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Entries in Great Scott (10)

Wednesday
Apr202011

TOGETHER: Day 2 Recap. Raging, Balloons, Bass, SBTRKT's Knob Twiddling, Etc

One of the primary visions behind the TOGETHER festival is to showcase how connected music and technology are. I think I’m now starting to realize that when I was involved in this weeklong series of events last year, I didn’t get the full 360-degree experience because I only attended the events where alcohol was present (go figure!) Taking the week off work was a good decision because the daytime panels and workshops are rammed with useful information, not only to curious hobbyists, but also full-blown professionals looking for new avenues of inspiration.

Now with all the droning I just did in the last paragraph out of the way, yesterday ROCKED! It felt like it was more of an electronic music pub crawl, if you will, because there were so many overlapping things going on at once. With some proper calendar skills (thanks iPhone), little time was wasted in attempting to document and photograph as many of them as possible.

(Let’s fire up the ProTools and T-Racks, shall we?)

First off I have to say I am impressed with the staff at Bristol studios, most notably Chris and Jason. They gave a real informative demonstration on the art and science of mastering. With their permission and credit due, I would like to share some of the important nuggets they touched on during the workshop:

 

  • Your mastering skills are only as good as the environment you mix in. A properly mastering facility has to be treated, and because every space is different, specialists need to custom-design and properly treat your studio if you ever decide to open one up for yourself. (And get ready to open up your wallet.) Chris demonstrated how design limitations in various studios can cause phase cancellation, which causes the engineer to hear sound different than the way it actually sounds. 

  • The “loudness” issue was one of the biggest focal points of the workshop. People in general like hearing a song that sounds “loud”, so less experienced producers often tend to turn things up way too loud or apply too much compression, ruining the dynamics of the music. When an experienced producer mixes down their project, they know what bits to turn up, and what bits to turn DOWN, to compensate. They also compress frugally, and finally, before the mix-down version is handed off to the mastering engineer, they leave a good amount of headroom (around -6db) for them to work with, ensuring distortion doesn’t become an issue.

  • When applying compression, it helps rhythmically to time it to the tempo of your song. This is accomplished by setting the release time of your compressor (in milliseconds) to the following formula: The song’s BPM, divided by 60,000 (number of milliseconds in one second). Chris also mentioned that he often works with a 30ms attack on the compressor, which gives the signal that extra impact while retaining the dynamics at the tail start of something like a drum hit.

  • There are 3 important frequency ranges of your song to check when mastering: 300-320 hz (a lot of instruments can fill this space, causing muddiness as they are all competing against one another to be heard), 1 khz (the upper fundamental of most instruments), and 7-10 khz (this area can be EQ’d to add what Chris calls “sparkle” to the overall project)

 

Bristol actually provides several different courses in audio engineering. These include courses that teach the fundamental concepts, along with specialized courses that train in various programs, including Digital Performer, Pro Tools, and Reason. Check out the link if you want to find out more.

(These guys know what they’re talking about.)

I also attended a panel at Northeastern on bass music. This discussion, moderated by David Day, included several well-known local DJ’s, including Red Foxxx, JustIncredible, Leah V, and Deanna. Also present was Alex Incyde, who works for well-known dubstep label Hotflush Recordings

The “bass music” sound is hard to define, but is considered to be at the forefront of electronic music at the moment. It is considered a descendant of bass-heavy genres such as dubstep and garage. However there is no defined template when it comes to the rhythm, arrangement, types of samples used, and overall song structure. The panel agreed that its only real tradition is in the sense that the majority of it is non-traditional. The rules are constantly being re-written, so the sound itself is changing and evolving at a pace rarely seen in dance. It can be summarized in a quote from Red Foxxx: “Bass is good music for novelty junkies, and especially for people who get bored quickly.”

(No, they don’t take requests. No, not even G6.) 

Another topic they touched upon was how to play this, or any sort of “new” music to the average crowd of people in a club, while still catering to their tastes. Alex Incyde said the biggest challenge is to “be appealing and exciting at the same time.” JustIncredible added that when he plays, he tries finding that balance between what he wants to hear versus what the people want to hear. This can be entirely different on any given night. They also touched on the fact that one of the reasons why bass music is evolving so rapidly is due to the immediacy of the social media revolution, online collaboration, and channels like Soundcloud and Twitter where content can spread virally overnight.

Redfoxxx said that he will soon be making a decent amount of his work available on Soundcloud, so check out his page here. Incyde also mentioned a busy release schedule on Hotflush, so if you’re into dubstep be sure to stay on top of that via his Twitter and main Hotflush page.

As for the evening festivities, the Hearthrob reunion was re-donk-ulus. I was entertained just by watching people try to work their way around all the black balloons in the doorway. The lighting was completely in-your-face, as was some of the heavy tracks Baltimoroder and Dev/Null got away with playing!

