Archive for the 'Internet/Media' category

Top 10/Bottom 3: September 2011

Top 10

  1. Grendel Drone Commander
  2. Louie
  3. Leyland Kirby’s Eager to tear apart the Stars
  4. Into the Labyrinth
  5. The return of It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia
  6. Presonus Firestudio Pro
  7. Carne asada
  8. The Clock of the Long Now
  9. Raxxess rack for my music equipment
  10. A long weekend of sitting on my ass watching TV

Bottom 3

  1. The horrible, horrible, HORRIBLE Doctor Who specials running on BBC America featuring US celebrities narrating and commenting on Doctor Who (a la I Love the 80s, etc…).  It’s blatantly obvious that these idiots couldn’t name a doctor other than Matt Smith.  I love Doctor Who, but those specials make me want to hate it.  Way to go, BBC America–you’re ruining the only hit you have.
  2. The new Amy-narrated opening to this season of Doctor Who that foregrounds the show as about THIS doctor and these companions in the exact way those horrible specials do.  I wonder if they’re showing that opening in the UK.  Please FSM, tell me no!
  3. Republicans (of course)

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Top 10/Bottom 1: August 2011

Top 10

  1.  The Great White Silence (unbelievable film of Scott’s Antarctic expedition, newly restored with a soundtrack by Simon Fisher Turner)
  2. OTO Biscuit (yummy!)
  3. David Bowie (for being awesome)
  4. Advisory Circle’s As the Crow Flies
  5. A Dance with Dragons (great continuation of epic fantasy series)
  6. Garth Marenghi’s Darkplace
  7. Boomkat (still best place to get great music)
  8. The Guild (another season!)
  9. The Shadow Line
  10. Jon Stewart and Stewart Colbert (still best thing about the USA)

Bottom 1

Only one bottom this month–the debt limit debate, summarized perfectly in Matt Stone and Trey Parker’s Team America:

To use the poetry of this brief scene, the tea party (and the other Republicans) are assholes.  Obama is acting too much like a pussy.  He needs to be more of a dick so those assholes don’t turn the whole country into shit.  Oh, and if he needs lessons, then he should ask his Sec. of State and her husband, don’t you think?  How’s that for a 50 word summary of the whole crisis?

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New Song: “Crunchy Mouse”

Jul 12 2011 Published by under Hauntology, Internet/Media, Music, Technology

Here’s a new song of mine that I created using my DRM1, Meeblip, and a few other things (like my voice).  No deep intellectualizing here–just a fun song.  Enjoy!

Crunchy Mouse by mheumann

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Ten Million Down to Two

May 27 2011 Published by under Internet/Media, Music, Personal

drm1mk3_front_540

Creating music on computers is an exercise in parsing.  There are limitless ways to combine sounds and instruments, mixing and matching and guessing and fussing and tweaking.  Main software programs like ProTools, Live, and Logic all come with their own instruments and sounds and effects.  Companies like Native Instruments and Waves and Camel Audio sell more instruments and sounds and effects.  There are analog and digital external devices to add even more flexibility.  Plus, recording new sounds has never been easier–a fantastic digital recorder is only a few hundred dollars, thus putting every sound within the grasp of even the most pedestrian musical adventurer.

All of this is, of course, duh.  And equally duh is the fact that those choices end up being more of a curse than a blessing, since unlimited choice means unlimited uncertainty that YOUR choice is the right one.  I can’t tell you the number of times I’ve spent hour upon hour fiddling with the settings on an instrument, continually second-guessing my choices, convinced that THIS or THAT tweak will result in the perfect sound, only to rethink that change in favor of yet another change, and on and on until, again, duh.

And so I know that the #1 job for an electronic musician is to forcibly reduce those choices.  Don’t use every instrument or sound or effect.  Focus on a few.  That’ll not only save time but will save sweat and blood, as well.

And so I did that: I limited myself to certain tools and tried not to go outside those tools.  The trouble was, I started to create a song, and suddenly there was a sound I wanted that my limited tools could not provide.  So I went back and tweaked, tweaked, tweaked, or I broke my rules and used new instruments or effects and tweaked, tweaked, tweaked.

In other words, I was addicted to the post-scarcity musical universe.

However, I found a solution to my addiction, and it came in an interesting way.  I created an album, Riverrun.  It’s available now.  I really enjoy the songs on that album, and I hope you do too.  But one thing struck me recently while listening to those tracks for the 47th time: there was too much variety.  The drums sounds were different on every track.  The bass and lead and pads all changed from one song to another.  The is a consistent mood and feeling to the album, but within the songs, there was too much variety for my taste.  I didn’t think the album really fit together as well as it could have, and I think this was caused by my unlimited choices.  Since each song could use different sounding drums or whatnot, each song did use different sounding drums or whatnot.

