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  • 9 new features in Studio One Pro 7
    From AI-powered stem separation to Splice integration, here are nine new features in Studio One Pro 7 that can elevate your creativity to new heights.

    From new instruments to Splice integration, here are nine new features in Studio One Pro 7 that can elevate your creativity to new heights.

  • Baby Audio release Transit 2 The latest version of Transit greatly expands the plug-in's Motion section, as well as pushing the total number of built-in effects to 28.

    The latest version of Transit greatly expands the plug-in's Motion section, as well as pushing the total number of built-in effects to 28.

  • Jerry Cantrell Discusses I Want Blood, Collecting Riffs, '90s GrungeShortly before the release of I Want Blood, Alice in Chains guitarist and longtime solo artist Jerry Cantrell chatted with AllMusic about the album and two of its standout tracks, in addition to songwriting, and if there can be another movement like grunge and alt-rock of the early '90s.

    Jerry Cantrell is seemingly never at a loss for guitar riffs – as heard in his work as either a co-founding member of Alice in Chains, or a solo artist. And on his fourth solo…

  • In memory of Steve O’HearSteve O’Hear, who wrote for TechCrunch for more than a decade out of his hometown of London, has passed away after a short illness.
    © 2024 TechCrunch. All rights reserved. For personal use only.

    Steve O’Hear, who wrote for TechCrunch for more than a decade out of his hometown of London, has passed away after a short illness.

  • Hyperliquid prepares for HYPE token launch, EVM rollout on mainnetThe perpetual futures DEX has set up a foundation and will announce the details of an airdrop next month.

  • On… TikTok, Merlin, and the awkward arranged marriage of music’s independent sectorHow the changing face of the 'non-major' music companies has made for some unusual bedfellows in indie-land
    Source

    How the changing face of the ‘non-major’ music companies has made for some unusual bedfellows in indie-land…

  • Lang Lang Music Foundation & Interlochen Center for the Arts to Host Young Pianist IntensiveIn June 2025, 17 of the world’s finest young pianists will converge at Interlochen Center for the Arts for the Interlochen-Lang Lang International Music Foundation Piano Intensive - Becoming A Citizen Artist.

    The one-week intensive is a new summer offering, resulting from a partnership between the Interlochen Center for the Arts and the Lang Lang Young Scholars Program, a multi-year mentoring program for pianists under the age of 16 presented by the Lang Lang International Music Foundation. During the intensive, which will run June 14-20, 2025, the scholars will focus on building their capacities as citizen artists and strengthening their abilities to communicate with and engage their audiences through a series of community concerts presented in partnership with Interlochen Public Radio.

    “We’re delighted to welcome the Lang Lang Young Scholars to Interlochen and to share the core capacities of successful citizen artists with these emerging musicians,” said Trey Devey, president of Interlochen Center for the Arts. “This exciting opportunity not only allows us to play a role in preparing these remarkable young pianists but also to deepen our relationship with globally renowned pianist Lang Lang and his extraordinary Foundation.”

    "We are thrilled to partner with Interlochen Center for the Arts to offer this unique opportunity to our Lang Lang Young Scholars,” said Leszek Barwinski-Brown, CEO of the Lang Lang International Music Foundation. “This intensive represents a crucial step in their development, not only as musicians but as engaged citizen artists. We believe this program will equip these talented young pianists with the tools to communicate their passion and artistry, leaving a lasting impact on their audiences and communities around the world."

    While at Interlochen, the Lang Lang Young Scholars will be mentored by an exceptional faculty of artist-educators from the top conservatories and universities in the U.S., led by Interlochen Marjorie Wood Drackett Piano Chair Dr. Kara Huber. Other instructors for the program include Curtis Institute of Music Eleanor Sokoloff Chair in Piano Studies Michelle Cann; Indiana University Jacobs School of Music Piano Department Chair Norman Krieger; Indiana University Jacobs School of Music Associate Professor of Piano Spencer Myer; and Interlochen Arts Academy Instructor of Piano Christopher Goodpasture.

