Wednesday, 5 September 2012

Week 1 - Diary

Week 1 Diary Entry

I've found my first week as a mature student studying Music Technology entralling. I have already picked up a lot of new information that I didn't know and have gained some hands on experience with various pieces of equipment. 

I'm excited at the prospect of learning a lot through out the course and have already learned things that I can apply to my own musical endevours. 

The class seems to be comprised of a variety of young people who have different tastes and interest which will be very beneficial to my learning.

I feel very prepared as previous to the course starting I had started reading various books on recording, mixing and sound engineering techniques and having guided learning is helping to "lock" this information together in my head. 

The tutors we have are excellent and seem to be working in conjuction to give us a good understanding of the subject without them repeating what the others have said. 

Malcom mentioned he hopes that we will leave the college praising the tutors which will attract other students, well in my case this has already happened. Many of the successful musicians I have met and worked with have been through this course and all speak highly of the tutors. 

I'm hoping to maintain a high level of discilpline through out the course and am aiming for distinction grades. 

Overall the college is immense imho. The facilities are top quality, the resources comprehensive and the staff seem to really care about us working hard and achieving out goals. 

I'm concerned about my ability to use Mac computers and will try and see if the lrc can give me a brush up on using one, and having only used ableton since the start of the year it's going to be a challenge to learn other daws such as logic, reason, pro tools and the like. Although these are all multitrack recorders in essence the way each one works is quite different so it's a challenge I'm looking forward to taking on. 

It's going to be great to get experience an qualifications in an area I really love and enjoy and the way all the tutors are focused towards working in the industry and making money is reassuring as I wish to persue a career in the music industry.






Keyboard Skills and Sequencing

Keyboard Skills and Sequencing

Tuesday Lesson 1 4/9/2012

Today we completed a questionaire using the glossery on the vle about midi, eq, effects and various other audio related subjects. This was completed and uploaded via the vle therefore I don't have any notes to update about this. 











Sound Creation and Manipualtion, Acoustics and the Music Industry

Sound Creation and Manipualtion, Acoustics and the Music Industry 

Tuesday Lesson 1 and 2 - 4/9/12

These two lessons where an introduction into some of the topics we will be covering over the course of the year. 

We discussed how knowledge is power and by understanding the protocalls (the rules and regualations/instructions) will enable us to work well in the music industry. We need to know the rules inoder to adhere to them correctly. 

The parameters of sound are volume (Decibels or dB) how loud or quiet it is. The pitch which is the frequency of a sound (is it high or low).


The threshold of human perception of sound is about 20hz - 20,000hz. It's only "about" as adults can't hear the entire range. Radio singles and wifi are sounds that are present nearly everywhere yet are outside the hearing of humans otherwise we would hear wifi and radio all the time. 

Sound travels at about 340 m/s in air. A train travelling towards a train station you would hear the sound coming through the steel railway as sound travels faster the denser the medium. Sound would travel at about 5,500 m/s through the steel rails. 

This can also be demonstrated in a bath tub. If you were listening to music in the bath and submerged your head the sound signal would sound speeded up as water is denser then air. 

We also talked about health and safety. The number 1 cause of hearing damage is caused by earphone buds. These aren't allowed to be used in the classroom and can cause damage as the sound is going straight down the ear channel and into the tympanic membrane (which is a thin layer of skin in the ear).

When using over ear head phones there is a gap of air between the ear canal and speaker and air is spongy and provides some protection from the sound. This can be demonstrated with a balloon or airbed as when filled with air they are squishy. The bones inside the ear are the smallest in the body.

 The no 2 cause of hearing damage are cottom buds, and the no 3 cause is the workplace. 

Another big issues is RSI. Repetetive Strain Injuruies are caused when your doing repetetive tasks. The number 1 cause of this is videogames, and using a keyboard is no 2.  

We also started looking at other health and safety issues. As we are at college there are students under the age of 18 and a risk assesment will have to be carried out to assess any risks in the venue. This sometimes called "recky" or reconisonce. 

The no 1 concern is electricity and knowing where the breaker in the venue is can be extremely important.

We started talking about equipment theres 3 different types. 

Consumer

Semi - pro

Pro

Consumer products are for the average person and generally break down with 3 years. 

Semi pro products are of a higher quality and less likely to breakdown

Pro equipment is top of the range and should last a lifetime. It's easy to get spare parts for and repairable. Such as the Roland Tr707.

