 |
| View previous topic :: View next topic |
| Author |
Message |
High Times

Joined: 25 Oct 2004
Posts: 744
Location: music written by JK/Toby Smith
|
Posted: Sun Jul 03, 2005 08:06 |
|
|
Jamiroquai used E Magic & Propellerheads Reason for Dyna
hi guys
this information is only for those who is interested
in making his own music.
its very interesting thing i've read in Dynamite booklet.
for those who dont know E Magic & Propellerheads Reason
are professional music production software used for recording songs.
E Magic which is supposed to be the best program for recording music
is compatible and can be used only with Apple computers,
because Apple has bought E Magic. E Magic is used by most of
the music stars since 90s. and Jamiroquai used it on A Funk Odyssey
together with Cubase program.
but Propellerheads Reason is a very cool different and special program
for making sampled modern styles like jungle, house, drum n bass,
trance etc is compatible with Windows !!!!
and now they released
updated version Reason 3.0 which already can be bought!!!
check their site ( press skip trailer if trailer will be downloading first)
http://www.propellerheads.se/index.cfm
although it cant record WAV. files it has a sampler and its own
synthesizers and sample libraries
(more than 30 discs). before Jamiroquai used it for Dynamite,
the most famous user of Propellerheads Reason was Liam Howlett from
UK band "Prodigy"

heres what Liam says about this cool program:
Liam Howlett of Prodigy explains why Reason, to him, is the best thing since sliced bread.
by Fredrik Hägglund
Anyone who wasn’t in a deep coma all through the 1990’s would be hard pressed not to remember Essex based dance outfit The Prodigy. They extracted the pure essence of the rave scene, infused it with hefty doses of punk, funk & skunk, wrapped it up and smuggled this package of unbridled club energy into your living room in the guise of chart smashers like Out of Space, Poison, Firestarter, Breathe and Smack My Bitch Up. But where are they now? As it turns out, they’re already on the approach for your speaker membranes at 300 mph, dead set on making all the world’s decibel meters blow their fuses once more.
Rumblings from the Dirtchamber
We tune in as Liam Howlett, the sonic sculptor of the band, is busy crafting the fourth Prodigy album in the depths of his studio dwelling The Dirtchamber. It has indeed been a while since we last heard from them; 1997 saw the release of The Fat of the Land, but other than the orphan single Baby’s Got a Temper – released in the summer of 2002 – Prodigy have been perplexingly quiet.
A six year hiatus, why?
– Well it wasn’t a conscious decision or a plan, really; it just happened. We knew there would be downtime after The Fat of the Land – we felt we had reached the pinnacle of what Prodigy was, and I myself had my mind set on taking a couple of years off. And then time just flew by, know what I mean?
About 2 years ago I started working again, but soon realized I needed to shift myself out of the formula I’d gotten into from working in the same environment all the time. I’d written everything in Cubase from 1993 onwards, with a bunch of hardware synths and Akai samplers as my main setup. I sat down and I thought, “well... this is just so boring. How can I ever get inspired doing the same old thing? How am I gonna write a fresh, inspired album? I’m not enjoying it, it’s not going anywhere, I hate my studio, I hate all the equipment in it.”
For a man with a hardware gear list the size of a small town phone directory, that’s a lot of equipment to hate. Liam’s winding road through the world of music making is one which many of his generation can relate to; he started out with a simple 4-track portastudio and turntables in the 1980’s, soon got into synthesizers, and eventually found himself using a Roland W-30 workstation with a whopping 16 seconds worth of sampling time. The entire first album, The Prodigy Experience, was created on just this one keyboard. As the royalties started rolling in, so did the gear – and soon enough Liam found himself immersed in a machine park with enough electronics to fill a space cruiser. But, as anyone who’s been-there-done-that will know, that can be more of a curse than a blessing.
What got you back on track again?
– I bought myself a laptop, which completely reanimated my creative process because I was able to write anywhere I went. At one point someone told me to check out this program Reason, “it’s really back to basics, you should check it out just for fun, you know?” So I did – I started out just writing beats on it and approached it in a sort of recreational sense, like you would a computer game. Then I’d go off somewhere like Scotland or New York and I’d take my laptop with me, with all my samples on the hard drive... and then it all just started happening. Reason was just like... it totally refreshed me, it was just amazing. It was like going back to how it was in the beginning. All of a sudden I was writing two or three songs a week, just messing around and having a laff again. I started something with it and got it rocking in ten minutes. That took a lot of pressure off of me. So, to summarize: What got me back on track was A) the laptop, and B) a program that let me feel I’ve gone back and taken all the complication out of writing music.
A lot of people feel that way; Reason is like a lifesaver for the bored gearhead musician. You?
– Yeah, I couldn’t live without it. If Reason hadn’t come along I would probably still be in my studio, depressed, going “aww bloody ‘ell, don’t know what I’m gonna do”, you know? I don’t want to pat Propellerhead on the back too much, but... Reason has literally changed my life, getting me back in the studio and enjoying it all again. It’s taken the monotony out of music making and put it into a format where music should be these days – no big deal, just something that should be fun to do. Creation is always painful, but this is the least painful way I know of.
What do you think it was in the old days that ultimately sucked the life out of creativity?
– It was all so time consuming back then, we were all bogged down in cumbersome processes. I’m not very technical – I come from a hip hop sort of cut-and-paste background and I’m not this big studio guy, it’s just all in my head. The technology available now frees the mind in the creative sense; I’m able to think about the actual song a lot more, rather than just going “it’s gonna take me an hour to do this or that”. Music for me these days is quite punk rock, it’s very DIY, very throwaway. I know I’m not creating something that’s gonna be around forever. For me and for Prodigy it’s all about the quick punch in the face, you know?
So, Reason is pretty much the meat of the sound on the new album?
– Literally everything you’ll hear on the new album has been written on Reason. Everything starts there. Eventually we get to a stage where the song is written, and then we – that’s my producer Neil McClennan and I – move it into ‘Tools where we finish off everything, and that works great since Reason integrates with ProTools really well. Everything that comes out of Reason sounds really good, it’s got this sound, I think – a kind of certain... everything sounds like it “locks in” really good, you know? And that sound we got out of Reason is something that we now and again had to go back to Reason to duplicate; sometimes we’d do a thing in ProTools and it just didn’t rock it like Reason did, so we’d take it out of ProTools and try to duplicate it in Reason instead.
What are your favorite Reason devices?
– That would have to be the drum machine and the Dr. REX. I use the REX player all over the place and I just love the way you can mess around with a loop, and I love the way you can sync the LFO to tempo and route it to the filter, we use that on the album a lot. As for the effects, the Scream 4 unit is just the best thing for the type of music I’m writing. Definitely the high point of version 2.5 for me. The tape distortion is very good for bass, to give it the edge, it’s warm...
What, specifically, don’t you use Reason for?
– When it comes to bass sounds, I’m pure analog and I don’t use soft synths for bass at all. There’s just no substitute for analog. Instead, I’ll take an Oberheim, Moog, Korg MS-20 or something, sample a sequence of it playing, rex it up and then bring that back in Reason and lock it in there. I do occasionally use the softsynths to put melodies down – I’d say maybe 50% of the synths, the top line and high end stuff, is Reason. I can’t as of yet use it for everything – obviously you can’t record vocals into it – but ultimately, what Reason does have by way of limitations is also one of its strong points. It forces your imagination to be more on the board, you have to dig it out of your head rather than just going “well, I just can’t do that in there”. I never saw it that way, I mean if something you want to do is completely off limits then just use another program, no big deal.
Liam has a wish list for things he’d like to see in future versions of Reason. One would be the ability to automap non-tonal samples to individual key zones in the NN-XT, for creating drum maps on the fly.
– My end note on Reason is, it’s got this humour about it, it’s like – when somebody showed it to me the first time and said “you can keep on building the rack up...” I was all, “what rack, what’re you on about?” I couldn’t believe it, it was just such a simple and genius idea. It’s so obvious now, isn’t it? Love it.
The new Prodigy album “Always Outnumbered, Never Outgunned” is slated for a spring/summer 2004 release. |
|
| Back to top |
|
 |
jamirokaki
Expert

