Episodes

  • Drum Beat Construction - Part 2
    Jun 13 2024

    Eddie Bazil gives us more pointers on constructing beats, incorporating useful tools such as Drum Replacement Software and pre-constructed Loops, then adding enhancements using timing, pitch and other processing tips.

    Chapters
    00:00 - Introduction
    00:33 - Drum Replacement Software
    01:41 - Example 1: Using Hit'n'Mix RipX DAW
    05:41 - Example 2: Making Loops Your Own
    11:36 - Example 3: Enhancing A Kick With Pitch And Timing

    Track credit for example 1: Ice Box featuring Omarion, produced by Timbaland - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ice_Box_(song)


    Eddie Bazil Biog
    Eddie Bazil launched his music industry career at the age of 17 as a synth programmer for a range of Electro / New Wave bands including Art of Noise, Spandau Ballet, Pet Shop Boys, Bobin, Paul Dee, DJ Krush, DJ Shadow, Jets Orchestra. By his 20s he was working as a sound designer for Akai, Roland Emu/Ensoniq, eventually signing on exclusively with the latter. Later, due to a growing demand for software instruments and libraries, Eddie started to develop libraries for various software manufacturers, including Native Instruments, Kiesel, Sound Effects Library, Arturia and Propellerheads. A meeting with Phil Allen, a Capital Radio DJ, resulted in the company Samplecraze, which Eddie has spent 20 years developing as an educational resource. At this time he trained in music production and soon gained a number of prominent contracts working with some notable artistes such as Busta Rhymes, Greensleeves, 9 Bar, SFP, Sleeveless, Chris Campbell and Gam Productions. He contracted to Island Records and Chrysalis as a producer and remixer, plus was commissioned to write the score for Macbeth that ran at 2 Way Mirror at Alexander Palace for the Cambridge Shakespeare Company. His ongoing development of Samplecraze has led to him offering educational workshops and classes, releasing four books via PC Publishing and becoming a contributor and forum moderator for Sound On Sound. Recently he has established The Audio Production Hub for online education and been invited by the Recording Academy to become a Grammy judge.
    https://eddiebazil.co.uk/

    https://samplecraze.com/

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    19 mins
  • Realistic Orchestras From Sample Libraries
    May 16 2024

    An introduction to using sample libraries focusing on the string section. Composer and Producer Sam Boydell talks us through selecting an orchestral sound library, creating a simple string motif and incorporating more realism into the finished piece by using a range of techniques, including articulations, dynamics and panning.

    Chapters
    00:00 - Introduction
    01:18 - The Tools Of The Trade
    03:13 - Choosing Your Sound Library
    06:01 - Starting With A String Motif
    10:39 - Allocating Orchestral Positions
    11:58 - Humanising The Performance
    14:57 - Fine-Tuning Velocity And Timing
    17:15 - Adding MIDI Automation
    19:56 - Placing The Orchestra In A Space
    22:17 - Incorporating Articulations
    24:39 - Creating More Dynamics
    27:46 - Mixing And Mastering

    Sam Boydell Biog
    Learning his craft by working in studios with the likes of Gareth Young (Sugababes), Stephen Lipson (Hans Zimmer) and Mark Hill (Craig David), Sam has grown into being credited for Composing many award-winning Commercials and Documentaries such as drift-racing’s, ‘Clipping Point’ (2022) rated at 9.3/10 on IMDb, as well as, prestigious TV shows like, Match of the Day (BBC).

    Sam is also considered one of the premiere Sound Recordists & Commercial Mixers in the UK, having worked with the likes of David Beckham, ITV and Ferrari.

    Further enterprises include the music label 60hz with Mark Hill and Neil Simpson, which works to nurture talent such as Nat Slater & Kyi in the past. And, Education, where he works with local universities and schools.

    https://boyde.tv/

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    32 mins
  • Drum Beat Construction - Part 1
    Apr 11 2024

    In the first of a two-part series, Eddie Bazil explains how some simple adjustments in your DAW will help you to achieve more bounce in your drum beats, by adding syncopation, swing and dynamism.

