my myspace/or MP3 DOWNLOADS- experimental/pop/psychedelic
Moderator: cgarges
-
- audio school graduate
- Posts: 22
- Joined: Tue Oct 26, 2004 7:09 pm
- Location: madison, wi
- Contact:
my myspace/or MP3 DOWNLOADS- experimental/pop/psychedelic
...or so the various labels imply.
http://www.myspace.com/sonmi
it is a solo project! check it out, if you want.
also, since it seems that mp3 downloads are preferable over myspace, here are downloads for the songs from the myspace-
parallel lines are bad
here is
bad days today
and here's one more song. not entirely substantial, i just wanted to practice mixing my cello into a song...
the hunter's son
i have more if anyone wishes to hear them!
http://www.myspace.com/sonmi
it is a solo project! check it out, if you want.
also, since it seems that mp3 downloads are preferable over myspace, here are downloads for the songs from the myspace-
parallel lines are bad
here is
bad days today
and here's one more song. not entirely substantial, i just wanted to practice mixing my cello into a song...
the hunter's son
i have more if anyone wishes to hear them!
Last edited by julia on Thu Dec 22, 2005 4:22 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- brokenchairs
- takin' a dinner break
- Posts: 171
- Joined: Sun Feb 22, 2004 1:31 pm
- Location: Louisville, Ky
- Contact:
i'd be careful if i were you. there's this guy who tried writing a record very similar to this one, and i heard he didn't turn out so well. the bad luck even seems to have spilled over to his brother. hide your siblings!
-
- audio school graduate
- Posts: 22
- Joined: Tue Oct 26, 2004 7:09 pm
- Location: madison, wi
- Contact:
ohh, thanks for listening!
seaneldon- oh dear, i do believe my infatuation with brian wilson and smile has perhaps boiled over a little much into my sound! but, do not worry, this being a solo project would prevent confrontations within band members, and my lack of recurrent substance use should keep me away from schizophrenic episodes :>
seaneldon- oh dear, i do believe my infatuation with brian wilson and smile has perhaps boiled over a little much into my sound! but, do not worry, this being a solo project would prevent confrontations within band members, and my lack of recurrent substance use should keep me away from schizophrenic episodes :>
- cwileyriser
- pushin' record
- Posts: 234
- Joined: Wed May 07, 2003 12:32 pm
- Location: Lexington/Athens, GA
- Contact:
Cool!!
Though I like the idea of being able to listen to what other people are playing and recording, I rarely like what I hear. But to me, this stuff is super cool - music, sounds and recording.
And an open-backed banjo in your myspace pictures! Awesome!
Don't know if you've got a pickup on it, but I've got a $20 piezo pickup (K&K, I think) on my ancient open-backed banjo that just sticks on to the backside of the head, and the jack sticks on too - wherever you can fit it on the bracing or whatever. I thought it would have come off by now, but it's all still stuck on there well. Sounds lo-fi, of course, but in a full band setting, it works fine and sounds "banjo-y" enough if you don't crank up the amp. Solo it sounds cool and trashy. I play it through a Princeton live, and I can make some awesome and surprisingly controllable feedback - even more insane if I run through the Z-Vex Super Hard On. I used it on a "real" recording recently and just ran direct through a Drawmer 1960 into a Digi001, and it sounded cool like that too.
Sorry for going off on the banjo tangent - I just love open-backed banjo sounds!
Though I like the idea of being able to listen to what other people are playing and recording, I rarely like what I hear. But to me, this stuff is super cool - music, sounds and recording.
And an open-backed banjo in your myspace pictures! Awesome!
Don't know if you've got a pickup on it, but I've got a $20 piezo pickup (K&K, I think) on my ancient open-backed banjo that just sticks on to the backside of the head, and the jack sticks on too - wherever you can fit it on the bracing or whatever. I thought it would have come off by now, but it's all still stuck on there well. Sounds lo-fi, of course, but in a full band setting, it works fine and sounds "banjo-y" enough if you don't crank up the amp. Solo it sounds cool and trashy. I play it through a Princeton live, and I can make some awesome and surprisingly controllable feedback - even more insane if I run through the Z-Vex Super Hard On. I used it on a "real" recording recently and just ran direct through a Drawmer 1960 into a Digi001, and it sounded cool like that too.
