Monday 28 December 2015

Getting Tooled Up, Part Two

My Christmas wish-list was an absurd collection of musical instruments and equipment, ranging from hi-tech gadgets to children's toys. Here's what my family kindly provided me with:



Clarinet
I love the clarinet for various reasons. It has a warm, expressive tone which is far more interesting and engaging than more attention-grabbing instruments such as the sax. It's also a beautiful artefact, with its mix of wood tubing and intricate metal keys, levers and stops. Mine is a “beginner's” model, which basically means it's (relatively) cheap and difficult to play. The lower notes in particular are nearly impossible straight out of the box. I suspect, however, that a few hundred hours of play will (a) improve the accuracy of my fingering and (b) break in the instrument itself. In any case, fighting against the medium is an integral part of my project: finding ways to get interesting music out of unpromising sources.

Anyway, here's Monty Sunshine playing at a level I'll never, ever, ever be able to match.



Stylophone
The first mass-market synth with a cheap and nasty tone. Basically a children's toy, though I'm not sure what sort of child would want to play with it these days. So it's a retro-toy, reeking of nostalgia for an outmoded future. I wonder what it sounds like through a few effects?

Stylophone Beat Box
The stylophone marches bravely into the 1980s with this charmingly basic drum and bass machine. You can build up complex loops with it, but there's no quantizing or even a metronome, so it's fiendishly difficult to get everything in time. Most of what you end up with sounds horrible, but occasionally it's interesting even if it's not what you intended. And therein lies its appeal: it's like the machine has a mind of its own.

German Market Percussion Section
Three simple percussion instruments bought at the Christmas German market in Milton Keynes. The mini-tambourine is usefully portable. The thing with plastic balls on it makes a sound like a pair of maracas, only softer. The third instrument has hollowed-out nut shells tied to it. I've no idea what it's called or exactly how you're meant to play it, but it makes an unusual clacking sound.

Melodica

A pleasingly simple cross between a harmonica and an accordion, I've already found it useful for working out chord progressions and simple melodies. Again, it tends to be known as a children's instrument, though it was widely used in 70's dub reggae and Steve Reich used it as the basis for his 1966 tape loop experiment, “Melodica”.


Saturday 12 December 2015

A Message from the Bourgeoisie

Like I say, time let Exercise 2 settle for a bit. I'm quite chuffed with it, all things considered, but it's a bit slick and really the type of thing I'm supposed to be avoiding. At some stage I'm going to have to fuck it up. Kill your babies. But I'm too fond of it right now, so time to move on.

To that end, we have A Message from the Bourgeoisie. You might call it the anti-Exercise 2. Everything except the flute, kettle drum and guitar synth was recorded about a year ago when I downloaded Audacity (although I've extended and reordered the original a bit). Thing is, I couldn't get on with Audacity, even after trying to master it for several minutes. I recorded 30 seconds of clunky, laughably out of time music, added a few annoying whistle sounds and a single drum sample and gave up the whole thing as a bad job. But I dug it up yesterday just to see if there was anything salvageable and was delighted by what I heard. I think the fact that I was so obviously fighting a losing battle against the means of production added greatly to its charm for me (there's a Marxist joke in there somewhere). Added the above-mentioned bits and bobs (which all came courtesy of the fantastic collection of free virtual instruments found here), and it is what it is.


Yet again, it's not a finished article. There are at least two more parts to come – one a cheesy elctro-pop song and the other a piece of ecstatic dance music. You have to understand that my approach at this stage is simply to get down as much music as I can, and then to sift, rearrange, re-edit and remix the hell out of it. And then to select whatever strikes my fancy. So at the moment everything's grist to the mill.

Friday 11 December 2015

Exercise 2 - update

I've more or less finished what I think is the backbone of the track. I've shortened the opening section, tinkered with the drum part and filled in the long, descending outro. I like how it just sort of melts away. You can access it here (or at least I hope you can. Let me know if it doesn't work). What it needs now is a focus: a vocal, or voices, or something of like that. Something to give it a context outside of mere computer-generated sounds. But for the moment I'm going to let it rest.




From a technical point of view (ie, getting to grips with Reaper), there's been some satisfying progress. I've worked out how to do track automation (you can automate FX, which is tremendously useful), create track folders, render groups of tracks, and all that kind of thing. I'd say I was quite close to where I was five years ago. I'm still phased by the freedom that non-destructive editing gives you. All those years working with tape-based portastudios has left it's mark; rendering tracks, producing a master – these things are not to be done lightly. But of course on a modern DAW that's absolute nonsense. Make all the changes you want – you can always change them back again. That's great but, at the same time, it kind of robs your decisions of significance. Any alteration you make is always “just for now”. So in a way there's no such thing as “finishing” a track; it's only ever a work in progress.

Wednesday 9 December 2015

Don't Fear the Reaper

Since Saturday I've been getting to grips with my new Reaper workstation. I wondered at first whether it was all that good, since it didn't seem to have many of the features I want. But of course it does have them – and many others besides – I just didn't know where to look. I've no doubt now that, for the money, it's an astonishingly powerful program. So most of my time has been taken up with getting back to somewhere near where I was when I stopped recording six years ago. It's like I've bought a strange new car and I'm having to learn where all the pedals and controls have been hidden.

