FILM MUSIC weekly ISSUE 52 • FEBRUARY 26, 2008 • A Global Media Online Publication • www.filmmusicweekly.com Dario Marianelli, Glen Hansard and Marketa Irglova Win Music Oscars Composer Dario Marianelli won the Oscar for original score for his score for the feature film Atonement and Glen Hansard n Dario Marianelli and Marketa Irglova won best original song for “Falling Slowly” from the film Once at the 80th Academy Awards Sunday evening in Los Angeles. Italian-born Marianelli, whose recent films include The Brave One and Pride & Prejudice, a film AMP Announces New Officers n The Association of Music Producers (AMP) has announced new officers for its National Board. Lyle Greenfield of Bang Music will serve a two-year term as President. Ray Foote of Big Foote Music is first VP, and Liz Myers of Trivers/Myers Music is second VP. Jan Horowitz of David Horowitz Music Associates is Secretary. Also elected to the Board were: Craig Hazen of Zen Music; Larry Pecorella of Comma Music (who is also president of the Midwest Chapter); Jon Slott of Juniper; Andy Snavley of Bendy Music; and Roger Wojahn of Wojahn Bros. Music. Greenfield succeeds Tiffany Senft of tonefarmer, who is immediate Past President of FILM MUSIC RADIO: SCORING NEWS: CD REVIEW: THE CHART DOCTOR: MUSIC TECHNOLOGY: the Board. The National Board is comprised of members from each AMP Chapter – New York, Midwest, and Los Angeles, as well as an “at-large” member (this term, Slott from Juniper in Dallas). “Since the National Board was formed last year, it has taken on many tasks, including exploring performing rights issues and compensation models,” said Greenfield, who served on the 2007 National Board and is a Past President of the New York Chapter. “As AMP celebrates its 10th anniversary, our intention is to turn up the volume—from celebrating the work of our member companies to increasing our presence and respect at the heart of the production process.” that resulted in his first Academy Award nomination in 2005. “I’m very lucky because I was part of a fantastic group of people that made a fantastic film,” said Marianelli in his acceptance speech. Glen Hansard, in his accep- tance speech, recalled how “Once” was made in three weeks with two camcorders and $100,000. His songwriting partner Marketa Irglova said, “This is such a big deal, not only for us, but for all independent musicians and artists who spend so much of their time struggling.” Report: Downloads Will Surpass CD Sales in 2012 n Half of all music sold in the US will be digital in 2011 and sales of digitally downloaded music will surpass physical CD sales in 2012, according to a new report by Forrester Research, Inc. Digital music sales will grow at a compound annual growth rate of 23 percent over the next five years, reaching $4.8 billion in revenue by 2012, but will fail to make up for the continuing steady decline in CD sales. In 2012, CD sales will be reduced to just $3.8 billion. “This is the end of the music industry as we know it,” said Forrester Research Vice President and Principal Analyst James L. McQuivey. “Media executives eager to stay afloat in this receding tide must clear the path of dis- Daniel Schweiger interviews composer Marco Beltrami “The X-Files 2” (Mark Snow), “Bolt” (John Powell) and more Daniel Schweiger reviews Movie Score Media “Notating Without Thinking, Or ...” by Ron Hess “RME Fireface 800 and the KRK VXT8s” by Peter Alexander covery and purchase, but only hardware and software providers can ultimately make listening to music as easy as turning on the radio.” The Forrester report is based in part on a survey of more than 5,000 consumers in the US and Canada. Among the drivers of Forrester’s five-year forecast for music sales: * MP3 player adoption. The average MP3 player is only 57 percent full, suggesting that the devices are underutilized, while more of the devices are being bought by households with more than one MP3 player. Moving forward, a majority of MP3 players will be sold to households that already have one. (continued pg.3) ������������ ����������������� ���������� ����� ����� ��������� ������������ ��������������������������� ������ ��������� ���� �������� ������� ������������������������� FILM MUSIC weekly Publisher: Mark Northam Editor: Mikael Carlsson VP Finance and Operations: Rebecca Lee Art Director: Joshua Young Advertising Manager: Steve Schatzberg Copy Editor: Lisa Rawson Technology Editor: Peter Alexander Soundtrack Editor: Daniel Schweiger Customer Service Manager: Robyn Young Website Design: Rakesh Rai Accounting: Tina Chiang Legal Advisor: Patricia Johnson, Esq. Film Music Weekly is published weekly by Global Media Online, Inc. Executive and Editorial Office: 23360 Velencia Blvd. Suite E-12, Valencia, CA 91355. Tel: 310-209-8263 Fax: 310-388-1367, email: info@filmmusicweekly.com. We are not responsible for unsolicited material. All Rights Reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without written permission of the publisher is prohibited. The opinions of contributing writers and editors to this publication do not necessarily reflect the views of Global Media Online, Inc. or any of our divisions, management or staff. 2 ������������ ��������� ������� �������������� YOUR FEEDBACK We welcome feedback on any aspect of Film Music Weekly. All letters must include an address and daytime phone number. We reserve the right to edit letters for clarity and space and to use them in all electronic and print editions. Mail to: Film Music Weekly, 23360 Velencia Blvd. Suite E-12, Valencia, CA 91355 or email feedback@filmmusicweekly.com ADVERTISING Our comprehensive advertising programs offer premier visibility to film and television music professionals, soundtrack collectors, and music executives worldwide. We offer competitive rates on a wide variety of advertising opportunities including display advertising and online advertising. For more information, call 1-888-910-7888 or 310-209-8263 or email sales@filmmusicweekly.com REPRINTS AND COPYRIGHT PERMISSIONS Before quoting or reusing editorial material, or for custom reprints (minimum order 100) contact 310-209-8263 or email reprints@filmmusicweekly.com SUBSCRIPTIONS Subscriptions to Film Music Weekly via email are available at no cost. To subscribe, visit our website at www.filmmusicweekly.com and enter your email address in our subscription section. Film Music Weekly and its logo are trademarks of Global Media Online, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Entire Contents © 2008 Global Media Online, Inc. FMR This Week on FILM MUSIC RADIO ON THE SCORE MARCO BELTRAMI Film music journalist Daniel Schweiger interviews composer MARCO BELTRAMI, who turns his musical vision to terror again with THE EYE. . LISTEN NOW ISSUE 52 • FEBRUARY 26, 2008 FILM MUSIC weekly INDUSTRY NEWS Report: Downloads Will Surpass CD Sales in 2012 * DRM-free music. With the four big music labels now committed to eliminating