jeffpeff's Featured RECords
- Annelien
It's SOOOooooo sad...But pretty, too, I think. I've named it Annelien.
Sorry I'm only just getting around to putting this RECord up, after about a year in cold storage. It's a document of creating the vinyl RECord hitRECord released last fall. I was pleased to be entrusted with overseeing the operation, and it was a very interesting session for me, since even though I've been making music and RECording professionally for 20-plus years, this was the first time I've had the opportunity to watch a lathe cut a disc.
For those interested in the technical details: It's a real time process, one in which if you screw something up halfway through, the whole pass has to be thrown in the trash; Sort of like the way final mixes used to be before automated consoles, only in this case, you can't roll back and re-RECord over a piece of tape...You have to pull out a fresh slab of vinyl.
The songs were given a mastering pass in order to put them at equal levels, and to make them sit together well generally, and then the songs were sequenced into two separate digital files, one for each side of the vinyl, with gaps in between songs already in place, done at the time of mastering. So really, all Pete, the cutting engineer, had to do was to set a proper level for the lathe and run the pass.
The "blanks" used to cut the music to are aluminum discs covered in a high-grade vinyl. There's only a couple of factories making them in the US now. They're the size of a 33 1/3 RECord, only a bit heavier due to the aluminum, and you often cut them only on one side (ie: One disc for side 'a' and another for side 'b'). A long time ago, these "lacquers" or "acetates" would be the only way an artist would be able to hear their music outside of the studio in between recording sessions, since it was very rare until the 1970s for most musicians to have access to open reel tape machines. Since it was (and still is) a fairly specialized process, and not every RECording studio would have a cutting lathe in house, that privilege was generally reserved only for the biggest artists. These RECords, while very high in quality, are also extremely fragile, succeptible to the lightest of scratches, and generally can only be played a few times before they start to deteriorate.
Once cut, discs meant as masters for duplication must be very-carefully handled, and are optimally sent to the pressing plant as quickly as possible (certainly within days of being cut), as they're somewhat perishable due to storage conditions, dust, overhandling, etc. At the pressing plant, these discs are then metalized (dunno how) in order to create the stamper, which can then pump out a certain number of copies of vinyl before they, too, wear out and need to be replaced.
What you'll see in the film first is us jumping around from track to track to confirm that the individual songs are hitting at the same level, and with the same general tone and EQ curves. Then you'll see the first "test" cut, wherein we took a piece of scrap vinyl, and ran a pass to make sure the amp settings are good, the grooves are cutting correctly, and that everything sounds good coming back off the vinyl. Then, it's on to the actual final pass, where we created the actual "master" which was sent to the pressing plant, to be duplicated on that sexy red vinyl we ended up with.
One cool detail I didn't know about until this session: You know the fat grooves in between songs on a vinyl RECord? They're not fat grooves because there's no audio there: In fact, they're the product of a real-time process done by the cutting engineer at the time of cutting: During the pauses in between tracks, he turns a knob to advance the lead screw such that it creates a wider groove, and then returns it to its normal setting once the new track comes in. I thought that was cool : )
It's too bad I wasn't able to capture what it looks like under the scope: It kinda looks like a zebra print...Black and white, and as you spin the disc, you can watch the grooves wiggle in response to what's going on with the audio.
- Fall Formal 2011_Love Is_Audio WAV
Here is the audio RECord of Joe and Neil Patrick Harris' performance of rcjohnso's "Love Is" at the hitRECord Fall Formal on October 10, 2011. WAV version, 48K /24 bit.
- Garden JeffPeff Adds 032611
I added a track of electric piano: A Wurlitzer 200A. Also, I sang a couple of vocal parts to add to Chigwinkle's outstanding (as always) vocals. I've had to resist the temptation to do more. I've also uploaded stems for further remixing in another RECord. This is my favorite music collaboration on hitRECord so far.
- Wanderer JeffPeff Remix 032211
This isn't really what I had in mind when I was first inspired to play with this piece. But I was somehow pulled in this direction, and since it felt like it was cooking, I took advantage of the opportunity to just have fun with it...As much as it's kinda unexpected dress in which to drape such a dark lyric.
The ideas are pretty well formed, but it's by no means "done". Like, it feels "over" before it should be, IMO...Despite the long ambient section at the end.
I'm putting it out today because I'm not sure I'll be able to spend more time with it in the next few days, and I might forget to otherwise : ) So yeah: Feel free to add new sections, parts, or arrange the parts I've created differently.
I'll be putting up stems shortly. Everything has been conformed to a consistent tempo, and even the non-drum part at the end is at tempo should you care to use it, so it should offer lots of possibilities.
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I think that much of the grief that comes with the death of someone so powerful and who shines so bright as Burning Dan Gordon-Levitt is due to the fact that we resent having to refer to them in the past tense…To think of them now as “someone who was”. It seems like a demotion from our perspective living on Earth; The image is one of us continuing on, while they have somehow stopped continuing on. As for my sense of the natural order of things though, this perspective of ours is too narrow to possibly be true. If any of us were fortunate-enough to be able to “live” to be 200 years old, we would still only have done so for a vanishingly-small sliver compared to the ages we have ALREADY spent somewhere else…And to which we will return (or evolve, if that’s your flavor). I don’t profess to know the ‘what’ or ‘how’ of it. But I know it awaits us all, and I have an innate trust that it is benevolent in nature, and most likely, it is entirely too engaging for those who reside there to allow any further need for, or even interest in, this world from which I’m writing. And so, I’m confident Dan is doing just fine without us. We, on the other hand, are right to feel our grief due to his being taken from our midst so suddenly. It willl take quite some time to adjust to the fact that his smiling, effervescent physical self isn’t standing among us while we go about our future endeavors. But he will remain a participant in my life always: I know that every time I ask myself “Is this task I’m embarking on too difficult to accomplish? Is this performance I’m planning too exuberant somehow?”, I know I will measure the depth of my conviction, and find my answer, by the light of Dan’s face looking back at me with that knowing, glowing smile, silently beckoning me…”Come on! YOU know the answer to that question! Go get ‘em!” Burning Dan isn’t ‘gone’. He’ll always be around every next corner, drawing us towards the Next Big Thing in our lives, rubbing his hands together in gleeful anticipation of the privilege of watching our faces light up as we accomplish something we once thought was impossible, and every time we do something as simple as creating just one more small piece of joy in the world. And yet, here we are, continuing on with our mundanity, while he continues on elsewhere, temporarily out of our physical reach. But I think I know what he would have us do with our lives here on Earth, despite his visible absence. Anyone who knows Dan at all will know, as well. And so, let’s all resolve to hone our own positive, optimistic spirit, and work to bestow it on those who haven’t quite ‘gotten it’ yet…To live our precious, all-too-short lives more colorfully…And to burn a bit brighter in our every day work and play; Not only because it keeps us closer to Burning Dan. But moreso, as I know Dan would frame it, because it puts us ever closer to our true selves. And as we draw ourselves nearer to that which is inquisitive, compassionate, and very-importantly, PLAYFUL, there’s nothing we can’t do; Either for ourselves personally, or perhaps more importantly, for all those joining us on our collective, continuing journey. Excelsior! |
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