Sound on Sound is considered a pro level magazine. They review equipment on an unbiased nature and report on the pros, cons and improvements of various equipment. 

We started talking about a few different assignments we will be covering in future such as speech edits (changing the wording from "I really do not like the conservative party" to "I really -- Like the conservative party"). This is sample editing. 

We discussed a little DSP which is Digital sound processing. 

The first assingment we will be doing will involve creating four different wave forms, as some are shallow and sharp others are jagged rough and distorted to create a 16 bar loop where at one point all the wave forms will be played at once. 

We will be tasked with creating specific sounds and have to create them from scratch. Such as a bright bell with sharp attack with very little reverb. 

Reason

For the final hour of the second lesson we started to look at Propeller heads reason. We opened the program loaded up a Subtractor synth looked at the backend wiring, created a second subtractor synth and added a reverb unit. We added a matrix which enabled us to play back sounds and had a fiddle with synth to make various sounds. 

Evidence

We also talked about various ways of presenting our work such as a blog, video evidence, audio evidence, and screen shots. It will be important for us to use multimedia evidence to support our assignments so we can show our understanding of what we have learnt. 











Live Sound

Live Sound
Monday Lesson 2 - 3/9/12

Mixers, Mics and Foldback Monitors

The lesson was held in the theatre where we were shown a few things about microphones, mixers, monitors and health and safety. 

We started by collecting some equipment from the area above the main theatre. We got 2 foldback speakers and a mixer. 

We ran a cable from a power supply through some surge protected power bricks. It's important to use surge protected power supplys to protect the equipment and also because if there was a fire it wouldn't be covered by insurance.You would usually duct tape the cables down for health and safety to prevent people tripping over the cables.

We use IEC power cables (also know as a kettle lead) to provide power to the mixer and fx unit. 

We discussed two different microphones the shure SM58 and the SM58 Beta A. 

The Sm58 is the current industry standard. It is a dynamic mic designed to take a beating and is often seen at venues, on tv and is one of the most commonly used mics. It's priced around 60 pounds it captures low and mid ranges and can be used for vocals. 

The Sm58 Beta A is also a dynamic mic with a few differences. It captures some high end and has a feedback response unit which provides less feedback while monitoring. It's priced at 120 pounds and is starting to become the standard. The price being double that of an sm58 is one of the reasons the sm58 is the industry standard at the moment. The Sm58 beta A is great for capturing vocals where a good performance on an Sm58 would sound great on the Sm58 beta A.

We connected the mixer to an IEC cable to the power supply and also connected the active foldback speaker to a power supply as well. Making sure the volumes are down on the mixer, we connected a (mono?) jack cable from the active speakers output to the passive speakers input and connected a (stereo?) from the jack output on the mixing desk to the jack input on the active speakers balanced line input. 

A mono cable is indentified by a single black ring around the plug and a stereo cable is identified by two black rings. 

The monitors are magnetically shielded to prevent damage to computer monitors. If it was not shielded this could destroy a computer screen. 

We then turn the gain on the first channel (which is where the microphone is plugged in) to 12 o'clock maybe a little bit more, increase the fader on channel 1 to send the signal to the master output and push the fader on the master up. We also turn up the volume on the monitors so we can hear whats coming through. Hearing the sound isn't massively important at this stage as we will see the led volume meters moving if there is a sound coming through. 

We check the level of the microphone (either 1-2, 1-2-3 or by telling a joke!). We adjust the volume to make sure the at the loudest use the meter won't go into the red as this would cause distortion. 

Mixers have different amounts of channels, the one we was using had 8 mono channels and 2 stereo channels.


Now that we had connected up a microphone we talked a little about eq. Eq stands for equalisation. Eq is used for several things one is adjusting the sound coming through the microphone. If the vocal was coming through very boomy we could turn down the low and get a less boomie sound (or increase for a big boomie sound!) and we can adjust the high end to get a brighter clearer sound by turning it up a bit it can make vocals sound nicer and clearer. 

We then looked at adding an effects unit into the mixer. We turn down the faders so that we don't have any loud bangs or pops while connecting audio equipment We then removed the connection from the speakers and put a jack from the mixers channel out into the effects unit in, and connected a jack cable from the effects unit output to the mixers auxilary return. 

We removed the microphone from the xlr input and connected a mono cable from a guitar into the first mono channel on the mixer. As the guitar is a line level instrument the signal will be very weak we could mic up an amp and connect this to the xlr input,. but these days it's much more convienient to use a DI box between the guitar and channel input to boost the signal. 