digital rights management (DRM), DRM-free music will extend beyond pioneer Amazon.com to Apple iTunes and the other major online music sites. * Social networks. DRM-free music enables every profile page on MySpace.com or Facebook to immediately become a music store where friends sell friends their favorite tracks. Forrester believes digital downloads are the logistical mass market for the future, satisfying all the needs that people have when it comes to music — easy to find, easy to buy, and easy to listen to, regardless of the device. On the other hand, subscription music services will show modest growth, reaching just $459 million in revenue in 2012 according to Forrester’s projections, while experiments in adsupported downloads will be silenced by the powerful combination of DRM-free music and on-demand music streaming on sites like imeem.com. “The industry has to redefine what its product is,” said McQuivey. “Music executives have spent years tracking CD sales. But the artist is the product — not just the source of it. New forms of revenue will come from unexpected sources. For example, the industry has failed to capitalize on the growing popularity of video games such as Guitar Hero and Rock Band. In a market where musicians are happy to sell a million copies of a CD, a video game market where titles can sell five million copies (continued. from pg 1) is enough to motivate even the most depressed music executive.” Initiatives currently before the 2008 AMP National Board include the introduction of new business tools to streamline workflow, and forward-looking discussions with the musicians’ union involving contract models for new media. Additionally, AMP will host a multi-city event this spring to celebrate its 10th anniversary. The National Board was formed last year to work with the regional chapters in setting the agenda for the organization, and to support those chapters in their own programs and initiatives. For more information on Forrester Research, visit http://www.forrester.com Professional Orchestration 2A: Orchestrating the Melody Within the String Section is a hit. A great publication! You perfectly met the needs of so many musicians - it's an incredibly valuable source of knowledge! I like also very much its clear structure and the way you explain complex things. A "must" not only for students, but for every musician dealing with samples and "orchestral sound". Peter Siedlaczek Advanced Orchestra Classical Choirs String Essentials 2 The new book is amazing! It builds on the first book by adding more explanations, MIDI programming advice and film scoring concerns. I can't imagine a more exhaustive study or more organized collection of string writing. You can precharge my card for books 2B through 8. Jeff Laity Marketing Manager TASCAM I would highly recommend this book to any student or working professional wishing to learn or expand their knowledge of orchestration. If you intend to work professionally the skills imparted by the studies presented here will be of enormous benefit and will give you a professional advantage for your entire career. Garry Schyman BioShock NOW SHIPPING! Order now at www.truespec.com FILM MUSIC weekly ISSUE 52 • FEBRUARY 26, 2008 3 SCORING NEWS THIS WEEK’S MAJOR SCORING ASSIGNMENTS Mark Snow: The X-Files 2 Composer Mark Snow has confirmed to Upcoming Film Scores that he has signed on to score The X-Files 2, the sequel to the 1998 feature film that followed the phenomenally successful sci-fi TV series. The film is directed by X-Files creator Chris Carter, who has worked extensively with Mark Snow not only on X-Files, but also on TV series Millennium, Harsh Realm and The Lone Gunmen. Sixty-one-year old Snow, who probably is the most prolific composer in television music, has received six Emmy nominations for his X-Files music. His latest feature film score, which came out last year, was a completely different type of project: a collaboration with French veteran director Alain Resnais on his romantic drama Private Fears in Public Places. It resulted in a César Award nomination for the composer. The X-Files 2 is scheduled to premiere on July 28, distributed by 20th Century Fox. John Powell: Bolt Walt Disney Pictures confirmed to Upcoming Film Scores that John Powell, one of the most prolific Hollywood A-list composers, has been signed to score the studio’s new animated film Bolt. Directed by Chris Williams, who wrote the stories for Disney’s animated features Mulan and The Emperor’s New Groove, Bolt tells the story about a dog who has lived his life on the set of a TV show and believes that he has true superpowers. Featuring the voices of John Travolta, Woody Harrelson, Bruce Greenwood and Thomas Haden Church, the film is scheduled to hit cinemas on November 26. John Powell, who is repped by Kraft-Engel Management, is busy as always: among his other upcoming films are the Will Smith action comedy Hancock, the drama Stop Loss, and another animated film, Horton Hears a Who. The two last-mentioned will be released on CD by Varèse Sarabande. Opening worldwide this weekend is Jumper, also scored by John Powell, with a score album coming out on Lakeshore Records. 4 THE SCOREBOARD LATEST ADDITIONS: Bruno Coulais: MR 73. Michael A. Levine: Columbus Day. Daniele Luppi: Hell Ride. Nathaniel Mechaly: Dorothy Mills. Angelo Milli: Paraiso Travel. John Powell: Bolt. Mark Snow: The X-Files 2. David Torn: The Wackness. Shigeru Umebayashi: Absurdistan. COMPLETE LIST: Panu Aaltio: The Home of Dark Butterflies. Tree Adams: Emilio. Andreas Alfredsson / Christian Sandquist: Possession. Eric Allaman: Witless Protection • Race. John Altman: The Master Builder • Shoot on Sight. Armand Amar: La jeune fille et les loups. Marco D’Ambrosio: Say Hello to Stan Talmadge. David Arnold: How to Loose Friends and Alienate People • Quantum of Solace • The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader. Chris P. Bacon: Space Chimps. Angelo Badalamenti: The Edge of Love • Secrets of Love. Klaus Badelt: Killshot • Starship Troopers: Marauder • The Scorpion King: Rise of the Akkadian • Fire Bay • Dragon Hunters • Heaven and Earth. Lesley Barber: Death in Love. Nathan Barr: Tortured • Shutter. Steve Bartek: The Art of Travel. Tyler Bates: The Haunted World of El Superbeasto • Day of the Dead • Doomsday • Watchmen • The Day the Earth Stood Still. Jeff Beal: Where God Left His Shoes • Salomaybe? • The Deal. Christophe Beck: Drillbit Taylor. Marco Beltrami: In the Electric Mist with Confederate Dead. Jean-Michael Bernard: Be Kind Rewind • Cash. Charles Bernstein: The Cursed. Doug Besterman: Exit Speed. Terence Blanchard: Miracle at St. Anna. Scott Bomar: Maggie Lynn. Simon Boswell: Bathory • My Zinc Bed. Jason Brandt: Something’s Wrong in Kansas. David Buckley: Town Creek • The Forbidden Kingdom. Kenneth Burgomaster: Garfield’s Fun Fest • Hero Wanted. Mickey Bullock: Sportkill • Orville. Carter Burwell: In