    Lang Lang International Music Foundation's Young Scholars (credit: Andrew Werner)

    Students also have unique opportunities:

    1)    They will work with renowned instructors, from some of the nation’s best schools, universities and conservatories, in private lessons and master classes.

    2)    They will work with Interlochen Public Radio Music Director Dr. Amanda Sewell to prepare for and present an interview, recorded and shared on IPR.

    3)    Students will work with Interlochen Director of Music Production & Engineering Marc Lacuesta, who will introduce them to the skills needed to collaborate with a studio engineer. Students will walk away with a studio recording.

    www.langlangfoundation.orgThe post Lang Lang Music Foundation & Interlochen Center for the Arts to Host Young Pianist Intensive first appeared on Music Connection Magazine.

    In June 2025, 17 of the world’s finest young pianists will converge at Interlochen Center for the Arts for the Interlochen-Lang Lang International Music Foundation Piano Intensive - Becoming A Citizen Artist. The one-week intensive is a new summer offering, resulting from a partnership between the Interlochen Center for the Arts and the Lang Lang Young

  • BOOM Library releases StereoLab, and it’s FREE for a limited time
    BOOM Library has released StereoLab, an all-in-one stereo imaging plugin for macOS and Windows and it is free for a limited time. BOOM Library is giving away 10,000 copies of StereoLab to celebrate the new release, but you’ll have to act fast if you want to pick it up for free. The offer ends on [...]
    View post: BOOM Library releases StereoLab, and it’s FREE for a limited time

    BOOM Library has released StereoLab, an all-in-one stereo imaging plugin for macOS and Windows and it is free for a limited time. BOOM Library is giving away 10,000 copies of StereoLab to celebrate the new release, but you’ll have to act fast if you want to pick it up for free. The offer ends on

  • The Greengate DS:3 Part 2: Putting a Retro Sampler to useThe Greengate DS:3 had been re-created in the form of the Goodgreat. Now [Bea Thurman] had to put it to use. If the Greengate DS:3 card was rare,  the keyboard was nearly impossible to find. After a long search, [Bea] bought one all the way from Iceland.  The card of course came courtesy of [Eric]. 
    It was time to connect the two together.  But there was a problem — a big problem. The GreenGate has a DB-25 connected via a ribbon cable to the board’s 2×10 connector. The keyboard that shipped with those cards would plug right in.  Unfortunately, [Bea’s] keyboard had a DIP-40 IDC connector crimped on its ribbon cable.  What’s more the connectors for the sustain and volume pedals were marked, but never drilled out. The GreenGate silk screen was still there though. 
    Maybe it was a prototype or some sort of modified hardware. Either way, the 40-pin DIP connector had to go if the keyboard ever were to work with the card. What followed were a few hours of careful wire tracing 

    Tracing out pins is always a pain.  To make it worse, the only DB-25 connector [Bea] had on hand was an Insulation Displacement Connector (IDC). It’s the right part to use for the ribbon cable attached to the keyboard, but not what you’d want to use to test pinouts. These connectors are generally crimped once.
    The GreenGate keyboard and foot pedals are matrix scanned – much like a standard alphanumeric keyboard. The keyboard also needed some internal cleanup after 40 years. Like many ‘boards of the day, it used small spring wires that made contact with a common bar. After some painstaking debugging, working directly with [Eric] on video chat, [Bea] had the system working.  Now came the fun part — using the keyboard to make music.  
    The Greengate hardware is impressive, but the software is stunning. [Bea] got in touch with [Colin Holgate], who wrote it. He’s also the “gate” in Greengate. With [Colin’s] software, Waveforms can be edited in an oscilloscope view, much like one would find in a modern DAW. The software even includes a pattern editor, which can be used for arpeggios.  
    The GreenGate has 4 notes of polyphony, is multitimbral, and can layer multiple samples across the keyboard. Considering this is all handled on an Apple II+ with a green screen monitor for a UI, impressive is an understatement.
    [Bea] gives us a great walkthrough using the system. She starts by sampling audio from a cassette. With the audio in memory, she uses this to build a simple song. The entire setup made an appearance at VCF MidWest, so if you saw it in person let us know in the comments!

