Sunday July 11th, 2010 16:59 Beat Sketching Seven Eleven

I’m sketching out the beat for my latest track. It’s changed a lot as you can hear. Usually this is how I start out chopping and messing with the original sample. Then build it up from there. The rest of the sounds are from Reason and various other samples.

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Friday August 14th, 2009 12:13 Recording and Mixing Services

I’m providing recording and mixing services for Producers who need their MPC projects to be multi tracked out, mixed and have files saved individually and burned to cd-r. See the link on the right column for more details.

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Sunday August 9th, 2009 20:14 Final mix of the latest track.

So, my insanity or musical OCD has been put to rest, the track is perfected. I’m ready for the next one. I finally got cartridges for the 1200 and went digging and found some obscure shit I feel will make some interesting tracks.

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Thursday July 30th, 2009 07:39 Recording again…

I really wish I could rock music full time. But I got to pay the bills. This was a fun session. Devon recorded vocals here at Soundtrack on a Neumann U87 into an Avalon 737 mic pre. 6200_1189626893355_1008831801_613983_6350251_n.jpgSSL 9000, pretty sick. Sicker than that, Biggie’s Ready to Die was mixed here and on this board.just-studio.jpgThe track is sounding so good in this room.

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Thursday March 19th, 2009 06:50 New gear, new beat…

Over the last few weeks I invested in some new gear. 10 channel Soundcraft Mixer, ART Tube Compressor and some Yamaha HS50 Monitors along with a new workspace (desk). The mixer alone brought my tracks a new breath of life. Decent mic pre’s and eq’s are important to give you a clearer more defined sound. The compressor really fatten and warms things up also. One thing most producers overlook is the importance of your workspace. I still need some more room for my turntable, but getting a bigger desk to layout things right makes creating that much more easier.

The latest track with it’s working title Inner City Epic (named that cause it reminds me of Marvins track) was done on my new gear. Beat composed on the MPC, bass was done in Logic and run through Guitar Rig (little secret there to get your synth bass to sound like a real bass) and I added some horns from the Miroslav plugin (one of the best orchestral plugins I must say).

I used a slightly different workflow on this track. The MPC is slaved to Logic via midi, but is being run through the 8 outputs into the mixer and the into the compressor finally into the apogee soundcard. Reason I don’t track into Logic, is I like to go stereo in and get my beat’s mix sounding the way I want without using the crappy digital eq’s in Logic. I get all my levels, pans and eq’s from the mixer, then fatten it up running it through the compressor. It really gives the track more definition against the other instruments that are all digital.As far as the monitors go, I couldn’t be happier with the Yamaha’s. There’s really no need to re-check your mix on another system, although you should, I find myself not second guessing when it comes to levels. The detail and accuracy of these little guys is amazing.

I no longer have my vocal booth, so we’re scheduling some time next week to hit the studio and record vocals. I’ll then bring the vocals back and mix the rest of the track.

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Thursday February 19th, 2009 07:33 I’m alive again

Well, sometimes life throws crazy shit at you. But I’m back in action, have some new gear to talk about and review and also have some new tunes to put up shortly. Stay tuned….

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Tuesday December 4th, 2007 09:48 Achieving the Commercially Polished Radio Ready Sound to your Music

I think the most sought after goal of any producer/artist is getting their music to sound like a major label release. Most demos don’t come close to sounding radio ready and super polished partly because of the inexperience of the engineer or person mixing/mastering the music. Also, most artists fail to recognize the importance of professionally mastering their music. You can come close to getting that professional sound at home but takes a lot of time and experience crafting it without the use of really top notch gear. Most commercial radio released music is very carved out, meaning there are a lot of frequencies that have been eq’d out or cut. This allows for the music to be very compressed/limited to be perceived as loud when bumpin on the radio.