    Chapters
    00:00 - Introduction
    00:20 - A Quick History Of Beat Production
    01:07 - Early Programmable Drum Machines
    04:33 - Defining A Good Beat
    05:15 - Example 1: Shifting The Snare To Drive A Beat
    07:55 - Example 2: Altering Dynamics And Note Durations
    10:51 - Example 3: Adding Urgency With A Backbeat
    12:37 - Example 4: Creating Swing With The Hi-Hats

    Eddie Bazil Biog
    Eddie Bazil launched his music industry career at the age of 17 as a synth programmer for a range of Electro / New Wave bands including Art of Noise, Spandau Ballet, Pet Shop Boys, Bobin, Paul Dee, DJ Krush, DJ Shadow, Jets Orchestra. By his 20s he was working as a sound designer for Akai, Roland Emu/Ensoniq, eventually signing on exclusively with the latter. Later, due to a growing demand for software instruments and libraries, Eddie started to develop libraries for various software manufacturers, including Native Instruments, Kiesel, Sound Effects Library, Arturia and Propellerheads. A meeting with Phil Allen, a Capital Radio DJ, resulted in the company Samplecraze, which Eddie has spent 20 years developing as an educational resource. At this time he trained in music production and soon gained a number of prominent contracts working with some notable artistes such as Busta Rhymes, Greensleeves, 9 Bar, SFP, Sleeveless, Chris Campbell and Gam Productions. He contracted to Island Records and Chrysalis as a producer and remixer, plus was commissioned to write the score for Macbeth that ran at 2 Way Mirror at Alexander Palace for the Cambridge Shakespeare Company. His ongoing development of Samplecraze has led to him offering educational workshops and classes, releasing four books via PC Publishing and becoming a contributor and forum moderator for Sound On Sound. Recently he has established The Audio Production Hub for online education and been invited by the Recording Academy to become a Grammy judge.
    https://eddiebazil.co.uk/

    https://samplecraze.com/

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    16 mins
  • David Mellor - Mic Polar Patterns Part 2
    Mar 14 2024

    A valuable test for recording engineers, David Mellor gives examples of different mic types to emphasise the importance of knowing your mic collection in detail so that you're using the correct one for the recording task at hand. Cardioid, Supercardioid, Figure of 8 and Omnidirectional are compared.

    Chapters

    00:00 - Introduction
    00:23 - Testing The Schoeps CMC 6
    01:44 - Cardioid Examples
    05:39 - Testing With Percussion
    06:33 - Supercardioid Examples
    08:40 - Figure Of 8 Examples
    11:22 - Omnidirectional Examples
    14:05 - Testing With Percussion
    14:58 - Testing Each Mic Type at 0 Degrees
    17:00 - Testing Each Mic Type at 45 Degrees
    18:19 - Testing Each Mic Type at 90 Degrees
    19:42 - Testing Each Mic Type at 180 Degrees
    21:15 - Summary


    David Mellor Biog
    David Mellor got his start in pro audio through the Tonmeister course at Surrey University studying music, piano performance, acoustics, electronics, electro-acoustics and recording.


    He went on to work at London's Royal Opera House, with responsibilities including sound design, front-of-house operation, stage monitoring and electronic design satisfying the likes of Luciano Pavarotti, Placido Domingo, Dame Kiri Te Kanawa and Karlheinz Stockhausen. He has also had over 600 works published in the field of production music, including the Chappell and Carlin music libraries (now combined into Universal Publishing Production Music). Notable uses of his music include the BBC's Horizon, Fahrenheit 911, and the Oprah Winfrey Show.


    David has been actively involved in Audio Education since 1986, teaching students of City of Westminster College and Westminster University, and also returning to lecture at Surrey University. He also worked with John Cage on the International Dance Course at the University of Surrey. David now specialises in online audio education and has been Course Director of Audio Masterclass since 2001.


    https://www.audiomasterclass.com/

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    23 mins
  • David Mellor - Mic Polar Patterns Part 1
    Feb 15 2024

    In the first of this two-part series, David Mellor gives us an introduction to mic polar patterns, explaining the best type of mic to use for various recording situations.

