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Some background: Most of you probably don’t know this because I haven’t talked about it much, but before I got involved with music on YouTube, I used to be a sample library programmer/producer (proof). A pretty good one. My products were given high star ratings and reviews in Electronic Musician magazine, Sound on Sound and elsewhere.

My first sample library release was so successful in fact that the Garritan company – makers of the Garritan Personal Orchestra, which is shipped with every single copy of Finale Music Notation software – flew me out to Seattle for a week-long interview. I was given the job, but unfortunately had to turn it down due to the amount of unforeseen traveling that would have been involved.

During my time working in the sample library field, I got to learn and collaborate with some very knowledgable music makers and music tool makers. I was an official product tester for Native Instruments. I was on a beta team for GigaStudio. But most importantly, I got to have regular phone calls with Tom Hopkins. Tom is the man behind the programming of the Garritan Personal Orchestra, which was an industry changing product when it was released.

Tom and I got into a number of discussions about composing, arranging, and performing music using nothing but sampled instruments. His feelings were strong that sample library technology had given us an opportunity to finally make music “perfect”.

What’s a sample library? Let me explain. Typically when you play a keyboard, you are hearing a synthesized (fake) sound. That sound resembles a piano, or a violin, or a harp, or a trumpet. But it is not a recording of any of those things, it is synthesized.

On the other hand, a sample library is an actual recording of every single note on any given instrument. The more expensive sample libraries include not just every single note, but also every single note played in a variety of ways (articulations), and at a variety of volumes (velocities (different velocities are important because some instruments change sound (timbre) dramatically when they are played softly compared to when they are played loudly).

So, when using a sample library, when you hit the A above middle C, you trigger an actual recording (or a “sample”) of someone playing an A note on a violin (or any other sampled instrument you may be using). And most violin sample libraries aren’t just recordings of random violin majors, no, national orchestras have been sampled, one player at a time, to build massive orchestral sample libraries. They are recorded in state of the art performance halls for reverb-baked-in libraries, or in professional isolation rooms for completely dry libraries that you can add your own ‘verb to in post production.

SIDENOTE: The most impressive orchestral sample library is the Vienna Symphonic Library. A special facility was built in Vienna solely for the purpose of recording, editing and programming this library. The full library consists of 1,143,482 individual note recordings and costs $13,990 to purchase. The total package clocks in at 746 GBs of data. But it sounds amazing! ;)

Okay, back to the individual sample recordings…

Through the use of MIDI programming and a DAW (Digital Audio Workstation, like Logic, Cubase, ProTools, Sonar, et al.), you can actually control whether each note is bowed up on the violin, bowed down, sliding to the note from a higher note, sliding to the note from a lower note, playing the note harshly, playing the note gently, playing with vibrato, playing without vibrato. Some libraries even let you control which string the note is being played on.

Even if you’re not a music composer, you can clearly see how powerful and revolutionary and… cool this technology is. You basically have a 100 piece orchestra dangling from puppet strings tied to your hands, mouse and keyboard.

You control all of the above with MIDI data. MIDI records and plays back a musical performance, but it’s not an audio file. It’s a list of commands. A single MIDI data file will tell your sampling software to play an A note, slid in to from a lower note, with vibrato, for two beats. That same data file will tell your sampling software how loud and hard to play the note, and will include any minute pitch bends or muting or other playing/performance cues you can think of. You get up to 127 different commands for each and every note on each and every instrument!

Want to learn more about MIDI? I made TWO separate VIDEOS about MIDI data a few years ago.

An additional benefit, because all this MIDI data is not an audio file, you can edit every single command independent of the others. Let’s say I program in a perfect pitch bend, vibrato, volume and slide for my note, but then, “oops, that was supposed to be an A sharp, not an A!”. No problem, I change just one of those 127 commands, and now all that perfectly programmed data plays back just the same, only now it’s a recording of an A sharp, not an A.

If your mind’s not completely blown right now, you’re not human.

MIDI and Controller Data in Cubase

With all of this insane note and performance control, you could compose an entire original symphony, performed by a first-class orchestra, one note at a time, completely from your desktop. The resulting recording would be made up of thousands of individual actual recordings of individual notes, no synthesized sounds. And, most importantly for my friend Tom Hopkins… you could make it perfect. Not one mistake, not one early note, and zero “swing” on any of the notes.

