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This synthesizer, with all the features it has, would be about $1,200," he said. Now "if I want to make a new one, say I want to make a synthesizer, I go to 'create' and click on it and boom, it pops up."
His hardware consists of a Dell 2.6 gigahertz Pentium 4 computer with one gigabyte of memory, five Maxtor 300GB hard drives, Mackie H24 speakers, a Yamaha 01V digital mixer, Technics CD turntables, CDJ-100S Pioneer record turntables, an M-Audio MIDI controller keyboard and an M-Audio Delta 1010 sound card. He also works on a laptop when he's on the road.
"I couldn't make rock 'n' roll without guitars, and I couldn't produce music without at least synthesizers and samplers. But to be as prolific and detailed as I am I must have computers, smoking fast computers," Lorin said. "Yes, I sample humans, like the guy beat-boxing or the vocalist. But all the beats, all the bass, and a huge majority of the sounds are synthesized, even if they sound like an electric guitar or a cello or a violin or a flute....It's all on my computer."
At the University of California, Santa Cruz, Lorin received dual minors in electronic music and education, and majored in community studies, for which he started a music therapy program at a juvenile detention center.
Though he has concentrated on electronic music for the last 10 years, Lorin's influences run the gamut from heavy metal and rock to hip-hop and classical. At the impressionable age of 16, he was banging heads and moshing to "churning" death metal at private parties in the basement of a public library in San Jose, Calif., where he grew up. At 27 years old, that intensity is reflected in his current music, albeit in a more sophisticated way.
"I got attracted to electronic music because it is so much more inherently positive than death metal....And it is grinding and it is sexy. That's the bass," he said. "Nothing sounds fatter than electronically produced beats and bass. No drum set or bass guitar is going to make that perfect blended sound."
"I'm creating songs that mesmerize me....I'm playing music that twists me into a dervish."
Twist he does, and not just his knobs. He bobs in full-body moves and chops the air with his hand to the beat, his long dark hair flying around him like a fine silk scarf.
In Lorin's world, no sound goes unnoticed--including birds chirping in his Berkeley, Calif., neighborhood, a cash register and wind chimes down the street--which makes for music that is multitextured, or "omnitempo maximalism," as he puts it.
Though he doesn't create his music live in performances as some musicians do, Lorin works live with customized songs and mixes them in a fluid way for a spontaneous show that some feel is much more involved and engaging than what typical DJs do.
"DJing inevitably is becoming obsolete, partly because of oversaturation," he said. "It was impressive in the early '90s, but now it's like 'big deal. He's playing two records.' I think a lot of people are concerned more with how to be a DJ than with how to make music and that, I think, is a problem."
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else in Detroit and Chicago that grew up on Kraftwerk and The
Yellow Magic Orchestra.
Similar techniques are use since more than 1 year. At this time Cubase 1 or 2 was used with Atari computer the 1st one the provide MIDI interface.
Now, artists like Infected Mushroom (http://infected.co.il/) , Growling Mad Scientists (http://www.spunrecords.org/base.html), Talamasca (http://www.mindcontrolrecords.com/talamasca/) to mention some are working like this. They don't need analogic intrument anymore (Synthetiser etc...) everthing can be composed, designed, engineered and produced on computer.
Visit the veteran DJ yahel site (http://www.djyahel.com/) you have a flash animation of his studio equipement. With some analog legacy equipement (synth, beat machine, FX machine) for the specific sound they produce. But no more for the quality and capability.
I think the point of the article was that he's doing it as a live PA using just a laptop, not just making tracks in his bedroom, bouncing them to audio and then playing them out (ie, DJing).
Although it is still taking many new shapes and forms, electronica in music isn't new. It went mainstream at latest in the early '80s, and was the center of several alternative genres (techno, rap, industrial).
By the '90s, it was a de-facto standard in the world of music. If not actually IN the music, it was in the recording and production. Those beautiful cavernous concert-hall vocals are sent through effects processors with complex Reverb DSP algorithms. These can recreate a near-perfect mathematical reproduction of the real sound reverberations.
Think of a few '80s movie soundtrack or Top 40 hits and you'll easily come across synthy sounds or sampled scores. In fact, try to think of something without it. Even rock-music-derrivatives often had keyboard backgrounds or a canvas of sampled sounds in the background.
"DJing inevitably is becoming obsolete"...
To say this is to say that CDs are making concerts obselete. A Live PA is a live performance in which a performer - who often started as a DJ - plays his own creations. Each performance - each rendition - does not have to be identical to the last if the proper expressive controls are embedded into the sequence (a sequence is the control track that tells every instrument when, what, and how to play; it is electronic sheet music).
DJing is the creation of a feeling using a stream of continuous music. You control and manipulate your audience by changing the sound - the feeling - either in-the-moment or subconciously over a period of time (an hour, for example). The source of the music is irrelevant as long as it does not interfere with your ability to express. A personal opinion: the turntable is still the method of choice.
The Hybrid DJ/PA - The Old and The New
Although neither DJing or the Live PA is a new thing, the ability to effectively integrate the two - especially in realtime - is particularly difficult. There are those like Lorell and Ron-E (http://www.epro-recordings.com) that are innovating in the forefront.
In this arena, the rules are what you make them. Anything you concieve, you can actualize.
If this article really wanted to talk about "turning electricity into music" it should have discussed the use of Rane Serrato to play mp3's through a regular vinyl turntable. Instead it shows a guy (Lorin who I've seen and is a good DJ & musician) who's playing CD's from songs he made. "How revolutionary." -in sarcastic voice.
