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Per et al, Thanks for the enlightening and stimulating thoughts/techniques regarding long distance collaborating. It has given me much to learn. Thanks again and rest assured I will keep you posted regarding the fruits of these labors!! ~peace~ Michael ----- Original Message ----- From: "Per Boysen" <perboysen@gmail.com> To: <Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com> Sent: Tuesday, May 01, 2007 3:45 AM Subject: Re: Long distance Music > On 1 maj 2007, at 02.39, Michael Plishka wrote: > >> I am trying to record with someone a couple thousand miles away. What >> does this fair group suggest? >> 1. Doing my part of the recording and sending the CD or emailing the >> files? >> 2. Using software and synching up live? > > > Hi Michael, > > In the nineties I pioneered Rocketnet as part of the beta testing team > and learned the basics of long distance collaboration. Rocketnet was a > great system that connected DAWS over the internet, via a dedicated >audio > file storage server. I could produce recordings together with other > musicians, no matter who was using ProTools, Logic or Cubase. Any >freshly > recorded track was uploaded to the server and downloaded for monitoring > in a compressed format to those that had joined that specific session. > Although Rocketnet never reached financial break even and sadly went > belly up, the basic needs for long distance collaboration remains the > same: > > Each collaborator need to (1) receive a monitoring cue mix and (2) >submit > his own recorded track. For monitoring any stereo file of a suitable > project mix is fine. For submitting your latest recorded track you >should > decide on a format with the best fidelity that works well with all > collaborator's DAW system. You can send the files on DVD's or via an > online file transfer. With the www.yousendit.com service FLAC has >proven > to work well for lossless audio file compression. FLAC supports Mac and > Windows equally well. RAR can also be used, but I like FLAC better > because its handling of files is much faster in OS X. > > Remember to always start every audio file at bar one, so whatever DAW > anyone is using all tracks will sound in sync related to each other, no > matter what tempo setting is used locally in the DAW application or >multi > track tape machine. Just line up the starting points of all files. My > ongoing collaboration project runs at 24 bit files of 44100 kHz >sampling > rate, stereo or mono depending on what is recorded. > > Regarding "syncing up" it all depends on the music. For my ongoing > project we play by ear and rely on our own sense of timing. But as you > know, there is always a tempo thread going on in the back of your mind, > even if you play totally freely. What I do, at the mixing stage, is to > identify that tempo and adjust the DAW's tempo grid according to it. >This > has to be done by ear for best musical result. The difference is to > simply go from "feeling the tempo" (as a musician) to "knowing the >tempo" > (as a producer). You may not think that you need it, but I have often > found it useful for subtle stuff like for example bringing in tempo > synced soft tremolo of a reverb return etc. It can be more explicitly > useful if you may want to add a drum machine or any type of typical >remix > stuff later on. > > An interesting tricks in long distance collaboration is to play to a > click track but take it away and send only your recorded instrument to > the other person. Even if this person does research the original tempo > and sets up his own local click track it will be different and as such > result in something surprising. When you play as a musician you always > have a "radar within". This built-in radar doesn't only deal with >tempi, > it's about everything in the music. Emotions, transitions, >directions... > The trick to succeed in online collaborating is to develop a > collaborating method that allows the collaborators to identify that > "inner radar sequence" of the partner and being able to relate to it in > his own playing. One mistake you can make, when you receive a >recording, > is to listen "for sound" rather than for your partners specific "inner > radar print". When playing together physically this is not such a big > danger because you will see the "bored to death" look on your partners > face and remember to adjust your playing into a more communicative > manner, but in distance collab's you really have to look out for that > trap all the time ;-) > > Greetings from Sweden > > Per Boysen > www.boysen.se (Swedish) > www.looproom.com (international) > http://tinyurl.com/fauvm (podcast) > http://tinyurl.com/2kek7h (CC donationware music releases) > > > >