Bruges. Edmund Butt: The Waiting Room. Niall Byrne: How About You. Peter Calandra: The Sickness. Paul Cantelon: The Other Boleyn Girl. Jeff Cardoni: You and I (Finding tATu). by MIKAEL CARLSSON mcarlsson@filmmusicweekly.com Patrick Cassidy: L’aviatore. Nigel Clarke & Michael Csányi-Wills: The Grind. George S. Clinton: Harold & Kumar Escape from Guantanamo Bay. Chandra Cogburn: Fiesta Grand • Orgies and the Meaning of Life • The Bard: The Story of Robert Burns. Juan J. Colomer: Dark Honeymoon. Normand Corbeil: Ma fille, mon ange • Boot Camp • Emotional Arithmetic. Bruno Coulais: MR 73 • Les Femmes de l’ombre • Coraline. Burkhard Dallwitz: The Interrogation of Harry Wind • Chainsaw. Jeff Danna: Lakeview Terrace (cocomposer) • The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus (co-composer). Mychael Danna: Lakeview Terrace (cocomposer) • The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus (co-composer). Carl Davis: The Understudy. Marcello De Francisci: The Butcher. Wolfram de Marco: The Lost Tribe. Jessica de Rooij: Tunnel Rats • Far Cry • Alone in the Dark II. John Debney: Big Stan • Bachelor No. 2 • Starship Dave • Swing Vote • Old Dogs • Sin City 2. Tim DeLaughter: The Assassination of a High School President. Erik Desiderio: He’s Such a Girl • Sons of Liberty. Alexandre Desplat: Largo Winch. Ramin Djawadi: Fly Me to the Moon • The List • Iron Man. Pino Donaggio: Colpe d’occhio. James Michael Dooley: Bachelor Party 2 • The Little Mermaid: Ariel’s Beginning • Impy’s Island 2. Patrick Doyle: Nim’s Island • Igor. Christopher Drake: Batman - Gotham Knight (co-composer). Ludek Drizhal: Life Goes On • Synapse • The Next Race: The Remote Viewings • The Sno Cone Stand Inc. Anne Dudley: Black Water Transit. Randy Edelman: The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor. Jonathan Edwards: The Golden Boys. Steve Edwards: The Neighbor • The Intervention • Sharks in Venice. Cliff Eidelman: He’s Just Not That Into You. Danny Elfman: Wanted • Hellboy 2: The Golden Army. Stephen Endelman: Redbelt. Paul Englishby: Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day. Tom Erba: Chinaman’s Chance. Ilan Eshkeri: The Disappeared. Evan Evans: The Mercy Man • You’re Nobody ‘Til Somebody Kills You • The Poker Club • Jack Rio. Nima Fakhara: Lost Dream. Guy Farley: Knife Edge • The Brøken • Dylan. Chad Fischer: The Babysitters. Robert Folk: Kung Pow: Tongue of Fury • Magdalene • Vivaldi. Jason Frederick: Good Chemistry • Bears. John Frizzell: Henry Poole Is Here. Michael Giacchino: Speed Racer • Star Trek. Vincent Gillioz: The Appearance of Things • Portal • Last Breath. Scott Glasgow: Toxic • The Gene Generation • Lo • The Bridge to Nowhere. Philip Glass: Les animaux amoreux. Erik Godal: The Gift • Ready Or Not • Irreversi. Jonathan Goldsmith: Tenderness. Christopher Gordon: Mao’s Last Dancer • Daybreakers. Jeff Grace: Trigger Man • I Sell the Dead • Liberty Kid. John Graham: Long Flat Balls II. Harry Gregson-Williams: Jolene • The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian • G-Force • Wolverine. Rupert Gregson-Williams: You Don’t Mess With the Zohan • Made of Honor • Bedtime Stories. Andrew Gross: Forfeit • National Lampoon’s Bag Boy • Diamond Dog Caper • The Speed of Thought. Larry Groupé: Love Lies Bleeding • The Hungry Woman • Straw Dogs. Andrea Guerra: The Accidental Husband • Parlami d’amore. Robert Gulya: Atom Nine Adventures • Themoleris • 9 and a Half Date. Steven Gutheinz: Rothenburg. Todd Haberman: Killer Movie. Richard Hartley: Diamond Dead. Paul Hartwig: Holiday Beach • Tyrannosaurus Azteca. Richard Harvey: Eichmann. Paul Haslinger: Prom Night • Make It Happen • While She Was Out. Paul Heard: Clubbed. Alex Heffes: My Enemy’s Enemy • State of Play. Reinhold Heil: Blackout (co-composer) • The International (co-composer). Christian Henson: Zomerhitte • A Bunch of Amateurs. Eric Hester: The Utopian Society • Lost Mission • Frail. Tom Hiel: A Plumm Summer. David Hirschfelder: Shake Hands With the Devil. Ben Holbrook: Kiss the Bride. Trevor Horn: Kids in America. James Horner: The Boy in Striped Pyjamas • Avatar. Richard Horowitz: Kandisha • The Whisperers. James Newton Howard: The Happening • The Dark Knight (co-composer) • Defiance • Confessions of a Shopaholic. Terry Huud: Plaguers. Søren Hyldgaard: Red. Alberto Iglesias: The Argentine • Guerrilla. Mark Isham: Pride and Glory • The Express. ISSUE 52 • FEBRUARY 26, 2008 FILM MUSIC weekly Film Music Weekly’s “The Scoreboard” only lists scoring assignments that have been confirmed to us by official sources. The list is limited to feature film scoring assignments. New additions are highlighted in red print. Corey Allen Jackson: Idiots and Angels. James Jandrisch: American Venus. Adrian Johnston: Sparkle • Brideshead Revisited. Bobby Johnston: American Fork • Stuck • Hotel California • Happiness Runs. Evan Jolly: Tonight Is Cancelled. Tim Jones: Cryptid. David Julyan: Eden Lake. George Kallis: Antigravity. Tuomas Kantelinen: Arn - Riket vid vägens slut. Yagmur Kaplan: The Elder Son • The Lodge • Broken Windows. Laura Karpman: Out at the Wedding. Kenji Kawai: L – Change the World • Orochi • The Sky Crawlers. Rolfe Kent: The Lucky Ones. Wojciech Kilar: Black Sun. Mark Kilian: Before the Rains. David Kitay: Shanghai Kiss • Blonde Ambition. Johnny Klimek: Blackout (co-composer) • The International (co-composer). Harald Kloser: 10,000 BC. Abel Korzeniowski: Terms. Penka Kouneva: Midnight Movie • The Gold and the Beautiful. Ivan Koutikov: Wanted Undead Or Alive • Living Hell. Robert J. Kral: Batman - Gotham Knight (co-composer). Aryavarta Kumar: The Rapture • Greater Threat. Nathan Larson: August • Choke. Jim Latham: Greetings from the Shore • Swishbucklers • Parental Guidance Suggested. Craig Leon: Maestro. Geoff Levin: Triloquist • The Rat Thing • Agenda • The Fallen. James S. Levine: Otis. Michael A. Levine: Columbus Day. Krishna Levy: Le nouveau protocole. Gary Lionelli: Oswald’s Ghost. Jason & Nolan Livesay: Bounty • Limbo Lounge • Little Iron Men. Andrew Lockington: Step • Journey 3-D • One Week. Henning Lohner: Kleiner Dodo • Love Comes Lately. Helen Jane Long: Surveillance. Erik Lundborg: Absolute Trust. Daniele Luppi: Hell Ride. Deborah Lurie: Spring Breakdown. Vivek Maddala: They Turned Our Desert Into Fire. Nuno Malo: Mr. Hobb’s House. Mark Mancina: Sheepish • Camille • Without a Badge • Like Dandelion Dust. Aram Mandossian: The Last Resort. Harry Manfredini: Black Friday • iMurders • Impulse • Anna Nicole • Dead and Gone. David Mansfield: Then She Found Me • The Guitar. Kevin Manthei: Batman - Gotham Knight (co-composer). Dario Marianelli: Far North • Hippie Hip- pie Shake • The Soloist. Anthony Marinelli: Grizzly Park. Gary Marlowe: Los Pereyra • Das echo der Schuld. Phil Marshall: Live. John McCarthy: The Stone Angel. Don McGlashan: Dean Spanley. Joel McNeely: The Tinkerbell Movie. Nathaniel Mechaly: Taken • Dorothy Mills. Matt Messina: The