Music
“It’s not hip-hop, it’s Electro.”
by Davin on Jul.13, 2010, under Music, Technology
I am really fascinated by electronic music again, lately. Mostly strange, obscure spin-off genres that showcase odd tempos and radical ways to even think of how you’d play a synthesizer or a drum machine. And it’s pretty fun, exploring like this. I might try something of it.
Oh Man,
by Davin on Jul.07, 2010, under Music, Technology, Whatever
I shoulda did this upgrade a long time ago…. Though, the G5 is still crunching away as a media center host. It does that VERY well.
Obvious
by Davin on Mar.05, 2010, under Music
if anyone spent the time to listen to Empty Spaces… they’d realize how much this song held sway over me at the time:
Dusk.
Everything, All The Time
by Davin on Feb.24, 2010, under Music, Technology, The Web, Whatever
and as much as I find the possibilities of what can be done with our technology.. I find it sad and disheartening that nobody knows that it’s there. or what it actually does. or the effort it took to get it to where
it is.

I wiggle my mouse, letting a laser sensor detect movement and send small electrical impulses down a copper cable via the universal serial bus into the front of my Apple PowerMac G5 where two IBM built PowerPC 970MP processors detect that movement and jolt to life together in unison, propelling my desktop computer to 2.0GHz per processor as it cycles through billions of calculations a second to frantically run the UNIX foundation that supports Mac OS X as a platform that flexes it’s muscles and hosts Core Audio that can detect my M-Audio audio interface over the universal serial bus and supply the electricity needed to not only power that input/output interface, but supply the extra 45 volts down it’s cable to my Nova where it powers the electronics and diaphragm of the microphone so it can receive and interpret sound pressure levels emitted by my Marshall Valvestate S80 amplifier who listens for the signals made by my Gibson SG guitar.
Where my hand and pic grazes the strings of it that vibrate at different frequencies depending on where I restrain those strings on various points along the guitar’s fretboard. the dual, plated humbucker pickups below the strings sense those strings vibrations with electromagnets wrapped in copper coil that generate small electrical signals that are routed inside the guitar, being coloured by the density of the wood and the coil of the strings as they pass through volume and tone filters that I could control with my hands with knobs on the face of the instrument and zaps on out through a 1/4 inch cable into my solid-state amplifier where those signals are sent through semiconductor circuits that use a combination of valve and solid-state technologies that create a unique overdriven sound and route it out to a pair of 12 inch speakers in a cabinet that continue to shape the sound before it expels outward as waves of particles and energy through the air and collides with my Nova microphone where it is then converted once more into electrical energy and is blasted down, through my I/O’s analog to digital converters that change electrical signals to digital information so my Macintosh’s Core Audio engine can read those packets of information and allow Logic Studio to route and record that information to my hard drives that are spinning at 7200 revolutions per minute.
All of this happens behind a graphical interface that allows me to modify, warp, change those recordings into a coherent “mix” where the guitars are spread out over a wide stereo spectrum and it’s harmonic content controlled with multi-band equalization so that the drum kit, who is a interface and algorithm with over 20,000 different samples of a given drum kit that interprets how I play my midi controller into different drum recordings, in real-time, to arrange different percussion patterns can eventually get mixed and summed with the recordings of my guitars in a mathematical algorithm where it is then converted, compressed and saved as an individual MPEG-Layer-3 coded file that I then upload over the TC/IP network that spans the entire fucking globe to a website that I own and run for a small-as-shit fee, so that anyone on the infinitely accessible internet can decide if they have the time to listen to what I had just spent the time creating or read what I had just self-published. for free.
EVERYONE.
everyone takes everything for granted, all the time.
and as much as I find the possibilities of what can be done with our technology inspiring and truly amazing.. I find it sad and very disheartening that nobody knows that it’s there. or what it actually does. or the effort it took to get it to where it is. or that they can do these kinds of things if they took the time to look into it.
THERE’S that sweet-spot!
by Davin on Feb.10, 2010, under Music, Technology, Whatever
It’s taken me about a month of looking (not really that hard, though. Damn, b-movies.) but I finally got that tone and mic placement redisovered from back before I moved. Man, that was a bit of a task.
Always remember: document everything. Even when you think it’s more fun to get another beer and continue to rock out. You just may regret forgetting how you came across a sound or setting you just created.
PIRACY
by Davin on Feb.09, 2010, under Music, Piracy & Bootlegging, Technology, The Web
the great scourge of the information age. I’ve tried many times to express why I feel piracy is so important, and I think I may have hit a nerve:
Piracy, right now, is important because it makes it difficult to make money in media. and that’s important. because by making it harder to cut a living in multimedia, it forcefully weeds out the entities that have no interest the medium as art, but as a source of income.
think of it like a human body in the grips of a fever: it is forcefully making it’s own body uninhabitable so it can drive out malicious agents.
that’s essentially my personal take on priacy and how it should be seen as a natural reaction to the *LACK* of a competitive marketplace since the 1970’s.
and it’s my opinion that this is only really at a start and has a lot farther to go and a lot more damage to do before things even begin to solidify.
I Am Not Dead
by Davin on Jan.05, 2010, under Music
At least, musically. Contrary to what some would think, I’m still grinding away at a few things. Here’s a bit of what I’m putting together. I aim to have something ready for the spring. (and yes, it’ll most likely be a copyright free MP3 pack that I’m going to give away for free)
Back into the Jungle, Time to Record.
by Davin on Dec.01, 2009, under Music, The Web, Whatever

