Nanoloop composition
- At June 17, 2010
- By ken
- In creativity / music
I’m a big fan of Nanoloop, both the iPhone app version and the GBA hardware version. This composition is just downright impressive.
Korg iElectribe
- At April 3, 2010
- By ken
- In music / tech
Great, another reason I’m going to want an iPad.
New gear
- At March 18, 2010
- By ken
- In music
Trying out a little something new. More to come.
* PS – sampling is much harder than it looks.
Unleash 2010 counter mixes
- At March 4, 2010
- By ken
- In music
One thing I enjoy about Unleash is the fact that I get to make two 10 minutes mixes for the message counters. For this year’s mixes I went with the following:
Counter 1
Massive Attack – Paradise Circus (feat. Hope Sandoval, Gui Boratto Remix)
autoKratz – Always More
BT – Suddenly (Celldweller Mix), from These Hopeful Machines
Counter 2
Fleetwood Mac – Dreams (Mingus Rude edit)
RJD2 – Let There Be Horns (from Colossus)
BT (a selection from) “These Hopeful Machines” (B Side)… around the 25:50 mark
nanoloop track 0b
- At February 22, 2010
- By ken
- In creativity / music
This little 8-bit experiment was created and live performed directly in Nanoloop on the Game Boy, captured in Garageband, and sweetened a little with a pad from Argon (iPhone synth).
Nanoloop for iPhone
- At February 16, 2010
- By ken
- In music
So I’ve been toying with Nanoloop on a Gameboy for a few months and have found it to be a very satisfying 8-bit musical experience. Today I learned that it has been released as an iPhone app. If you’re interested in 8-bit/chiptune music I would recommend checking it out.
Massive Attack – Splitting the Atom
- At February 10, 2010
- By ken
- In creativity / music
New video from Massive Attack. I’m just stunned, so amazingly beautiful. And the amount of detailing that must have gone into this piece is astounding.
Massive Attack-Splitting the Atom-directed by Edouard Salier from edouard salier on Vimeo.
Dance party
- At February 8, 2010
- By ken
- In creativity / me / music
So, we had a little dance party at the Wilson house this weekend. That was fun.
Let the 8-bit begin
- At December 12, 2009
- By ken
- In music
Today the nanoloop cartridge arrived. Last week the GBA showed up. Now I spend some time attempting to synthesize a musically valid song on a Gameboy. Why am I doing this?
Because it’s there.
Richard Devine playing the DBeat
- At December 5, 2009
- By ken
- In creativity / music
Repeat to yourself “the monome is still relevant, the monome is still relevant.” Then watch Richard Devine demonstrate the tactile environment of Open Lab’s DBeat. Amazingly fun.
acoustic
- At November 25, 2009
- By ken
- In creativity / music
Forget electronics, let’s do something like this.
edison
- At November 23, 2009
- By ken
- In monome / music
dang.
edison – tonka truck from edison on Vimeo.
iPhone audio organism
- At November 15, 2009
- By ken
- In creativity / music
You may “get this,” you may not. You may think it’s just plain weird. But it’s quite interesting. The iPhones process an audio signal input, then react off of one another. Musically valid or not, I appreciate concepts that are way out of the box such as this. Fascinating.
Dub FX – live beatbox mix
- At November 10, 2009
- By ken
- In creativity / music
In the utmost of live looping and creativity I really dig this track from Dub FX. (head’s up, it is hip-hop and will probably have some NSFW language). But what mastery of beatboxing, looping, effects, and general musical flow.
Wouldn’t you say this is the epitome of white guy hip-hop?
Roland TB-303 Style Synth
- At November 7, 2009
- By ken
- In music / tech
Here’s a nice free Roland TB-303 Style Synth plugin. Sorry, this is only for you Windows users out there. (too bad for me).
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Don’t Get Married Until…
- At November 2, 2009
- By ken
- In creativity / culture / design / entertainment / music / video
This weekend marked the beginning of a new series, Don’t Get Married Until… For the visual package and opener Perry’s sole request was that it should an element of hip-hop. Listening to the 90s station the other day I heard some Heavy D and I instantly knew it was the right choice. The goal in this piece is to set up the series with “if you’re ______, then you’re not ready to get married.” Here’s the resulting opener.
Tomorrow I’ll post of the preproduction details (and a special preliminary video), sketches, and talk a little about the process.
BT using an iPhone
- At October 28, 2009
- By ken
- In creativity / music
Nice example of BT using the Sonifi iPhone app in a live set.
BT at FOF performing with Sonifi from BTtv on Vimeo.
Moby interview
- At October 27, 2009
- By ken
- In music
Electric Independence has a great, well shot interview with Moby in his home studio. It clocks in at 12+ minutes, but I would highly recommend it. By favorite line at 11:37, “There is no such thing as a cool electronic musician.” Speaking as one (if only in my own headphones), I agree.
End of the World tracklist
- At October 26, 2009
- By ken
- In music
I love intentionality, and personal preference aside, I dig when things are chosen for a reason.
For the series How to Survive the End of the World we choose songs for the counters in the theme of “apocalypse” or “the world is ending.” Some weeks there was more than one track used, but to cover our bases:
Megadeth – “Symphony of Destruction”
Nine Inch Nails – “The Day the World Went Away”
U2 – “Until the End of the World”
Zager and Evans – “In the Year 2525″
The Rolling Stones – “Paint it black”
R.E.M. – “It’s the End of the World as We Know It (And I Feel Fine)”
U2 (feat. Johnny Cash) – “The Wanderer”