Least of These. Guy Michelmore: Doctor Strange • Bono, Bob, Brian and Me. Randy Miller: Last Time Forever • Shanghai Red • Second Chance Season. Robert Miller: The Key Man • Trumbo • On the Hook • Wherever You Are. Angelo Milli: Máncora • Paraiso Travel. Sheldon Mirowitz: Renewal • Operation Filmmaker. Richard G. Mitchell: Almost Heaven. Charlie Mole: Fade to Black • I Really Hate My Job • St. Trinian’s. John Morgan: The Opposite Day (cocomposer). Paul Leonard-Morgan: Popcorn. Trevor Morris: Matching Blue • Krews. Mark Mothersbaugh: Quid Pro Quo • Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs. Hélène Muddiman: Skin. Sean Murray: The Lost • Clean Break. Peter Nashel: Carriers. Javier Navarrete: Mirrors • Inkheart • Fireflies in the Garden. Blake Neely: Elvis and Anabelle • The Great Buck Howard • Surfer Dude. Roger Neill: Take • Scar. Joey Newman: Safe Harbour. Randy Newman: Leatherheads • The Frog Princess. Thomas Newman: Nothing Is Private • Wall-E • Revolutionary Road. David James Nielsen: Reclaiming the Blade. Stefan Nilsson: Heaven’s Heart. Marinho Nobre: Left for Dead. Adam Nordén: Everybody’s Dancing • Wolf • De Gales hus. Julian Nott: Heavy Petting. Paul Oakenfold: Victims. Dean Ogden: Oranges • Knuckle Draggers • A Perfect Season • The Sensei. John Ottman: Valkyrie. John Paesano: Shamrock Boy. Heitor Pereira: The Canyon • Running the Sahara • South of the Border. Mark Petrie: The Road to Empire • Valley of Angels • Farmhouse. Barrington Pheloung: Incendiary. Leigh Phillips: War Made Easy • Still Life. Martin Phipps: Grow Your Own. Nicholas Pike: It’s Alive • Parasomnia. Nicola Piovani: Odette Toulemonde. Douglas Pipes: Trick r’ Treat • City of Ember. Conrad Pope: In My Sleep. Steve Porcaro: The Wizard of Gore • Cougar Club. FILM MUSIC weekly ISSUE 52 • FEBRUARY 26, 2008 John Powell: Horton Hears a Who • Hancock • Stop Loss • Bolt. Michael Price: Sugarhouse Lane • Agent Crush • Wild Girl. Trevor Rabin: Get Smart. Didier Lean Rachou: An American in China. Brian Ralston: Graduation • 9/Tenths. Jasper Randall: The Secrets of Jonathan Sperry. Joe Renzetti: 39 • Universal Signs. Graeme Revell: Pineapple Express • Days of Wrath • The Ruins • Street Kings. Graham Reynolds: I’ll Come Running. Zacarías M. de la Riva: The Last of the Just • The Anarchist’s Wife • Carmo. Carmen Rizzo: The Power of the Game. David Robbins: War, Inc. • The Dot Man. Matt Robertson: The Forest. Douglas Romayne: In Zer0: Fragile Wings. Philippe Rombi: Bienvenue chez les Ch’tis. Brett Rosenberg: The Skeptic. William Ross: Our Lady of Victory. Laura Rossi: The Cottage. David Glen Russell: Contamination. Hitoshi Sakamoto: Romeo x Juliet. H. Scott Salinas: Strictly Sexual • What We Did on Our Holidays. Anton Sanko: Life in Flight. Gustavo Santaolalla: I Come With the Rain • On the Road. Brian Satterwhite: Cowboy Smoke • Maidenhead. Mark Sayfritz: Sake • The Shepherd. Brad Sayles: The Bracelet of Bordeaux. Dominik Scherrer: Good Morning Heartache. Misha Segal: Lost at War • Shabat Shalom Maradona. Marc Shaiman: Slammer. Theodore Shapiro: The Mysteries of Pittsburgh • The Girl in the Park • SemiPro • Tropic Thunder • Nowhereland • Marley & Me. George Shaw: Victim • Sailfish. Edward Shearmur: Passengers • Bill • College Road Trip • Righteous Kill. Ryan Shore: Numb • Jack Brooks – Monster Slayer • Shadows. Vince Sievers: The Source. Carlo Siliotto: La Misma Luna • The Ramen Girl. Alan Silvestri: G.I. Joe • A Christmas Carol. Emilie Simon: Survivre avec les loups. Marcus Sjöwall: Dreamkiller. Cezary Skubiszewski: Death Defying Acts • Disgrace. Damion Smith: Stompin. Mark Snow: The X-Files 2. Jason Solowsky: L.A Takedown • Strawberries For The Homeless • Tamales And Gumbo • The Sweep • Exodus? Maarten Spruijt: The Seven of Daran Battle of Pareo Rock. Marc Streitenfeld: Body of Lies. William T. Stromberg: TV Virus • Army of the Dead • The Opposite Day (cocomposer). Johan Söderqvist: Walk the Talk • Let the Right One In • The Invisible. Joby Talbot: Son of Rambow. Frédéric Talgorn: Hexe Lilli. Mark Thomas: Tales of the Riverbank. tomandandy: The Koi Keeper. John van Tongeren: War Games 2 - The Dead Code. Pinar Toprak: Blue World • Dark Castle • Serbian Scars • Say It In Russian • Ocean of Pearls. David Torn: The Wackness. Jeff Toyne: Within • Late in the Game. Michael Tremante: If I Didn’t Care. Ernest Troost: Crashing. Tom Tykwer: The International (cocomposer). Brian Tyler: The Heaven Project. Shigeru Umebayashi: A Simple Love Story • Absurdistan. Cris Velasco: Prep School. Fernando Velázquez: Shiver. Reinhardt Wagner: Faubourg 36. Michael Wandmacher: Train • Never Back Down. Stephen Warbeck: Flawless • The Box Collector. Matthias Weber: Silent Rhythm. Craig Wedren: Little Big Men. Richard Wells: The Mutant Chronicles. Cody Westheimer: Benny Bliss and the Disciples of Greatness • Hysteria. Alan Williams: For the Love of a Dog • Act Your Age • Snow Princess • He Love Her, She Loves Him Not • The Velveteen Rabbit. David Williams: The Conjuring. John Williams: Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull • Lincoln. Patrick Williams: Mikey and Dolores. Tim Williams: The Passage • Star Crossed. Austin Wintory: Captain Abu Raed • Mr. Sadman • Grace. Debbie Wiseman: Amusement • The Hide. Chris Wood: Zombies Ate My Prom Date. Lyle Workman: Forgetting Sarah Marshall. Alex Wurman: Five Dollars a Day • The Promotion. Gabriel Yared: Manolete • The No. 1 Ladies Detective Agency • Adam Resurrected. Christopher Young: Sleepwalking • A Tale of Two Sisters. Geoff Zanelli: Delgo • Outlander • Ghost Town. Marcelo Zarvos: What Just Happened? Aaron Zigman: Lake City • Meet the Browns • Flash of Genius • Blue Powder. Hans Zimmer: Frost/Nixon • Casi Divas • Kung Fu Panda • The Dark Knight (cocomposer). Atli Örvarsson: Vantage Point • Babylon A.D. 5 NEW TECHNOLOGY | NEW HARDWARE | NEW SOFTWARE | NEW BUSINESS SKILLS | NEW BUSINESS MODELS It’s A New World Out There... FILM MUSIC INSTITUTE SPRING 2008 COURSES SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 16 Breaking into Film Composing in the Changing Face of Hollywood Instructor: Film & TV Music Agent Linda Kordek This new all-day exclusive course describes, in detail, how composers and songwriters can use the same techniques longtime agents use to open doors, get music listened to, and get paying work in film and television music. Learn what has traditionally worked and what to expect in the changing world of “convergence” and strikes. The course will cover areas including identifying prospects, approaching decision makers/networking skills, the submission process and your demo package - what to send, what not to send, the negotiation process, the financial aspects, closing the deal and working in the new paradigm. SATURDAY, MARCH 1 The Working Film & TV Composer Instructor: Film & TV Composer Shawn Clement This course will benefit composers who are working or studying to work in the film, television or