We didn't use a di box for this instance and the signal came through very quiet. We was going to look at some effects on the fx unit but there was a problem and we was unable to do much more.


Health And Safety

Health and safety is massively important in the music industry. Working with artists, venues and the general public it's important to have a grasp on the various risks involved in live and recording environments.

Cables - All cables should be duct to the floor to prevent anyone tripping up.

Surge protectors - protect equipment and can prevent fires. Microphones/speakers can be blown if theres a surge.

Heavy equipment - can be dropped on feet or people damaging both equipment and the person involved. 

Pop/loud noises/feedback - can damage equipment and ears. 

Liquids/Food - Can damage equipment such as mixers and cause fires. 

Overcrowding - Can cause problems such as crushing or if theres a fire risk to getting out safely. 

Mic stands - Can fall over damaging equipment or hitting someone.

Mixing desk/movable equipment - If breaks aren't set on movable equipment this can be a hazard to both the equipment and people. 

Safety breakers - Knowing where the breakers are at a venue can be vitally important if theres a fire or electrical accident.

Cables - If their not correctly coiled or duct to the floor can be tripped over.

Running - Can be dangerous you could fall over and hurt yourself, or fall into equipment and damage the equipment.

Checking a monitor with ear next to it - can be very dangerous can seriously damage hearing if someone turns volume up or shouts into a microphone.








Sound Production and Music Recording

Sound Production Skills / Music Recording
Lesson 1 - Monday 3/9/12

Signal Flow

Today we started to have a look at signal flow. Signal flow is how the sound travels through the equipment. It's important to understand signal flow so you can identify problems (and solve them) and also so that you can change where the sound is going.



Firstly the vocalist sings into the mircophone. The microphone converts the acoustic sound energy into electrical energy that represents sound.

We use a XLR (grounded left right) balanced lead (as a balanced cable enables hums and buzzes the lead picks up to be removed) to connect the microphone. If we used an unbalanced rca cable that would pick up interference.

In the college this then goes into a snake box which connects to a wall box that takes the signal into the control room. Not every recording studio has a snake boxs but all will have a wall box. The snake box is numbered and this matches up with the patch bay and mixer.

The sound then goes into the patch bay which is wired in to the corresponding channels on the mixer.

A Stereo out from the mixer will go into an amp and speakers for monitoring.

The mixer is also connected to an audio interface AD/DA which converts electricity into binary so that the information can be processed by a computer (mac or pc) running music sequencing software. The Box can emulate instruments, equipment and is also used for mixing.

After discussing signal flow as a group of 6 we attempted to connect up a microphone to see if we could get a signal going through from the live room to the control room.

We set up a stand with microphone connected an xlr cable between the microphone and snake box, then went to the control room where logic was loaded on the pc.

We came across several problems while trying to set this up. We managed to get a microphone sound to come through the mixer and the speakers but there was a problem getting the signal into the computer and Dan Morgan had to come and have a look. It was apparent that there is usually some sort of problems happen usually occur and that sometimes these are not fixable in a short amount of time. This can lead to recording sessions having to be abandoned.

Setting up a Microphone Stand Correctly  

We was then shown how to set up a microphone stand and asked to set one up correctly.


A Microphone stand consists of the base and the microphone boon (holder). The first step is to set up the base. There is a knob which releases the central pole and allows it to be raised. It is important that the central pole be extended all the way out so that the tripod feet can rest flat on the ground. This is important because sound can travel along the ground and up the metal shaft and cause interference. The tripod feet have rubber stoppers to prevent this but these also stop bass sound escaping to the floor which would cause a loss of signal. With the feet folded out and the central pole fully extended we adjust the mic boon. There is another knob on the boon which allows us to raise or the lower the mic boon. This is loosened and is used to adjust the angle of the boon. The boon is adjusted and rotated so that it extends and is in line with one of the feet, this makes sure that the microphone is more stable and less likely to fall over and cause an accident. 

We then attach a microphone clip onto the end of the boon and it's time to set up the cable.


First we slot the xlr female side through the mic clip and (unlike the photo!) wrap the cable around the microphone boon. We then wrap the cable around the main pole of the stand and make a small coil of cable at the stand base and tuck it a little underneath it. This is in case we need to move the stand in future and to prevent accidents. We then clip the cable to the stand with a cable grip and we are ready to attach the microphone. 

The microphone slots into the clip and the female end of the xlr cable is connected to the male socket on the mic and we have a correctly set up microphone stand.