Here’s a few tips to make your demo’s sound close to radio ready

1. Use eq correctly.  One of the biggest mistakes is when you have a bad sound and try to fix it with eq. If an instrument sounds a little off, try a different one. When in doubt, look to cut frequencies rather than boost. You can do wonders using low cuts and high cuts on beats, especially snares. Eq acts like a chisel to cut away at bad frequencies that cloud up a mix. When an artist is sculpting something from stone, he cuts away, he doesn’t add stone to make his piece of art. Think of eq the same way. Every instrument has it’s own frequency spectrum it lives in, it’s your job to make sure other instruments don’t take up that same frequency

2. Easy on Compression. Another very misused tool. A compressors job is to squash the dynamic range of a signal. Dynamic range is the lowest to highest level in one particular signal. This helps with instruments that are very bass heavy and tend to eat space in your mix. Always look to go easy on the compression ratio at first and use your ears to judge.

3. Balance your levels. Many people mix, but they don’t really MIX. Mixing is more than just being creative and placing sounds from left to right. You need to achieve a good balance of all tracks in relationship to each other. Vocals should always be the loudest track in the mix, but you should be able to clearly pick out each other track in the mix. Eq really plays a big part here also, if the eq on your tracks are off, your levels will never sit right and you will never have a clear mix.

4. Reverb/Space Dimension to your mix. Most Rap music is very dry, which means there is not much reverb treatment on tracks besides vocals and even so, it’s used minimally. One trick to achieve a radio ready sound is to give your mix medium to large room reverb on the master bus of your mix. Make sure to use a very very small wet/dry ratio. I usually use 5-8% and also make sure to reduce the high frequency content which most reverb plugins have setting for. When used properly and sparingly, this glues your mix together giving it a filled out sound.

5. Mastering. Mastering is the very last step in the recording process. This is usually done by a separate engineer and studio then where the music was tracked. A good mastering job will take your mix to another level. It will make it sound consistent on many different speakers and systems and will give a very well rounded balance to all the tracks start to finish. Mastering is also expensive if done in a professional studio which is why alot of unsigned artists skip this step. One plugin that has really helped in making my music stand out is Ozone by the company Izotope. Ozone includes a parametric eq, multiband compressor, reverb, exciter, and stereo widener. When used properly, Ozone can really make a difference on your tracks. Just Blaze has even used it on some of Jay-Z’s Kingdome Come record. Check out the link: http://www.izotope.com/artists/just_blaze.asp

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Wednesday November 14th, 2007 10:16 Yay, I’m not Dead, and here’s a new track

Ok, I’ve been through some creative block and some hard times. I’ll be posting a few more this week. Then I’ll go back into hibernation. The track playing is a Diana Ross Sample with a classic drum break layered with some other drum kit I made. This is a really rough mix, but you get the idea.

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Friday October 19th, 2007 06:59 Don’t cry, dry your eye…

It’s been a few days, yeah I know. Been busy with alot of ish. Here’s when I tell you I’ve been working on some music. I’VE BEEN WORKING ON SOME MUSIC. I don’t bang out tracks everyday. I have to be in the right mood. If not, I don’t believe in it or feel it. I’ve been listening to alot of new artists that I never thought I’d like that much considering the commercialism of hip hop. One artist I have’nt been able to stop listening to is Papoose. I have a feeling this dude is gonna break into the mainstream in a firery storm. He credits his influences as Big Daddy Kane and Rakim. You know he’s the real ish if he’s giving those cats as his influences. Stylin on Ya is such a hard track. I listen to it daily now. Even though he’s representing the new school of hip hop, you can tell his roots are in the classics.

So with that being said, I have some new inspiration in my heart. I will finish two tracks this weekend and post them.

Later,

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Thursday October 11th, 2007 07:32 The Next Big Producer is…

Every video Boon Doc has on YouTube is golden. I can’t believe he’s not fully blown up yet. The most minimal setup produces some of the best sample based hip hop beats. He’s really inspired me when I’ve had creative blocks. I suggest you watch the whole thing.

Oh remember to stop the track in the right nav bar or the sound will clash with the video.

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