So I’ve moved back into the city, this week. It’s been a long, long time since I had a place to live where the high-rises of downtown Vancouver were something I could look out over my balcony and marvel at. In fact, it was the apartment on Haro St with my Dad, would be the last time that happened.
I’ve since had a place in White Rock, and two in Burnaby and… they never really felt quite, completely right. Granted, my bachelor pad I just moved out of was brilliant but that’s probably because I was truly self-sufficient and on my own for the first real time. No room-mates, no family, just me and myself and however I could make ends meet. I completely recommend just diving out on your own with no extensive plan or experience and just getting a small, cheap apartment and going at it by yourself for a while. Completely. The freedom, is delicious.
BUT, I’m back in the city and it’s about time I got down to work. You can expect to hear some singing from me and a friend of mine in the next few months, and you can expect the drum kit and electric guitar will most likely be left out of the equation. Once I get a new mic stand… since the one I have doesn’t hold the Nova quite right…
In any event, here’s a thing I did the other night, inspired by all of this. Hope you like it:
Moving / Upgrade to The Lab
by Davin on Nov.08, 2009, under Music, Technology, Whatever
So, I’ve been rather absent of late. This is because as of November 29th, I’m moving in closer to the city! I’ll be shacking up with my girlfriend in a larger apartment so her and I can bank more money and have more resources to do more stuff. Like do a little upgrade to the ol’ home studio, in my case. I’ve got a pile of new gear in the shipping room at work that just came in, so once I’m moved in I’ll be rebuilding my workstation to incorporate this new stuff. My existing mic is getting replaced with a Nova that I’m going to mount in this shockmount and pop-filter, and it’s getting piped into a new FastTrack since I’m now only ever recording a single XLR or 1/4″ at a time nowadays.
My controller is still a Kontrol49, and I doubt that will change anytime soon. I’m still very, very, happy with that board and if it ever broke, I would simply buy another one just like it. But, I do intend on setting up a dual tier stand so I can have my MicroKorg back and more involved, as it’s kind of been gathering dust for the past few months. Hell, I might even build a cool little rack to house my interface, outboard guitar effects board and an XLR & 1/4″ cable patch bay.
Or maybe even buy that damn bass guitar I keep telling myself I’m going to get so I don’t have to bug other musicians I know to borrow theirs. (The last band I was around enough to borrow one from, Fake Shark, I haven’t heard from in ages and are probably off doing who knows what and Oddchild are often far too busy to lend out gear. hrmphf.)
The software is still going to be the same since I’m sticking with the G5 tower for around another year or two and Logic Studio is still going to be the same. the plugins aren’t going to change either, so it’s basically a nice, new set up of recording hardware. This will help out a lot with some of the ideas I have for the next few months, regarding music.
Hopefully not too long after I move The Lab and rebuild my workstation, I can get back to work on a cool electronic idea I would like to have out by the end of the winter.
A Sinner In Control
by Davin on Sep.11, 2009, under Music
It’s been a while since I’ve put out some music. In fact, it’s been about three weeks since I estimated I would be finished this album. But hey, better late than never, right? So here it is:

This was written between March and August, 2009. It was initially a little bit of fun to try and make some old-school, electro-punk and quickly became a fun project that took on a life of it’s own and developed a bit of a theme and a name that stuck in my head whilst recording it. I spent a few early mornings and late nights recording this in my home studio creating this thing and I eventually came to the decision to experiment and release it completely copyright free and see what happens. I’m kind of a nerd about that sort of stuff.
So, there’s some ideas I have with spreading this around I want to play with as well. So that should be fun. But, either way, take this and listen to it, share it, give it away or use it in games/movies/videos/samples. Whatever you like.

