A is for Amazon June 17, 2008
Posted by mistrust in blog, blogging, children, e-learning, elearning, family, mistrust, music.Tags: b2bmediaco, children, e-learning, elearning, kids, web2.0
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Not exactly music-related, but some news anyway. I’ve recently had an article published in a popular e-learning magazine in the USA. I wrote about how young kids are growing up learning the language of the World Wide Web and how we should encourage them to become proficient in using the internet at an early age. The article was reproduced from my own e-learning blog that someone from the magazine found a while ago, and asked if they could publish it. I’m quite chuffed, as you can imagine, and it just adds to the the list of other articles/letters I’ve had published in the last year or two (eg in Future Music magazine).
You can read the whole thing (and the rest of the magazine) online in a virtual magazine reader here at E-Learning Magazine’s website (go to page 50 of the NextBook edition.) or see it in its original form on my e-learning blog.
Also…. I’m seriously considering moving all my other blogs into one place (here!) as it’s easier for me to keep tabs on what I’m writing and who’s reading them.
Mixtape, Muxtape May 14, 2008
Posted by mistrust in music.Tags: mixtape, mp3, music, muxtape
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Updated: 28th May 2008
It seems that my Mixtape/Muxtape isn’t working because the Muxtape website has lost most of its data. I’m currently uploading a new playlist which should be available here shortly…
Here’s a word you don’t come across much these days: Mixtape. Remember? The thing you made for your friends or for listening to in your car on a long trip, taping your favourite vinyl tracks or the week’s Top 30 on Radio One. The thing you made for your mate’s party. The mixtape is now only a mythical beast since the ubiquotous CD came along. Well, I came across a website that will let you recreate your favourite mixtapes online. It’s a website called “Muxxtape”, which lets you upload upto 12 tracks to create your very own mixtape. A lot of the people who’ve signed up seem to have have made mixtapes of their favourite albums (copyright problems anyone….?) and uploaded them to the site.
Well, I thought I’d upload some of my own tracks from the last few years, seeing as though there may not be many new ones finished for a while. You can listen to my own “mistrust” mixtape by clicking the image below. There’s also an RSS feed so you can add the playlist to iTunes etc and get notified of any updates.
Add mistrust.muxtape.com to iTunes (RSS)
Don’t forget, you can listen to all my blog entries via Talkr at the Podcast Directory
Advice wanted about the Firewire audio interface April 29, 2008
Posted by mistrust in music.Tags: audio, firestudio, firewire, interface, presonus
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More on the possibility of me getting a Presonus Firestudio, I’m a little bit more convinced after reading this interesting article on Recording Review’s website:
Just ordered a presonus firestudio
“So my first goal was to find an audio interface that had a powerful headphone mixing system with zero latency…..I ended up selecting the Presonus Firestudio. It has just about everything I need for $700.”
It looks like a very indepth review.
I’m trawling the web for reviews, articles, videos of firewire audio interfaces, particularly the Presonus Firestudio, to help me make my mind up. If anyone’s got any suggestions, please let me know.
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Kids making electronic music 2 April 28, 2008
Posted by mistrust in artists, blog, mistrust, mp3, music, unsigned.Tags: 80s, old, retro, songs
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Following on from my previous post about how I started making music with various bits and pieces of old radios and things, I posted a comment on Createdigitalmusic’s website about all it in an article about Kids making electronic music between the 60s and the 80s. I also I put in a link to “This is the Mood….”, the track I made in the mid-80s using just a Jen SX1000, Casio MT31, and a Kay Drum Machine. I was really surprised to get a reply. I maybe expected maybe a “hmmm”, or “well, it WAS the 80’s”. The reply came from the Editor-in-Chief and Publisher himself, Peter Kirn: “Excellent. Totally excellent”.
I’m convinced there’s something in some of these old tracks of mine - maybe I have a plan….
Have a look at the original article on Createdigitalmusic, with all the comments:
Golden oldies - kids making electronic music April 23, 2008
Posted by mistrust in artists, blog, mistrust, mp3, music, music library, unsigned.Tags: kids, oldies
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I often get asked how long I’ve been making electronic music. The answer is - probably most of my life! My dad was a TV engineer in the 60s and 70s, so he had allsorts of circuit testers and oscilloscopes and other bits of junk that I could mess around round and make odd bleeps and sinewave wails! My dad also had an old valve stereo radio and I used to tune it in to all sorts of weird and wonderful Eastern European radio stations on Short-Wave, and made crazy frequency sweeps. I even hooked up a model train transformer to the radio’s input socket and made wacky noises. I moved on to buying a cheap stereo reel-to-reel in a wooden box and recorded tunes I made on an old electronic organ that worked by blowing air from a fan. The first “proper” song I made was called “The Car Park”, and then something called “Do you know Mister Wall?” (anyone spot where I got that title from?). I used to try making “musique concrete” tunes by cutting up my tapes, but I didn’t have the right gear to join them up again, and made a horrible mess of the tape heads!
I got my first synth in about 1980 - a Casio MT31, followed by a Kay Memory Rhythm, and then a Jen SX1000. Not much, I know, but it was all I could afford and it allowed me to make tunes for all the lyrics I’d been writing about teenage angst and life in general. I recorded everything onto a Phillips hi-fi system (with adjustable Left and Right mic inputs!) bounced down with a Phillips portable cassette player and a home-made 4-input mixer (in a small tin box!). Most of the parts were pretty much played live, then bounced down and things like the synth solos and vocals were played over the top.
I made about 5 cassette tapes full on songs around that time, and they all survive to this day. The only one I’ve copied to CD so far is the first one, called “Ultraviolent Light”. Listening to them now makes me think of the songs of Casiotone for the Painfully Alone, who still use similar gear as I used. One of the tracks from this “album” is called “This is the Mood (I’m in) and is here for you to listen to in all it’s glory. Bear in mind that it’s from a cassette tape that’s nearly 30 years old and I haven’t used any noise removal equipment….. it sounds quite a quirky little song….see what you think!
This is the Mood (I’m in) - 4′40″
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