videogame music industry, and provides in-depth, hands-on knowledge about how to successfully work as a composer including detailed looks at the art, craft, technology and business issues critical to a successful career working as a film, television or videogame composer today. From streamlining your studio to making new business contacts, getting work and building a career, this course covers what composers need to know. SATURDAY, MARCH 8 Understanding and Maximizing your ASCAP, BMI and SESAC Royalties Instructor: Performing Rights Author and Composer Mark Holden This one-day seminar by veteran performing rights journalist and composer Mark Holden provides an in-depth look at how performing rights royalties are paid and how composers and songwriters can maximize their royalty income. The course will cover topics including how the performing rights system works and the role of performing rights organizations (PROs), choosing a PRO, pros and cons of ASCAP, BMI and SESAC, the process of registering your works and filing cue sheets, music usage categories, payment rates, and more. SATURDAY, MARCH 15 Conducting Film Music Recording Sessions Instructor: Orchestrator, Copyist and Author Ron Hess Conductor and orchestrator Ron Hess teaches all the basic and not-so-basic conducting skills composers will need in order to take control of a film scoring session and competently conduct ensembles ranging from small groups to large orchestras. The course will include participants conducting a live musician. Among the topics covered will be workable beat patterns, saving effort by cuing within the beat pattern, developing left/right arm independence, visual telegraphing of important score elements, mental approaches so you can control your ensemble (and not vice-versa!), eliminating counterproductive elements in your conducting, replacing time-consuming verbosity with gestures that work, sight conducting, and session strategy. SATURDAY, MARCH 29 Basic Engineering for Composers Instructor: Film & TV Scoring Mixer Michael Stern Veteran scoring mixer Mike Stern discusses and demonstrates a variety of important engineering techniques that can be used by any composer to make their mixes sound better. These basic techniques can be accomplished with most DAW and digital editing software that will be used during the course to demonstrate the engineering techniques for composers. Mike will also discuss advantages of different digital editing software for composers and will discuss plugins, mixers and other outboard equipment. SATURDAY, APRIL 5 SATURDAY, APRIL 26 The New Music Editor Instructor: Film & TV Music Editor Christine Luethje Music Editors are the ultimate conduit between the Director/Producer and the Music Department. At any point in the process this position can have a significant amount of influence on who is hired, which songs are used, and how the royalty generating cue sheets are reported. Usually working for no less than 5 people per project, the music editor directly contributes to the efficiency of each project’s work flow while managing an often heavy editing work load. Areas covered in the course include spotting music meetings that are music efficient, the influence behind tracking music, temp scores, and music libraries, tips and tricks for cutting songs and licensing responsibilities, support and strengthen the scoring session, bullet proof the final dub: delivery specs and protocols, cue sheets that protect performing rights royalties, deal memos that safeguard the creative process, and how to employ digital transfer technologies for improved work flow. Handouts, demonstrations, and examples will be provided. SATURDAY, APRIL 19 Scoring Reality Television Instructor: Film & TV Composer Shawn Clement An in-depth look at the day-to-day work of scoring top reality shows from a working composer’s point of view. The course will focus on the art, craft, business and technology of this booming area of television programming including how jobs are won, the use of library vs. custom scored music, unique scoring challenges (artistic issues), logistical issues including turnaround time, examples of good reality scoring, where the reality television marketplace is headed, political issues, and budgets and the use of live musicians. Creating Great Film & TV Scores and Parts with Finale Instructor: Orchestrator, Copyist and Author Ron Hess Veteran Finale pro and orchestrator Ron Hess provides an in-depth look at how composers can quickly and effectively use Finale for score and part preparation. Special emphasis is placed on working efficiently with Finale and creating parts that are easy to sight-read. Whether you’ve worked with Finale for years or are new to the product, learn tips, tricks and intelligent strategies at this focused course designed to enable composers to embark on the path to mastering this powerful tool. Areas covered in the course include: approaches to being the master and Finale the slave (instead of vice-versa), extending Finale’s capabilities through the use of internal and external macros, saving time & effort by building good templates, batch-processing through the use of Finalescript, a look at the future of computer notation: touchtype input of scores, making sense of the recent score/part linkage features, really cool, but undocumented, Finale capabilities, and customizing finale to achieve your own distinctive notational style. SATURDAY, MAY 3 The Art of the Deal Instructor: Film & TV Music Agent Jeff Kaufman This course will benefit those who are already working or are seeking to work as a film and television composer, film music agent or manager. This course takes a comprehensive look at the role of the film and television music agent, and how composers can effectively function as their own agent if they do not yet have an agent handling their careers. The course is also designed to benefit those who are considering a career as and agent or manager for film and television music. www.filmmusicinstitute.com 6 ISSUE 52 • FEBRUARY 26, 2008 FILM MUSIC weekly CD REVIEW by DANIEL SCHWEIGER dschweiger@filmmusicweekly.com The Movies You’ve Never Seen are the Scores Worth Hearing at Label Specializing In New Composing Talent Title: Movie Score Media Composer: Various Label: Movie Score Media Suggested Retail Price: $16.95 Grade: B+ W ith so many composers vying for so few quality movies, it can be hard moving up the musical ladder — especially when said film barely gets a release. But leave it to Movie Score Media to hear the best scores that lie within Netflix oblivion, creating a label that basically sells itself on the guarantee of good, if not downright impressive music with each purchase. The Swede responsible for this cool boutique label is Mikael Carlsson, a film journalist with a natural ear for upcoming talent. And he’s given many deserving composers a real foot in the door with his slim, smartly packaged