Good news for users of Apple's mighty Logic Pro and Express DAWs: there's a new website on the block, aimed squarely at you.
Logic Café is an online resource from which Logicians can access free online tutorials, EXS24 instruments, Groove Templates, Environments, interviews and more. The site is still in its infancy but nonetheless has a rapidly growing worldwide user base.
Site owner Paul Yarrow comments: "Logic Café offers its users a clear and concise journey through its articles, with no sign-up, no monthly subscription and no membership fees. It's been created with the user journey in mind. From clear, graphical step-by-step tutorials to classic synthesizer EXS24 instruments, complete with encyclopaedic information on the original machines, Logic Cafe aims to provide users with with plenty of informative and relevant information."
It's the moment Reason users have been waiting for - Propellerhead have officially announced Reason 4 on their website. Click here to check it out.
As well as giving details of the new instruments and effects (including Thor, RPG-8 and the ReGroove...
CM114's dance samples - you won't believe your ears!
CM114 comes with possibly our best sample collection yet, 2007 dance samples created exclusively for CM by hard dance engineer Hattrixx. This collection features all the building blocks you need to create your own dance anthem: we're not just talking easy to...
Keyboards and mice are OK, but they're looking a little long in the tooth these days. Step forward Microsoft and their amazing looking multi-touch surface hardware - check out this absolutely incredible video showcasing the future of computer interaction:
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Feel slightly out of your depth when it comes to following the tutorials in CM ? Perhaps you’re a newcomer to computer-based music production, or simply need to go back to basics to get a firm foundation to build upon? Get our brand-new Beginner's Guide and...
Joining the ranks of cool musical instruments that can be played with your Nintendo Wiimote is Evan Merz's Wii Play the Drums. It's a soft sampler that's played just like a real-world drum kit… albeit an invisible one! Evan wrote the program in .Net and used this nifty Wiimote library from Coding4Fun's Brian Peek. Here's a clip of the sampler in action:
The sampler is a snap to set up on pretty much any windows machine and is a must-try for every PC-based musician who owns one of Nintendo's innovative controllers. Download it here.
Tuesday May 22, 2007
First dedicated blog for palmtop musicians goes live
Making music on your PDA? You'll want to check out Palm Sounds, then, a brand new blog and website dedicated to music production on portable devices. Palm Sounds offers news, reviews, industry events and speculation on future developments, as well as the internet's only comprehensive directory of mobile music programs. The Application Directory presents a complete list of software for both the Palm and Windows Mobile platforms, complete with summaries and links, and will be updated regularly.
Palm Sounds are courting opinion from 'the community' as to what direction the site should go in, so head on over and let them know what you think.
Wednesday May 09, 2007
Computer Music, June issue (CMU113) on sale now
Details of what's in this month's issue, including Unknown 64 CM, CMorg, 2175 royalty-free samples and the essential guide to trackers. ...
Complete music video in 177KB (that's not even a floppy disk's worth)!
Welcome to the world of demos, where the synergy of music and art can be wildly more thrilling than the sum of their parts. And there are no demo productions more elegant than Debris, the latest competition-winning production from legendary Teutonic demo crew Farbrausch.
What makes this incredible audio-visual artwork even more impressive than most is the fact that the whole thing is generated on the fly – graphics, sound and music – allowing the file-size to be kept below that of the average kick-drum sample. The whole thing is packed into a 177KB executable!
Those running a PC with a half-decent graphics card can download the demo. For the rest of us, there's the YouTube video. Whichever you choose, though, do watch the whole thing with that file size firmly in mind – you won't believe your eyes...
CM has given away some pretty impressive software over the past couple of years - ZebraCM, Samplitude V8 SE and Dominator spring to mind - but CM114 will feature a package of such power and flexibility that even we can't believe it's a freebie.
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Remember Cotton Eye Joe? Well Rednex – the geniuses behind said country/house opus – are now up for sale. We're assuming that the person who buys the band won't actually have to offer them board and lodgings, but he or she will take ownership of the Rednex...
These days you can make amazing music on your home computer with a variety of powerful software packages and hundreds of incredible plug-in effects. It hasn't always been this way though - check out this vintage clip from long lost BBC technology show Micro Live:
Who would have though that high street chemist Boots would be the first place to shop for virtual drum machines?
If you're after those classic C64 sounds features later in the clip, keep your eyes peeled for a very special addition to the CM Studio, arriving with issue 113 on May 9th.
Wednesday April 18, 2007
Get three CM Specials on DVD
The Essential Guide to Mixing, The Expert Guide to Reason and The Essential Guide to Music Online are back by popular demand! ...