Anyway, I'm slowly getting up to speed, and I've started work on a couple of tracks. The first (excitingly called “Exercise 1”, with a cheeky nod to the Joy Division song of the same name) is a short piece of nonsense thrown together to practice a few basic techniques. It sounds like 1988 is breaking out all over because the only instruments I had at the time were free VST imitations of old analogue synths and drum machines. Well, that's my excuse and I'm sticking to it. There's no live performance on it (or the other track); since I don't have an audio interface yet I'm only working with MIDI and sampled sounds. Still, you can do a surprising amount with those. 

For what it's worth, you can hear Exercise 1 here.



The second track (excitingly called “Exercise 2”) is more substantial. It's based on two different chord progressions bolted together. The first seeks to form a new chord by altering one semi-tone of the existing triad. So it starts in G major then drops the G to Gb to form B minor, raises the D to Eb to form B major, and so on through five transitions until it arrives back at G major. It repeats four times but then moves into a different cycle. This time, starting with G minor (the final chord of the previous sequence), it drops the root note by a single tone to form a major chord (so from G minor the G drops to F forming Bb major) and then drops the root note by a semi-tone to form another minor chord (Bb drops to A to form D minor). In this way you can transpose through all 24 major and minor chords without repetition before you arrive back at your starting point. It still needs a lot of work, but I like the way it's shaping up, and you can hear it here. Oh, and for no good reason at all it's in 5/4.


Enjoy!

Sunday 6 December 2015

Getting tooled-up

What do I have?

A laptop (HP Pavilion g6 Notebook). A phone (Samsung mini something or other). A wifi connection. A couple of blues harps (one in C, one in D). A tambourine. A pair of maracas. Various leads and jack-plug adapters.

And, as of yesterday, I have a DAW: Reaper. They give you a 60 day free trial, which should be plenty of time to work out whether it's worth the candle, and even after that it's only about £40. Obviously, it's not going to be top quality, but that fits my approach down to the ground. Part of what I'm trying to achieve here is a victory over the fetishization of sound. The less potent your ideas, the more you fixate on sound quality as a kind of ersatz substitute. You end up like one of those dreary wine buffs who bollocks on for hours about highlights and notes. The quality of the actual music gets pushed aside by a neurotic obsession with the depth and clarity. That's a marked feature of modern music – especially electronic music, where it's almost taken for granted that the songs themselves will be formulaic and banal. It's all about that bass. At the same time, I must be on my guard against inverted snobbery; just because a song is ramshackle that doesn't make it meaningful or profound. Indie music is ample proof of that. The sound quality should be sufficient to do justice to the idea, but without taking centre-stage. So I will be an avant garde Aristotle, ever striving for the golden mean.

Anyway, Reaper comes with a rather basic soft-synth, to which I've already added an organ and a piano (both free downloads). More will follow once I've got a better grasp of how to integrate them with the workstation. As for Reaper itself, I've fiddled about with it for a few hours, watched a few tutorials on YouTube and managed to get about twenty seconds of midi music out of it. It's frustrating to be back near the bottom of the hill. My previous stint of home recording involved Cakewalk, and by the end I could do some fairly sophisticated things with it. I'm not sure yet whether Reaper is better or worse than Cakewalk from a technical point of view, but it certainly seems less intuitive to use. Perhaps that's just a matter of getting used to it. Really powerful software programs often have a steep learning curve but then again so do quite a few shit ones.

What I will need to get – recording

Obviously an audio interface and a condenser mic – and so, obviously, the audio interface will have to be able to accommodate a condenser mic. The interface will be new territory for me as previously I've used a portastudio for live recording and final mixing. I only used Cakewalk on my laptop for midi and drum tracks which were then transferred to the portastudio (via a simple line out). Man, I loved the “make do” feel of that. It was like I was in Abbey Road in 1966.

I'll also probably need an external hard drive and some extra memory, though neither of those are particularly pressing at the moment. But what I'll certainly need is a decent field recorder. I'm thinking of a Tascam Dr-22wl, but the Zoom equivalent would probably do just as well. The ability to record reasonable quality material outside of my flat is absolutely vital to my project. You see, a huge drawback to home recording is that if you don't watch out it becomes isolating. In that respect it's part of a wider social trend: technology isolates. But you can also use it as a means to defeat its own end, and the modern field recorder is a good example of that. It allows you to get out and record things with other people at the drop of a hat. Those recordings can then be weaved into the larger tapestry of your design, and you can make them available to the others involved so that they too can use it if they wish, but whatever is done with it after the fact, it will retain a moment of human cooperation. That is, or ought to be, at least an aspect of all recorded music.