releases. For these are the kinds of scores that will hook any producer and director – let alone film music fan. Though Carlsson has a number of notable electronic releases available via iTunes like The Roost, Evil and Headspace, it’s his preference for symphonic music which shines through on most of MSM’s “hard copy” releases, no more so than in The Royal Philharmonic Orchestra’s performance of The Rocket Post. As scored by Nigel Clarke and Michael CsanyiWills, Post’s strings, flutes and harps beautifully evoke the Scottish Isles; a lush, lilting sound that’s as romantic as the heather on the highlands. The psychological drama of Jeff Toyne’s Shadow In The Trees is a nuanced, and haunting score that makes effective use of voice, violin and piano; the perfect music to FILM MUSIC weekly ISSUE 52 • FEBRUARY 26, 2008 raise the rural ghosts of the past. Also rustically appealing is Guy Farley’s score to The Christmas Miracle Of Jonathan Toomey, a heartwarming holiday soundtrack that doesn’t slam the jingle bells in your face. Instead, Farley gets across the Xmas magic with soothing, understated melodies for the piano and strings and several country hoedowns – all of which beautifully evoke a young boy’s loss, and his new emotional bonding with the holiday spirit. An understated, and mightily creepy composer on the rise is David James Nielsen, whose Haunting Villisca is a truly foreboding spook house score that gradually builds its fear with an impressive, melodic touch. And though having Batman’s Adam West in the place of Rod Serling for Tales From Beyond might make you think you’re getting a comedy score, Nielsen thankfully plays it creepy with a striking number of musical styles, ranging from lounge lizard jazz to skittering dissonance. Yet all remain tonally cohesive, making for an effective omnibus score. And while it’s only a bunch of film students running from a movie-crazed killer in Scott Glasgow’s score for Hack, the composer uses the opportunity to pay tribute to such current, malefic maestros as Marco Beltrami and Danny Elfman, all with the kind of shrieking chords and playfully dark orchestrations that have filled such horror flicks as Scream and Psycho. But Glasgow’s got the horror stones to pay tribute without doing a sound-alive, showing he’s got his own darkly thrilling voice that can evoke past chillers while remaining its sinister own. The Killing Floor is given a mean, propulsive edge by Michael Wandmacher. And after his similarly inventive thrill scores for Modern Vampires and Cry Wolf, Wandmacher’s use of samples and orchestra for The Killing Floor reaches a new adrenalin high, with a propulsive sound that reaches the cool factor of a Jason Bourne beat swinging a bloody symphonic axe. Some of MSM’s most notable releases come from the label’s European home base, beginning with Dario Marianelli’s I Capture The Castle. As one of the scores that led to the composer’s current Oscar nomination for Atonement, Castle beautifully shows off Marianelli’s near-wondrous talent for melodic themes, especially in the “costume picture” context. Like his other Oscar-nominated score to Pride & Prejudice, Marianelli has a real way of capturing the lovesick feminine sensibility, a laced-up place of romantic yearning that he lets loose with gorgeously lush orchestrations. Far lighter in feel than Atonement, Castle ranges between playful accordion waltzes to flutes and strings, the kind of music that tells you things will end up just fine as the characters find transcendence from class-conscious rigidity. (Continued pg 8) 7 CD REVIEW Movie Score Media Marianelli travels to far darker territory in Beyond The Gates, another score to deal with the Rwandan massacre. Combining African songs with his own tragic music, Marianelli is careful to keep his musical outrage to a boil instead of a roar, a powerful way of capturing characters who can only do their small part in the face of atrocity. The far more genteel atmosphere of Vienna’s artistic “Secession” movement is strikingly captured by Jorge Arriagada’s score for Klimt. This wonderland of bold new poetry, painting and music is given a striking canvas, with music that recalls every style from Mahler’s revolutionary orchestrations to Strauss’ “Blue Danube” waltz. And when it comes to the artist himself, Arriagada plays Gustav Klimt with dream-like expressionism, perfectly capturing a painter who falls into the illusion of his erotic work – a tapestry of Cimbaloms, voice and strings that do the almost impossible task of sonically capturing art’s visual process. Since he’s dealing with scores that usually lack for name and title recognition, Carlsson is smart enough to put out his 8 (continued from pg 7) physical releases as limited editions – with many at no more than 500 copies. This can lead to quick sell-outs, though you might have luck on eBay at finding Nicholas Dodd’s soldout score to Treasured Island. As a long-time orchestrator for David Arnold on such films as Stargate and Casino Royale, it’s easy as to hear how his work is strikingly similar (and just as good) as Arnold’s – especially when Dodd’s given the chance to do his own score. And while his eerie sci-fi score for Renaissance landed him this Island, don’t expect any Caribbean-sounding scoundrels here – as Dodd’s impressive talent for lush, orchestral melodies give this score a sound that’s at once swashbuckling old-school and alt. modern with its techno-percussion. Here’s a truly refreshing take on the pirate score with no small amount of humor, action and pure composing panache. Dodd is one composing talent that deserves the kind of success he’s played a part in, and hopefully Treasured Island will alert the industry to it – the kind of thing that Carlsson’s label is doubtlessly doing for many composers. It’s understandable how the bigger labels can’t put out, or even bother to hear, a fraction of the releases that MSM is responsible for. And God bless them for taking the risk, especially with such upcoming releases as Jeff Grace’s Trigger Man and the elegant “bad seed” score from Joshua by Philip Glass’ protégé Nico Mulhy. Then there’s The Legend Of Butch And Sundance, a television film that marked the last score from the late Basil Poledouris, the amazing composer who deserved better from Hollywood after the likes of Conan and Robocop. That Carlsson is giving this legend a proper soundtrack sendoff speaks volumes for the evolving mission of Movie Score Media. And I hope it’s one that consumers will continue taking as they give new composing talent a chance, a gamble that will always roll quality here. n LISTEN HERE: •www.moviescoremedia.com ISSUE 52 • FEBRUARY 26, 2008 FILM MUSIC weekly FILM MUSIC weekly ISSUE 52 • FEBRUARY 26, 2008 9 THE CHART DOCTOR by RON HESS rhess@filmmusicweekly.com Notating Without Thinking, Or What The Computer Can Do For This Generation Of Composers L ast week I said a shocking thing, so