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The Sonifi Logo

Posted by Rageous

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Unbeknownst to many, the (soon-to-be) famed iPhone-based Sonifi app logo is actually a winning design from 99designs, a contest website that provides a vehicle for corporations to receive spec designs and select the best. Sonifi’s winning design comes from Nuno Serrão, a Portugal-based designer that does a variety of identity, branding, print and web. Based on the examples listed on URB Studios, Serrão’s firm, he is exceptionally talented and his work well-deserving of further attention throughout the electronic community.

Emily Lazar on the mastering duties

Posted by Rageous

With all the recent attention towards BT’s new (and yet untitled) album #6 and the associated acts doing remixes and collaborations, it’s very easy to overlook a number of contributors deeply involved in helping produce a record of the highest caliber. Today we’ll take a look at the most important person not actually featured on the album: The Mastering Engineer.

Mastering is a lost art form of sorts. It entails a broad spectrum of everything from finalizing the tracklisting, normalizing the audio to keep the levels consistent throughout the record, to preparing the material for a glass master pressing at the CD distributor. Most importantly, however, the mastering engineer is responsible for pouring through every inch of the audio with a fine tooth comb to detect and clean up inconsistencies, hollow sounds, unwanted echos from recording sources, and imperfect balances or muddiness throughout the frequency spectrum. They may also apply additional filters for a variety of subtle enhancements. Some artists opt for a bright, sweet sound, others want a “live performance” feel. There’s also the issue of dynamic range: Higher compression creates a louder and punchier sound (See: The Offspring), at the severe expense of losing the depth and dimension of the record. The trick is to find the happy medium—a sound that is forceful yet preserves all the peaks and dips of a sonic waveform. We could very easily punch out a doctrinal thesis on expert methods of mastering, but the bottom line is that it takes someone with exceptional talent and judgement to assess all these factors and implement a solution that compliments the vision of the source material. Mastering is not for everyone.

imageMeet Emily Lazar. As founder, owner and chief engineer of world-renowned studio The Lodge, mastering is definitely for her. In addition to mastering duties on BT’s previous works This Binary Universe and Emotional Technology, Emily has put her touch on a number of hit records including Playing the Angel by Depeche Mode, Elements of Life by Tiesto, a half dozen albums by Garbage, All Or Nothing by The Subways, (my personal favorite) Sonic Youth’s remaster of Dirty (what an honor that had to be), and even my Seattle-based home church Mars Hill’s compilation of worship bands. Having worked with a wide palette of sounds and styles for thousands of records, Emily has very few imitators, even fewer peers and nothing to prove to anybody. Plus she’s ridiculously hot. She’s the best of the best, and right now she’s working on BT’s latest offering.

Here’s a brief snippet of her biography—you can check out The Lodge here, their MySpace page here, and view the PDF with the bio and Emily’s complete discography here. She was also previously covered by Mix Magazine two years ago.

At the forefront of a new generation of mastering engineers, Emily Lazar, founder of The Lodge, recognizes the integral role mastering plays in the creative musical process. Combining a decisive old-school style and sensibility with an intuitive and youthful knowledge of music and technology, Emily and her team capture the magic that can only be created in the right studio by the right people.

Founded in 1997, The Lodge is located in the heart of New York City’s Greenwich Village. Equipped with state-of-the art mastering, DVD authoring, surround sound, and specialized recording studios, The Lodge utilizes cutting-edge technologies and has attracted both the industry’s most renowned artists and prominent newcomers. From its unique collection of outboard equipment to its sophisticated high density digital audio workstations, The Lodge is furnished with specially handpicked pieces that lure both analog aficionados and digital audiophiles alike. Moreover, The Lodge is the only studio in the New York Metropolitan area with an in-house Ampex ATR-102 one-inch two-track tape machine for master playback, transfer and archival purposes.

As Chief Mastering Engineer, Emily’s passion for integrating music with technology has been the driving force behind her success, enabling her to create some of the most distinctive sounding albums released in recent years. Her particular attention to detail and demand for artistic integrity is evident through her extensive body of work that spans genres and musical styles, and has made her a trailblazer in an industry notably lacking female representation.

Recently, Emily helped to launch the flagship Apple store in New York City with her presentation on the relationship between mastering and Apple Computers. Some of the esteemed artists she has worked with include: Depeche Mode, David Bowie, Lou Reed, Morrissey, Jeff Buckley, Sonic Youth, Third Eye Blind, Natalie Merchant, The Shins, Donald Fagen, Beyonce, Sinead O’Connor, Destiny’s Child, Simple Plan, Wu Tang Clan, Nada Surf, The Walkmen, Vanessa Carlton, Tiësto and The Prodigy to name a few. In addition, she has mastered original soundtracks for the following feature films: Training Day, Pokemon: The 1st Movie, Boys Dont Cry, Six Feet Under, Heroes and The Punisher among many others.

But even the most successful studios cannot just rest on their laurels. Seeing the potential for expansion, The Lodge recently added to the core competency of their business by opening new audio production facilities to serve different areas in the music/audio market, making The Lodge one of the most comprehensive audio service facilities on the planet.

Current articles on Emily Lazar include features in Artist Pro (cover story), Bust Magazine, Electronic Musician (cover story), Home Recording Magazine, Mix Magazine, Billboard, Pro Sound News, Medialine, Future Music, Remix Magazine and TapeOp. Lazar is also a highly publicized product endorsee for Avalon Design (audio equipment) and Apple Computers.

