Beatport presents a remix competition for Tiesto's next track called "Knocked You Out"
More information here
Remix parts here
Via Houseplanet.dj
Wednesday, September 30, 2009
Sunday, September 27, 2009
Remix Competition: Noob & Brondinski
Remix Competition comes from the Turbo household with their latest EP from Noob and Brodinski - Peanuts Club, winners get featured on the Turbo website with a post and an interview.
Competition closes 31st Oct, more info at HousePlanet.
Via Houseplanet.dj
Competition closes 31st Oct, more info at HousePlanet.
Via Houseplanet.dj
Labels:
brodinski,
noob,
remix competition
Access Virus Ti2
As you may already know the original Access Virus Ti is an extremely popular hardware synth that is used by many big name artists in genres from Trance to Hip-hop.
With the addition of a new and improved Ti2 earlier this year many people were keen to find out how much better it was than the original monster? Hopefully these videos will give you reason to start saving...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zX-AZeFm-qs
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZSwiJcQNKxw
If anything the new product will bring the price of the Ti down so that it can be picked up for a bargain price.
With the addition of a new and improved Ti2 earlier this year many people were keen to find out how much better it was than the original monster? Hopefully these videos will give you reason to start saving...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zX-AZeFm-qs
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZSwiJcQNKxw
If anything the new product will bring the price of the Ti down so that it can be picked up for a bargain price.
Thursday, September 24, 2009
Riva Starr Remix Competition
November 13 deadline
Get samples and more information at http://www.myspace.com/rivastarr and http://www.discobelle.net/2009/09/16/riva-starr-made-to-play-remix-competition/
Good Luck
Get samples and more information at http://www.myspace.com/rivastarr and http://www.discobelle.net/2009/09/16/riva-starr-made-to-play-remix-competition/
Good Luck
Labels:
remix competition,
riva starr
DJ Stands from Melbourne
Pimp out your DJ area with these great stands from dexdjstands.com.au, available worldwide...
http://www.dexdjstands.com.au/dex-2tS-cdj.html
http://www.dexdjstands.com.au/dex-2tS-cdj.html
Nice VSTs and Soundbanks from DanceMidiSamples
Nice VSTs with specific genre Soundbanks aswell with a decent price tag, here are links to two of the ones I'm most interested in


More at http://www.dancemidisamples.com/


More at http://www.dancemidisamples.com/
Game boy synths
I'm a big fan of that authentic Gameboy synth sound. Here are my best finds for getting the sounds for yourself.
http://www.littlesounddj.com/lsd/ - synth and sequencer for the Gameboy
http://www.lowgain-audio.com/ - bought his LSDJMC2 which works a charm, see below. Original design by www.firestarter-music.de/lsdj/
Similar to Low-gain's/Firestarters interface there are these two aswell http://www.komaku.com/e_index.html and http://beatshelter.com/Projects.html
Software emulators (via littlesounddj.com) - Gambatte, VisualBoyAdvance, and there are others.
http://www.littlesounddj.com/lsd/ - synth and sequencer for the Gameboy
http://www.lowgain-audio.com/ - bought his LSDJMC2 which works a charm, see below. Original design by www.firestarter-music.de/lsdj/
Similar to Low-gain's/Firestarters interface there are these two aswell http://www.komaku.com/e_index.html and http://beatshelter.com/Projects.html
Software emulators (via littlesounddj.com) - Gambatte, VisualBoyAdvance, and there are others.
Labels:
emulator,
gameboy,
lsdj,
synthesizer
Wednesday, September 23, 2009
Sidechaining in Cubase
Quick tutorial that shows you how to implement the ever popular technique sidechaining, to give your track that little extra punch.
Labels:
Cubase,
side chaining,
tutorial
Sander van Doorn Remix competition
Since I've only just started this Blog I'm still catching up on things that happened in recent time to make sure your informed.
Future Music mag has a remix competition for Sander Van Doorn running in conjunction with a Feature video on the DVD where Sander reveals some of his signature production techniques... including the synth wind (well thats the best I can describe it) effect he puts in many of his tracks just as the rhythm is about to drop (listen to Club Scene Investigators - Direct Dizko (Sander van Doorn Remix))
The closing date for the competition is 3rd of November. Go to http://www.futuremusic.co.uk/ for more information.
Future Music mag has a remix competition for Sander Van Doorn running in conjunction with a Feature video on the DVD where Sander reveals some of his signature production techniques... including the synth wind (well thats the best I can describe it) effect he puts in many of his tracks just as the rhythm is about to drop (listen to Club Scene Investigators - Direct Dizko (Sander van Doorn Remix))
The closing date for the competition is 3rd of November. Go to http://www.futuremusic.co.uk/ for more information.