What I will need to get – performance

Obviously I'm going to need some musical instruments, but I'm fighting shy of getting a guitar. I've played guitar for nearly forty years now, and there's just too much baggage comes with it. As soon as I pick one up my mind starts to run on rails: it's this chord sequence, that riff, that scale, this trick, and so on. I'll get one eventually, I suppose, but I'd quite like to avoid composing on the guitar as far as possible. It's strangely liberating to write a song on an instrument you can't really play. You make connections you wouldn't normally make and hear the world differently. So my wish list (it's literally an Amazon Christmas wish list) contains almost everything except a guitar: violin, clarinet (how I regret getting rid of my old one!), glockenspiel, keyboard, cheap analogue synths, mandolin, Tibetan singing bowl, a recorder, bongos, ukulele – basically, anything that's not a guitar (although I don't want a saxophone either, as that's the sound of Satan farting). I'd get a trombone, but I reckon even my mild-mannered neighbours would be after my blood.


I suppose I'll also need a midi controller keyboard, but my heart sinks slightly at the prospect. For one thing, I enjoy composing straight onto the midi piano roll, like Stravinsky (amongst others) used to with the pianola.


Why is digital music so goddam conservative?

Here's something that puzzles me. Thanks to technology, for a few hundred quid anyone who feels like it can buy recording equipment that would have astounded the top musicians and producers forty years ago. Unlimited tracks and sound-manipulation are there for the asking. You are not restricted by your ability to master an instrument or the arduous business of getting several musicians to play in unison. You're not even restricted by how many fingers you have. Any sound you can think of, you can produce. Any combination of sounds you can think of, you can produce. Any sound you can record can then be manipulated in a near infinity of ways. All you need is time and imagination. So how come the music created with this unprecedented technological freedom is so arse-achingly predictable?

I'm not really talking about mainstream pop here. That trots along more or less as it has done since the late fifties: producing reasonably catchy songs that have an emotional hook and are good for young people to dance to. There are more sequencers, synths and auto-tuning than there used to be, but those are just decorations on a relatively fixed underlying structure. We shouldn't fall into the trap of criticising pop for failing at something it's not even trying to do. With “alternative” music-makers, however, it's a different story. Those guys are supposed to be pushing boundaries, tearing up the rule book, and so on. Yet what do we find? You've got electronic dance music which sounds almost indistinguishable from stuff made twenty years ago; rap music, which is actually less inventive than it used to be thanks to legal restrictions on sampling; retro-rockers and neo-folkies unconvincingly trying to make a virtue out of being derivative; and the ambient crowd producing lush, abstract soundscapes which say nothing and are meant to be heard rather than listened to.

OK, I'm being harsh. All of the above styles have their good points, and a lot of talented people are trying hard to produce interesting music. But, to return to my initial point, doesn't it all seem a bit conventional and unimaginative given the radical freedom at our fingertips? Where are the guys recording stuff that makes you shout “What the fuck is THAT”? For decades we had them, but they seem to have disappeared at the precise moment when production methods have never been more in their favour (and maybe that's no coincidence).

Actually, although I'm puzzled by the failure of alternative rock to live up to the potential of its own technology, I'm probably even more puzzled by the failure of classical music. After all, classical composers have a veritable tradition of pushing boundaries and tearing up the rule book. For most of the 20th century that's virtually all they did. And their experiments in electronic music predate those of rock by at least a decade – or by fifty years if you include the pianola as an early type of midi device. You would have thought that a gifted composer who had studied Stravinsky, Schoenberg, Varèse and Stockhausen (as well as Bach, Beethoven and Brahms) would be gloriously well-placed to produce something astounding. And yet it simply hasn't happened. At most, there are a few composers who incorporate the odd technological adornment into their work as a nod to the fact that it's no longer 1935. When it comes to exploring digital possibilities, contemporary classical music shows an incredibly depressing lack of ambition.

Part of the reason, I think, is that classical music has never really embraced the idea of the studio as a compositional tool. Its focus remains resolutely fixed on what musicians can produce on the spot, and the studio is only there to capture their performances. And actually there's something laudable about that; it helps retain a social, organic aspect to music which is easily lost when it's just one person in a studio (or bedroom) endlessly fiddling with loops and compression filters. Nevertheless, you'd have thought there might have been at least one composer willing to step outside the performance-centred orthodoxy and spend a year or so creating an amazing recording that couldn't possibly be reproduced live in the concert hall. But you'd be wrong.


Well, here I am moaning about other people not doing what they ought to. Why don't I give it a go myself, since I seem to think it's so easy? And that's what I intend to do, although I don't think it will be easy at all. Technology has opened up possibilities, but converting that into a worthwhile actuality is never a simple matter. For one thing, the very inventions that seem to help us can also work against us. They offer the prospect of previously impossible creations, but they also make it almost irresistibly easy to produce shallow variations of the past. That's certainly something I've found with my own attempts at home recording. Why struggle to be original when it's so simple to churn out an endless stream of charming pastiches? I've been down that road, and although I'm quite proud of some of the things I produced (you can hear some here), it's time to say enough is enough. It's time to explore – to genuinely explore. It's time to refuse to settle. Let's be honest: it's probable that I won't be up to the task, that the result will be unlistenable rubbish. But that's still better than the alternative.