this blogpost originated from nathanfleet.blogspot.com
I am a non-touring desktop musician that works as a composer and director for film and television. I hope you enjoy this desktop education which includes film strategy, guitar lessons, theory lessons, tips and tricks on everything from songwriting, recording, and promoting all the way to the finished product. Learn. Use. Share @nathanfleet
Friday, December 30, 2011
Easy Arpeggios
An arpeggio is a chord played one note at a time rather than strummed all together (I'm talking guitar here) Using the notes of a C chord (C-E-G) I demonstrate a few easy ways to play a major, minor (C-Eb-G), augmented(C-E-G#) and diminished (C-Eb-Gb) arpeggio. Remember to hide most of the pick under your thumb and use the tip. I find that it minimizes the amount of movement your picking hand needs when you want to play fast.
Tuesday, December 27, 2011
Tweet Lessons and Tips
I am now tweeting short tips / lessons on Twitter. Follow me @nathanfleet twitter.com/nathanfleet
Sunday, December 18, 2011
Monday, April 18, 2011
Mixing it up. Listen up.
Recently I have been sending several film scores and theme songs to be approved before making final versions of songs. I mix in stereo and surround. I have a sub woofer that rumbles the house but chances are, iPhones and laptops do not have subs hooked up and that is where clients are now previewing work, on the go, on the bus, in the car or at a cafe.
While you want to make sure that your mixes sound amazing in a controlled environment like a theatre or home theatre set up, that is not always where your work will be previewed or even listened to in its finished format.
For example, I recently created a theme for a movie review podcast called Screamwave . I had bass drum percussion running through the piece and in my environment, my subs were booming and it sounded very cinematic. When I reviewed it on my laptop the drums were non existent. I went back to the recording session and added some taiko drum sounds that have a higher frequency and that brought the percussion pattern back to life when I reviewed it on my laptop.
Listen to these on your laptop / iPhone speakers to hear what I mean
Low drums original listen
Higher drums for laptop listen
Always listen to your mixes the way real people do. Laptop, iPhone, car, iPod, desktop speakers and your home theatre. Take the time, listen to your mixes, take ear breaks and enjoy the subtle differences a few changes can make.
Low drums original listen
Higher drums for laptop listen
Always listen to your mixes the way real people do. Laptop, iPhone, car, iPod, desktop speakers and your home theatre. Take the time, listen to your mixes, take ear breaks and enjoy the subtle differences a few changes can make.
This blogpost originated from nathanfleet.blogspot.com
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