Topic: Unexpected Events and more

Viewing 7 posts - 1 through 7 (of 7 total)
  • #2709
    Lion
    Participant

    My new album: Unexpected Events just released for free download!

    As always, produced completely in Podium.

    http://justmuziq.com/muziq/lion-unexpected-events/

    Also I have a video for ‘Take A Walk With Me’ on youtube and vimeo

    #21559
    Levendis
    Participant

    @Lion wrote:

    “Buld it, box it, throw it on the screen…”

    Great lyric man!

    Thanks for the album 🙂
    And great to know it was all done in Podium.

    Just played it and it’s great! Love the soul vibes 😀

    #21565
    Lion
    Participant

    Thanks, I have one more coming this Monday.

    #21587
    Levendis
    Participant

    😀 Found it!

    TeeJei x Lion – Something else

    ‘Get It’ and ‘Something About Hip-Hop’ (creepy flutes) are my favourites 🙂

    #21595
    Lion
    Participant

    haaaa 😆

    thanks.
    People have been really responding to Get It. TBH thats the one I wanted to have the most response to.

    There’s a video planned for it.

    #21608
    The Telenator
    Participant

    Hey Lion! I saw your post the other day and finally got the chance to listen to your latest. I should qualify the following by saying that as a dinosaur Rock Blues performer and sometime Pop composer the whole Hip Hop genre is about as far away from home base as it gets for me. That shouldn’t matter really, though, for a long-time musician. It’s Duke Ellington who is normally credited with saying, “There are really only two kinds of music — Good and Bad.”

    Thanks to you and a couple others, one of them being my oldest son, others from this forum, my appreciation of Hip Hop beats has really maxed lately — to the point that I’m currently working on finishing a half dozen guitar instrumental tunes with what I think might be best called a post-dubstep tempo and beat. Then I’ll probably head back to my regular thing.

    About your stuff, though: I try to be a good listener, even to stuff that really isn’t my bag. And even if it isn’t, I think I can still tell good music. In your case, I thought first of all your lead vocals were probably as good as it gets. You did a great job of recording them, too — that’s for certain. I thought the stuff like your panning of the backup vocals when you used that effect came across real well, too. For the lyrics themselves, I’m not qualified enough to judge. You have to go to someone like levendis; he’s more the man to ask about that. I only listen for the tone and placement. And I haven’t heard all of what’s out there these days, but they sounded to me about as good as any I have heard recently.

    Of course, I didn’t sit there and try to pick your beats all apart, but then I didn’t need to — I thought the rhythms, the beats, were all right on the money on these tunes. The drumset sounds good, and where I really focused in on it I thought the kick was just right. From tune to tune your levels were pretty well matched. Of all of them, I think there was only one or two where the level of the mix sounded a little higher than the rest, and I wanted to throw the album on a meter to check all the numbers, but no time at all for that this week. You know, I think that’s one of the hardest things for anyone to get perfect and glue a whole album together — the overall level of each tune compared to every other, a big reason artists may shell out up $50,000 to a mastering house.

    Okay, everybody is going to dig your “creepy flute” as much as I did on, what, #6? Yeah, that made that tune. Are you planning to reveal what you used for that? Had the timbre sort of from a penny whistle, without the heavy slide effect. That was good placement at the album end. I think that will help folks remember your album after they get done. That’s what is charting some Hip Hop higher than others these days — aside from standout lyrics. I keep noticing how artists will include “a somethin’ extra” to keep it memorable.

    I need to talk about your bass frequency zone on all this. Remember how I said you got the kick just right? That’s mostly ’cause it was kept tight. I think the bass frequencies overall could be tighter as well. I thought the levels within each tune were fine — in fact, nearly perfect balance against your lead vocals higher up the frequency spectrum. There are a bunch of plugins that help a lot with the tightness/definition thing. Some good ones are freeware too. I think one that might work for you is that plug called BASSLANE, free at toneprojects.com. It will really zero right in fine-tuned to the Hz cutoff you want, and what it does is mono-ize some of the bass to give it tight focus while keeping the full stereo spread and depth untouched above where you set it. They got others, too, but this one’s my fave and maybe easiest to use. I know that in this stuff and in Rock some also, this bass zone is the No.1 thing that can make artists tear their hair out trying to get right. I threw your album on a couple different speaker arrays and headphones, too, I’m not saying anything sounded bad, just saying I think you can make it kick in the gut a little tighter.

    Last thing on tech talk is I check for IMD — for any inter-modulation distortion. That’s why I wanted to find time also to put it on a dynamics meter and check headroom and so on. You can’t hear IMD on some players, but on more and more new ones it shows up as little clicks, thumps and pops. The best MP3 players will not allow distortion between samples, but what happens instead is they ‘dump’ it into those little noises. Anyhow, not necessarily a make or break issue unless you are trying to win a Grammy for production. No matter what, IMD can be totally removed by never letting your mix go above -1dB at any time. That gives the file the space to peak between samples without clipping. IMD will stand out as soon as you convert to MP3. Then it will poke you right in the eye. MP3s always sound like total crap to me no matter what, but no worries — we’ll all be compressing to the better AAC format in a few years anyway.

    Sorry to run long and don’t want to end on a negative note, so let me go back to saying that you’ve got some very fresh-sounding, very original-sounding tunes here. Like levendis was saying, some really clever turns of phrase lyrically, but I think I ended up most impressed with the vocal quality. So many still trying to break into rap and hip hop — seems like a new one every single day. That’s why you have a lot to be proud of here — because the voice tones are memorable and they have enough original style and character to them so you don’t end up sounding like the 10,000 others out there right now. The vocals sound better to me than some of the stuff I hear charting right now. Same idea and some examples: guitarists B.B. King or Santana — you know it’s one of them playing one of their tunes sometimes as soon as the very first lead note on their guitars. Lion, I need to know, I mean people need to know that it is YOU doing one of your latest releases by the 3rd or 4th word of your lyrics. That info is all in your vocal tone and character. To me, that’s what you got going on here with this release.

    #21610
    Lion
    Participant

    Thanks for the extensive review Tele

    Yea, I actually downloaded Bassline somewhere, I dont think I installed it yet. As for everything being tight, thanks — I started out playing bass with a few other students and since I got into full production I’ve been a stickler for letting all important elements really cut through.

    As for the sound I used in ‘something about hip-hop’ (track 6). It’s from a free sample pack from sample radar (music radar’s sample library) – experimental-samples. That’s enough info for everyone to find 😉

    Anything thanks for the (constructive) critique and info, helps my confidence and more importantly my direction.

    On the back-end, funny that you mention Duke Ellington he’s actually one of my favorite musicians and one of the first I learned to play on Bass.

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