Random Access Memories Reviewed by a Random Amateur Musician — Sonaris

Random Access Memories Daft Punk Sonaris ReviewThis is not a track-by-track review and is actually just a bunch of stuff I thought about while listening to the album. That said, read on…

I like to think I am a Daft Punk fan but I have some internal conflict with this concept. On the one hand I find that I admire quite a few of their productions, but some I really love and there are definitely some I hate. Calling myself a fan of anyone’s music is a tricky thing because there is so much good music out there, it’s hard to say I’m a fan of it all, I have to be picky. I could say I’m a fan of a certain album or a certain song, but to call myself a fan of any one artist is really putting a lot on the line.

Even the productions of theirs I hate, there is a lesson to be learned in all of them. As a producer, I probably listen to music differently than other — normal — people do. My word involves hours upon hours of listening to repeating loops, searching for an hour for the right kick and snare combo, and subtle variations of the same melody and/or bassline until I feel I got it right. When I listen to music, I can’t help but analyze it. This analysis, or maybe even over-analysis of music allows me the gift and curse of reviewing music in a unique way.

The meat…. What’s so special about the super-hyped-up new Daft Punk album Random Access Memories then? Well, it’s pretty f*cking different, that’s for sure. Is it EDM? Not really, but kind of. Does it sound good? Yeah, it sounds amazing. It sounds like DP sat for days picking out every single sound, meticulously — well, that’s actually exactly what they did — and it shows. The dynamics are some of the most interesting I’ve heard in an EDM album in a while. That is not to say that there aren’t some other awesome producers who get how panning and EQing works, but DP doesn’t just pan and EQ well but they do it in such a way that the sounds play together in a nice, friends-at-first-sight kind of way. Is the album flawless? No, but I think that’s the point here. It’s something different and certainly a new, bold direction for DP.

Now, I’m no expert on putting together a full-length LP, I’ve only done it twice, and I probably could have done a better job. But, from a layman’s perspective, RAM flows well, each track a natural progression from the last. I found some interesting themes present, fluctuations in emotion, if you will. At times I found myself calm and relaxed, just taking the journey, other times I aggressively rewound to listen to the same hook a few times just to let it sink it. Listening to the album is interactive. Some tracks shine more than others, a lot more. But, it’s certainly a journey. I can’t wait to play this at full volume in my car with the windows open, on the highway, and get lost in retro daydreams. That’s the kind of album this is.

One of my producer friends asked why are people so adamant that this is going to change EDM in a major way? I’m not sure that it will, but it might. Here’s why I think so… I thought the album might have some harder-hitting tracks, but it looks like DP gave away the secret weapon, which is definitely Get Lucky, on this album. But… this album is just the beginning. Soon the EDM scene will be flooded with bootleg remixes, and ripped samples.

What makes this album different than what’s out there? For one, it’s the lack of overused percussion loops, melodic hooks and samples. This album is the original real deal in EDM, something which happens rarely now-a-days, maybe because most of us lack the resources to record live music and make it sound so f*cking good, maybe it’s laziness, maybe it’s a lack of inspiration in the face of over-compressed cookie-cutter beats which is what it seems like everyone is listening to right now. For once, DP didn’t sample a lot of other people’s music. This is sort of their answer to critics who threw stones every time a new sampled piece was discovered in their older projects. In any case, DP does it right, very very right with this album. Not everyone is going to get it, at first, and some are never going to get it — but I feel like I do.

I am a fan of Daft Punk, and — in my opinion — this is their best album, yet.

Stream the album on iTunes if you’ve got it. Album out in most stores on May 22nd.

Reddit External Links Data Out: How You Can Use This To Promote Music More Efficiently

New numbers from Reddit are out, on the Top 100 external domains submitted to reddit (as of March 27, 2013). Top 10 below. So, how does this help you promote music?

If you’re not familiar with Reddit, it’s a site which essentially aggregates information in one place, shared by its own users. It being one of the top sites for this sort of thing right now means that the below sites are some of the most relevant sources of content at the moment. No huge surprises on the sites listed there. What does this mean for you?

If you want to gain visibility, be in the places where other people are. Namely:

  • Do use images, photos to promote your releases, yourself, your band, your label, whatever – post these on Flickr and Share them on imgur
  • Do post videos on YouTube even if they are just a static image, but make sure that the music is of good quality (yeah, it might get ripped, but no one is going to share your 30 second 90kbps mp3 file). You’re better off with people ripping and sharing your music than not… exposure!
    • If possible, do try to use some animation in your videos so people have a second reason to share it, not just for the sound
  • Do focus your efforts on getting publicity so you can get on Wikipedia, it legitimizes your presence in the industry

An article in the NYT certainly wouldn’t hurt, but if that’s not you today, it can always be a goal.

