Archive for the ‘Music’ Category
Ritornell for Musicbox
Beautifully designed functional business cards designed by Katharina Hölzl for jazz duo Ritornell. With the aid of laser assisted milling, nine micro compositions consisting of circles, triangles and Ritornell's contact information were applied onto a long musicbox paper stripe. [vsw id="31134236" source="vimeo" width="521" height="221"
Acid Jazz
Acid Jazz with Gilles Peterson. feat. Brand New Heavies - Mark "Snowboy" Cotgrove - Steve Williamson and Bukky Leo at Dingwalls. [vsw id="27940835" source="vimeo" width="521" height="221"
Drummer Weekend
Here are some of my favorite drum vids... this drummer is at the wrong gig [vsw id="ItZyaOlrb7E" source="youtube" width="521" height="221" autoplay="no"] Brush Duet Salt & Peanuts [vsw id="D-0Ve059ThI" source="youtube" width="521" height="221" autoplay="no"] The Groove Master himself - Bernhard Purdie I do 8th, i do 16th, i do nuts and i do triplets... aaaaaaaaahhhh [vsw id="Yfxp0A4MKos" source="youtube" width="521" height="221" autoplay="no"] Nothing to
Flying Lotus
This is such a nice electronic music... and ENTERTAINMENT!!! The Destroy Game The Attack Game Flying Lotus on BLEEP [vsw id="15568767" source="vimeo" width="521" height="221"
Otomata Music Toy
Otomata is a generative sequencer. It employs a cellular automaton type logic I’ve devised to produce sound events. This set of rules produces chaotic results in some settings, therefore you can end up with never repeating, gradually evolving sequences. Go add some cells, change their orientation by clicking on them, and press play, experiment, have
teenageengineering
God, i wanna be a child again... smile - this is mine, soon The Portable Wonder from Teenage Engineering. A hybrid digital synthesizer and MIDI controller with enough features to question if this thing is even real. Playing at maximum volume you can travel over the Atlantic ocean two ways constantly making music on your OP-1 before it runs out of power. And at the same time have over 2 years of stand by
ARC & Monome
Here’s a video of the Arc and Monome in action: a micro-looper. eight samplers, corresponding to columns of the grid. record by holding second-from-bottom key. focus arc to column by pushing bottom key. left knob is loop selection. turn to move selection, push-turn to resize selection. right knob is volume. turning changes velocity, not position, so a tremelo effect is easily achieved. pushing down stops the spin, like a turntable. third key up is mute/unmute. top rows transpose up/down by octaves. top rows meter sound ...
in da loop
this weekend i worked the first time with ulla for a new concept. she is an audio engineer from frankfurt. so, we had the chance to work in a theater in stuttgart - it was pretty cool - - Soundcheck & a little bit of swing [vsw id="24653694" source="vimeo" width="521" height="221" autoplay="no"] a bit of drum`n bass [vsw id="12011579" source="vimeo" width="521" height="221" autoplay="no"] the 4 to the floor Live [vsw id="14898569" source="vimeo" width="521" height="221"










