Debugger (World of Warcraft…): Not a ‘happy ending’ for Sky in Beyond the Game, … R_Debugger (Real Vintage: Dav…): LOL, he turned grey over the years Debugger (Snow Leopard is h…): Vier dagen geleden mijn bestelling bij Apple gepl… Saul (iPhone sequencers…): I love you !!
Thanks a kaossilator and an I phone… R-Dbugger (Amstel river area…): Love his work, especially the music RemoteD (Barack Obama): DP and O both rocks!! Richard (Happy Christmas a…): En jij ook een fijne kerst ! DBUGR W00T (Stay Zen): Be relaxed! DGBUGR JZS (New visualizer in…): a bloody shame, we want new macbooks!!! EH (Portishead): Since you write in English now, here some interes…
One of my favorite YouTube artists is Anchorsong from Tokyo. He creates his music with a sampler (AKAI MPC2000XL) and a keyboard (KORG Triton) right in front of the audience. He brings together different electronic dance styles within melancholic pop compositions. Lately he moved from Tokyo to London to get a record deal and become a professional musician. His latest song is Devil's Clap:
This is an early public performance of KJ Sawka. In the meantime he has signed a record deal and has done an European tour. With more than 600.000 hits for this video, you can definitely say that Sawka owes at least a part of his success to YouTube. I still love to watch this video of the 'human metronome'.
Detroit based producer Jeremy Ellis shows what making music with the computer is all about. He makes me think of Jamie Lidell. Don't miss the singing part :) BTW: Nice contrast with this post.
On YouTube you see a lot of gear porn. Sometimes it sounds very nice, but more often it sounds like crap. Some painful examples of people who do nothing with the potential of their gear. Still, their studios make me instantly jealous:
Impressions from the Native Instruments Traktor Pro Launch Party at Watergate, Berlin. I am a big fan of Traktor, so i don't mind publishing the promo video ;)
Episode of The Simpsons about the new Apple Store in town. Even, or better, especially for Apple fundamentalists like me, it's very funny. Thanks to my friend EH.
BTW: Because of the severe copyright policy of YouTube, this kind of movies are directly removed from their website. The same counts for my earlier post of Lazy Town. It is frustrating to see that Google has destroyed systematically all the potential of the original concept.
The spirit of freedom of content lasted just one-and-a-half year till november 2006 when Google bought the site for 1.65 billion dollars. At least there are some alternatives now, like Daily Motion.
Kurt Kurasaki, alias Peff, has made many patches for Reason. In this video he gives some insight into the deeper features of the new Thor synthesizer of Reason 4. Very informative.
Oliver of Wire to the ear tested the audio recorder for the iPhone of Griffin. The quality of the audio recordings is quite remarkable. Listen here to the test recordings.