    The Greengate DS:3 had been re-created in the form of the Goodgreat. Now [Bea Thurman] had to put it to use. If the Greengate DS:3 card was rare,  the keyboard was nearly impossible to find. After …

  • Concord acquires mystery Latin Music catalog for $217m, after raising $850m in latest asset backed securities transactionConcord catalog now worth more than USD $5 billion, according to Kroll report
    Source

  • Solving a Retrocomputing Mystery with an Album Cover: Greengate DS:3[Bea Thurman] had a retro music conundrum. She loved the classic Greengate DS:3 sampler, but couldn’t buy one, and couldn’t find enough information to build her own. [Bea’s] plea for help caught the attention of [Eric Schlaepfer], aka  [TubeTime]. The collaboration that followed ultimately solved a decades-old mystery. 
    In the 1980s, there were two types of musicians: Those who could afford a Fairlight CMI and everyone else. If you were an Apple II owner, the solution was a Greengate DS:3. The DS:3 was a music keyboard and a sampler card for the Apple II+ (or better). The plug-in card was a bit mysterious, though. The cards were not very well documented, and only a few survive today. To make matters worse, some chips had part numbers sanded off. It was a bit of a mystery until [Bea and Tubetime] got involved. 

    Eric Schlaepfer
    While [Bea] didn’t have the card itself, she had a photo of the board and a picture of an album that contained the key to everything. The Greengate came packed with a vinyl album, “Into Trouble with the Noise of Art.” An apt title, since the album art was the Greengate PCB top layer. Now if you know [Eric], you know he wrote the book (literally) on taking things apart and taking photos of them, even producing replicas. 
    Thoroughly nerdsniped, [Eric] loaded the photos KiCad and started tracing. With the entire top layer artwork and most of the bottom layer, the 8-bit card wasn’t too hard to figure out. The sticky point was one chip. A big 40-pin part with the numbers scrubbed off. One owner pulled the chip to check for fab information on the back, only to be greeted by a proper British “You Nosey S.O.B.” penciled on top of more sanded part numbers. 
    If the chip was an ASIC, the project would be blocked until they could get their hands on an actual board for analysis. An ASIC would have custom part numbers on it from the fab though – no need for sanding. It had to be something off the shelf. [Eric] used some context clues to determine that the Mystery chip had to be a DMA controller. This narrowed the field down. From there, he had to compare pinouts until he had a match with the venerable MC6844. 
    With the mystery part out of the way, [Eric] put the finishing touches on the PCB, saved it to his GitHub as the GoodGreat DS:3, and sent it off.  A few days later, the bare boards arrived and were quickly populated with vintage parts. [Eric] ran a few tests and sent the card off to [Bea], where we will pick up with part 2. 
    At least the device wasn’t protected with a self-destruct code.

    [Bea Thurman] had a retro music conundrum. She loved the classic Greengate DS:3 sampler, but couldn’t buy one, and couldn’t find enough information to build her own. [Bea’s] plea for help caught th…

  • Synchro Arts Artist: New subscription plan Arts have announced the launch of a new subscription plan that they say will equip users with everything they need to make, release and monetise their music.

    Arts have announced the launch of a new subscription plan that they say will equip users with everything they need to make, release and monetise their music.

  • “The music scene will never be the same without you.” Jackmaster tributes pour in from dance music titans and friendsOn 12 October 2024, Scottish DJ and Numbers co-founder Jackmaster died suddenly at the age of 38, sending a shockwave through the electronic music community world;  just last month Jack Revill dominating the decks at Hï Ibiza.
    Revill’s family shared the news of the DJ’s death via Instagram. The post explained how Revill had suffered an accidental head injury in Ibiza that was fatal.