Labels:
Future music,
remix competition,
sander van doorn
Musicradar.com: Reviews, Tuition and Interviews
Musicradar.com is the child of two of my favorite music production magazines: FutureMusic and ComputerMusic. I mentioned it briefly in a previous post but I believe it deserves a post of its own. It hosts videos, reviews and more on anything thats related to music. From where to find great cheap plugins to reviews of new and up and coming hardware and software.
I cannot recommend this site, and the two magazines, highly enough, they are a godsend for anyone who wants to stay a step ahead of the game.
Here are some of my favorite Articles
How to make a dubstep track with Rusko
How to make a Calvin Harris-style '80s lead synth sound
Ask MusicRadar: what's the best hardware synth available today?
I cannot recommend this site, and the two magazines, highly enough, they are a godsend for anyone who wants to stay a step ahead of the game.
Here are some of my favorite Articles
How to make a dubstep track with Rusko
How to make a Calvin Harris-style '80s lead synth sound
Ask MusicRadar: what's the best hardware synth available today?
Labels:
calvin harris,
computer music,
dubstep,
Future music,
musicradar,
tutorial
NI Kore 2 Tutorial
Kore 2 is something I want to learn more about, considering NI calls it a "Super Synth." I'm interested to know just what is a "Super Synth?" The tutorial I put up before is a good starter but I really need a deeper look into how it works and what you can do with it, for now its just collecting dust until I work out the individual Synths in Komplete. Here are two online video tutorials I found that seem like the could be good enough to fill in some gaps.
Native Instruments 101: Core NI KORE
Native Instruments 102: Complete NI Komplete
Really hope the put some more Instrument tutorials up, then it might be worth the $25/month
Has anyone done these tutorials? Worth it?
Native Instruments 101: Core NI KORE
Native Instruments 102: Complete NI Komplete
Really hope the put some more Instrument tutorials up, then it might be worth the $25/month
Has anyone done these tutorials? Worth it?
Labels:
Komplete,
Kore 2,
Native Instruments,
tutorial
Chip tune and 8 bit samples... with Mario Bros samples
I love the sounds that come out of the Chip tune scene. I eventually would like to make a track that uses a lot of the samples but keeps the standard house/electro feel to it. In case you don't know chip tune is a tune that uses old school gaming systems or samples to make music.
Super Mario Brothers Samples - awesome work by these guys
http://mirell.org/swf/smb_super_synth.swf
Sample CD companies have created specialist CDs for this scene... it obviously saves a lot of time
http://www.loopmasters.com/product/details/143
http://www.samplemagic.com/cd_nurave.htm - some of these samples are used in some harder chip tunes I've heard.
Has Gameboy, NES, C64, Atari and Apple II samples
http://www.sonycreativesoftware.com/8bitweapon
Super Mario Brothers Samples - awesome work by these guys
http://mirell.org/swf/smb_super_synth.swf
Sample CD companies have created specialist CDs for this scene... it obviously saves a lot of time
http://www.loopmasters.com/product/details/143
http://www.samplemagic.com/cd_nurave.htm - some of these samples are used in some harder chip tunes I've heard.
Has Gameboy, NES, C64, Atari and Apple II samples
http://www.sonycreativesoftware.com/8bitweapon
Leon Boiler and Sied Van Reil Trance Tutorial
Using Cubase and Access Virus these guys have done a few tutorials that reveal a bit of their production tips. Shaky cam but quite funny to watch the two winding eachother up.
Labels:
access,
Cubase,
leon boiler,
sied van riel,
tutorial,
virus
NI Kontakt 3 Tutorials
These official NI tutorials helped me a lot for geting a quick run down of what the app does and how you can use it beyond the normal preset instruments. There are 7 tutorials (in the Related videos section) convering sample slicing, zone envelopes, modulation and more. DanceTech is another author you want to watch.
Labels:
envelopes,
kontakt 3,
modulation,
slicing,
tutorial
NI Absynth 4 Walkthrough tutorials
Youtube user: vnknetwork have a tonne of tutorials for this Synth monster
The First Tutorial is here, also embedded above, the rest are in the playlist below the description
The First Tutorial is here, also embedded above, the rest are in the playlist below the description
Audio Books from Amazon
I love looking through Amazon trying to find the ultimate handbook to creating the dance music I want with the Instruments and DAW I have chosen. While I still haven't found this mythical book I have found ones that would help in certain areas.
Dance Music Manual
Complete Guide Remixing Professional Dance Floor
Remixers Bible Build Better Beats
Building Through Digital Sampling Remixing
I'd be interested to hear any that have helped you.
Dance Music Manual
Complete Guide Remixing Professional Dance Floor
Remixers Bible Build Better Beats
Building Through Digital Sampling Remixing
I'd be interested to hear any that have helped you.
NI Kore 2 Video
This is a promo video for Kore2 narrated by NI themselves, it also explains its features and what it does.
