Mix of the day: Newworldaquarium

Delivered... RA - The Feed | Scene | Wed 7 Apr 2010 11:00 pm
The Bunker crew presents a dark and twisted two hour set from Jochem Peteri, taken from his recent US debut as part of the Unsound NYC festival.

Media : JBM, Ambitions & War

Delivered... info@filtermmm.com | Scene | Wed 7 Apr 2010 10:46 pm
JBM, Ambitions & War

Canada-born, and formatively raised between Los Angeles and New York, Jesse Marchant (aka JBM) is no stranger to moving around. It's a good thing, because it looks like he'll be able to channel that nomadic spirit, at least for the next few months. Fresh off a tour opening for fellow Brooklynite Sondre Lerche, he'll now open for the Oakland boys of Rogue Wave. Touring in support of his debut album, Not Even in July (out April 13th, via Partisan Records), Marchant was lauded by iTunes as a top singer/songwriter of 2009. 

Enjoy at FILTERmagazine.com

Céu on Amazon’s 100 Albums for $5 in April

Delivered... globalnoize | Scene | Wed 7 Apr 2010 9:53 pm

Céu – Vagarosa on Amazon for $5

Céu has been captivating audiences since her self-titled debut in 2007. Chosen as the first international artist featured in Starbucks’ Hear Music™ Debut series, Céu earned both Grammy and Latin Grammy nominations, countless press accolades, and chart topping numbers. Now “Vagarosa“, her second full-length album, is part of Amazon Mp3′s 100 Albums for $5 for the month of April. These are hand-picked by the Amazon staff to give people a chance to download full mp3 versions of great albums for only five dollars each.


DJ History take Shelter

Delivered... RA - The Feed | Scene | Wed 7 Apr 2010 7:13 pm
The site reprints Andy Thomas' comprehensive 2007 piece on Timmy Regisford, Freddie Sanon and Merlin Bobb's long-serving New York venue.

News : Mates of State Plan Covers Record; Offer Free Download

Delivered... info@filtermmm.com | Scene | Wed 7 Apr 2010 5:07 pm
Mates of State Plan Covers Record; Offer Free Download

Adorably hipster married couple Kori Gardner and Jason Hammel (aka Mates of State) will return with music this summer, though not new music. The duo will release a covers record, entitled Crush, which will feature their take on tracks from Belle and Sebastian, Death Cab for Cutie, Tom Waits, Nick Cave, Fleetwood Mac, and many more. To celebrate this latest effort, and in turn keep fans anxious for its release, the band is offering a free download of their interpretation of "Laura," by 2009 indie fave, San Francisco's Girls. Check it out here. No official date for Crush's release, but expect some electro-piano driven duets sometime this summer.

Media : Hooray for Earth, Surrounded By Your Friends

Delivered... info@filtermmm.com | Scene | Wed 7 Apr 2010 5:04 pm
Hooray for Earth, Surrounded By Your Friends

New Dovecote signees Hooray for Earth are about to depart their dual hometowns of Boston and NYC to play songs from their soon-to-be-released EP MOMO for the right half of this fine country. Hooray for Earth? Hooray for the Midwest and East Coast, more like... Okay, we might be just a little impatient to check them out when they hit LA. Meanwhile we'll have our new summer jam "Surrounded By Your Friends" on repeat.

|  Hooray for Earth  |  "Surrounded By Your Friends"  |  MP3  |

Hooray for Earth Tour Dates:

May 5 New York, NY @ Le Poisson Rouge (w/ ArpLine, Midnight Masses)
May 17 Cambridge, MA @ Middlesex Lounge - (w/ Twin Shadow, You Can Be A Wesley)
June 3 Milford, CT @ Daniel Street *
June 4 Rochester, NY @ The German House *
June 5 Buffalo, NY @ The Traif *
June 6 Cleveland, OH @ Beachland Ballroom *
June 8 Memphis, TN @ Hi Tone Cafe *
June 9 Birmingham, AL @ Bottletree Cafe *
June 10 Tallahassee, FL @ The Engine Room *
June 11 Orlando, FL @ Club at Firestone *
June 12 Miami, FL @ Grand Central Poplife 11th *
June 13 Jacksonville, FL @ Jack Rabbits *
June 15 Carrboro, NC @ Cat's Cradle *
June 16 Washington, DC @ Black Cat *
* June 3-16 w/ The Pains of Being Pure at Heart, Surfer Blood