SBTRKT at Great Scott was phenomenal. Basically, Jeff Mills with Ableton and a mask, end of story. He was triggering hundreds of clips in Ableton, spanning dozens of songs across multiple genres and tempos. He didn’t spend any more than a half second not touching a knob, fader, or button on his APC. And regardless of all the knob-twisting, the way he was reconstructing songs on the fly was unbelievable, often layering 4 or 5 together at once. The video I grabbed is unfortunately poor sound quality (iPhone), but I had to get at least some footage of him doing his thing.

 

Throwed was fun as always, and I had a chance to head over to one of the live band shows Together was promoting at Church, early on. I saw the last half of noise/experimental group Fjords early on, along with 3-piece rockers Endless Wave for about a half hour. UK headliners Spectrum headlined, and am curious as to how their show went. Here’s a video of one of the Endless Wave songs; again, I apologize for the shite sound quality.

And of course, PICTURES. There are plenty, dig in. 

Endless Wave & Fjords :: Church :: 4.19.11
Throwed :: Middle East :: 4.19.11
Hearthrob Reunion :: Middlesex :: 4.19.11
SBTRKT :: Great Scott :: 4.19.11
TOGETHER Daytime Activities :: 4.19.11

Tuesday
Apr192011

TOGETHER: Day 1 Recap, Day 2 Flyers, Links / Pantha Du Prince Pics

Hi folks- As many of you from Boston are well aware, the TOGETHER 2011 Festival is now in full swing! What I am going to do is each afternoon, I am going to post quick recaps of the events that took place the previous day, including any important take-aways, photos, video, or other cool things. As one of their event photog’s, you can see to it that I will be at the majority of these events, documenting them as thoroughly as possible. 

Because I have the week off work, I’ll also be attending some of the daytime panels as well. They’re all free; and be sure to check the TOGETHER Schedule for times, locations, and other important info.

Wayne Marshall will be giving one presentation at 3 in Northeastern on the art of remixing (77 St. Stephen St., Boston). In case you aren’t aware, Wayne is a highly regarded local blogger and has a very wide array of musical knowledge to share. You should check out his blog when you have a chance- wayneandwax.com.

There will be a workshop at the Bristol Recording Studios (169 Mass Ave, right near Daddy’s Junkie Music Shop) on Mastering, presented by Chris Billas. I had the opportunity to meet Chris, along with Jason Blaske, when I stopped by the Studio to pick my tickets up yesterday. These guys have decades of experience and are very personable. If you check this seminar out (it starts at 6pm and goes to 7:30), bring one of your tracks with you. One lucky person will be selected at random to have their work masterd on the spot.

(photo credit: Angela Bray)

No daytime events yesterday to recap, however the VIP party on Sunday was a blast! Creative Director David Day presented a proclamation from Mayor Thomas Menino, effectively marking April 17, 2011 as “Together Boston Day” in the city. Angela Bray took photos of the party, you can check them out here.

Here are the pics I took at some of last night’s events:

Links Soundclash :: TT The Bears :: 4.18.2011

Pantha Du Prince :: Great Scott :: 4.18.2011

Pantha Du Prince’s set was awesome- it was a live PA-type thing, with countless MIDI controllers strewn about the table on stage like dirty laundry. Having become familiar with his body of work after recording the Together mix a few weeks ago, I could tell he was layering multiple tracks of his on top of one another, pitch-shifting and re-arranging them to make them sound cohesive. On the fly. I’m still in the dark about what that pyramid shaped thing with the reflectors on the stage was (Alex told me if Pantha has 20 minutes to spare after the set, he would explain in detail). But either way, it looked cool ;)

Below are flyers to tonight’s events. I’ll be shooting at SBTRKT, Hearthrob, Throwed (possibly), as well as some of the early evening shindigs.

HEARTHROB REUNION INFO:
 
☢☢☢☢ IN A WORLD STRICKEN WITH WARFARE, DESTRUCTION, DISASTER… HUMANS VIOLENTLY VYING FOR POWER AND VORACIOUSLY CONSUMING EVERYTHING IN THEIR PATH LIKE A PACK OF SAVAGE BEASTS. WE ARE FACED WITH A BRUTAL TRUTH. NATURE HAS FAILED. GOVERNMENTS HAVE FAILED. MAN HAS FAILED. OUR ONLY HOPE NOW LIES IN TECHNOLOGY, THE ABILITY TO REINVENT AND CHANGE THE WORLD AROUND US, CREATING THE TRUE PARADISE OF THE IMAGINATION THAT WE, THE ENLIGHTENED ONES, HOLD… A WORLD OF LIMITLESS FREEDOM… A WORLD WE CALL… HEARTHROB…. HEARTHROB: VIRTUAL SALVATION- THE REUNION ☢☢☢☢

