ProAudio Coalition


Saturday, June 26, 2010

Sony Sound Series: Platinum Theory Hip-Hop

Chris Meyer

Don’t be put off by the “hip-hop” label; this collection is inventive and well-recorded.

This is one of the most inventive hip-hop sample libraries I’ve heard. Producer Henry Willis (aka lukecage) has crafted a set of 62 construction kits that show off the more experimental side of hip-hop, ranging from R&B to illbient. He’s taken a minimal approach to the art, providing 3-5 loops per kit that cover bass, beats, and additional melodic parts including a lot of piano.

more »


Audio • (0) Comments • • Permalink


Saturday, June 19, 2010

Big Fish Audio: Primal Drums

Chris Meyer

A film scoring toolkit masquerading as an ethnic music library.

Ah, yes: Books and their covers. Given the title and the evocative woodcut-style cover art by Nancy Nimoy, here I was expecting an African-influenced percussion collection. Instead, this library contains 50 construction kits well suited for a film composer or adventurous ethnic-hybrid producer, providing alternately lush cinemaesque landscapes and urgent chase sequences. Although heavily percussion-driven and indeed tribal in flavor, there are also several melodic parts both percussive and instrumental, plus massive “pads” (sustained chords and other musical textures) to fill out the compositions.

more »


Audio • (7) Comments • Most recent comments by: square peg web, Facebook apps, Sproketz, Chris Meyer, Square peg web, Sproketz, Sproketz, • Permalink


Sunday, June 13, 2010

Modern R&B Music Construction Kits

Chris Meyer

A set of three sound libraries to help you create your own hip-hop and R&B-oriented soundtracks.

One side effect of the maturation of desktop tools has been that our clients and employers expect us to do more - for example, an editor is often expected to also do some motion graphics and sound editing; a motion graphics artist may be expected to come up with the soundtrack as well. Fortunately, several desktop-based sound tools - such as Apple’s GarageBand and Soundtrack Pro, Adobe’s Audition and Soundbooth, Propellerhead’s Recycle and Reason, Ableton’s Live (my weapon of choice), and Sony’s ACID Pro (the pioneer of them all) - make it easier for a doodler with a good ear to create a soundtrack out of a box full of sound snippets. These snippets usually consist of musical phrases that may be repeated (looped) or strung end-to-end (here’s a short primer how).

These applications tend to ship with their own box of snippets; third parties also offer literally dozens of “music construction kit” sound libraries that contain collections of coordinated snippets which make it easier to create songs in specific styles. I rely on these myself, either using a construction kit to create a soundtrack in a style a client has requested, or mixing and matching between sets to create original compositions. For those who are new to this world, I’m going to share some reviews of construction kits I’ve encountered in hopes of helping you make informed decisions as to what might inspire your inner musical muse.

more »


Audio • (0) Comments • • Permalink


Sunday, June 06, 2010

Simple Soundproofing

Chris Meyer

A couple of attempts to reduce the slap echo in my voiceover room.

We work at home. Our house has two levels; downstairs is half-jokingly referred to as “the studio complex.” We’ve set up one of the spare bedrooms down there as an audio room.

Most bedrooms are boxes with parallel walls, which in turn often cause problems with resonances and echoes in a room. Fortunately, the spare bedrooms in this house have some non-parallel walls, which help break up and diffuse the pattern of echoes, which makes them less annoying. Adding more hard surfaces such as computer desks and monitors can increase the amount of diffusion, but sound is still bouncing around. The result is akin to the reverberation present in what one would call a “live small room.” As we use a microphone placed about a foot away from our head instead of a headset mic (to cut down on the distraction, and also pick up sounds such as the keystrokes and mouseclicks), it picks up some of this room sound as well.

Although I personally like a little natural reverberation when I listen to a voice - completely dead rooms sound unnatural to me - a few have “commented on” the liveliness of the room sound in the voiceovers to our training videos, so I decided to see if I could tame the bouncing soundwaves a bit. I tried a cheap, low-tech approach first, then threw a little more money and work at it. I thought it would be fun to share my results:

more »


Audio • (8) Comments • Most recent comments by: mia, lightningad, Chris Meyer, lightningad, Chris Meyer, Peter Gruden, Chris Meyer, John Richard, • Permalink


Page 1 of 1 pages


Advertisement



Creating the “OK Go” Effect in Motion
Mark Spencer






image

Creating the “OK Go” Effect in Motion

Mark Spencer | 06/21- 05:40 PM

A quick look at how to create the look of one of OK Go’s videos.

To be considered for listing, contact pr (at) provideocoalition (dot) com


Copyright © 2011, HD Expo, LLC a division of Diversified Business Communications. DBA Createasphere

All rights reserved. HD EXPO, High Def EXPO, Createasphere, E-Tech, Entertainment Technology Exposition, 3D Production Workshop, VariCamp, P2 Camp, ColorCamp 101, and Lighting, Filters & Gels for HD are all trademarks of HD Expo, LLC.

Terms of Use  |  Privacy Policy

Check PageRank