it’s probably worth repeating: So entrenched is the sequence-then-notate priority that, to succeed and survive, this generation of industrial composers has come to define compositional limits not as what they can purely imagine, but as that which they can coax a machine to perform. At the recent NAMM show, the leading notation software developers waxed proudly about their efforts to “get us away from the mouse.” Uh-huh. When I inquired about when they would be “getting us away from the MIDI keyboard,” they looked at me with blank stares. One hard reality for us in the music prep community is that these developers have a market they are trying to nail, and it ain’t us. It’s teachers – hundreds, maybe thousands of them for each one of us. So many that they get their own discount. And they aren’t nearly as demanding as we are. As Michael Corleone said in The Godfather, “This isn’t personal, Sonny; it’s business.” Perhaps we industrial types may be fortunate that our tools work for us as well as they do. I am inputting this column with a computer (ASCII) keyboard. In a previous life, when I actually earned some money as a typist, it hit me that the reason I could type 100+ words a minute on my trusty IBM Selectric II was that I wasn’t processing what I was typing. In fact, to really fly, I turned on a radio to pull my head out of the natural impulse to understand what I was typing. The shorter the path in the brain between optical recognition (seeing) and firing the neurons which produce the keystrokes (typing), the faster and more reliably you will do it. Any unneeded detours through the realm of understanding what you are typing will just slow down the process. The same principle holds true for notation input, only the symbols (and how they are positioned relative to each other) are different. Thanks to different priorities and the demand for MIDI involvement, we have grown used to a MIDI-assisted input system, hosted by 10 notation and audio software, which demands a priori that your mind concurrently wrestle with several layers of non-musical crapola to get the data, correctly formatted, into the computer. Strictly from a creative-freedom versus gettingit-written standpoint, the gap separating thought from computer notation is still GrandCanyonesque compared to pencil and paper, and catch up isn’t even on the horizon. At this point, we need to advocate tools which give us back the freedom to compose as before, while preserving the advantages of realistic playback and data manipulation. Our industry is telling us: “Realistic playback is paramount, notation is optional, and effortless notation isn’t.” What we need to advocate: “Notation as effortless as typing, reasonable automatic playback, and superb playback achievable with a little extra effort.” What we need is to touch-type our scores as part of a “notate first; play back after” model of music production. (As an aside, I flirted with touch-typing Finale 15 years ago, but couldn’t make it work. The first Acorn-compatible Sibelius had potential, but hasn’t yet followed through...) Real-time MIDI input is a nice feature, but it usually serves the needs of the samples, not the composer. The inherent notation/performance conflict is never clearer than here: One MIDI pitch (“C”) can be notated multiple ways (B-sharp, D double-flat), and one notated dynamic (forte) can have multiple MIDI meanings. Simply put, ASCII keyboards should be for the input of symbols and MIDI keyboards should be for MIDI sequencing, and notation software should carry the translational weight of placing the former and playing back the latter. Many, perhaps most situations do not need “realer than real” playback. So why is our notation software bogged down by baggage as if it did? Why is the output so mediocre? If we conceived of a system where input was as effortless as touch-typing and how it sounded came after, we might make better strides at massaging that MIDI output for proper effect. I don’t think it has been attempted on a proper scale, but the advantages to composers of performed music could be huge: (1) Shrinkage or elimination of the chasm separating composing from notating, (2) more sophisticated compositional architectures made practical again due to composing with all of your “tracks” simultaneously visible and outside of real time (rather than just audible during sample playback), (3) elimination of the usual post-inspiration workload, as there’s nothing to clean up, (4) composition do-able anywhere you can write an e-mail, (5) playback which reinforces your orchestrational/ score-prep experience instead of fighting it, and (6) practical and complete music composition in the hands of the visually-impaired. The downside? What is needed from our developers to accomplish this approach? (1) software that can learn the finite set of rules that every copyist knows about symbol orientation and that can place and edit those symbols by ASCII keystrokes alone, (2) real-time ability to easily and quickly rewrite MIDI performance data for situations where the automatic notation playback isn’t quiiiiiiiiiite what is needed, and (3) a practical, adjustable MIDI architecture which will allow third-party samples to correctly respond to standard notational elements like real-world musicians. Acceptably realistic playback could still be achievable; we would just get there by a different route, one that doesn’t hamper all of us, either in self-imposed limits on what we can compose or self-accepted limits on how effortlessly we can do it. Let’s face it: the next time you sit down to write an e-mail, imagine you could instead be typing your next musical opus just that easily. Why not? n Ron Hess works as a studio conductor, orchestrator, copyist and score supervisor in Los Angeles, where he’s well-known for his quick ability to ferret out the most hidden performance problems and spot score glitches rapidly. He holds a Master’s Degree from the New England Conservatory, and is considered one of the top Finale experts in Los Angeles. Email your questions to Ron at rhess@filmmusicweekly.com ISSUE 52 • FEBRUARY 26, 2008 FILM MUSIC weekly MUSIC TECHNOLOGY by PETER LAWRENCE ALEXANDER palexander@filmmusicweekly.com RME Fireface 800 and the KRK VXT8s A while back I reviewed, positively, the KRK VXT8 monitors using the MOTU Traveler. Since then, I’ve had the opportunity to replace the MOTU Traveler and work with the RME Fireface 800. The RME Fireface 800 is an audio card that connects to either the PC or the Mac using the Firewire connection. With this approach, you no longer need to install an audio card inside your computer. The Fireface 800 is actually more than an audio card. It’s also a mini-mixing board in a single space unit. Starting with the back of the unit, going left to right, there’s the threeprong electrical connector. To the right of that is a pair of MIDI In/Out Ports. This gives you a couple of