and same for right. Would confuse the heck out you first time, but I guess you'd get used to it. Makes that crossfader work look even cooler.
Edit:
Well there you go, Hamster style
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hamster_style
Tel Aviv - Incredible Amateur Audio/Video Mashup
That comment is a reflection on what I hear on a daily basis.
Perhaps my wordage is off, but the stuff coming at us 24-7 is created by studios, not musicians. So much of what I hear is produced by guys sitting at mixer boards and computers.
My comment isn't aimed at every person out there making music, in fact I know there are lots of musicians out there with talent and skill..., but we never get to hear them over all the crap being dealt out by the industry which is breeding Egos as musicians. (I'd choose Beck over Beyonce any day of the week.)
Sure, I know, it may seem like I'm digging a hole and jumping in but the system is broken and the good music is being squelched. Maybe not 100% of the time, but listen to the music. The electronic age is filtering everything out of the music, no more drummer, no guitar, auto tune, synthetic voice. where is all the character? Where are all the happy accidents that real music serves us. How many of today's artistes (on the charts) can serve us music without a guy mixing it to make them sound good, double tracking, and keeping their voices in tune? I know these tricks have been used for years but never to the extent they are being used today.
I remember a quote by Niel Young, way back when he was recording. The guys at the board keep telling him he wasn't hitting the note, and his answer was "Hey, that's my style man!" So they had to leave it in, and the result was great. Pure Niel Young.
So, I guess it's not so much the musicians out there, so much as it is the recording studios, and the system of pump out the next clone hit...
It was Tony James that initiated this era, back when he created Sigue Sigue Sputnik. He had a dream, a vision of what the band looked and sounded like. He hired people that looked like what he wanted, none could play music, he taught them three chords and they they became the number one, unrecorded, unsigned band in history, and EMI finally Won (relative term) by offering them the most money. From that point all the music was produces electronically in the studio. It sounded like crap, but I loved it. It was new and sounded different. And people ate it up. The studios caught on, and realized they didn't need musicians any more, they always wanted money. It made more sense to hire nobodies, they were a dime a dozon and they could be made to sound any way they wanted them too. Just like the Boy Bands and Girl Bands (Spice girls, Pussy Cat Dolls)
Okay... so I'm rambling now..., it's been a long day...
The industry feeds us synthetic garbage because it's cheep, makes money and is easily replaced by the next song/artist.
Meanwhile the real artists are doing everything they can to get recognized and struggle to make a living giving us their soul served in a song and doing everything they can to be heard over the sounds of the industry.
That's great, but your second post is a pretty far cry from
Why British Homes Don't Have Mix-Type Faucets
I'm British - got mixer taps on my bath and my kitchen sink. What you talking about BITCH???
Slightly more sensibly - my 66 year old dad has mixer taps on both floors of his house and my wife's 74 year old mum has mixers on both levels too.
Dunno where his getting this shite but mixer taps have never been uncommon whilst I was growing up.
Why British Homes Don't Have Mix-Type Faucets
Erm... I have 2 mixer taps in my house that were installed by the builders who built the house to NHBC standards and last time I looked I was still in Britain. And we have a tank in the loft...
mintbbb (Member Profile)
Your video, It is time for concrete mixer driver to replace underwear, has made it into the Top 15 New Videos listing. Congratulations on your achievement. For your contribution you have been awarded 1 Power Point.
How many men does it take to move a house?
Amish are Mennonites, but Mennonites aren't necessarily Amish.
There really is a difference.
For example, these Mennonites probably used a typical cement mixer and power trowels for the foundation. An Amish wouldn't.
Both groups believe in living plainly, the Amish take it to a further point.
"Attraction / Separation" from Munch Remastered
Thanks Sound was my job during the live show. I haven't done much live-sound, but I know the music (since i made it) and how i wanted it to sound. So I arrived at the theatre and found this:
https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10151885771065851&set=pb.586505850.-2207520000.1383845680.&type=3
kinda scary mixer to be thrown in front of, but oh so nice sounding!!
Excellent stuff - really good sound quality too!
The Best DJ in the World...wait for it
Yep, there's clearly a plugged-in device/mixer in front of him (i.e. between him and the unplugged silver-coloured mixer). You can see the wires, and the curved side of it just next to the laptop-like device. So, no fail here.
The Best DJ in the World...wait for it
Ok-If you look closely, there's a black unit sticking-out from the right side of the back of the unconnected mixer-Looks like he's got that un-plugged mixer blocking the one he's using. I think yer right.
Why would anyone fake being a party DJ atta Mexican fiesta??
Oh and, DJ's react to the music while they tweak it....it's part of their cult-of-personality thingy tied into the whole performance aspect of making 'new' music. Dubstep DJ's for example, consider themselves artists and performers. They usually have egos large enough so that they don't have to wait for fans or critiques to suggest or ascertain this either....lotta douchebag in the DJ industry.
I'm wondering if what he's messing around with is possibly in front of the unit that has no wires going to it. There are some wires on the right hand side of it between it and the laptop like device that one of them seems to go to, the other I can't tell, either goes to a microphone of a block to the side. The angle makes it hard to tell for sure, either way it looks like he's more reacting to the music than controlling it.