I compared Riverrun to recent albums by some of my favorite artists–Jon Brooks’ Music for Dieter Rams, Pye Corner Audio’s Black Mills Tapes, The Caretaker’s An Empty Bliss Beyond This World, Leyland Kirby’s Sadly, the Future… These are all different in a number of ways, but the thing they have in common is each works from a singular sonic map.  The songs on each album feel connected to one another, and that sense of connectivity is due largely to the fact that the songs are using only a handful of instruments, and those instruments can be heard and felt all the way through.

And, yes, you’re thinking, duh.  What did you expect?  When Bruce Springsteen records an album, he uses the same instruments he always does–drum, bass, guitar, keyboard, some sax, a few other things thrown in.  Each album uses those elements, yet each of his albums is unique.  Most artists do this–heck, almost all.  But it’s easy to forget that fact when surrounded by choice after choice after choice in a computer-based environment.

So the lesson I learned was simple: treat electronic music the way that all other music is treated.  Use a few instruments, and use them well.

Another side-duh I discovered recently came courtesy of a Dubspot video I was watching about some electronic artist (I don’t even remember his name now).  But the video spoke about this guy’s virtuosity with a particular Roland synth.  The guy is a self-taught musician, and all the music he creates comes from this synth.  He’s learned how to use that instrument so well that he doesn’t need anything else.  The video also mentioned how the electronic artist Squarepusher only used this one type of sampler and his bass guitar to create all his weird, wild stuff.  Then I remembered that Moon Wiring Club only uses samples and some Playstation music game to create his stuff, Monolake uses only Ableton Live’s Operator synth to create a lot of his music, Pan Sonic use only analog synths they create themselves (along with a sampler), Augustus Pablo used a melodica to create most of his music, and I could go on and on.  Artist after great artist pick an instrument, learn it, and use it.

Abundance was getting in the way of mastery.  I had too many choices.  I tried to learn too many different things instead of focusing on really learning a few.

So my plan was set: find some instruments, master them, and then use them.

The first step was finding the right instruments.  And here I have decided to do a full about-face with computers and use actual hardware with real knobs and everything.  I’ve found that using hardware instead of software not only limits the choices down for sound selection, but it also allows for better and more interesting improvisation.  I can use automation in Ableton Live to create a semblance of improvisation, but every time I do improvise something using a softsynth, I end up editing it to death before I create a mix, and that effectively kills the spontaneity of it all.

So, what instruments?  Well, first I wanted a drum machine to help me create popping noise like Pan Sonic.  I wanted a real drum machine, an analog one.  I found it in the Vermona DRM1 mkIII.  It’s an awesome beast, and you can read all about it if you want to know more.  The second had to be a synth, and here I had my choice.  I ultimately went with a Meeblip, a monophonic device that creates crackly, crunchy sounds that can go anywhere from harsh noise to soft bass lines.  I picked it for two reasons: it was cheap and it was simple to use.  It was only an added bonus that it produces awesome sounds.

Meeblip

So those are my instruments.  Now, bear in mind that I am still learning these instruments; I’m nowhere near mastery.  And part of that process is discovering what I can and cannot do with these instruments.  I have been a little concerned that the Meeblip won’t be able to generate as many of the softer, richer tones that I’d prefer to include in my music, so I have considered adding a third instrument to my collection in the form of a polyphonic hardware synth (perhaps the OP-1 by Teenage Engineering).  But I’m holding back for now because I really don’t know what the limits are for the Meeblip.  I know I can’t create chord progressions too well, but it can create a lot of complex sounds.  How many sounds?  Do they work for the music I want to create? I’m not sure yet.  That’s what the learning stage is all about.  The same goes for the DRM1.  It only has 10 sounds total, but there are so many knobs that create so many different variations that 10 sounds might as well be 10,000,000, and while I’ve tweaked the knobs on that instrument over and over, I still find myself amazed by the variety of sounds I can produce.

I’ve started creating some music with these instruments, and I’ll be showing it off soon enough.  I like where I’m headed, at least, though it has been a bit difficult to stick to my rules.  I’ve actually sampled sounds from the Meeblip, put those sounds into Ableton’s Simpler or Camel Audio’s Alchemy and modified the sounds to into softer, more sustained tones.  And I like the results of those songs.  However, when I listen to those songs against others that used only the DRM1 and the Meeblip, I find that they don’t quite mesh the way I’d prefer, the way Pye Corner Audio’s music all meshes together so nicely.  So I won’t be using those other programs any more, and I think my music will be better for it.