News : Surfer Blood To Tour With The Pains Of Being Pure At Heart

Delivered... info@filtermmm.com | Scene | Wed 7 Apr 2010 4:52 pm
Surfer Blood To Tour With The Pains Of Being Pure At Heart

Prepare for a spring dose of indie pop refreshment, East Coasters. In June, NYC's The Pains of Being Pure at Heart will join the Floridian boys of Surfer Blood on an East Coast tour. Surfer Blood's stellarly catchy debut Astro Coast is out now, via Kanine Records, and they'll release a special Record Store Day split single, featuring "Take it Easy." New material from The Pains of Being Pure at Heart will hit shelves this June. "Say No to Love", backed by "Lost Saint", will release June 8 via Slumberland. The 7" record is pressed on sea foam green vinyl, and it'll also be available digitally.

Continue reading at FILTERmagazine.com

Roland V-Piano Evolution System Program Update

Delivered... Electronic Musician | Scene | Wed 7 Apr 2010 4:28 pm
This update adds two new Vintage and Vanguard piano models to enhance the sonic possibilities for the V-Piano. Vintage replicates the sound of the world’s finest acoustic pianos, while Vanguard allows the pianist to create new and innovative instruments beyond the limitations of the traditional acoustic piano.

News : MGMT Unveil Summer Tour Plans

Delivered... info@filtermmm.com | Scene | Wed 7 Apr 2010 4:22 pm
MGMT Unveil Summer Tour Plans

The pyschedelia-loving boys of MGMT will release their latest, Congratulations, next Tuesday via Columbia. The album, receiving mixed feedback as it were, is currently streaming in full, and last week a mind-bendingly strange video surfaced for "Flash Delirium," complete with elderly dancing, and Alien-style stomach creatures. Yeah. To celebrate their ambiguously-genre'd new album, the band will head out on an expansive tour, hitting North America throughout the summer. Check them out on tour, because if the album and video are any indication, the live show is sure to transport you into a different dimension.

Continue reading at FILTERmagazine.com

Media : Deluka, Cascade (Acoustic)

Delivered... info@filtermmm.com | Scene | Wed 7 Apr 2010 4:20 pm
Deluka, Cascade (Acoustic)

Brooklyn-by-way-of-England newcomers, Deluka, are gearing up to bring their female fronted, attitude laced, electro tunes to the US this month.  Touring in support of their self-titled debut EP release off Vel Records, the quartet will be playing a handful of dates that kick off in Los Angeles and will make their way east.

Before all that, Deluka will be one of a slew of featured guest DJ's at our very own Coachella Kick Off Party.  If you're not lucky enough to win a guest list spot, check out this acoustic version of their lead single, "Cascade", and dream of Team FILTER dancing the Indio night away!

Tour Dates:
April
15 Indio, CA - FILTER's 7th Annual Coachella Kick Off Party (DJ Set)
20 Los Angeles, CA - The Viper Room
29 New York City, NY - Brooklyn Bowl
30 Albany, NY - Bayou

May
6 Boston, MA - Harper’s Ferry
8 Hartford, CT - The Warehouse

l  Deluka - "Cascade" Acoustic MP3  l

Want a DAW that Supports OSC? In a World of Doesn’t, Ardour Does – Free

Delivered... Peter Kirn | Scene | Wed 7 Apr 2010 4:19 pm

And yes, there’s even built-in control surface support for the Wiimote. I have to give that a try to figure out how the heck that works.

Why wait for The Future, when you can have a full-featured DAW that supports OSC (OpenSoundControl), right now, today? That DAW turns out to be Ardour, the open source workstation software that’s been maturing surprisingly nicely, and runs on both Mac OS X and Linux.

Ardour has had OSC support for some time, but early this year, it got proper documentation. Setup is absurdly simple: there’s a single menu item to check off at Options > Misc Options > Use OSC. If you’re using any recent build, it’ll be there – no need for the bleeding edge. (If you want to adjust the port on which Ardour listens, there’s a single line to edit in a configuration file, though the default will probably work just fine.)

Check the menu item, and Ardour is ready to receive OSC messages, meaning it’d be really easy to build an OSC-compliant control surface from hardware or software. (I probably shouldn’t mention this in public, but I’ve started a simple remote control for Android. If you have feature requests or an idea of how it should work, let me know. One thing I’d like is to use Android’s gesture library for making menu shortcuts. I only bring this up in case anyone is interested in helping.)

