My music site
Moderators: MetalBeast, Capm
- SilverFJ
- DBB Cowboy
- Posts: 2043
- Joined: Wed Jul 28, 1999 2:01 am
- Location: Missoula, Montana
- Contact:
My music site
Long time no post... I just started this site not too long ago. Check it out!
http://www.jnicmusic.com
http://www.jnicmusic.com
Re: My music site
SilverFJ wrote:Long time no post... I just started this site not too long ago. Check it out!
http://www.jnicmusic.com
Well done!
But
In my opinion, this is a typical American music, which is no different from the folklore of the southern states of the USA. For example, the music of the peoples of Kamchatka (it's across the Bering Strait from Alaska) goes something like this
http://pleer.com/tracks/129156865f2v
P.S. And by the way, Bristol Bay is located in the UK, but not in Alaska. Maybe I have something wrong translated?
- Sergeant Thorne
- DBB Material Defender
- Posts: 4641
- Joined: Sun Nov 25, 2001 3:01 am
- Location: Indiana, U.S.A.
Re: My music site
You're the silly foreigner that decided not to believe the website in the first place.
I like it, FJ, but you seriously need a better recording setup (both for voice and the guitar).
I like it, FJ, but you seriously need a better recording setup (both for voice and the guitar).
Re: My music site
It seems that you need to re-read my post, to understand what I'm pointing to the lack of authenticity of the northern peoples in music SilverFJ. I do not hear in his works reflected national music Alaska Native - Athabasca, Haida, Inuits, Aleuts, etc. Now his music is not different from the standard music of the American cowboy. I think SilverFJ is perfectly understood what I meant, unlike your deep knowledge of the orchestration and styles of music.
- Sergeant Thorne
- DBB Material Defender
- Posts: 4641
- Joined: Sun Nov 25, 2001 3:01 am
- Location: Indiana, U.S.A.
Re: My music site
So you're psychic and I'm stupid about music?
Re: My music site
Of course, everyone has their own tastes. Just you perceive music as a listener, and I as a kind of DJ, who loves to do himself mixes and who understands the music a little bit more than you. SilverFJ makes beautiful music, but I always want to improve everything...
- Alter-Fox
- The Feline Menace
- Posts: 3164
- Joined: Thu May 24, 2007 12:49 pm
- Location: the realms of theory
- Contact:
Re: My music site
I've always had the view that music isn't so much about what the listener likes as being about what the artist likes.
Hopefully it's not about what the record label likes over what the artist likes, but that does happen.
Kind of like reading -- I might criticize how someone tells their story but I'd never criticize what story they choose to tell.
Hopefully it's not about what the record label likes over what the artist likes, but that does happen.
Kind of like reading -- I might criticize how someone tells their story but I'd never criticize what story they choose to tell.
Ship's cat, MPSV Iberia: beware of cat.
...
Beware my original music, at http://soundcloud.com/snowfoxden.
...
Beware my original music, at http://soundcloud.com/snowfoxden.
Re: My music site
Except for Twilight. We can criticize the ★■◆● out of that.
- SilverFJ
- DBB Cowboy
- Posts: 2043
- Joined: Wed Jul 28, 1999 2:01 am
- Location: Missoula, Montana
- Contact:
Re: My music site
Hey thanks for the good words and input.
My music is more western, the subject material is oftentimes about Alaska because of the seasonal work I do there.
As for a better setup for voice and guitar, I agree. I have a little station with a YETI pro-mike, FL Studio 11, and Beats Studio headphones to hear it through while I recorded. HOWEVER, my interest in computers ended when I stopped playing Descent a long time ago, and I don't really know how to use all this stuff! It'll take me some time to learn all the little intricacies. The recordings with the lyrics and pictures were both done on a single Rock Band game USB mic plugged into the computer on Audacity, and the other ones are my stock webcam and mic.
My music is more western, the subject material is oftentimes about Alaska because of the seasonal work I do there.
As for a better setup for voice and guitar, I agree. I have a little station with a YETI pro-mike, FL Studio 11, and Beats Studio headphones to hear it through while I recorded. HOWEVER, my interest in computers ended when I stopped playing Descent a long time ago, and I don't really know how to use all this stuff! It'll take me some time to learn all the little intricacies. The recordings with the lyrics and pictures were both done on a single Rock Band game USB mic plugged into the computer on Audacity, and the other ones are my stock webcam and mic.
- Alter-Fox
- The Feline Menace
- Posts: 3164
- Joined: Thu May 24, 2007 12:49 pm
- Location: the realms of theory
- Contact:
Re: My music site
It is generally a good idea to figure things like this out for yourself -- it's more rewarding and you learn them better... although "figuring things out yourself" is always relative, cuz no-one's an island. Unless they live alone on a desert island with no phone or internet, but if they do that then they're not here.
One of the things that really helped me take myself to a new level was a course in live sound engineering. It's not exactly the same thing as recording at home with a computer or in a studio, but it gave me a really good background on how and why things work, which is a very useful framework of knowledge for recording or performing anywhere -- cuz when you know how things work you know what you're doing when you're playing around with them. As far as I know the course itself is specific to Red River College, and I've heard that courses like it are pretty rare (specifically that this is the only one in Canada). The textbook should be easier to find -- I could point you in its general direction if you'd like.
One of the things that really helped me take myself to a new level was a course in live sound engineering. It's not exactly the same thing as recording at home with a computer or in a studio, but it gave me a really good background on how and why things work, which is a very useful framework of knowledge for recording or performing anywhere -- cuz when you know how things work you know what you're doing when you're playing around with them. As far as I know the course itself is specific to Red River College, and I've heard that courses like it are pretty rare (specifically that this is the only one in Canada). The textbook should be easier to find -- I could point you in its general direction if you'd like.
Ship's cat, MPSV Iberia: beware of cat.
...
Beware my original music, at http://soundcloud.com/snowfoxden.
...
Beware my original music, at http://soundcloud.com/snowfoxden.
- SilverFJ
- DBB Cowboy
- Posts: 2043
- Joined: Wed Jul 28, 1999 2:01 am
- Location: Missoula, Montana
- Contact:
Re: My music site
Yeah that would be great. I barely know how too run an EQ on a car sterio. When I try to record things on this pro equipment it's so sensitive I don't know how to filter out noise, etc...
- Alter-Fox
- The Feline Menace
- Posts: 3164
- Joined: Thu May 24, 2007 12:49 pm
- Location: the realms of theory
- Contact:
Re: My music site
The book's called Live Sound Reinforcement and it's by Scott Hunter Stark.
As I recall it wasn't very expensive for a textbook; but that's not saying much.
As I recall it wasn't very expensive for a textbook; but that's not saying much.
Ship's cat, MPSV Iberia: beware of cat.
...
Beware my original music, at http://soundcloud.com/snowfoxden.
...
Beware my original music, at http://soundcloud.com/snowfoxden.