Tom went on to mention some of the other exciting aspects. Composers could now write pieces that could never be performed before. Computers can play notes faster than any human ever could. Computers can sustain those faster tempos indefinitely. Computers could sustain notes longer than is physically possible in the world we inhabit. No longer would composers have to search endlessly for a virtuoso who could handle their works. Their computer could do it, just as easily as it could check their email for them. And given the recording quality of the individual sampled notes, very few would know the difference.

So is all this perfection really better than a human performance? Sure, humans make mistakes. Humans are not metronomes. Humans add swing to triplets and other note patterns. But is the alternative not stale? Is the alternative not… soulless?

This is the question I am currently struggling with as my band The Caulden Road begins production on our first album. Sure Christian and I can program in every drum and percussion hit. We could program in pianos and violins and choirs and harps and anything else that’s ever been sampled. And it can be perfect. And it can sound like a million bucks. But will it still have life? Will it still have passion? Hiring choirs ain’t cheap. And an orchestra won’t fit in my office/home studio. And maybe perfect is what the modern music fan wants anyway. Quantized rhythm sections, pitch-corrected vocals.

It’s just, something about it all might be too synthetic for me.

PS. Wanna hear a sample library in action? This is an original piece I composed and programmed using a “lite” version of the VIenna Symphonic Library mentioned above, along with a few sampled instruments from my own private collection I’ve produced:

Lullaby by Alan Lastufka

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AKA “we’re going to need a bigger harddrive”
AKA “why I just deleted my entire iTunes library”

With the stroke of one key, I deleted over 10,000 songs this weekend. I was tired. Tired of listening to a random playlist and going an hour without hearing a song I really liked. Tired of missing ID tags like artist names, track numbers, proper album release dates… Tired of all this music I have no connection with.

Then, I pulled all of my old CDs out of storage.

Nine Inch Nail’s The Downward Spiral. Tori Amos’ Little Earthquakes. Roger Waters’ Amused to Death. Ahhh… now these were albums. These were songs I had a connection with. I had the lyrics booklets. I had the various inserts and limited edition slip cases. I had 1,000 finger print smudges on each disc from repeated playing and traveling.

The music coming out of the speakers was the same as it was yesterday, but the listening experience had changed.

I began building towers of CDs on my office floor. One stack for albums I couldn’t wait to reimport. Another stack for albums I wanted, but could put off importing, and others still that had a few good tracks, but also a few bad ones.

I began the process of rebuilding my iTunes music library from scratch. I filled in every ID tag before importing. I corrected every song title variation that bugged me, and properly labeled all special editions, imports, bonus tracks, reissues and featured artists.

I even used the vastly overlooked “sort album” ID tag feature to input the year the album was originally released. Now, when I browse my music library, each album is listed first by the artist, and then in the order it was released, NOT alphabetical order. A small detail, but a really important one when listening to more than random singles.

For instance, this glorious collection of Tori Amos CD singles (US and UK imports)…

…were a mess in my old iTunes. Now, they are presented in the actual order of release, not alphabetic order:

…ah! So much better!

I also imported every track utilizing the Apple Lossless codec (ALAC). This is a little technical but, basically, when you rip CDs to mp3, you are throwing away about half of the audio signal information. So you know those horribly pixelated jpgs you sometimes see online, or the YouTube videos that were processed before 2009 where the edges are just kinda blurry on everything – yeah, that’s what you’re doing to your music when you use mp3 or other lossy compressions. Apple Lossless does just what its name says, it imports your CDs with zero loss of the original audio signal. The files are bigger, but so is the sound. =)

I then spent hours on Google Images, tracking down accurate album art for each title. So this Smashing Pumpkins CD singles box set…

…actually has accurate album cover art:

Now my new music library is clean, and organized, and only filled with the good stuff. No more “Track 01”s no more “alexday_covers_ladygagaomglol.mp3”, just full, (personally) important albums that I can listen to without skipping or randomizing. And ones that I can pull the lyric booklets out for, and sing along (out of tune) to every word.

