Project Archive

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Signals with Shivasongster Show #14 – 12/15/11

1 Reason RPG8 Experiment – “Hermano”
2 Thorgan (transition)
3 Record Player
4 Somethin Funny (with samples from recovered 2006-07 Minidisc recordings)
5 Ghost Adventures – Are You A Witch?
6 Ghost Adventures – Play With Ya
7 Ghost Adventures – Bass Tuning Weirdness
8 “The Bells” by Edgar Allan Poe (using material from LibraVox.org)
9 Vampire Power (Collab with Stephen Schrum originally started in Riffworks)
10 Saw It With My Own Two Eyes (2011)
11 Thor (part 1) transition
12 Ravi Sitar 1 (First Electro Harmonix Ravish Sitar experiment)
13 Good Shepherd (Traditional)
14 Thor (part 2) transition
15 Electro Test 4
16 Just Friends (2011)
17 Screamer (Ravish Sitar experiment)
18 Electro Afternoon
19 Zero One Eleven Eleven (Collab with Robert Dorschel)
20 Xmas Blues outtake

All tracks produced with Propellerhead Reason 4, 5 or 6. Copyright Jeremy dePrisco and collaborators as noted above.

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Electro Drafts

Don’t have Flash? Use this link:
http://soundcloud.com/shivasongster/sets/electro-drafts

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EM2011 – RodoJede

Video from our debut performance at Electro-music 2011 – Robert Dorschel on keyboards, sequencing and effects, Jeremy dePrisco on guitar, Kaoss pad and effects.

2011.09.09 13:00 — RoDoJede @ electro-music 2011 from Steve Mokris on Vimeo.

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New Track – Are You A Witch? (Come On)

This is a short experimental piece dedicated to our favorite Ghost Adventurers on the Travel Channel, Zak Nick and Aaron. Enjoy!

Are You A Witch? (Come On!) by shivasongster

Got iPad or iPhone? Try this link instead.

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Electro Tools of the Trade – Riffworks

Riffworks - Simple, but brilliant

Over the past couple weeks I’ve been listening to studio experiments and fragments created in a recording program called Riffworks 2.6.5 by Sonoma Wire Works, a tool geared toward guitarists (but not exclusively for guitar). I first discovered the tool in mid-2009, and used it heavily for a little while, then again in 2010 when I was compiling material for my first Electro-Music performance. What Riffworks lacks in pro sequencing and mixing features, it more than makes up for in the intuitive interface and sheer fun and ease of use.

Riffworks has some definite strengths as a writing tool. It puts a front end on looping features that take a bit longer to set up in other programs (but if you use a template in Reason you can do the same thing, see below). Riffworks comes with some really good drum loops via its InstandDrummer feature with controls that add variation. Since I almost always come up with good ideas while jamming to drums, this was one of the things that attracted me to it. Riffworks can also load REX loops – 4 of them in fact – a feature that foreshadow’s Propellerhead’s eventual development of the Dr. Octo Rex player which loads 8 REX files.

Many people don’t want or need the extra mixing, sequencing and editing features of a DAW, so Riffworks is great for messing around with ideas. It can even be used live if you get comfortable with it. Riffworks also includes the requisite add-ons like Line 6, which I admit gets some good sounds (and is much easier to use than my off-board Line 6 Pod XT). RiffLink and RiffCaster add a riff sharing community, if you are into that, but I usually like to keep my pieces for my own use. I find it difficult enough to keep up with the other communities I am in, and using other people’s riffs just seems a bit lame.

Riffworks might appeal to guitarists or electronic musicians who think in terms of loops, which has – at times – been a part of my own writing process. Used in concert with Reason, Riffworks is a pretty impressive tool. The export feature allows you to take each of the individual loops from a jam session and develop them – tempo matched – outside of the program later. However, any panning or level setting done in Riffworks is lost unless you use the Mix option for export. Mix allows you to output your entire song (made up of the riffs you’ve arranged).

Riffworks main screen

On the down side, you can not resize the workspace window (though this may have changed in subsequent versions). Relying on the RWS proprietary file format to stay relevant in the future is a bit of a gamble with so many other tools on the market. It’s so easy to get sucked into these programs and soon forget just how reliant you might become on them. Aside from the financial cost of upgrades and add-ons, there’s the time cost in maintenance and the learning curve. In many cases, there’s a re-learning curve when you’ve been away from an application for a while, as so often happens with my fragmented writing and recording habits.

