Monday, January 26, 2009

Sparrow Launches Von Drat Surf Guitar

Vancouver based Sparrow Guitars has introduced the Von Drat surf guitar at the 2009 NAMM Show. The Von Drat is the newest addition to Sparrow's family of retro guitars which includes the Big Daddy, Primitive, Rat Rod and Twangmaster models.

The Von Drat joins Sparrow's Rat Rod and Twangmaster as available in the premium "Continental" line. Made in Vancouver, BC Canada, the Von Drat surf guitar features Burns Tri-Sonic pickups, Grover tuners, bone nut and Wilkinson tremolo. With an alder body, maple neck and rosewood fingerboard, the Von Drat is a 21-fret, 12" radius, 25½" scale length guitar with the volume and tone top-hat knobs and three-way selector switch located at the lower bout for versatility and playability. The Von Drat is currently available in Tudor Black and Avocado Green, with custom pickguard.

Check it out at: http://www.sparrowguitars.com/

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

CBC Pays Tribute to the 808

It helped Marvin Gaye get some sexual healing. Beyonce and the Beastie Boys have sung (and rapped) its praises. The most revered makers of hip hop, techno and industrial rock couldn’t live without it. And now the most popular MC of our day pays tribute to it in the name of his new album.

You can read the full article here.

Monday, January 19, 2009

Native Instruments Announces MASCHINE Production Studio

Native Instruments today announced MASCHINE, a next-generation groove production studio that makes beat creation and arrangement more immediate and tactile than ever before. The system combines an advanced software sequencer and sampler with a seamlessly integrated, highly functional performance controller. Finally merging a fast and intuitive groove-box workflow with the power and versatility of software, MASCHINE enables an inspiring and spontaneous creative approach for today's computer-based music production setups.

MASCHINE is built on an intelligent combination of timeless groove box and drum machine workflows, systematically refined and expanded to take advantage of the best aspects of computer technology. It brings together flexible step sequencing and real-time polyphonic recording in a forward-thinking pattern-based arrangement concept that makes it easy to jam out ideas, and turn them into full-blown songs in a way that is efficient, effortless and fun. MASCHINE was designed to accommodate and facilitate inspiration at any point in the creative process, from spontaneous beat creation to sophisticated multi-timbral arranging.

For more information, visit their web site at www.native-instruments.com.

Friday, January 16, 2009

Access Music Releases Virus TI2 Series Synthesizer

Access Music is pleased to announce the immediate availability of the Virus TI2 series. The successor of the acclaimed range of totally integrated synthesizers adds 25% more calculating power and sports a redesigned housing and front panel. Access also used new materials to bring down the weight of the keyboard versions. On the software side of things, a major feature update, OS3, will be available by the time you read this. The new operating system adds several new FX such as a Tape Delay, Frequency Shifter and several new Distortion algorithms along with a new feature called Character.

Character allows you to adjust the overall tone of a preset reminiscent of several vintage and well-known synthesizers. In addition you can emphasis certain aspects of the patch to allow it to cut better through the mix, or fade it into the background with an extra-wide stereo field. The new distortions were built from scratch and feature an extreme dynamic range along with sophisticated controls to tailor the sound to your specific needs. They can add everything from warm, tube-like overtones to complete sonic deconstruction more reminiscent of circuit-bending. The new algorithms also include a revamped bit and sampling-rate reduction, allowing you to change the quality and cutoff point with precise, continuously variable control.

The stereo Frequency Shifter and the new Ring Modulator are state of the art algorithms modelled with old '70s stomp boxes in mind.

The Tape Delay goes way beyond the possibilities of the real Tape Delays in the '60s and '70s. It smoothly syncs to tempo, lets you decide if a Doppler effect takes place when changing the tempo, and even switching the delay time between presets is all smooth, making it perfect for performers. Last but not least, a modification to the main "VCA" algorithm enables OS3 users to design gating FX known from electro and minimal influenced music.

Monday, January 12, 2009

New McDsp Plugins

The Retro Pack bundle includes the 4020 Retro EQ, the 4030 Retro Compressor and the 4040 Retro Limiter. Channel G Compact delivers the same sonic experience as Channel G with a smaller DSP footprint. Channel G Surround is a Compressor/Limiter optimized for 5.1 channels using 4 compressors sets – LR, C, LsRs, and LFE. And finally, Emerald Pack 4.0 will include the new Channel G Compact plug-in along with existing products; Analog Channel, Channel G, Chrome Tone, CompressorBank, DE555, FilterBank, FutzBox, MC2000, ML4000, NF575, Revolver and Synthesizer One.

All new products will be shipping late Q1 2009.

For more information please visit www.mcdsp.com

Friday, January 9, 2009

Celebrate CBC Radio One on 88.1 FM!

radio one

CBC Radio One in Vancouver can now be heard on both 690 AM and 88.1 FM! To celebrate their new expanded coverage help us spread the word!