I particularly enjoyed digging in to my Pink Floyd mini LP box set again…

Which ended up in all its lossless digital glory as…

From here on out, if I want an album enough to spend money on it, I will buy the physical package. I know, first hand, how hard artists (and some good labels) work on the physical packaging of their releases, and I miss holding a piece of each artist in my hand as I listen to them. I will utilize the free streaming players that so many artist use, from Alex Day to… myself, on their websites to listen to the albums before making a purchasing decision. And my iTunes will again be relevant to my musical interests.

It’s been a very relaxing, enjoyable (looong) weekend. =)

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I’m coming up on the fifth anniversary of my original YouTube channel “fallofautumndistro”. It’s been a great five years. I’ve gained over 60,000 subscribers, my videos were watched over 7.5 million times, I worked on a lot of great projects with a lot of great friends, all who I met because of that channel.

But I haven’t updated it in months. I’ve only uploaded two new videos in the last year. I just feel like I’ve done all I can do with that channel.

So, it’s time for a change.

Today I uploaded a video called “Nothing Left To Prove” to a new, small channel tucked away in a quiet little corner of YouTube. That channel can be found here:

http://youtube.com/persistenceofvideo

I had been vlogging there, but not promoting the channel at all, just letting people find me on their own through video responses, comments I left on other videos and the like. (I’ve recently removed all of those vlogs, see the following)

But that really wasn’t pushing me to do anything more with the channel than treat it as a response channel.

I don’t want to just respond to what’s happening around me and with me, I want to affect the things and people around me. So I’m being a little more proactive with the channel now.

My last channel, fallofautumndistro, quickly turned from a tutorial and video art channel, into a parody and music channel, in my quest for subscribers and views. Can you blame me? Subscribers and views are the shit! But somewhere along that path, I lost interest. And my upload history proves that.

My new channel, persistenceofvideo, isn’t going to chase subscribers or views. I’m simply going to make things that make me smile. And hope that they make you smile too… enough to subscribe, and like, and comment, and share with your friends, and gah, I’m doing it again!

Anyway, TL;DR version: fallofautumndistro is now dead, persistenceofvideo is rising from its ashes.

My new first video:

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It has been one year since I released my debut album, Erase This, with Luke Conard.

I don’t usually celebrate these kinds of anniversaries. And had the album not been released only four days before my birthday, I probably wouldn’t have remembered the date. But Erase This isn’t really like any of my other projects.

First, there was the budget difference. With Taking Leave, Tom Milsom and I did everything. Studio time was extremely limited and hurried. Our instrument choices were limited to what we had on hand. We mixed and mastered the EP ourselves. And all of that shows. For Erase This, I was determined to not be limited by my own talents or musical knowledge, or lack there of.

So I invested a great deal of money in the writing, recording and production of Erase This. In the end, well over $10,000 that I have receipts for, and probably much more in small PayPal payments that I never recorded. I hired the best producer I could find, Christian Caldeira, who originally was just supposed to fill in for our absentee drummer. Without Christian behind the mixing board, Erase This as it stands today, would not exist.

I hired some of the best songwriters I knew to work with me. I know my own strengths, and my own weaknesses. I am a very strong lyricist, and wrote every line on Erase This. But my melodies lack… well, melody. The majority of the music on Erase This was written by Jason Munday and Raven Zoe. But some of the tracks, or elements of some tracks were written by Eddplant, JB Dazen, Tom Milsom or Ted Hu. All people who seriously know their shit.
[click to read more…]

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Over 280,000 views on YouTube. Over 3,000 digital singles sold. With an additional 4,000 full-length albums sold. All for a song I was ready to delete one November night in 2009.

I was in the middle of working on my debut album Erase This. I had written this fun little track about dailybooth photos, relationship statuses and two teens wanting to escape their opprosive, dull little town after losing their virginity to each other.

I ignored the song for a few days after I had finished writing it. It was kinda nerdy. Kinda fun. I don’t write nerdy. I don’t write fun. I write serious songs with concepts and story arcs and casts of characters.

After getting over myself, I emailed the lyrics to a group of about ten different musician friends. I told them I’d given up on including the song on Erase This and asked if anyone wanted to work together on releasing it as a one-off single.
[click to read more…]

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