# Domain Submissions
1 i.imgur.com 4,907,577
2 imgur.com 4,013,285
3 youtube.com 3,367,658
4 reddit.com 994,339
5 qkme.me 641,745
6 quickmeme.com 355,509
7 youtu.be 278,618
8 flickr.com 263,352
9 en.wikipedia.org 178,003
10 nytimes.com 159,780

 

Dred Scott (Rapper): Breakin’ Combs — One of The Best 90’s Rap Albums You’ve NEVER Heard

2018 Update: This album is now on Spotify!

Sometimes it so happens that I run accross a track that completely blows me away, and this happens less and less lately. I’d say this is less because music is “getting worse” but more because I’ve probably heard quite a bit of it already. The rap scene lately hasn’t been getting a lot of my attention. That’s why it’s mind-blowing when I find an entire album that’s just this crazy journey of smooth beats, flawless delivery and witty rhymes. That album is Dred Scott’s “Breakin’ Combs”.

I’ll begin the story by saying that I found the first track I heard from this album by typing something completely random into YouTube and just happened to click on the video for “Back In the Day”. Immediately I went from the surroundings of my office to a day in the park in the Bronx after I first moved to New York in the early 90’s. Memories of after school basketball, pump-up high-tops, Looney Toons, fruit punch, JanSport backpacks, Super Nintendo, breakdancers in Central Park, all this came rushing in. The thing is, Dred Scott was an L.A.-based rapper, but the vibe is so strongly, distinctively 90’s that I couldn’t help but get lost in my own world of the time period with a sound so distinctively 90’s rap.

An entire day worth of play-on-repeat later I realized I need to know if there is more of this out there. As it turns out, Dred Scott only released one rap album, in ’94. (He also released a jazz album a year later). So, I quickly tracked down a few more tracks on YouTube, and all of them are bangin’ beat gold! Practically every beat I found is a grandiose percussive tribute to the boombox, screaming to be played in my car with the windows down. For a 90’s rap album the fidelity of sound is quite good, even in digital recordings on YouTube and a couple I found on this post by Jeff Leon on KevinNottingham.com

Well, now I definitely want a copy of the album. Over to Amazon, but alas there is no MP3 version. Luckily, a few used copies were still available for a reasonable price. Needless to say I grabbed a copy and now eagerly await to get these jams in my possession to listen to at my whim. It kind of feels like I’d been waiting to find this album and, as if by fate, I have. One of my favorite feelings is when I find new music which I want to enjoy over and over and over, music which makes me feel something, takes me to a different place.

Is it a shame that Dred Scott only put out one album? Should he have gotten more exposure? Would he still be around rhyming right now? I’m not sure, but maybe this is meant to be a treasure to be discovered by a few, the lucky ones.

How to Mix Electronic [Dance] Music [EDM] 101: Tricks, Tips and Winning

How To Mix Electronic [Dance Music] Sonaris Music

I get this question a lot and I’ve posted about the difference between mixing and mastering before (update 2019: article is no longer archived on the site), but I figured I’d throw together some thoughts, and [my own] secrets – if you will, in this short article on mixing electronic music. There are lots of tutorials out there, but this one is unique because this is how I mix my own tracks and I pretty much learned most of it by trial and error, so my techniques may be different than what you’ve seen out there. Continue reading “How to Mix Electronic [Dance] Music [EDM] 101: Tricks, Tips and Winning”

Sonaris Definition

Sonaris Music LogoI’ve had a few people ask me how the name Sonaris came about, so I decided to write a short post on it. Even though I wasn’t the first to come up with this word, I was the first to use it as a music alias, to the best of my knowledge. I was certainly the first, and still the only one — at this point, to release an album using this alias.

The definition of Sonaris, as I intended it, is an entity which finds or discovers sound.

One of the biggest things for me, as a producer, has always been to “find my own sound”. It’s something I had been focusing on, even before I officially changed my production name from EJ Lirik to Sonaris.

How it came about: As I felt my music start to mature, I wanted a name which would reflect the evolution of myself as an artist. I had come up with many names, but one really stuck. One of my favorite films when I was growing up in the Soviet Union had been “Solaris” — by Andrei Tarkvosky (not the George Clooney remake, but the 70’s original).  In the film, there is an ocean which (spoiler alert, to some extent) turns out to be a sentient being. I’ve always felt that music is something which flows through me freely, and I’ve chosen myself to be a mere conduit. Thus, Sonaris isn’t me, as a person, but an entity which picks music out of a vast ocean of sounds and aligns them to sound in a particularl, sometimes pleasing way.  A “sonar” is a device which detects objects. “Sonus” is “sound” — in Latin. Thus, a combination of these words made perfect sense, as an alias for music production.