The advantage of OSC over MIDI or even traditional keymaps is that there’s no translation of one thing to something else. Ardour simply responds to any message sent to any menu item. The message for Save, then, is Save. The message “edit cursor to previous region start” is edit-cursor-to-previous-region-start. Everything is described in human-readable English.

http://ardour.org/osc_control

It’s also not hard to look at the OSC commands and imagine a more generic spec for common, shared commands that would work across DAWs.

Ardour is already a joy to use for audio, especially if you think of it not as an all-in-one app that has every conceivable effect you’d ever need, but as a JACK-enabled host that works with other tools. Little wonder: JACK audio, an ingenious way of routing sound and transport between software on Linux and Mac, is also the creation of lead Ardour developer Paul Davis. (On Linux, I’ve started using the combination as a way of conveniently recording sounds from Pd.)

If you’ve found other DAWs have gotten overcomplicated and want an audio host that focuses on exceling at the basics, Ardour is well worth a look. Of course, for many of us, MIDI editing is a basic we can’t do without, so needless to say a lot of folks are impatient for Ardour. Paul tells me progress is going smoothly, though, so stay tuned – and consider donating at the site if you like what you see and want to support more development. Another way to help: on Mac, there’s the fantastic-looking Mixbus, a commercial version of Ardour that turns it into a full-featured, analog-style mixing console with effects.

http://ardour.org/

And commercial developers, I do hope you’re paying attention, too. Yes, this is something you could do.

Readers: what would you want to see from OSC controllers for a DAW?

Updated: Ardour + TouchOSC

Max Breakwell has blogged the Ardour DAW and also has set up a convenient-looking template for TouchOSC. I agree with Max that one of the big challenges is just picking out what you want to control – you wouldn’t want everything (that’s what the UI is for). On the other hand, it’s great to have that flexibility. Wanted to post this and haven’t yet had time to ask him, but I find it curious that he needs to run Max/MSP in the background to process the ports; I have to find out why.

TouchOSC and Ardour

“Ardour and OSC Ideas” / Ardour mini-review

Needless to say, though, OSC does not have to mean iPhone/iPad, exclusively. OSC hardware is gradually evolving, and other platforms are possible, too — including what promise to be some dirt-cheap, Android-powered tablets later this year. So I’d keep my eye on this one; even if you’re not ready yet, you might find yourself using this combination down the road.

Updated: Ardour + Pd

With OSC control providing full control of everything Ardour does, you wind up with something a little bit akin to the combination of Max for Live and the Ableton Live API calls (Live DOM). Not only could you control Ardour yourself via a tablet or controller or other device, but you could build a patch that provides programmatic control of Ardour. What might you do with that? Well, that’s up to you – it seems it could range from the practical (automating common tasks) to the somewhat unusual.

Apostool is a set of Pd patches that turn Pd into a “scripting” tool for Ardour. Developed by a user by the name of seegwen, it’s in its first steps, but it’s a good place to start if this interests you (and from comments on Twitter and elsewhere, I think it might). In case this seems like a distraction, too, there’s no reason not to keep such a patch simple, pulling only what you want to manipulate – indeed, it’s likely faster than some MIDI assignments and the like would be.

There’s a great discussion on the Ardour forum, which even raises the possibility of “algorithmic mixing.” Dave Phillips, the awesome Linux audio author, even chimes in with some ideas of other software that could get in on the fun. Sure, it sounds intensely geeky, but because of the potential simplicity of the tools involved, there’s no reason you couldn’t come up with a simple project and make some actual music with these ideas.

Apostool, Ardour Puredata Osc Scripting tool [Ardour forum]
Apostool – Puredata – Gwen [Project page]

And MIDI… For all the MIDI gear you’ve got that does MIDI and not OSC, Ardour needs your help creating mappings:
We Need You: creating MIDI controller mappings for Ardour 3

IK Multimedia GrooveMaker for iPad

Delivered... Electronic Musician | Scene | Wed 7 Apr 2010 4:12 pm
GrooveMaker for the iPad offers the same features and streamlined workflow as the iPhone/iPod version for making music with loops, but also takes advantage of the new larger multi-touchsurface to provide enhanced operation with an integrated, advanced controller.