MUSIC: BALTIMORODER, DEV/NULL, MORGAN LOUIS, REDFOXX
VISUALS: BLOODSUGAR
HOSTED BY: HARUM SCARUM
LIGHTING BY: PETER BROWN
INSTALLATIONS BY: C.E.O. AND BERRETTA
☢ DRESS TO BE SAVED ☢
☢ 21+ ☢
☢ FREE ☢
VIRTUAL SALVATION

Monday
Oct182010

Matthew Dear, Andre Obin, Coralcola & Volvox @ Great Scott, 10.19.10

Image credit: http://thisishopewell.files.wordpress.com



Depending on whom you ask, Matthew Dear is a DJ, a dance-music producer, an experimental pop artist, a bandleader. He co-founded both Ghostly International and its dancefloor offshoot, Spectral Sound. He’s had remixes commissioned by The XX, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Spoon, Hot Chip, The Postal Service, and Chemical Brothers; he’s made mixes for the Fabric mix series and Get Physical’s Body Language. He maintains four aliases (Audion, False, Jabberjaw, and Matthew Dear), each with its own style and distinct visual identity. He straddles multiple musical worlds and belongs to none—and he’s just hitting his stride.

Read my review on Matthew Dear’s new LP “Black City” here



OPENING: Andre Obin, Coralcola, Volvox

Tuesday October 19, 2010
$10 adv. | $12 door
18+ | 9pm
Great Scott
1222 Commonwealth Ave, Allston, MA 02134

Get advance tickets for only $10 @ http://ticketweb.com/

Thursday
Oct012009

Kid Koala, Tonight at Great Scott! 10.1.09

Just got word on this tonight at Great Scott- Kid Koala is an awesome tablist and has amazing taste in music. If you’re around, check it out! Doors open at 9pm, $15 cover.


View Great Scott in a larger map

 

Saturday
Jun272009

Basstown is Dead: Tonight (6.27.09) at Great Scott!


Respect due to Basstown for hosting their monthly Saturday parties at the Great Scott in Allston. They will be finishing up a chapter tonight and hosting their final event there via the freshest tech house, b-more club, and electro from residents David Day, Volvox, Die Young, and Mistaker. Cover is only $5!

Saturday
Jun132009

Dparty! Dpony, Zambri, Hot Protestants, etc @ Great Scott tonight

Sorry I'm a little late on this one, just saw it posted in my myspace bulletin board this morning. Basstown's monthly saturday jam at the Great Scott returns for the June edition tonight! On the lineup include Dpony, who is celebrating a record release, Zambri, Hot Protestants, and Dental Plan.

Check out the Hot Protestants' new free EP!

<a href="http://hotprotestants.com/album/ep">Sad About an Ice Age by Hot Protestants</a>

Live Zambri performance from NYC last year:

Friday
May292009

Basstown presents I'll House You, Great Scott, 5.30.09 Bruno vs. 7L

Bruno and 7L are two legends in Boston's music scene; both will be going head to head tomorrow and the result will be dozens of house music treats spanning the last 20 years! With 7L very busy in the studio working on his hip hop based projects you don't get to see him playing house and dance music every day, but he has well beyond 20 years of experience behind the decks so he surely won't disappoint. Bruno is the man behind the one of the longest running house music events in the city, Utopia; his career spans just as long as 7L's. Basstown hosts Die Young and Volvox will bring the opening pressure. Be there!

Also, be sure to check out 7L's side project The Bladerunners. This is an ongoing project between him and Steve "The Razor" Picardi where they take a variety of different tracks and mash them up/rework them in a dancefloor context. Their edits have been popular amongst A-list US dj's such as Kenny Dope and Z-Trip, be sure to check their site for future projects.

 

Friday
Apr242009

Basstown presents Lazer Sword @ Great Scott, 4.25.09


5 great local dj's on the bill this saturday at the Great Scott in allston! Headliner is Lazer Sword, a producer combo running the gamut from dubstep to electro to glitch-hop; this is their first tour as they're just starting to get attention...come saturday so you can say you saw them in '09, the year before they blew up in '10!!

Lazer Sword



Pandai'a

Skunk

DSub

Residents Die Young & Volvox

Friday
Mar272009

Basstown presents Feminized II: Lenore vs. Volvox, Great Scott, 3.28


Two of Boston's best go head-to-head!
Lenore vs. Volvox

 

Friday
Feb202009

Back 2 The Rave @ Great Scott, 2.28.09

This party looks great! Check out Portable Sunsets at flatflat.org as well as Pete Dev/Null, who is one of the most versatile DJ's and Producers in Boston. He runs a great blog that focuses on old skool breakbeat hardcore records, I highly recommend checking it out. And the Heartthrob lineup never fails to disappoint either. Check it out!