Link
Link
Labels:
Kore 2,
Native Instruments
Massive Tutorials at massive-blog.com
Check these guys out, doing a fantastic job collating a lot of information on Massive, with heaps of tutorials free on Youtube, HQ available for Members and store for patches.
http://www.massive-blog.com/
http://www.massive-blog.com/
Tuesday, September 22, 2009
Beatports Guide to Synthesis
I just added a blog on the blog list for Beatports' Guide to Synthesis. It deals directly with hardware and and software synthesis: what it is and how to use it.
Here are a few of the older ones but essential, hope they keep coming
Introduction to Synthesizer Programming Part 1 & Part 2
Some call it Analog: How Subtractive Synthesizers work
Understanding Envelopes Part 1 & Part 2
Here are a few of the older ones but essential, hope they keep coming
Introduction to Synthesizer Programming Part 1 & Part 2
Some call it Analog: How Subtractive Synthesizers work
Understanding Envelopes Part 1 & Part 2
Labels:
analog,
beaport,
beatportal,
envelopes,
synthesizer
SonicAcademy.com teaser
Sonic Academy Teaser
Watch out the the poster for this video as it is SonicAcademy themselves
Here is a link to one of their Sounds like courses...
How To Sound Like Tech Trance
How To Sound Like Drum and Bass
How To Sound Like Tech Trance
How To Sound Like Drum and Bass
Labels:
Drum and Bass,
Sonic Academy,
Tech Trance
Battery 3 upgrade + Tour Video
Native Instruments have an update for Battery bringing it up to 3.0.6, mainly bug fixes
The Tour video gives you a good understanding of what Battery is and how it can be used - Battery 3 Tour Video. Watch out for soundwavescience the poster of the above video as he has some greate videos, I'm still going through them
The Tour video gives you a good understanding of what Battery is and how it can be used - Battery 3 Tour Video. Watch out for soundwavescience the poster of the above video as he has some greate videos, I'm still going through them
Iphone apps for making muisc
When I heard about rumours of synths coming for the iPhone, I was really excited, as I spend 3 hours a day commuting I could get so much work done on songs or atleast the skeleton of one.
I bought the 8Bitone app - which seemed like a pretty decent port of an old school synth to the iPhone. Played with it for two days and gave up, without a mouse and the screen size I found this Synth to be more gimmiky than a tool to create a decent track and with the Communist regime governing how you get things on and off your iPhone makes most music production apps seem .
I look forward to other apps such as Steinbergs Cubase iPhone app that instead of replacing the original monster app, it works with it. This is where I see the iPhone's music production future.
What are your thoughts?
I bought the 8Bitone app - which seemed like a pretty decent port of an old school synth to the iPhone. Played with it for two days and gave up, without a mouse and the screen size I found this Synth to be more gimmiky than a tool to create a decent track and with the Communist regime governing how you get things on and off your iPhone makes most music production apps seem .
I look forward to other apps such as Steinbergs Cubase iPhone app that instead of replacing the original monster app, it works with it. This is where I see the iPhone's music production future.
What are your thoughts?
Labels:
8Bitone,
Cubase,
iPhone,
production
Monday, September 21, 2009
Courses: Online, in-person or other
There are literally hundreds, if not thousands, of schools, courses and sites dedicated to teaching music in one form or another. Whether it is focused on a specific instrument or genre there is pretty much a course to suit your every need.
Searching for a good course to learn how to make good, underground dance music I came up with the following groups:
http://www.pointblanklondon.com/ or http://www.pointblankonline.net/ - £595 online, £1595 in person
Pro: Highly regarded and from the free content I've seen probably worth the money, specific courses for producers, DJs and sound designers
Dis: Very expensive
http://www.subbassdj.com/ - £1295
Pro: Highly regarded and specific courses in Music Production and DJing
Dis: No online option, quite expensive
http://sydney.sae.edu/en-gb/course/494/Electronic_Music_Production - AU$3950
Pro: Highly regarded, industry recognised, one course for all you need to know
Dis: Expensive, no online option
http://www.machinemusik.com/tuition/productioncourses.htm - AU$150 Beginners, $450 Intermediate, $750 Advanced
Pro: Cheap and focused course to get you started
Dis: 3 separate courses could get expensive if you need to do all three, courses focus only on DAW's with no alternative for Instruments/Synths/Beats, no online option
http://askvideo.com/ - US$39.99-49.99 per DVD, 3 or 4 DVDs to a course
Pro: Learn at your own pace, cheap
Dis: No chance to have things explained if you didn't understand a topic, no set structure to push you, usually doesn't have a focus on any genre leaving you to decide what you want to use
Magazines (FutureMusic, ComputerMusic, MusicTech,...) - around £5.99 per issue
Pro: Cheap, comes with demo software, industry knowledge and expert tips/guides
Dis: It can take a while to have a specific topic explained, may not discuss your specific product or DAW
http//www.youtube.com or http://www.musicradar.com/ - Free
Pro: Free, learn what you want, usually you can find the same topic explained in a few genres so you can instantly apply the method to your track
Dis: No set structure, no guarantee of finding the information you want
Leave comments on any personal experiences you've had when trying to learn a new bit of software, genre,...
