This Sunday, we had our workshop Christmas bash. Fine food was eaten. Fine wine was quaffed. Guests were also subjected to a quiz, which was mainly an opportunity to take the piss out of everyone by disguising the mockery as questions. The final round of the quiz was a 'guess the Xmas number 1' round, where I played a few 'reinterpretations' I had recorded of well known No. 1's for the quizees to guess.
Here's my favourite. Guess what it is. I should point out, the mixing and levels are optimized for my boxy little Marshall amp in a hall of a hundred chatty people, so on headphones the guitars sound a little oversaturated.
'Guess the Xmas No. 1' Party Track by Buttonbasher
Mars Needs Drums
Tuesday, December 13
Saturday, December 10
TRACK 4 - Soul Crunk
I experimented a bit with this one by using my Orange Crush amp as a line-in preamp on every sound here (apart from the guitar and sitar parts, which is sampled straight from vinyl). There are some really cool tones going on here, such as that bell-like buzzing/ringing you can hear in the chorus and the beefier, nastier synth lines later on.
Soul Crunk by Buttonbasher
Soul Crunk by Buttonbasher
Saturday, December 3
Gear: The Alphasphere
It's been around for a while now but it's the operating system and software behind the Alphasphere that make it really interesting. Midi is a system where an instrument is loaded as a plug-in (also called a VST, or Virtual Studio Technology) and the 'notes' are drawn into a timeline. Thousands of VSTs exist, for nearly every instrument or synth engine imanginable, and are analogous to the third-party Apps you can download for your Iphone or Ipad. They're great for studio use, since instead of buying the hardware, you can buy the software and replicate the real thing. For example, Korg's MS-20 Analogue synth will set you back at least a grand; or you can install the VST for £50.
However, they don't always translate well into a live situation. While Midi controllers are becoming increasingly flexible, there's not a lot you can do in terms of performance and note expression. That's the gap the Alphasphere bridges.
However, they don't always translate well into a live situation. While Midi controllers are becoming increasingly flexible, there's not a lot you can do in terms of performance and note expression. That's the gap the Alphasphere bridges.
Friday, December 2
TRACK 3: Woodworm
Another Friday, another track; there only a few samples in this one, everything else is VSTs and plug-ins. It took a while to figure out the right combination of effects to get that growly, soft tone out of my bass guitar. It's a nice mellow tune and ramps up nicely into some transitions.
Woodworm by Buttonbasher
Woodworm by Buttonbasher
Thursday, December 1
Badass: John Carter of Mars
I got into John Carter through Frank Frazetta (who is one of the greatest artists of his century). Burrough's stories of a lost man on another planet were compelling to me purely for the monsters; bollocks to character development, I want things with teeth and claws, and paragraph-long descriptions of breasts.
So this is the trailer for the film, which somehow doesn't seem red enough for Mars, but that's OK because it's got Lynn Collins.
So this is the trailer for the film, which somehow doesn't seem red enough for Mars, but that's OK because it's got Lynn Collins.
Friday, November 25
TRACK 2: Busy Weasel Bounce
Second track for y'all now; cheesy space house. I love tablas. I also love latin percussion. And buzzy rave synths.
Also, the ending after the main buildup is still a little unresolved. I've put some glitchy effects over the verse synth line as a placeholder, and it still needs some work, but it's more or less there. Let me know what you think. Blam!
Busy Weasel Bounce by Buttonbasher
Also, the ending after the main buildup is still a little unresolved. I've put some glitchy effects over the verse synth line as a placeholder, and it still needs some work, but it's more or less there. Let me know what you think. Blam!
Busy Weasel Bounce by Buttonbasher
Tuesday, November 22
Gear: Dewanatron
Dewanatron, a duo comprising Brian and Leon Dewan, are 100% punk rock. They make barely controllable electronic curiosities that make weird noises and no sense in equal measure; it's impossible not to love their anarchic approach to electronic instruments.
They're also enormous nerds.
They're also enormous nerds.
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