    Chapters

    00:00 - Introduction
    00:43 - Influenced By The EMI Emiguide Tapes
    04:08 - What Is A Polar Pattern?
    06:46 - Omnidirectional and Figure Of 8
    08:43 - Cardioid, Hypercardioid and Super-Cardioid
    11:14 - Pressure-Sensitive and Pressure Gradient
    11:58 - Imperfections In Higher And Lower Frequencies
    13:01 - The Decca Tree
    14:06 - Abbey Road Demonstration
    15:32 - 0 degree axis Figure Of 8
    16:10 - 90 degree axis Figure Of 8
    16:48 - 180 degree axis Figure Of 8
    17:30 - 270 degree axis Figure Of 8
    19:01 - Multi-Pattern Microphones
    19:58 - Best Usage
    24:26 - Interference Tube, Parabolic Reflector
    26:23 - Experimenting With Off-Axis


    David Mellor Biog
    David Mellor got his start in pro audio through the Tonmeister course at Surrey University studying music, piano performance, acoustics, electronics, electro-acoustics and recording.


    He went on to work at London's Royal Opera House, with responsibilities including sound design, front-of-house operation, stage monitoring and electronic design satisfying the likes of Luciano Pavarotti, Placido Domingo, Dame Kiri Te Kanawa and Karlheinz Stockhausen. He has also had over 600 works published in the field of production music, including the Chappell and Carlin music libraries (now combined into Universal Publishing Production Music). Notable uses of his music include the BBC's Horizon, Fahrenheit 911, and the Oprah Winfrey Show.


    David has been actively involved in Audio Education since 1986, teaching students of City of Westminster College and Westminster University, and also returning to lecture at Surrey University. He also worked with John Cage on the International Dance Course at the University of Surrey. David now specialises in online audio education and has been Course Director of Audio Masterclass since 2001.


    https://www.audiomasterclass.com/

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    28 mins
  • Gear Of The Year 2023
    Jan 11 2024

    Paul White and Hugh Robjohns pick their software and hardware highlights from the last 12 months.

    Chapters
    00:00 - Introduction
    00:16 - Universal Audio Waterfall Rotary Speaker
    03:25 - Boss GM-800 Guitar Synthesizer
    04:24 - Tokyo Dawn Records Simulathe Cut
    06:33 - PreSonus Eris 3.5 Studio Monitors
    07:32 - Prism Audio Dream ADA-128
    10:07 - Walrus Audio Fable Granular Soundscape Generator

    10:59 - Blackstar St. James Amp Plug-ins
    11:55 - Zoom F8n Pro Field Recorder
    14:13 - Strymon BigSky Multi Reverb / Deco Tape Saturation
    14:49 - Line 6 HX One Pedal

    Paul White Biog
    Paul White initially trained in electronics at The Royal Radar Establishment in Malvern then went on to work with Malvern Instruments, a company specialising in laser analysis equipment, before moving into technical writing.


    He joined the Sound On Sound team in 1991 where he became Editor In Chief, a position he held for many years before recently becoming Executive Editor. Paul has written more than 20 recording and music technology textbooks, the latest being The Producer’s Manual.


    Having established his own multitrack home studio in the 1980s he’s worked with many notable names including Bert Jansch and Gordon Giltrap. He’s played in various bands over the years and currently collaborates with Malvern musician Mark Soden, under the name of Cydonia Collective. Paul still performs live claiming that as he has suffered for his music he doesn’t see why everyone else shouldn’t too!

    http://www.cydoniacollective.co.uk/

    Hugh Robjohns Biog
    Hugh Robjohns has been Sound On Sound´s Technical Editor since 1997. Prior to that he worked in a variety of (mostly) sound-related roles in BBC Television, ending up as a Sound Operations Lecturer at the BBC´s technical training centre. He continues to provide audio consultancy and bespoke broadcast audio training services all over the world, lectures at professional and public conventions, and occasionally records and masters acoustic and classical music too!

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    17 mins
  • Drum Science - Part 3
    Dec 8 2023

    In the third and final part of this series, Rob Toulson focuses on recording drums and talks us through the issue of frequency cancellation in a multiple mic setup, details how to choose the recording sweet spot in a room and explains the various stereo mic technique options that are available.
    See the Show Notes for further details.

