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Billboard.biz Q&A: BT Discusses Sonifi iPhone App

By Antony Bruno, Denver

It seems like every artist is coming out with an iPhone app these days. But only a select few are taking the format to new levels-using the device as a means of creative expression rather than just a new distribution channel.

One of these is trance pioneer Brian “BT” Transeau, who last week launched Sonifi, an iPhone app that lets fans remix the song “The Rose of Jericho” from his upcoming album. But it only starts there. In a recent interview, BT tells Billboard.biz that soon other artists will release music using the Sonifi remix technology and that he will release his entire back catalog available for remixing as well, as part of an effort to merge remix and mobile cultures.

Twenty-First-Century Prototype

by Mark Small ('73), Berklee Today

Brian Transeau ‘89 is creating dance, film, and art music that’s a revelation for the rising generation of laptop musicians.

This Binary Reflection

by Aaron Roach, TranZfusion.com

Most people are going to read this interview because they know it’s about BT – a man that defies introductory clichés. I could sit here and talk of all his achievements, but a quick Google search will give enough information to last … whatever. I’m not here to clog up the bandwidth with any more background. His new album This Binary Universe is now available and it’s essential listening.

BT on the Big Screen

by Emily Tan, Club Planet

Voted in the top 5 of “America’s Best DJs” by the readers of DJ Times, BT’s music – as found on his albums, IMA, ESCM, Movement In Still Life and Emotional Technology – is considered to be classic by today’s standards. For his latest effort, the stirring surround-sound album and DVD, This Binary Universe (DTS), BT flew DJ Times writer Emily Tan from New York to his home in the Hollywood Hills for a private screening in his home theater.

Interview: Brian Transeau aka BT

by Alen Spiler, ClubbingScene.com

Initially known as the pioneer of trance music, BT has evolved into one of the most visionary artists and producers for a multitude of musical styles. Whether composing intricate scores with 80-piece orchestras for blockbuster films and the Oscar-winning Monster, writing and producing for Sting, David Bowie, remixing evocative epics for Madonna or designing and creating cutting edge proprietary software tools from scratch to make it happen.

BT Interview: Progressive Sounds

by Devon Shaw, Progressive Sounds

V-Synth Artist Interview: BT

by V-Synth.com

He’s known around the world the “Father of Trance,” but Brian Transeau (BT) is no one-trick pony. Whether he’s mixing electronics with orchestral scores (for films such as /The Fast and the Furious /and/ Stealth/), collaborating with mega-stars like Sting, or creating epic remixes for Sarah McLachlan, Tori Amos, Madonna, or Seal, BT consistently balances creative and memorable songwriting, sonic innovation, and the latest technology for a cutting-edge, yet organic sound.

Binary Acoustics: Where Digits Dare To Dream

by Stephen Fortner, Keyboard Magazine

BT creates nearly all his work at his home studio, Binary Acoustics, on a setup that’s “very modest and clean, compared to what I’ve used in the past,” he says. The nerve center is an Apple dual G5 running Logic Pro 7, the 30-inch Cinema display we all wish we had, and lots of MOTU interfaces. “When I hear ‘hard’ followed by ‘ware,’” he says, “MOTU is what I think of. My Traveler has never crashed at a gig, and I’ve crashed a ton of interfaces.” His main controller is an M-Audio Radium. “People are surprised I use an unweighted keyboard,” he says. “But it feels like all those vintage synths I spent summers mowing lawns to afford.”

The Mind of BT

by Stephen Fortner, Keyboard Magazine

Electronica’s visionary takes off in a new direction.

“Basically, my house is a hard drive,” laughs Brian Transeau. Though BT’s referring to the more than eight terabytes of computer storage at his home studio, the place actually does look like a hard drive, its sparse cubic forms and corrugated metal walls boldly rebelling against the Spanish-tile status quo of residential hills near L.A.’s Griffith Park. “It was designed by Frank Gehry [the architect behind Disney Hall and Seattle’s Experience Music Project building], and I think even the realtor didn’t know that when I first made an offer.”

Positively BT

Ted B. Kissell, EQ Magazine

Deep Throat spilled the beans on Watergate in a cloud of smoke in a darkened parking garage. Brian “BT” Transeau is about to do the same to the recording industry on his living room couch between sips of an Ultimate Ice Blended.

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