Sorry for going off on the banjo tangent - I just love open-backed banjo sounds!
-
- audio school graduate
- Posts: 22
- Joined: Tue Oct 26, 2004 7:09 pm
- Location: madison, wi
- Contact:
thank you so much! that's really flattering to hear.
i do not have a pickup on the banjo (and strangely, i hadn't really thought of it yet, though i am definitely interested in putting pickups on my acoustic instruments). i can imagine it sounding pretty amazing through some effects. actually, i'm not sure if i've ever heard a banjo with a pickup! mine is really quite cheap, but i still enjoy the sound a lot. and because it's cheap, i love experimenting with the sounds it can produce, by bowing the strings and whatnot :>. are there pickups specifically for the banjo, or are there universal pickups that could, say, be used on a cello as well?
i do not have a pickup on the banjo (and strangely, i hadn't really thought of it yet, though i am definitely interested in putting pickups on my acoustic instruments). i can imagine it sounding pretty amazing through some effects. actually, i'm not sure if i've ever heard a banjo with a pickup! mine is really quite cheap, but i still enjoy the sound a lot. and because it's cheap, i love experimenting with the sounds it can produce, by bowing the strings and whatnot :>. are there pickups specifically for the banjo, or are there universal pickups that could, say, be used on a cello as well?
- cwileyriser
- pushin' record
- Posts: 234
- Joined: Wed May 07, 2003 12:32 pm
- Location: Lexington/Athens, GA
- Contact:
A cheap banjo can sound as good as any other. Mine's a very temperamental 120-year old curmudgeon of an instrument, but its quirks give it character.
The pickup I put on it is a K&K HotSpot (http://www.kksound.com/hotspot.html). You can get one for $30 at a bunch of places. I got mine for around $20 - clearance or something. It's not designed for any particular instrument. It works fine for the banjo sounds I want. I love it even more because it was super inexpensive. If you're a little bit electronically inclined, you can make a lo-fi piezo pickup for almost no cost using one of those little piezo speaker thingies from a musical greeting card or toy, a piece of wire, and a 1/4 inch jack (and if your more electronically inclined, a couple of resistors for a voltage divider so it's not so hot, but you might like it hot if you're going for trashy sounds).
If you want to put a pickup in your cello and have it sound pretty and natural, I highly recommend the David Gage Realist (http://www.violinsetc.com/violinsetc/pr ... _id=Gage03 - also http://www.davidgage.com, but the site wouldn't load for me today). I have a Gage Realist on my doghouse upright bass and one on my Eminence electric upright. The pickup sounds great both plucked and bowed - especially bowed.
The pickup I put on it is a K&K HotSpot (http://www.kksound.com/hotspot.html). You can get one for $30 at a bunch of places. I got mine for around $20 - clearance or something. It's not designed for any particular instrument. It works fine for the banjo sounds I want. I love it even more because it was super inexpensive. If you're a little bit electronically inclined, you can make a lo-fi piezo pickup for almost no cost using one of those little piezo speaker thingies from a musical greeting card or toy, a piece of wire, and a 1/4 inch jack (and if your more electronically inclined, a couple of resistors for a voltage divider so it's not so hot, but you might like it hot if you're going for trashy sounds).
If you want to put a pickup in your cello and have it sound pretty and natural, I highly recommend the David Gage Realist (http://www.violinsetc.com/violinsetc/pr ... _id=Gage03 - also http://www.davidgage.com, but the site wouldn't load for me today). I have a Gage Realist on my doghouse upright bass and one on my Eminence electric upright. The pickup sounds great both plucked and bowed - especially bowed.
on the subject of the banjo...you might want to graduate to one of these bad boys.[/url]
- cwileyriser
- pushin' record
- Posts: 234
- Joined: Wed May 07, 2003 12:32 pm
- Location: Lexington/Athens, GA
- Contact:
Crazy.