options. If your MIDI keyboard can connect directly to the computer via USB, you can use that connection. Or you can run the MIDI In/Out of the keyboard to the MIDI In/Out of the Fireface 800. In a larger studio, this saves a MIDI port on your hardware MIDI interfaces. The next section has Word clock out, and below it, two options for Firewire connections. The first connection is the standard Firewire 400. The next connectors are for the newer Firewire 800 which doubles the speed of transfer. If you’re on either a Mac PowerPC or PC, you’ll get the standard Firewire interface. If you want Firewire 800, you’ll need a PCI card which ranges in price from $49 to $69US. On the new Power Macs, the Firewire 800 comes with it standard. The next section contains the audio outputs. The Fireface 800 generously gives you eight balanced outs, along with two (2) ADAT connectors for both In and Out. So on the back panel you can have 32 audio ins and 32 audio outs total. There’s also SPDIF and Word Clock out. The final section contains eight balanced line ins, along with Video In, and LTC In and Out as a time code option. LTC stands for Linear Time Code. Says RME, “The TCO (time code op- FILM MUSIC weekly ISSUE 52 • FEBRUARY 26, 2008 tion) module is an optional extension for the Fireface 800 option slot. “The little module provides the Fireface with a Word Clock input and offers a synchronization to LTC and video. Thanks to SteadyClock™, the TCO not only extracts absolute positions from these signals, but also a very clean low-jitter word clock. Thus a sample accurate timecode synchronization to audio or video sources is assured.” The Fireface 800 enables you to connect two ADAT systems, and up to four systems with audio outs. Counting the sequencing/ digital audio system, that’s seven (7) computers that can be connected to the one RME Fireface 800 card combining ADAT and stereo options. I have one small system dedicated to strings with an RME 9652 audio card connecting directly to the Fireface 800. The richness and detail in the strings makes the investment well worth it. But if you can’t afford the Fireface 800, do the next best thing and get the Fireface 400. The front of the audio card gives more options. On the front panel, you can connect up to five additional instruments, effects, or mics. There’s even Phantom Power. Each connector lets you control volume (also called gain). and back panels happens to be the box. The Fireface 800 box does have outstanding graphics. It’s just amazingly inconvenient to use. Second, the manual does not show the number of connection opportunities possible with the Fireface 800 the way the MOTU Traveler manual does. This may be a small point to some, but for many composers who come to recording with ground-zero level experience, or only slightly higher, having such a connection diagram is really appreciated. The manual has a General section, followed by specific setup sections for Windows and Mac, and finally a section on the Total Mix software which allows for unlimited mixing and routing. This section is a bit of a geek’s paradise since RME gives you an engineering schematic for Hardware Input 1 and how the signals are routed. The balance of the manual is dedicated largely to the mixing opportunities using the Fireface Mixer which is based on RME’s Total Mix software. Just learning to work the Fireface Mixer is a lesson in itself, and perhaps we’ll revisit that one day. Installation This feels like my soapbox, but the installation instructions for the Mac were not clear. I even had someone smarter than me look at it, my wife, who has her Master’s in Film Composition while I have but a Bachelor’s degree. What could have been handled in 5-10 minutes took about 30. I had two issues with the manual. First, the manual does not contain a complete graphic of either the front or back panels, but it does have sectional panels. The only place that does have graphics of the front In all this is a very powerful audio package. Re-Enter The KRK VXT8s Because of the kind of work we do as dramatic composers, whether film or TV, one thing is guaranteed, we need audio clarity to create effective mixes, especially when audio engineering is a “second language” for many composers. (Continued pg 12) 11 MUSIC TECHNOLOGY RME Fireface 800 and the KRK VXT8s (continued from pg 11) When I first heard the Fireface 800 with the KRK VXT8s, I was so surprised at the aural results when compared to the MOTU Traveler, that in fairness to the folks at KRK, I went back and retested half the pieces from my review in the December 11, 2007 issue. In every single case, the detail was exceptional. I even listened to MP3s from a Jerry Goldsmith album available from eMusic. Even here, the level of detail compared to before was significant. I retried samples from the Vienna Strings. And while there was still some edginess in the upper register, it wasn’t as pronounced and angular through the RME Fireface 800. You’ll have to listen for yourself, but to my ears, the RME Fireface 800 combined with the KRK VXT8s is a magnificent audio combination to be heard. Protecting Your Monitors With SUZY Suzy is a great tool to protect your monitors, especially when you’re connecting your audio card directly to the computer and bypassing a hardware mixing board. Get a free basic listing today on MUSE411 – The Music Industry Online Directory, and access the industry. Free basic listing includes: The front of the Fireface shows what appears to be a master volume knob. But it’s not. It’s the volume for the headphones. To protect your audio monitors, consider getting SUZY from Alva. SUZY acts as a bridge between the audio card and the monitors. You connect balanced cables from the Main Outs from the audio card into SUZY. Then connect balanced cables from SUZY to the audio monitors. At the end of the sawed off triangle, you see a knob labeled Volume. This acts like a master volume between the audio card/computer and the audio monitors. If your main DAW is also connected to the Internet, this is a great way to protect your speakers when you go to sites that have sound and volume set quite high. Wrap Up So there you have it - three pieces for a single system. n Peter Alexander is preparing to score The Good Samaritan. His most recent books are • Your name, email, phone and other contact information • Link to your music demo • Your photo • Musical Styles and Instrument(s) Played • Professional Affiliations — Unions, organizations you belong to • A description of you, your bio, and much more Special Zip Code search* allows people in your area to locate you quickly and easily! Get your FREE basic listing today! www.muse411.com How Ravel Orchestrated: Mother Goose Suite, and Professional Orchestration. He has also written White Papers on music education. 12 * U.S. RESIDENTS ISSUE 52 • FEBRUARY 26, 2008 FILM MUSIC weekly
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