Though Riffworks runs on both Mac and PC (a requirement of my new recording ethic), it goes against another new rule I’ve imposed on myself regarding downsizing the number of tools I am using. The problem with all of these tools is that the moment I upgrade to Windows 7 or 8, I will be forced to reinstall and – in most cases – upgrade all of them. That comes with a cost. Many won’t work, or there may be issues and hours of troubleshooting. I’ve just decided that there aren’t enough hours in the day to:

Maintain my live acoustic blues/roots set
Record an album for my “electro” persona
Continue online collaborative projects
Maintain my web sites
Promote myself through gigs and networking
Expand my knowledge through reading and listening
Maintain my computer network and devices

Oh, and did I mention maintain keep a day job as a software developer/analyst too?

So I am trying to harvest any good ideas from my Riffworks experiments and move on. I’ve found a few fruitful sessions, but now the time needed to migrate the data to a more flexible mixing environment for “official” release is taking time away from the overall creative process. As I type this I am waiting for my PC to reboot because Riffworks has a weird quirk where it takes forever to close (Mac or PC), and sometimes hangs up. Just another reason to downsize in favor of something much more stable (like Reason).

*Here’s a procedure I wrote up for transferring Riffworks tracks to Reason 6. Enjoy!

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Signals Electro-Music 10/20/11 Radio Show

Signals with Shivasongster returned to the interwebs on 10/20/11 after a hiatus of a couple months due to our travels in Ireland, EM2011, and other priorities. Now back as a monthly program, Signals is offering me a place to once again experiment with new sounds and put myself out there as an improv/electro artist. Its some of the most fun I’ve had musically.

Show #13 featured the following:

ElectroWednesday – A combination of prerecorded composition in Reason 6 accompanied by live instruments through various effect pedals.

Crush My Mouth – An expanded version of the song debuted at EM2010 that kicks off many of my electro performances.

Tobit’s Demons & Warwick’s Robots – Two connected pieces debuted at EM2011. These began as experiments on a Boss Looper pedal (which I sold last year). Later I reconstructed them in Reason and use a JamMan to perform them live.

Sunday Beat – A newer Reason 6 project with live overdubs.

Life After – Another newer composition in Reason 6, based on some sounds from a Korg Triton Extreme.

Pentangle & Maya – Solo electric guitar versions of the acoustic pieces that debuted on my album Bloomsburg to Bangladesh, also performed at EM2011 with fellow EMer Robert Dorschel.

Tune in next month (11/17/11) Check schedule for latest info.

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New Electro Tracks

Enjoy these new experiments…

ElectroWednesday

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Dog Assassin: The Musical

Dog Assassin is the musical version of an original play by long-time collaborator Stephen Schrum. Here’s a little background from Dr. Schrum:

“Have you ever been kept awake by barking neighborhood dogs and been so agitated you wanted to use the phrase: ‘Terminate with extreme prejudice’?

Dog Assassin depicts a young grocery store bagger, Bob, who makes extra money as a hitman who rids the world of noisy neighborhood dogs. His life is changed after two encounters: he meets his Spirit Guide (a dog, of course) on a camping trip, and later meets Amber, a young woman with whom he has a fling. Something she says disturbs his status quo, and he decides to become a hitman for humans. However, things go awry, and he finds himself running for his life—until he is helped by a stray dog. Renouncing this dark path, he packs up and moves away with Amber, finding reputable employment.

Dog Assassin, like the Tony-winning Broadway play Urinetown, has a terrible title, but a socially redeeming ending for the protagonist.”

Previously, Amber’s monologue from Dog Assassin was published in “One on One: Best Women’s Monologues for the 21st Century”. (Joyce Henry, Bob Shuman, and Rebecca Dunn Jaroff, eds. NY: Applause Books, 2007, pp. 38-39). The play will be produced at University of Pittsburgh at Greensburg and will feature 20+ original songs by Schrum/dePrisco performed by a live progressive rock band, with both male and female singers and puppets.  Dog Assassin is one of my biggest undertakings of time and creative output to date, with over 90 hours of writing/recording logged and over a year of prep.

PROGRESS
Summer 2010 – First writing retreat to establish what Steve wanted
December 2010 – First Drafts done
February 2011 – Second Drafts done
April 2011 – Third Drafts done
July 2011 – Writing retreat with musical director Elliot Sheedy, who is working on the play for his senior capstone project.
Fall 2011 – Call for musicians & overture completed!
Jan 2012 – Auditions and Casting complete

March 2012 – Show goes up! – Check for dates

Follow Dog Assassin: The Musical on Facebook

Steve throws down rhymes for "Punk Spunk" during a late January work session in Greensburg.