Searching for a good course to learn how to make good, underground dance music I came up with the following groups:
http://www.pointblanklondon.com/ or http://www.pointblankonline.net/ - £595 online, £1595 in person
Pro: Highly regarded and from the free content I've seen probably worth the money, specific courses for producers, DJs and sound designers
Dis: Very expensive
http://www.subbassdj.com/ - £1295
Pro: Highly regarded and specific courses in Music Production and DJing
Dis: No online option, quite expensive
http://sydney.sae.edu/en-gb/course/494/Electronic_Music_Production - AU$3950
Pro: Highly regarded, industry recognised, one course for all you need to know
Dis: Expensive, no online option
http://www.machinemusik.com/tuition/productioncourses.htm - AU$150 Beginners, $450 Intermediate, $750 Advanced
Pro: Cheap and focused course to get you started
Dis: 3 separate courses could get expensive if you need to do all three, courses focus only on DAW's with no alternative for Instruments/Synths/Beats, no online option
http://askvideo.com/ - US$39.99-49.99 per DVD, 3 or 4 DVDs to a course
Pro: Learn at your own pace, cheap
Dis: No chance to have things explained if you didn't understand a topic, no set structure to push you, usually doesn't have a focus on any genre leaving you to decide what you want to use
Magazines (FutureMusic, ComputerMusic, MusicTech,...) - around £5.99 per issue
Pro: Cheap, comes with demo software, industry knowledge and expert tips/guides
Dis: It can take a while to have a specific topic explained, may not discuss your specific product or DAW
http//www.youtube.com or http://www.musicradar.com/ - Free
Pro: Free, learn what you want, usually you can find the same topic explained in a few genres so you can instantly apply the method to your track
Dis: No set structure, no guarantee of finding the information you want
Leave comments on any personal experiences you've had when trying to learn a new bit of software, genre,...
Labels:
ask video,
computer music,
dj,
education,
Future music,
machine musik,
music tech,
musicradar,
point blank,
SAE,
Subbass,
youtube
Pioneer CDJ 2000
The recently announced CDJ is the "Dawn of a New Species" that will change the way you DJ. Hop on board the marketing train with these tutorial videos
http://www.mydjspace.com/cdj2000.html
http://www.pioneerdj.com/gear.aspx?product=CDJ-2000&cp=2
http://www.pioneerelectronics.com/PUSA/Products/ProDJ/TabletopPlayers/CD+Players/CDJ-2000
The suggested retail price is US$2150, but you probably wouldn't get too many people buying just the one so it could be a significant investment should you choose to go all in. Hopefully this will drive the price of the CDJ 1000 Mk3s down so that buying the two isn't as big a hit to your wallet.
You have to wonder whether Pioneer are worried about the popularity of Serarto and Traktor applications making the CDJ obsolete. Feel free to comment.
http://www.mydjspace.com/cdj2000.html
http://www.pioneerdj.com/gear.aspx?product=CDJ-2000&cp=2
http://www.pioneerelectronics.com/PUSA/Products/ProDJ/TabletopPlayers/CD+Players/CDJ-2000
The suggested retail price is US$2150, but you probably wouldn't get too many people buying just the one so it could be a significant investment should you choose to go all in. Hopefully this will drive the price of the CDJ 1000 Mk3s down so that buying the two isn't as big a hit to your wallet.
You have to wonder whether Pioneer are worried about the popularity of Serarto and Traktor applications making the CDJ obsolete. Feel free to comment.
Labels:
CDJ 2000,
dawn of a new species,
Pioneer
Hello World!
Hi all, welcome to my first blog.
I'm making this blog to help dance music fans, producers and DJ's create and DJ with dance music.
I want this to be a place where people can find information that would otherwise be spread over several sites and promote things that I have found useful on my way to creating great dance music.
Right now all I have is Cubase 4, Ableton Live 5, Native Instruments Komplete 5 and a very limited understanding of each. While it is more than a lot of people have when starting out I have a long way to go until I can call myself a dance music producer.
I'm making this blog to help dance music fans, producers and DJ's create and DJ with dance music.
I want this to be a place where people can find information that would otherwise be spread over several sites and promote things that I have found useful on my way to creating great dance music.
Right now all I have is Cubase 4, Ableton Live 5, Native Instruments Komplete 5 and a very limited understanding of each. While it is more than a lot of people have when starting out I have a long way to go until I can call myself a dance music producer.
Labels:
Ableton,
Cubase,
Komplete,
Native Instruments
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