sEEthIng — a songlet

As I mentioned yesterday, I was needing to get out of my writer head, who wants nothing at all to do with writing (for whatever reason). So I have.

I had previous mentioned my intentions of buying virtual synth and maybe upgrading to the subscription model for my DAW. Then I read the fine print: that subscription price on the DAW was only good for a year, and then the price would double. Great deal at the half-off price, terrible at the standard price.

Well, the last thing I want to do is lock myself out of my own music when I decide to no longer subscribe, so I opted out of that plan and redirected those earmarked funds to the second virtual synth I had my eyes on, thereby saving myself some money in the process.

Michael… This is awfully boring, let me skip ahead to your demo song already

I have been playing around with both software emulations of vintage Oberheim analogue synths this evening and discovering that I have a LOT to learn if I want to craft my own synth patches from scratch. My efforts all resulted in crap, crap and more crap — although, the last bit of crap sounded like major improvement over the earlier attempts. So, I’m picking up the ideas, but lacking mastery by any stretch of the imagination.

After a point, I elected to tweak the pre-purchase experiment to test some of the limits of the virtual synth within the DAW environment. I got it up to six instruments playing in tandem without lag or distortion on playback — something that shouldn’t happen and usually means that the software is not very well optimized when it does. For a frame of reference, one of my favorite go-to synths before this would start crapping out on me at three or four instances of the synth playing in tandem.

This didn’t hiccup in the least, which makes me a very happy user.

The mix on the result is very rough and I hear one note that technically is in key, but sounds dissonant to my ears. Dissonance can be a good thing, but it doesn’t sound good to my ears. When I rework this, I will probably give on that note that I am so wed to using and use a root note instead. Poo!

The idea behind this piece is to stretch out the introductory part to leave wide open and airy for vocals that sound like they are in a fog. The buildup before the drums will be lengthened somewhat, with fewer vocals and more incidental stabs/textures to build tension. The drums introduction for the final version of the song is to try and defuse some of that tension and leverage the dynamic nature of the song.

sEEthIng [edit]

“sEEthIng [edit]” a songlet by michael raven

All instruments aside from the drums are Oberheim virtual synths, utilizing “out-of-the-box” patches. No tweaks. The drums are from an edited sequenced run of sampled real drums. I probably overdid the ‘verb in this edit, and my stereo balance is rushed. No other effects were added aside from the reverb. Time to arrange, compose and mixdown was only about 3 hours total and it probably shows. Still, I learned a lot about the capabilities of my new tools and I am very pleased with how they sound (as well as their performance).

I would be remiss if I didn’t mention that there was a slight snafu in making my purchase, entirely my fault. Overnight, the problem resolved itself. But, before I could call up the vender to make sure it was kosher on their end, they called me to make sure I received my licenses and didn’t have any questions about how to get them installed on my PC. Not only that, but they asked a bunch of questions to make sure they understood my future needs and my customer service rep is assigned to me for all future purchases unless I request someone else.

So, a shoutout is definitely in order. Kris at Sweetwater rocked my morning.

Tomorrow, I may tackle the other end of the spectrum of learning how to do things: how best to employ a sequencer to create something more industrial-flavored, which is a sound I’ve been meaning to explore closer to see if I can capture the essence of those 80s-90s bands. These two synths seem to be just the ticket for doing such things.


19 responses to “sEEthIng — a songlet”

  1. unknown Avatar
    unknown

    The process of learning how to make things better, is the best. It sounds like you had fun. Blessings 🙏

    1. michael raven Avatar

      Indeed. I usually enjoy myself and can get lost in the process.

      Thanks! Blessings to you as well.

  2. Stacey C. Johnson Avatar
    Stacey C. Johnson

    Hearty cheers! I love this sound, Michael; it’s evocative and rich with dream language. A pleasure to hear!

    1. michael raven Avatar

      Thank you Stacey 💙

      I really appreciate your saying so.

  3. R. Jay Hoffman Avatar

    I look forward to hearing more. The Tony Banks sound is what stands out in my mind about the late 70s and early 80s. Genesis, Peter Gabriel, and the 80s Rush albums. The sound got to be ubiquitous, it seems, but I still love to listen to that music.

    1. michael raven Avatar

      Thanks! I tend to do these musical experiments in fits and spurts, so we’ll see what comes of it.

      Your comment reminds me that I really need to fill in the Genesis gap in my musical background. My progrock tastes trended more towards folk and/or harder rock (for more synth-based, there was ELO and APP) than I think Genesis played. I listened to a lot of Peter Gabriel’s solo efforts and I appreciate it quite a bit, but Genesis for me had that post-Gabriel sound that left me with a bad taste. I didn’t really care for the Collins years of the early-mid 80s. But! I should go back and listen to their earlier music. I’m surprised it never got played when I worked a used record store gig back in my late teens. There were certainly plenty of in-store copies around at the time.

      Thanks for the poke on that matter, I’ll probably have to stream something while I work.

  4. Chico’s Mom Avatar

    Genesis is the most under rated group EVER!

    1. michael raven Avatar

      😂 I can think of a few others that are also severely underrated, but I suspect that you might be onto something.

      1. Chico’s Mom Avatar

        I’m sure there are others. Back in the day I loved Milli Vanilli. They got caught lip syncing. Why didn’t the people that were doing the actual signing ever come out? They were great. There are so many underrated artists out there.

        1. michael raven Avatar

          Indeed.

          I’m only surprised with Milli Vanilli that everyone was so shocked about it when it came out. They only got caught — they certainly were not the first act to do so, or the last.

          1. Chico’s Mom Avatar

            True. The men that were lip syncing were great performers. The actual singers were great singers. To me it seems like a case of kill the messenger.

  5. shredbobted Avatar

    Sweetwater is great. My wife gets a lot of recording equipment for her voice-overs from them.

    1. michael raven Avatar

      I had always heard they were a good place to get gear, and now I can vouch for them being so.

  6. chrisnelson61 Avatar

    I like this (and am looking forward to see how it progresses). Very much my bag.
    I’m not drawing any comparisons here just using points of reference: a sort of Cure-esque keyboard intro, which is great, and I think that the slightly juxtaposed keyboard uplift works really well (a kind of Kælan Mikla/ Lebanon Hanover vibe) then the drums have an almost Enigma feel.
    Works well for me.

    1. michael raven Avatar

      Thanks, Chris. Appreciate the comments, as it gives me something to consider as I toy around with it.

      I’ll probably noodle on this a bit over the coming weeks, broadening it and adding flavor, incidental stabs and fade in pad elements with a goal to increase the otherworldly/eerie elements.

      1. chrisnelson61 Avatar

        I’ve said it before, it’s always good to play around creatively – always learning!

        1. michael raven Avatar

          I enjoy not having the need for everything to be performance quality (oh, the anxieties at times when I was in a performing band!). I readily admit these are just the results of my sandboxing things to see what works. Like my writing, I’m doing it for the enjoyment of the process, not for fame or fortune. Or even a thrown beer bottle from the audience.

  7. lyndhurstlaura Avatar

    Yep, totally over my head; but glad you enjoyed it all. 😂