You are currently browsing the archives for March, 2010.

Current Listening: La Roux – In For The Kill [Tristan Ingram Remix]

March 10, 2010 // Posted in Current Listening, music  |  No Comments

I find the transitions between musical elements to be the key to making electronic music compelling.  There is a sexy mathematical element and certain geometry to the progression of rhythm that Techno expresses in subtle ways.  Many progressive DJs choose one tempo for an entire mix.  This is a very safe, yet unadventurous way to mix.  Anyone can make a loop but the true expression happens in not only the selection of those elements but also in the transitions between them and the gradual evolutions through time.

Menno De Jong has a podcast that I’ve been following for a while.  In his Intuition Podcast #019, he opens it up with a remix of “In For The Kill” by La Roux that smacks the tempo all over the place while maintaining a smooth and danceable feel.

Starting off with an Aphex Twin sounding ambient pad, deep bass tones and slowed down vocals, the track merges into the realm of drum and bass with filtered drums jumping in at 160bpm and the vocals at around 80.  Then, during the crescendo, the drums switch to half-time and then get faster and faster and faster until a slower kick comes in at around 130 bpm.  A few measures after this, the vocals jump back in at 130 as well.  This gives the feeling of the drums slowing down and the vocals getting faster while staying in sync.  For a mathematically minded DJ like myself, it’s quite a treat for the mind and ears.

Current Listening: The Big Ghana Band, Unbelievably excellent!

March 6, 2010 // Posted in Current Listening, music  |  1 Comment

Today I’m starting a new series called Current Listening. It is a collection of music that I’m currently enjoying, discovering or rediscovering.  I hope you enjoy it!

– Adam Smith-Kipnis

Mastermix Studios in Ghana

Mastermix Studios in Ghana

Remember EMF?  A coworker recently introduced me to this hot hot jam that was recently recorded by The Big Ghana Band at a small recording studio in Africa.

You can download the album for free from the music division of chocolate manufactuer Cadbury.  Read more about the band and the recording adventure here.

Mini Theremin and Analog Synth Kits

March 6, 2010 // Posted in Audio Hardware  |  2 Comments

As an Interactive Audio Designer, I explore world of sound in many different ways.  On Thursday afternoon I got a text message from my girlfriend saying that a package had arrived for me from Japan.  I had recently purchased two hobby kits.  A Gakken Mini Theremin and Gakken SX-150 Analog Synthesizer.  That night, before I went to bed I finished building both kits.

theremin_sx150

Mini Theremin and SX-150

A Theremin is a truly amazing musical instrument that is played without touching it.  It’s most commonly associated with old Sci-Fi movie sound effects and the “oooweeeeoooo” sound in the Beach Boys’ hit song, “Good Vibrations.”  When I was working on the Destroy All Humans video game franchise, we incorporated the sound of the theremin into the movement of the UFO.

According to Wikipedia,

The theremin was originally the product of Russian government-sponsored research into proximity sensors. The instrument was invented by a young Russian physicist named Lev Sergeivich Termen (known in the West as Léon Theremin) in October 1920[2] after the outbreak of the Russian civil war. After positive reviews at Moscow electronics conferences, Theremin demonstrated the device to Bolshevik leader Vladimir Lenin. Lenin was so impressed with the device that he began taking lessons in playing it,[3] commissioned six hundred of the instruments for distribution throughout the Soviet Union, and sent Theremin on a trip around the world to demonstrate the latest Soviet technology and the invention of electronic music. After a lengthy tour of Europe, during which time he demonstrated his invention to packed houses, Theremin found his way to the United States, where he patented his invention in 1928 (US1661058). Subsequently, Theremin granted commercial production rights to RCA.

Analog Synthesizers are also very cool.  While the theremin is a type of analog synthesizer, the SX-150 offers greater control over the effecting and processing of it’s noise source.  It includes a low-pass filter, resonance, attack, decay and both square and sawtooth noise generation.  An 1/8 inch external input and output are also built in although I had a bit of trouble with getting the input to function correctly as did a few others who built the same kit.

Both kits were very simple to build.  No soldering was required.  The directions were all in Japanese, but there were detailed illustrations that made it so that anyone familiar with following instructions from a Lego set could construct one of these.  Assembly required a very small phillips head screwdriver and 4 AA batteries each.

Both kits may be purchased from the Maker Shed.

Mini Theremin – $29.99 + S/H

SX-150 Analog Synthesizer Kit – $54.99