And the article brushes on Reason. Reason 3.0 I might add. I say 3.0 as in the THIRD major installment of the application as in it's been around for years.
I'm just not sure if this author is trying to discuss the music scene or new technology here? Hellen Keller could have described the latest technology scene better and the technology he's described is nothing new.
ps. Big props to Javier Lopez-roman's posting.
sorry to find all you unhappy folks on here.
anyhow, just wanted to clear up any confusion:
first off, i don't think i ever claimed that it was "revolutionary" to use Reason to make my own songs and DJ them on CD. If i did, then i must have been drunk. Because i actually told the reporter explicitly that it was absolutely NOTHING new in the world of electronic music production. I did explicitly note that it was best to start somewhere basic, with a program like Reason, which has SO MANY options, and possibilities, while still many limitations and confines that can help streamline the process and avoid getting lost in a boundless series of paths and possibilities.
That fact, however, does not take away from the fact that the software is an awesome tool for creating music, be it for professionals or beginners alike. And while I specifically told her that there was (and has been for a while) much deeper and more sophisticated software, be it Pro Tools, Reaktor, Tracktor, Cubase, Logic, to name some of the most obvious, i never claimed to be in a bragging contest, showing off how advanced i am or how mindblowing Reason is to an audio-file or tech head....
Rather, i think it is an invaluable tool of creation, and for people who DO NOT understand production, and who are NOT schooled in the deep and rich history of the genre (be it back to Kraftwerk or back to Brian Eno, or Pierre Henry, or Stockhausen (sp?).... to people who may authentically refer to anything of the sort as "techno" (and don't blame them for not being hip to all the latest jive...i think its honest and sincere) then i think it is good to start at the beginning.
That is why in my classes the program i teach is Reason. Because it is such a great place to start, virtually simulating a comprehensive studio, with almost everything at once, with awesome graphics, with the ability to create complex patches, etc...
Anyhow, I was very honored and excited to share my music and how i go about imagining sound and bringing it into reality, and I'm sorry if the ultimate experts didn't find anything that was brand new...but it sounds like yall aren't exactly suffering from a lack of info on the topic, so maybe just appreciate the potential for informing other people who are not as far along in their discovery, and don't expect them to understand a complex, advanced lecture until they get the basics.
Anyhow, i hope i dont come off as rude, disrespectful, or aggressive, because the fact is, i agreed with almost everything written in all 9 comments i read. it was all pretty much truth.
:)
I just wanted to chime in with a different perspective, and hopefully point out the fact that, at least to me, what's a lot more important is the emotional value of music, and the potential for impact, both personally and socially, inherent in every note. And in speaking about my music, i tried to bring a taste of that to people who it might actually be new for, and who might just be getting turned on now, all these days later, way in the future of 2005 AD.
;)
much respect.
lorin ashton
here:
" Just a few years ago, it would have been near-impossible for
just one person to do what he's doing in this hot club."
I am not sure where you have been, perhaps in a cave or in a
coma, but this has been quite possible for over 10 years.
But according to your coverage, this is some sort of
technological innovation. Perhaps you should do a bit of
research, maybe talk to some other people in the field you are
writing about, check out some websites, DO SOMETHING before
writing a full blown article about it.
He is using standard CD turntables, and Reason is a mid-range
program that has been out for close to a decade (its currently at
version 3.0). Most real musicians discredit Reason compared to
real sequencer programs due to it's limited functionality. So I
guess the fact that he is actually pulling this off with such crappy
software, may be innovative, but that's about it.
Laptop DJs/musicians/etc have been around for many years, and
coming from a place of knowing many of them myself, I would
advise you to be a bit more thorough in your research and
writing. Your article sounds like you are writing about color TV
when everyone is watching black and white.
WOW! HE IS USING A MAGICAL COMPUTER PROGRAM CALLED
"REASON". WHOAAA. What is
this crazy magic!?!?! And these magical spinning disc
machines... What are
they?!?! Turntables... That play... CDS!??!? NO WAY!
And you should know that several people on several electronic
music mailing lists are calling bullsh*t on your article as well.
Maybe you should go back to writing about things you are more
familiar with instead of falsely portraying a genre/subject you
are obviously clueless about.
- another negative vote
- by sf-audio November 29, 2005 6:07 PM PST
- Poor writer. You stumbled into the porcupine's den of digital audio creation and electronic music and got nailed repeatedly.
- Like this Reply to this comment
-
-
- Thanks for the feedback
- by elinormills December 7, 2005 10:21 AM PST
- This article was not meant to be a comprehensive, definitive piece on all the latest technology for making electronic music, but more a profile of how one artist is using technology. And no. I don't usually write about electronic music. But I listen to it and was glad to get the opportunity to possibly broaden its exposure.
- Like this
-
(16 Comments)IMHO News.com editorial staff needs to get with the program or stay away from this discipline altogether (probably the latter.)
For a CNET piece, this comes off as very UN-tech-savvy.
Readers interested in this area are generally -very- educated and knowledgable about this subject and have access to decades of information about this topic online already.
It's great to give the local dude props (and he should be given props) - but no mention of any of more popular/hyped artists in this scene is a glaring sign that the writer is totally new to the subject and hasn't done what those who know would call the required research.
Expect lots of negative feedback if NEWS.com continues on this topic without beefing up the background knowlege or without getting editorial staff that knows the scene and can put a fresh spin on a seemingly "new" but actually quite mature discipline in electronic music.
Probably just should stick to reviewing hardware.
Sincerely,
Elinor