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JUNIOR BIRDMAN AUDIO

FIRST INTERNSHIP COMPLETE!

July 30, 2020  /  Mike Hallenbeck

BDaMan.jpg

Shout-out to the recently graduated Bryce Foster, aka BDaMan, Junior Birdman Audio’s first-ever intern!

Wielding formidable skills as both an MC and producer, Foster has what it takes to take the audio world by storm, even when he’s had to prove it by editing the sounds of sandpaper friction for our product videos. He’s currently pursuing his masters in the School of Hard Knocks this world has become (even more than usual) in recent days, and I know he’s up to the task. I see a bright future for this young man! Good luck, Bryce. Let’s keep in touch.

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categories / hip hop, minnesota music, music, sound edit, internship
tags / intern, internship, producer, hip hop, bdaman

"BIRDS OF THE FUTURE" TOP OF SHOW

July 22, 2020  /  Mike Hallenbeck

Some nostalgia here for a both post- and pre-apocalyptic nature: Back when it was still safe for people to congregate, I created the sound design for a performance installation called “Birds of the Future” by Skewed Visions. Here’s the opening of the show, in which two refugee bird people (Megan Mayer and Erika Hansen) set out to find a better life after the collapse of civilization. The soundscape at the top of the show features wind, flapping wings, and plain old birdsong. Believe it or not, things haven’t gotten truly weird yet.

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categories / experimental performance, sound design, sound edit, sound effect, sound for theater, theater, work sample
tags / theatre, theater, sound designer, sound for theatre, sound for theater, sound design, soundedit, soundeditor, performance, experimental performance

MINIDISC REDUX!

June 18, 2020  /  Mike Hallenbeck

Recently I’ve been resuscitating a “sinner-songwriter” recording project I started almost 20 years ago. Engaging every lateral move I could think of between CPUs, CDRs, operating systems, DAWs, and dongles, I finally managed to unlock all the sessions and revamp them as projects in my current Nuendo system.

There was only one file I couldn’t find, which was a piano performance I tracked in my friend Ben’s living room, back when we were housemates. I wrote it off and redid the performance using a virtual piano, which was fine, but it still bugged me because it just wasn’t the same.

Finally I remembered that what I was sifting through were WAV files, but that the many of the source tracks-- including the piano-- had originally been recorded to minidisc. Minidisc, folks! And do I still have all those minidiscs from the early 2000s? You better believe it!

So I unearthed the boxes of MDs, and lo and behold, found the piano performance after about an hour of rifling through them. The disc was labeled and everything. I found one of my minidisc players-- my first one, not even the newer Sony that does actual digital transfer of files-- and was happy to discover that it still worked.

I input the audio into Nuendo-- complete with creaks of the piano bench and that annoying whir the MD recorder made every once in a while-- and I was happy to hear that I’d done a couple of mouth clicks to sync with the countoff I’d done on muted guitar strings previously. The session’s legacy tracks are now complete, waiting for edit and mix!

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categories / home recording, composition, minnesota music, music, new music, nuendo, original music, virtual instrument, work sample
tags / recording, recording engineer, recording studio, home recording, homerecording, md, minidisc, archival, archival audio
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