A Hat Tip to the Genius of KiloWatts and Vanek

Posted by Rageous

This site over the years has pointedly refrained from discussing, exploring or endorsing other artists, at least on the front page. People come here for BT-specific news and information, and album recommendations are best left to members on the board, or the experts at Progressive Sounds and Resident Advisor. There are rare cases however, when overwhelming talent and sufficient overlap of community warrant a shameless plug. That time is now.

The artist in question is Jamie Watts, better known as KiloWatts, a BT Network regular for the better part of the last decade, and one of the most ridiculously talented up-and-coming acts in electronic music. His music is unquestionably good—I’ve witnessed decks burst into flames and speakers crumple into piles of smoking plastic because of it. Dave Tipper listened to this kid and said, “That’s it, I quit.” True story. Well, not really… but fact remains, there’s not another person in electronic music right now with equally masterful command of melody, songwriting, technology and sonic experimentation. At the same time the general EDM public were consumed with BT’s recent effort This Binary Universe, members of BT Network were completely engulfed with Routes, KiloWatts’ 2006 solo effort.

Released today online is Focus & Flow, the sophomore collaborative effort of KiloWatts & Vanek, a glitch-pop duo with Belgian singer/songwriter Peter Van Ewijk. Conceived back in 2003 during the height of Soulseek, the two musicians met online and began an unholy alliance of Peter’s traditional folk-pop songwriting and Jamie’s penchant for glitch-infested IDM. The result was a striking, wholly unique sound that eventually became the two’s debut album Rawq. This album was an immediate hit with anyone who heard it, whether electronic fans or not, and left us bitching and moaning for a follow up. It would take four years to deliver. But deliver they did. Focus & Flow hits in full form, exploring new sights, sounds, textures and creative paths with all the bounding youthfulness of its predecessor.

I have buried myself in this album for the last six months prior to its release, and it’s taken this long to fully appreciate all it has to offer. It was my album of 2007, that I wasn’t allowed to list because it wasn’t out yet. I have played it for electronic music aficionados who demanded a copy or a link to purchase one. I have played it for electronic haters and seen it pass with flying colors. I have tested it on $20 car speakers in dank pickup trucks and in home audio demo rooms with $10,000 worth of Martin Logan speakers. In short—I wouldn’t hesitate to recommend this to anyone capable of enjoying music, nor would I reach for anything else before this. The duality of practical song-oriented structure and electronic experimentation is so ridiculously fucking good, I could eat my shorts. This album deserves nothing less than a breakout into a mainstream success, 500,000 copies sold, and for Jamie and Peter to charge the full 18.99 retail sticker price while getting every penny back. It’s that good. I guarantee it.

Focus & Flow gets the big shiny BT Network Seal of Approval.

Now click this link and fucking buy it.

(Ongoing album discussion can be found here: http://www.bt-network.org/board/viewthread/184/)

Scott Pagano & Jochem Paap: Hi-Fi Fusion

by Dustin Driver, Apple Pro

Mash a Kandinsky with a Duchamp, crumple one of Zaha Hadid’s smaller architectural experiments with H.R. Geiger’s eerie organic forms, cram the whole thing into a high-definition television, and you might end up with something like the art of Scott Pagano. Grind down the gritty, industrial detritus of Rotterdam — one of the world’s largest port cities — and process it in a digital audio factory and you may, if you’re lucky, get something that sounds like the mechanized mayhem of Jochem Paap, a.k.a. “Speedy J.” Blend it all together in a high-fidelity digital soup and you get, well, you get something entirely new.

FixIt Tip From FOH Engineer Ben Grossman On Using Eventide H8000FW

by Mix Magazine

Ben Grossman has been wowing audiences with his electroacoustics vielle a roué, or hurdy-gurdy as it is also called. He’s currently out on the road with BT and Trifon, as well as Thomas Dolby, creating a mesmerizing live performance that combines visuals with live 5.1 surround sound.

Master Of Vocals Is Pulling The Strings

by David Weiss, Mix Magazine

Emily Lazar of The Lodge in New York City (http://www.thelodge.com) has had albums from Morrissey, Depeche Mode, BT, Garbage and David Bowie, among many others, pass through her mastering suite. As the final stop in the processing chain, Lazar emphasizes that mastering is a crucial stage for the vocals.

Kid Beyond: Cutting-Edge, One-Man Band

by Michael Gallant, Keyboard Magazine

Sharing a bill with DJs and rock bands, Kid Beyond sticks out. His arsenal doesn’t include turntables, guitars, or drum kits — he’s just a dude with a laptop and microphone. It all makes sense, though, when the Kid opens his mouth and starts to fill the room using his top-shelf beat boxing skills, expert vocals, and some of the deepest, most amazing live-looping chops we’ve ever seen. Whether he’s doing a sensual cover of Portishead’s “Wandering Star,” an eerily realistic rendition of Nine Inch Nails’ “Closer,” or one of his Fatboy Slim-esque party song originals, Kid B’s ability to pump up a crowd using zero support personnel and nominal equipment is truly impressive.

Pyramind School Chooses Rock Engineer Frank Gryner to Teach

By Mix Editors, Mix Magazine

San Francisco-based Pyramind (The Institute for Advanced Digital Audio Training) had its first class session with new instructor and engineer Frank Gryner. Gryner was brought in to show Pyramind students first-hand miking and tracking techniques. Gryner was recently in from Los Angeles, along with the rap-metal band AWS, to record a track for their upcoming Peace of Mind EP. The recording session and Pyramind’s Advanced Music Production Class (MP&E 301) took place at Hibiki Studios (Mountain View, CA).

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