    READ MORE: AlphaTheta’s new DJ controller hosts a new feature for freely manipulating drum parts and creating original grooves

    “His family—Kate, Sean, and Johnny — are utterly heartbroken,” the family write. “While deeply touched by the overwhelming support from friends, colleagues, and fans, the family kindly requests privacy as they navigate the immense grief of this devastating loss.”
    “Jack’s passion for music and his relentless drive to push creative boundaries through his work at the Numbers label and Rubadub Records in Glasgow, including discovering countless innovative artists, made him a beloved and pioneering figure in the electronic music community both in front of and behind the scenes,” the post continues.
    “His talent for blending genres and delivering electrifying DJs sets and productions earned him the respect and admiration of peers and fans across the globe. His legacy will continue to inspire, and his impact on the world of dance music will remain indelible.”

    View this post on Instagram

    A post shared by Jack Revill (@jackmaster)

    Tributes have been coming in from all corners of the DJ world for Revill. On his family’s announcement post, friends and musical peers have been flooding the comments with love.
    Fellow Scottish DJ Ewan McVicar shares his respect, writing “the very best to ever do it & the reason i started all this. thanks for inspiring a generation with quality.” Elsewhere, American DJ Diplo writes a poignant “You’re gonna live forever.”
    Electronic duo CamelPhat also shared some words. “Can’t believe what I’m reading,” they write. “In an industry full of Ego you were hands down one of the nicest fellas we ever met along the way. Our thoughts are with family & friends. RIP my friend.”
    The sorrow is widespread. From South Korean DJ Peggy Gou to Irish DJ and presented Annie Mac, peers from across the globe are feeling the loss of Revill’s musical spark.
    Producer Skream, aka Oliver Jones, has shared a trio of photos to air his grief. The pair collaborated on 2022 release, The Attention Deficit Track, but they also had a strong friendship. The photos depict the pair posing together with a knight’s helmet and sword, a joyous polaroid, and even a snap of Revill giving Jones a kiss on the cheek.

    View this post on Instagram

    A post shared by Skream (@skreamizm)

    “Not really not too sure what I’m meant to say,” Jones begins. “Everyone knows how much the boy meant to me. From the minute we met we were kindred spirits. There’s never been a Skream without Jacky sequencer and vice versa…”
    “You were my brother and we went through so much together,” he continues. “I’ll miss you dearly Jack. Can’t even understand what’s happening… heads absolutely upside down…”
    Another caption reads: “Still not making sense to me mate… What we done for each other as people over the years is something I’ll cherish till I’m with ya. Us meeting was literally a game changer for the entire industry. Love ya bro”
    Electronic duo Disclosure have also shared their own Instagram post. “Inspiration,” their post reads. “Pure talent. Pioneering DJ. Friend. The music scene will never be the same without you. Thank you for all the amazing memories, shows & laughs we had together. Rest in peace Jack.”
    In a chat with Electronic Groove in March, Revill promised that nothing would ever tear him away from his decks. “I’m obsessed with DJing,” he said. “I am so grateful for my fans, but I got into music because I love dancing.”
    Read more music industry and music tech news.
    The post “The music scene will never be the same without you.” Jackmaster tributes pour in from dance music titans and friends appeared first on MusicTech.

    The revered Glaswegian DJ and producer has died suddenly at the age 38 from a head injury in Ibiza.

  • MLC Black Box funds still unpaid as royalties pass $2.4BThe Mechanical Licensing Collective (MLC) has collected more than $2.4 billion from DSP on behalf of songwriters and publishers. But about 50% of unmatched or so called MLC "Black Box" funds remain unpaid.
    The post MLC Black Box funds still unpaid as royalties pass $2.4B appeared first on Hypebot.

    Explore the issue of MLC Black Box funds in the music world. Discover the steps being taken to distribute unpaid royalties to artists.

  • International Creators Protect Music with CosyndLearn how international creators protect music with ease using Cosynd’s comprehensive copyright tools. Don’t let legal complexities hold you back—learn the steps to protect your music globally today. International Creators. Continue reading
    The post International Creators Protect Music with Cosynd appeared first on Hypebot.

    Learn how international music creators can protect their work with ease using Cosynd's copyright tools. Safeguard your music globally.