Joined: 29 Jan 2003
Posts: 3472
Location: basque country
|
Posted: Sun Jul 03, 2005 10:19 |
|
|
can you know what parts did they make with this program?
maybe the beggining of give hate a chance?
the second part on black devil car??? (i absolutely love the drums there, theres a break whit a kind of electronic drums wich is amazing) _________________
***STONED AGAIN*** |
|
| Back to top |
|
 |
High Times

Joined: 25 Oct 2004
Posts: 744
Location: music written by JK/Toby Smith
|
Posted: Sun Jul 03, 2005 11:12 |
|
|
hi mate!
i cant say for sure.. they could
produce a lot of different things using "reason".
maybe different cool cosmic sounds, or electro music style elements,
or something else it has so much in it - even has a vocoder.
they could use it just as a sampler connected to "e magic" by rewire
though e magic has its own built in sampler. |
|
| Back to top |
|
 |
five5tyle

Joined: 06 Dec 2004
Posts: 40
Location: Santiago, Chile
|
Posted: Mon Jul 04, 2005 04:44 |
|
|
that's the softwares that i use!!
Reason is excellent and with a big sounds data base... |
|
| Back to top |
|
 |
lafly
Joined: 22 Oct 2004
Posts: 161
Location: UK
|
Posted: Mon Jul 04, 2005 14:25 |
|
|
Yeh I used reason and Logic Gold when I did a music tech course at college - but I could never really get the hang of it. It is a proper good program but I always struggled to get to grips with it, needless to say I droped out of that course. |
|
| Back to top |
|
 |
jacko198

Joined: 31 May 2005
Posts: 67
|
Posted: Mon Jul 04, 2005 18:51 |
|
|
i got reason for a bit but its sooooooooooooooo confusing, liam howlett--- such a ledgend and so r the PRODIGY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! |
|
| Back to top |
|
 |
|
|
You cannot post new topics in this forum You cannot reply to topics in this forum You cannot edit your posts in this forum You cannot delete your posts in this forum You cannot vote in polls in this forum
|
Powered by phpBB © 2001, 2005 phpBB Group
|