Send in a photo of yourself, your family, your friends, your colleagues, your pets, your car, your house, your tree – whomever or whatever you can recruit – and help the CBC promote their newest place on the dial: 88.1 FM!

You can also create a message to send out via online social networks.

Your photo should include the message that you can now tune in and hear CBC Radio One on 88.1 FM. If the message is outside, it should be readable to anyone walking, biking, boating or driving by it. If the message is via social networking, the photo and the message must be easily viewable.

The judges will be looking for originality in presentation and design, as well as maximum visibility.

This is your chance to get your creative juices flowing!

Nine Inch Nails: The First Open-Source Band?

From PC WORLD DOT COM:

Throughout his 20+ year career as the man behind industrial-rock act Nine Inch Nails, Trent Reznor has been no stranger to the ways of Creative Commons and digital distribution. In fact, he's let fans tinker with his musical creations as far back as the 1999 release of his two-disc album, "The Fragile," two years before the sharing and remixing licensing arrangements of the non-profit organization Creative Commons even existed.

In an era when record labels fight the underground, unpaid spread of music tooth-and-nail, and companies like Apple take six years to strip the Digital Rights Management out of their massive online song stores, Reznor seems to have found a fire in non-traditional distribution arrangements. He's used alternate reality games and secret scavenger hunts to promote new works, and released full CDs under a "pay for it if you feel like it" arrangement. In addition to PDFs of artwork and liner notes, the new albums come with full Creative Commons license arrangements that allow fans to modify, share, and remix the work at their leisure.

One would think Reznor has fallen into a Downward Spiral of economics, but the facts don't lie: his release of the four-part instrumental album Ghosts I-IV netted the singer/songwriter/geek more than $750,000 in the first three days of its release--even given the fact that fans could legally grab the music for absolutely no cost. In turn, said album became the bestselling MP3 album of 2008 at Amazon.com. And fans have responded to the licensing arrangements in kind, launching full communities of their own for collecting, promoting, and releasing remixed Nine Inch Nails tracks. (For more information on how Reznor accomplished this feat, check out this Creative Commons blog post)

But it doesn't just stop with the music. After hearing that Reznor wasn't able to proceed forward with a Blu-Ray and DVD collection of his most recent "Lights in the Sky" tour, the fan community organized an underground filming and DVD production effort to complete the project themselves. Once Reznor got wind of the effort, he relaxed security for the remaining shows of the tour, allowing more than 25 fans to film concerts from all sorts of angles and styles, standard-definition and high-definition alike.

Reznor might be taking a page out of Steve Jobs' playbook, for it seems there's always just "one more thing" on the horizon. In a first for a band of this size in the music industry, Reznor today released more than 400GB of high-definition concert footage from three shows on the "Lights in the Sky" tour, seeding these massive video files and pre-organized Final Cut Pro sequences across BitTorrent. Links to the three shows can be found below:

Victoria
Portland
Sacramento

For a band that's released over eight major CDs, four remix albums, and three video tour documentaries, the new push toward digital distribution and altruism is quite a departure from the normal album release and promotional efforts of the recording industry. While such efforts might very well only work for a band with Nine Inch Nails' cult-like following, it's an encouraging note for what could very well be the bare beginnings of a new open-source musical movement.

Tuesday, January 6, 2009

Macworld

Phil Schiller delivered the keynote at MacWorld, the first after the Steve Jobs era of keynotes. Here is Engadget's live blog. The big news, predicted by many rumor sites, was the introduction of the unibody 17" MacBook Pro. As rumored, the battery is not removable, but it's claimed to provide 8 hours of battery life (7 hours with the discrete graphics): "3x the charges and lifespan of the industry standard." $2,799, 2.66 GHz and 4 GB of RAM, 320GB hard drive, shipping at the end of January. There is a battery exchange program, and there is an option for a matte display. The other big news is that iTunes is going DRM-free: 8M songs today, all 10+M by the end of March. Song pricing will be flexible, as the studios have been demanding; the lowest song price is $0.69. Apple also introduced the beta of a Google Docs-like service, iWork.com and a new "Learn Song" feature for Garage Band.

Monday, January 5, 2009

Harbourside IT featured in the NS News

Harbourside Institute of Technology has been featured in the North Vancouver's North Shore News. You can read the article here.

From the article; In the past three years, the audio school has worked to distinguish itself from the competition, keeping class sizes down, making pricey investments in equipment, and arranging for the school to become the first Pro Tools certified institute in Vancouver, Canada.

Of particular pride to the school's administrators are the teachers they've been able to attract. All work in the industry, and guest instructors are also brought in to share knowledge about particular areas.

"People aren't stuck in a class of 60 people, listening to a teacher that's actually never made a record before," says Chris DeMarcus, the school's Program Director, who has worked on more than 60 albums.