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Great Job, May!

May 25 2011 Published by under Hauntology, Humor, Internet/Media, Music

May 2011 has brought a number of stellar releases (and promises of more releases) to my little world:

  • An awesome new Joker single, “The Vision,” coupled with the news that his first album is on its way (but how soon?).
  • Jon Brooks’s Music for Dieter Rams, which is a wonderful collection of songs crafted from samples of Brooks’s alarm clock.  I didn’t expect an album created using a gimmick like that to be so rich and beautiful, but it’s both.
  • Leyland Kirby has revamped his website, released Vol. 1 of his 12″ series Intrigue & Stuff (Vols. 2-4 coming later this year), released a brand new Caretaker album (An empty bliss beyond this World) and another Caretaker release to come later this year), and announced a new Leyland Kirby full-length release, as well.  He has also developed a “digital subscription plan” for those who want all of his releases this year.
  • The Book of Mormon original cast recording was released, so I can find out what everyone has been talking about.

Good month, indeed–at least on the music front.

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Top 10/Bottom 3: May 2011

Jedward

A little late this month.  Oh well.  On we go…

Top 10

  1. Parks & Recreation–Amazingly, the coolest show on TV go 100 times cooler this month when Aubrey Plaza’s character April came out as a huge Neutral Milk Hotel (and Jeff Magnum) fan in the season finale.  Nice one, show!
  2. Pye Corner Audio, Black Mill Tapes Vo. 2
  3. Vermona DRM1 mkIII–my new best friend
  4. Barak Obama (see?  First three are pretty awesome to put Barak at #4 after taking out Bin Laden)
  5. Moon Wiring Club, Somewhere a Fox is Getting Married
  6. Mark McGuire, A Young Person’s Guide to Mark McGuire
  7. George R.R. Martin’s Songs of Ice and Fire series–am on book 3
  8. Doctor Who
  9. Meeblip
  10. Stewart Brand’s The Clock of the Long Now

Bottom 3

  1. Fox News
  2. Republicans
  3. Eurovision voters (seriously, Azerbaijan?)

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And…It’s Here!

Apr 10 2011 Published by under Internet/Media, Music, Personal

Cover of Michael Heumann's Riverrun

Yes, that is correct: Riverrun is available now at Bandcamp and will be available soon at iTunes, Amazon, Emusic, and other online music stores.  If you go to Bandcamp, you can listen to every song for free and buy whatever you’d like–and two tracks are available for free (including the title track).  A bonus song, “Spell Dignity,” is also available there.

Additionally, my new website, MichaelHeumann.com, is now up and running.  You’ll see a link at the top of this page.  It takes the place of the Haunted Ink Records website and contains all sorts of information about my music.

Finally, while you’re visiting Bandcamp to buy my new album, make sure to stop by Pye Corner Audio’s Bandcamp page to purchase their wonderful new album Black Mill Tapes Vol. 2 (and, by “new,” I mean hours old).  Vol. 1 was one of the best releases of 2010, and Vol. 2 is more of the same wonderful analog wonderfulness.  It’s £4.99, which is about $8 USD.  Riverrun is $5.  That means you can get two albums for a fraction of the cost of a season of Glee on DVD, and you can guarantee that all proceeds will go to the artists themselves (unlike, say, Glee).  So go Bandcamp, and thank you for reading my blog and listening to my music!

Michael Heumann (aka The Inkbottle)

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Top 10/Bottom 3: April 2011

Meeblip

Top 10

  1. Angels baseball is back!
  2. Burial’s Street Halo EP
  3. Rob Young’s Electric Eden
  4. Meeblip
  5. Firefox 4
  6. iPhone 4 (finally got my upgrade)
  7. Vashti Bunyan’s Just Another Diamond Day (how did I miss this one? Thanks, Rob Young!)
  8. Ancient Methods’ First Method
  9. Boomkat
  10. Mutek 2012 (because I might be able to go to that one!)