News : Bloc Party Frontman To Release Solo Album

Delivered... info@filtermmm.com | Scene | Wed 7 Apr 2010 3:50 pm
Bloc Party Frontman To Release Solo Album

Bloc Party singer/guitarist Kele Okereke will release his first solo album, entitled The Boxer, June 22 via Glassnote Records.  Produced by XXXchange (Spank Rock, The Kills), with additional mixing by Philippe Zdar (responsible for Phoenix’s Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix), The Boxer sees the talented frontman pushing the boundaries of his own melodic sensibilities, embracing pop, rock and electronic music to boldly step out as a solo artist in his own right.   First single “Tenderoni” will be unveiled in the coming weeks.

Continue reading at FILTERmagazine.com

Ohm Teases Collaborative Music Host; How Should Collaboration Work?

Delivered... Peter Kirn | Scene | Wed 7 Apr 2010 3:48 pm

Surprise! Plug-in developer Ohm Force, known for their plug-ins (like effects Ohm Boys and Frohmage), today tease an upcoming collaborative host. It looks like the sort of thing Apple could have done, but hasn’t. There’s a GarageBand-style MIDI and audio editing pane, plus semi-modular routing of plug-ins on a pretty, graphical surface that resembles the “cheese grater” perforated aluminum of a Mac tower, and pop-up window palettes that resemble those we’ve seen on the “flattened UI” of the iPad.

The real feature here, though, is collaborative editing in the “cloud”: sessions are uploaded to a server, which in turn keeps track of versioning. (Actually, it’s quite unclear how that works collaboratively – this means you can “undo” from one version to another, but I can’t tell whether collaborators can try different “forks,” or if it’s all one set of linear changes.) The changes are “real-time,” though usually the trick to allowing international collaboration over the Internet is to make things delayed enough that everyone stays in sync.

There’s also an accompanying Web community for connecting with collaborators. Everything else about the product, however – more features, pricing, and specifics of how it all fits together – is as yet unknown. Mac and Windows are both supported, though – something Apple would not have done, most likely.

It’s an interesting idea, one I think we’ll see more frequently as connected applications grow in popularity. Among other options, Ableton had promised something like this with Share and then fell off the radar. Image-Line had a collaborative tool called Collab for its FL Studio, then abandoned it. The most significant competition comes from tools like Indaba. Indaba’s edge: by being powered by Web tech, you can do all your editing right in the browser; serious users can then keep using their host of choice and just bounce out audio. But while Indaba has an offline editor, too, the addition of plug-ins in Ohm Studio is a big change.

I do wonder with all of this, though: are we consigned to collaboration existing only in proprietary, integrated app-website combinations? Isn’t the whole lesson of the Web about open standards and platform-agnostic communication? Having said that, what would a more open tool look like – and what do people really want to do? (For instance, I wonder how hard it’d be to build a system that allowed open chat and transport control, with standards-based versioning and sharing, using the open-source DAW Ardour? See the post I’m … about to write … for the OSC end of this.) On the other hand, is the kind of integration Ohm Studio is offering necessary to make it all work together? (That last question we should be able to answer once this is in our hands and ready to try.)

I don’t wish to pre-judge Ohm Studio – on the contrary, I think this is a provocative product teaser that immediately raises some of these fundamental questions. So bravo, Ohm, for starting that conversation; I can’t wait to see what you’ve cooked up. And anything that gets artists collaborating is potentially a very good thing.

In the meantime, readers, it seems the most important question falls to you. Do you even want to collaborate with other artists? What would an ideal system look like for doing so? What features would you want? How would you want to work? Is real-time important, or do you prefer some time to sit back and think about how elements combine? When you collaborate now, how do you go about it? (more...)

MYNC, Rhythm Masters, Wynter Gordon ‘I Feel Love’

Delivered... Posted by Zack Rico | Scene | Wed 7 Apr 2010 3:26 pm
Donna Summer and Giorgio Moroder's 1977 disco classic 'I Feel Love' is currently dominating clubs across the globe. Again. Thanks to a drum heavy techno remix by MYNC, Rhythm Masters and Wynter Gordon, the likes of Carl Cox (above) and Sven Väth (below) have been playing it out a lot, with rapturous results on the dancefloor, unsurprisingly. Moroder's entirely electronic backing track for 'I Feel Love' is often named as the starting point for house and techno, and since 1977 the track has appeared in various incarnations.

Watch this video on Beatportal

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