    Chapters
    00:00 - Introduction
    00:52 - Phase Coherence
    03:00 - Time Delays
    05:10 - Comb Filtering
    07:53 - Flipping The Polarity
    12:22 - Choosing A Recording Space
    14:56 - Mic Choice And Placement
    17:43 - Stereo Techniques
    18:08 - Spaced Pair Technique
    19:02 - Glyn Johns Mic Technique
    20:12 - Coincident Pair Technique
    21:16 - ORTF Technique
    22:20 - Mid-Side Technique
    24:30 - Comparing The Techniques
    25:22 - Other Mic Techniques

    Professor Rob Toulson Biog
    Rob is Director of RT60 Ltd, who develop mobile apps for musicians and sound engineers. RT60’s iDrumTune Pro app assists drummers with learning the skills of drum tuning and has been the number one music app in over 100 countries since its launch in 2012. More recently, Rob and RT60 developed Songzap, which simplifies the process of recording and capturing musical ideas, enabling songwriters to focus exclusively on their creativity.


    Rob stared his career as a mechanical engineer with a doctorate in digital signal processing, before following his passion and moving into the field of music technology and specialising in percussion acoustics and audio software development. Rob has held a number of academic research roles in his career, including Professor of Creative Industries at University of Westminster and Director of the CoDE Research Institute at Anglia Ruskin University. Rob’s also a successful musician, music producer and sound designer, having worked with many artists including Talvin Singh, Wilfy Williams and Mediaeval Baebes, who have previously topped the UK Classical Music Chart.

    Rob is author of a number of music related books and articles, including ‘Drum Sound and Drum Tuning’, published by Routledge in 2021, and co-editor of the ‘Innovation In Music’ book series, which is also published by Routledge. His sound design work has been included in films by BAFTA Winner Shreepali Patel and has been showcased at Glastonbury Festival, The V&A and The Natural History Museum.


    https://www.robtoulson.com/
    https://www.rt60.uk/

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    28 mins
  • Drum Science - Part 2
    Nov 16 2023

    In part 2 of this 3-part series, Rob Toulson explains how to optimise the drum sound for recording by experimenting with drum head, damping system, tuning and drum shell combinations.

    Chapters
    00:00 - Introduction
    01:09 - Drum Heads
    01:44 - Mersenne's Laws
    04:05 - 1 and 2 Ply Drum Heads
    05:45 - Damping Systems
    07:10 - Centre Dot Drum Heads
    09:27 - Choosing Your Timbre
    11:44 - Selecting Your Drum Shells
    14:25 - Optimising The Whole Kit
    19:41 - Tuning The Kick Drum

    Professor Rob Toulson Biog
    Rob is Director of RT60 Ltd, who develop mobile apps for musicians and sound engineers. RT60’s iDrumTune Pro app assists drummers with learning the skills of drum tuning and has been the number one music app in over 100 countries since its launch in 2012. More recently, Rob and RT60 developed Songzap, which simplifies the process of recording and capturing musical ideas, enabling songwriters to focus exclusively on their creativity.


    Rob stared his career as a mechanical engineer with a doctorate in digital signal processing, before following his passion and moving into the field of music technology and specialising in percussion acoustics and audio software development. Rob has held a number of academic research roles in his career, including Professor of Creative Industries at University of Westminster and Director of the CoDE Research Institute at Anglia Ruskin University. Rob’s also a successful musician, music producer and sound designer, having worked with many artists including Talvin Singh, Wilfy Williams and Mediaeval Baebes, who have previously topped the UK Classical Music Chart.

    Rob is author of a number of music related books and articles, including ‘Drum Sound and Drum Tuning’, published by Routledge in 2021, and co-editor of the ‘Innovation In Music’ book series, which is also published by Routledge. His sound design work has been included in films by BAFTA Winner Shreepali Patel and has been showcased at Glastonbury Festival, The V&A and The Natural History Museum.


    https://www.robtoulson.com/
    https://www.rt60.uk/

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    22 mins