Bottom 3

  1. Republicans
  2. Republicans
  3. Republicans

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Random Thoughts

Mar 19 2011 Published by under Film/TV, Internet/Media, Music, Personal, Random, Sports, Technology

 

  • Finally got around to seeing The Social Network.  It’s an excellent film–well acted and directed and all that.  But what struck me most was how similar it was to The King’s Speech.  No, really.  Think about it: both are historical dramas featuring introverted main protagonists who struggle with communication in the technology age.  Yes, the historical eras of the two films are quite different (1930s vs. 2000s), and the communication mediums that focus on are different (radio vs. Internet).  Yes, King George is a nice guy who only becomes a jerk when his stutter gets the better of him, and Zukerberg is a jerk pretty much all the time. However, at their heart, both films are about technology and communication.  King George’s struggle is with technology–being able to deliver a speech on the radio without devolving into a stuttering wreck; Zuckerberg’s struggle is with actual human beings, and he overcomes this struggle through technology (creating a social tool that lets anyone communicate with anyone else).  These are different types of stories with different outcomes, but they are wrestling with the same basic themes.  As I see it, the real difference between the films is that, whereas King George actually learns to control his affliction and emerges triumphant in the end, Zuckerberg really doesn’t change at all from the beginning of the film to the end (that friend request to his ex-girlfriend doesn’t really count, I think–not enough of a change to warrant the audience’s admiration or respect).  That’s a big reason why The King’s Speech won the Oscar–happy ending vs jerk ending.
  • I’m using my iPad now more than I ever have.  It’s starting to fit better into my daily activities.  For the first 9 months that I owned it, I used it mostly when traveling and when in meetings at work.  Now, it’s the computer I keep with me when I’m watching TV or hanging out around town.  I watch Netflix on the iPad all the time.  The Google Readers on the iPad are excellent (I use River of News).  Twitter is easier to follow on the iPad.  I can read The Wire magazine on the iPad weeks before my print copy arrives.  And games, of course, are awesome on the iPad (I’ve been playing Plants vs Zombies lately, though I also like 10 Pin Shuffle).   The iPad is improving as a sports fan’s device of choice.  I love the MLB at Bat app, and that’s been on the device since it came out.  I’m going to cancel my DirecTV MLB subscription because I can watch all games on the iPad now.  But now there are other live sports apps for the NHL, the NFL, and MLS (along with the March Madness app).  Most of these require you to pay a little cash to watch the games, and I don’t pay for NFL or NHL, but I did get the MLS package ($40 for the whole season).  So, as a sports fan, the iPad is awesome.
  • The iPad’s not perfect, though.  I wish ESPN would open up ESPN3 to the iPad.  Also, Amazon should expand their Video on Demand to include the iPad as well.  And there are some crappy news apps like the BBC’s (though CNN’s is excellent).  And there are other problems, like the lack of cloud storage and document transfer integrated into the iPad (Dropbox is excellent, but you need to go through a few hoops to transfer files created on the iPad into Dropbox).  And there are other problems that others have discussed better than I.  Still, as a first-generation template for the future of computing (nope, I don’t have the iPad2 yet–and won’t get it for a while), the iPad is quite impressive, and it’ll only get more functional and flexible as the years go on.
  • UCLA lost their second-round March Madness game today against Florida.  UCLA was the #7 seed, and Florida was the #2 seed, so I can’t really be all that disappointed.  Still, they had plenty of chances to win, and their immaturity at the foul line and their inability to hit shots further than 2-feet from the basket pretty much doomed them.
  • SDSU barely won their 2nd game, but they won.  The majority of people where I work went to SDSU, so they’re all excited about their run.  I didn’t go to that school, so I don’t have any particular vested interest, but I always root for the west coast teams in tournaments, so I am happy they are moving on (and will play their next game in Anaheim, which should give them a nice home-state advantage).
  • I’m starting to understand Harry Partch, but I’m not completely there yet.  More on that later.
  • Recent music purchases: Sublevel’s Total Erosion, Trevor Duncan’s Final Frontiers, Indignant Senility’s Plays Wagner, and The Soulless Party’s Exploring Radio Space.  I’m in a hauntological/hypnagogical spiral.
  • Nearly done with my latest album.  I’ll be mastering it soon and distributing it via every online store I can find.  The working title is Riverrun, though that will most likely change.

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Top 10/Bottom 3: March 2011

Mar 02 2011 Published by under Film/TV, Internet/Media, Music

Let England Shake

Top 10

  1. PJ Harvey, Let England Shake
  2. Tim Hecker, Ravedeath, 1972
  3. Smm: Context
  4. Quatermass and the Pit
  5. Spring Training
  6. Behringer Tube Ultragain Mic200
  7. HostGator (for saving me from GoDaddy hell)
  8. Boomkat
  9. Folklore, Myths, and Legends of Britain
  10. Wisconsin protesters

Bottom 3

  1. Scott Walker (what a douche)
  2. All other Republicans
  3. Corporate interests

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