"A new sound for bass players, the BB-400 has an uncanny resemblance to the tone of an upright acoustic bass with our special sliding mag pickup. The BB-400 has extremely quick hammers, pull-offs, and slides. It is especially suited to play slap bass techniques. The BB-400 is available with frets or as a fretless model."
http://www.goldtone.com/products/detail ... ea2=bb-400
Now I'm off to sneak over to my workshop to make some cheapo piezo pickups. Talking about it made me want to try some on some oddball percussion things (cardboard boxes, trashcans) just for fun.
"A new sound for bass players, the BB-400 has an uncanny resemblance to the tone of an upright acoustic bass with our special sliding mag pickup. The BB-400 has extremely quick hammers, pull-offs, and slides. It is especially suited to play slap bass techniques. The BB-400 is available with frets or as a fretless model."
http://www.goldtone.com/products/detail ... ea2=bb-400
Now I'm off to sneak over to my workshop to make some cheapo piezo pickups. Talking about it made me want to try some on some oddball percussion things (cardboard boxes, trashcans) just for fun.
- cwileyriser
- pushin' record
- Posts: 234
- Joined: Wed May 07, 2003 12:32 pm
- Location: Lexington/Athens, GA
- Contact:
Yeah, I haven't done primal percussion in too long - though I did build myself this percussion thing for a solo show earlier this year made from a piece of 2x4 about 18" long with bottle caps loosely nailed all over one side of it, two caps per nail, and with two cheap kid-size belts screwed to it so I could strap the thing to my calf and stomp on stage to rattle it.
My old band in Chapel Hill used to use almost everything BUT real drums for percussion - just one kick and one (sometimes 2) snares - but that was between three guys. The rest was found stuff - trashcans, bottles, computer monitors, computer keyboards, plexiglass, boards, toys, even the entire (extremely heavy, took a truck to move it) frame guts of a grand piano. Many times the stuff was found on the day of the show.
We recorded our side of a split 7" with Trailer Bride at a studio near DC about 10 years ago and stayed at my grandparent's house since they lived nearby. My grandparents were so cool - they helped us round up empty bottles in their basement, then gave us a big metal bucket to put them in so we could break the bottles and shake and beat on the bucket for a percussion on one of the songs. John Peel playing that track on one of his BBC shows was definitely one of the highlights of my musical life!
My old band in Chapel Hill used to use almost everything BUT real drums for percussion - just one kick and one (sometimes 2) snares - but that was between three guys. The rest was found stuff - trashcans, bottles, computer monitors, computer keyboards, plexiglass, boards, toys, even the entire (extremely heavy, took a truck to move it) frame guts of a grand piano. Many times the stuff was found on the day of the show.
We recorded our side of a split 7" with Trailer Bride at a studio near DC about 10 years ago and stayed at my grandparent's house since they lived nearby. My grandparents were so cool - they helped us round up empty bottles in their basement, then gave us a big metal bucket to put them in so we could break the bottles and shake and beat on the bucket for a percussion on one of the songs. John Peel playing that track on one of his BBC shows was definitely one of the highlights of my musical life!
- ClownMonkey
- pluggin' in mics
- Posts: 30
- Joined: Wed Jan 12, 2005 9:25 am
Coolness. Listening now. I added you as a "friend" too.
I'm getting a big deja vu for the band Gong listening to Somni.
http://myspace.com/doombilly
I'm getting a big deja vu for the band Gong listening to Somni.
http://myspace.com/doombilly
- Jeremy Garber
- suffering 'studio suck'
- Posts: 497
- Joined: Thu Dec 30, 2004 6:05 am
- Location: Louisiana
Beautiful.
Rhythm reminds me of an old drumset I had. Carboard box for the kick, empty crumpled up gallon of milk container for a snare, plastic 5 gallon bucket for a floor tom, short cross hatched metal table (yard furniture) for a hihat, and a round saw blade for a ride.
Thanks for linking directly to the MP3s too! For some reason MySpace band pages aren't loading correctly for me, although my band page works fine...
Rhythm reminds me of an old drumset I had. Carboard box for the kick, empty crumpled up gallon of milk container for a snare, plastic 5 gallon bucket for a floor tom, short cross hatched metal table (yard furniture) for a hihat, and a round saw blade for a ride.
Thanks for linking directly to the MP3s too! For some reason MySpace band pages aren't loading correctly for me, although my band page works fine...
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 42 guests