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Funded in part through New Music USA’s MetLife Creative Connections program.

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EM2011 Report

Poster by Jack Hurwitz

The Electro-Music festival and conference in Huguenot, New York in early Sept was another great experience and I came away inspired (if not well-rested). It was bittersweet however, as this was also the same weekend as the flood in Central PA (from the aftermath of Tropical Storm Lee) and my mind was certainly not present as much as last year. In fact, it wasn’t even clear if EM2011 would be held, with bridges and roads out, but somehow it managed to stay afloat and for those who attended I think it made a big difference and helped keep spirits up.

For those that know me as an acoustic artist, it may seem odd to be attending such an event. But there are sides to my composition and musical interests that just do not get very much exposure in the folk/blues genre. Whether it is the influence of sound experimentalists like Ken Nordine or Brian Eno, or my exposure to electronics from an early age, I can not deny the attraction to sound as texture. Still, EM is not for everyone, and it takes a very open mind, and open ears to appreciate what some electro artists are doing. Whether it is the sorrowful cry of the theremin, or the clammer of power drill percussion from Brazil, there is something to be learned from all of these sounds because in the end they are the expression of the human spirit reaching out.

JD's rig for EM2011 - Keeping it simple?

RoDoJede - Robert Dorschel and Jeremy dePrisco

Solo electro performance - (Photo by Cyndi Heap)

Spooky walk back to the lodge.

































More photos can be found at:

http://www.flickr.com/photos/mindspeak/sets/72157627671987938/

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Signals with Shivasongster – Electro-Music Radio Program

Image by Adam Lunger

Signals with Shivasongster airs on the webwaves as a monthly program, every third Thursday at 03:00 GMT (which is 10 pm Eastern US time).

A monthly show will allow more time to develop material in between shows, as I am also working on a new electro collection for release. Check out my program and others at radio.electro-music.com

Signals with Shivasongster features a range of electronic and electro-acoustic material starting from my early 4-track experiments right up to the most current concoctions using programs like Acid Pro, Garage Band, Propellerhead Reason and a multitude of effects pedals. Occasionally the program features the segment “Space Folk, or Folk in Space” rendering traditional material with modern signal processing tools, drum samples and ambient textures. Shows are pre-recorded and/or live depending on the material being presented.

Check the Calendar for upcoming show dates.

For info about previous shows, check out my electro archive.

WinAmp or Windows Media Player users: if you have difficulty, try going to the File menu and Open URL, then put in http://radio.electro-music.com:8050

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Signals Electro-Music Radio Show Archive

Keep listening to the signals!

Wow… 12 shows already. I must be pretty serious about this. Well, sort of. Last night’s show was another Propellerhead Reason improv, mixed live with even less prep than last time. It’s posted in my electro archives below.

Please note that Signals with Shivasongster will be on hiatus until mid/late October while I work on sound design for a local murder mystery, do some performing and traveling, and work on my next play with Dr. Stephen Schrum, Dog Assassin. Oh yeah, and somewhere in there I’m going to be attending EM2011! Lots of music (and sounds). Keep listening to the signals!

Select shows are posted below.

This program is Copyright 2011 Jeremy dePrisco.
Be sure to check out the rest of my electro archives for playlists, and pictures of my early studio setups… some of them quite fun.

http://www.shivasongster.com/category/electro/

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Signals Electro-Music 6/23/11 & 7/7/11 Radio Shows

Reason - No VST support, but you shouldn't need it!

For shows #11 & 12, I mixed it up a little bit with a live performance using only Propellerhead Reason/Record. I’ve been wanting to do such a set for a while. This week everything fell together (or apart) because I had little time to prep. I didn’t have other pre-recorded material I felt like sharing, and with the 80+ degree weather and 60% humidity in the studio, I was not interested in setting up my usual guitar-based loop-pedal monstrosity.

Reason is very liberating in terms of sound creation and manipulation. Even though I relied heavily on third party loop libraries and material from Computer Music Magazine, this set was very fun and the level of expression by the end was to my liking. I now have a base line for future experiments like this.

Based on the encouragement on the electro-music.com chat board, it is likely I’ll do this again next time.

6/23/11

7/7/11

This program is Copyright 2011.

Be sure to check out the rest of my electro archives.
http://www.shivasongster.com/category/electro/

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