A Few of My Favorite (Classical) Things

Update: Added vocal pieces, as suggested and recommended by Reddit user spike

If you’ve known me for any length of time, you know I love various kinds of music, and am frequently inspired by many off-the-wall productions/compositions, as well as contemporary mainstream music. But, Classical music has always been close to my heart. While I have no Classical training, and my piano “playing” is akin to an angry elephant stomping on the keys, as a child I attended many concerts in the Moscow Conservatory. I slept through many of them, but the music stuck. When in deep need for inspiration, I turn to Classical. Lately, I’ve found myself listening to a lot of Baroque, as this period is highly influential to me with usage of melody, melodic structure and progression and raw, passionate, emotional energy.

As I listened to some pieces (on Iceberg Radio’s Baroque Masterpieces channel) which really struck me, I decided to take notes so I can come back and hear pieces I like again and again. The following compilation took me a couple of months to put together from Baroque (mostly) pieces which I felt most resonated with my aural preference. I tracked almost all of the pieces I liked on YouTube, and tried to pick those with the best sound quality. Enjoy:

Vivaldi Violin Concerto In A Minor, Rv 356 Largo

Telemann: Die Kleine Kammermusik – Partita No. 1 in B flat major, 1968 Recording

Bach – Harpsichord Concerto No.1 in D Minor BWV 1052

Suite No. 5 in E Major HWV 430 – Courante

Corelli – Concerti Grossi, Op.6 (1714) / Concerto Grosso No. 1 in D major

A. Vivaldi: Concerto for bassoon, strings & b.c. in B flat major (RV 503) – Part II

Bach Sonata for Solo Violin No.1 in G minor BWV 1001

Vivaldi – Cello Sonata in E Minor RV40 – Mov. 1-2/4

J.S. Bach – BWV 525 (3) – Sonata I – Allegro Es-dur / E-flat major

Bach – Partita No. 6 in E minor, BWV 830 II. Allemande

G.F. Händel – “Ho tanti affanni in petto” – aria for alto, flute and continuo (“Mi palpita il cor”)

J. S. Bach – Sonata for Flute and Obbligato Harpsichord in B minor BWV 1030: III. Presto – Gigue

J.S. Bach – Quia respexit humilitatem & Omnes generationes / Magnificat, Es-dur BWV 243a

Two Part Invention No. 8 in F Major, BWV 779

J. S. Bach: Allemande from Suite in e-minor BWV 996

Maxim Bernard – J. S. Bach: Partita No. 2 in C minor, BWV 826

Georg Solti/Beethoven Symphony No. 5 in C minor (“Fate”), Op. 67 4th Allegro Pt2-2

Jean-Henry d’Anglebert de pièces d’Opéra de Jean-Baptiste Lully

Telemann / Han De Vries, 1982: Oboe Concerto In E minor, TWV 51:e1

Handel – Sarabande

Handel – Suite No. 5 in E Major HWV 430 – Allemande

Albinoni’s Adagio

Bach – Brandenburg Concerto No. 5 in D major BWV 1050 – 1. Allegro

J. S. Bach – Trio Sonata in E flat Major BWV 525 (1/3)

Antonio Vivaldi – Concerto for two oboes in d minor RV 535 (1/-)

Courante, Mr. De Lully (Harpsichord)

Telemann – Concerto grosso in D major, TWV 54:D3 (Trevor Pinnock / The English Concert)

Bach: Mattäus-Passion – Kommt, Ihr Töchter, helft mir klagen – Otto Klemperer

J. S. Bach – Partita n. 2 in C Minor BWV 826 – 6. Capriccio (6/6)

J. S. Bach – Partita No. 6 in E minor, BWV 830 (Perahia)

Corelli : La Follia

Vivaldi: Sovvente il sole (Andromeda liberata, RV117)

Desterò dall’empia Dite – Sharon Rostorf-Zamir – Amadigi – Handel

Sento la Gioia – M.R. Wesseling – Amadigi – Handel

Handel, Io t’abbraccio Love duets

Handel – Serse “Ombra mai fu” – Lorraine Hunt-Lieberson

Johann Sebastian Bach 6 Partitas BWV 825-830,Gustav Leonhardt

Mozart – Lacrimosa

I hope you enjoy these pieces as much as I did when I had first heard them. I am always open to suggestions and recommendations, so please feel free to comment on my Facebook page if you’d like to share them, or just your thoughts.