This Week in Music Tech: Logic X, Serato Remote, Traktor Kontrol X1 MK2, Mumdance’s 909 Tutorial, and More

Between Apple unveiling Logic X, Serato rolling out a new iPad app, and Native Instruments teasing an updated Kontrol X1, it was a busy week in the world of gear news. We recap those developments, check out a 909 tutorial, a QuNeo update, and a German DIY instrument builder in the latest round of This Week in Music Tech.

This week brought the somewhat surprising news that Apple released a new version of its flagship DAW, Logic Pro X. Complete with a redone GUI and a host of new features such as “Flex Pitch,” “Drummer,” and a new Arpeggiator, the update also allows for users to control the program using an iPad via the Logic Remote app. Logic Pro X is currently available to purchase for the sum of $199.99.

This week, Native Instruments unveiled the Kontrol X1 MK2, an update to its popular X1 controller for Traktor—adding a multi-function touchstrip and smart encoders for the “Loop” and “Browse” functions, among other new features. The Kontrol X1 MK2 can currently be pre-ordered for $199, though no exact release date for the product has been shared at this point.

Serato entered the app market this week with Serato Remote, a $19.99 iPad application that allows Serato Live and Serato DJ users to gain addtional control of their performances using an iPad. A few features the new app brings to the iPad surface are the ability to control loop points, load tracks (and instantly copy playing tracks to another deck), creatively control FX, and trigger samples, all using the touch screen on an iPad. Serato Remote can be purchased from iTunes now.

London producer Mumdance recently linked up with FACT TV to give a tutorial of sorts on how to use Roland’s classic 909 drum machine, detailing his methods with the rythym box both live and in the studio.

The Keith McMillen-designed QuNeo controller got an update this week with the company’s release of its version 1.2.3 firmware. The update boasts “a faster scan rate that increases pad performance” and the new ability to power the unit solely using an iPad. Existing QuNeo users can grab the update here.

As part of the ongoing Slices video series, the German producer and DIY gear-builder behind Leaf Audio was highlighted for his efforts to help others learn how to build their own audio circuits. During the course of the mini-doc, Leaf Audio head Manuel Richter shows how to build his 808 kick drum clone circuit and discusses the importance of sharing electronics know-how with other DIY producers through workshops.

Katie Gately “Last Day”*Public Information*

Newcomer Katie Gately hails from Los Angeles, but the fact isn’t exactly apparent from listening to “Last Day”, the first track to appear from her self-titled debut for UK label Public Information (out on September 2). With pure, ethereal vocals poured over an industrial and sluggish beat, “Last Age” sounds like Gately found the hidden door to the intersection of light and shadow, planting her flag solidly at its nexus. At the track’s core is a harsh sample of what sounds like a bottle being dragged across the ground, and there’s an eerie contrast between the slow, wrenching rhythm and the light, airy vocals which echo out into the abyss. “Last Day” comes with a similarly demented and angular video from filmmaker Alexander Stewart, which can be seen after the jump.

Last Day

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Steven Tang Disconnect to Connect

Like many of his peers in the Chicago underground, Steven Tang seems to prefer to keep his profile low key. Since he first started releasing music under his own name and as Obsolete Music Technology, he’s stayed in the shadows, producing a considered style of machine-dominant music that’s as much informed by the Windy City’s low-budget analog past as it is by the melodic complexity of old-school techno. Yet Tang’s music is more than just the roughshod DJ-tool fodder such a narrow description might imply. His EPs and singles have often come off like fragmented dispatches of narrative soundtracking some larger sci-fi picture. Tang’s work has always seemed like a natural fit for the LP format, but even though he’s been turning out music since the late ’90s, he’s only now releasing Disconnect to Connect, his first full-length album. It was worth the wait.

Fundamental to the record, and much of Tang’s discography, is the familiarity of the sounds used. These are the 808 rimshots, 303 gurgles, and lush pads that form the backbone of house music. In less competent hands, tracks like the acid-happy “Some Solace” and Prescription Records-deep “Potential Light” might come off as derivative nostalgia. But that’s never the case, as his cuts instead rely on the linguistic base formed by these touchstone elements to weave a novel story, much in the way a skilled house DJ might phrase new things with old records. For instance, on the aforementioned “Some Solace,” he sketches something emotionally dense that lets its arcing bassline play out like a network of psychedelic fractals, forming a background for involved lead work played on synth. Admittedly, that doesn’t sound particularly distinct on paper, and maybe it isn’t, but what makes it work is the level of restraint employed. Like a finished jigsaw puzzle, everything has a reason for sitting where it does. It’s something that’s an almost perfect manifestation of the core aspects of house, yet it still manages to stand as a work of its own.

This is a trick that runs across the length of Disconnect to Connect, and it’s not just exclusive to the record’s tighter tracks either. On “It’s Perceived As Sound,” Tang gets loose and jazzy, with live drumming and double bass lazily creating space for meditative analog pads and a subtle flute melody. It’s the most distinct thing on the record, sounding like a mellowed riff from Paperclip People’s “Bug in the Bassbin.” The song taps into a strain of ambient dance music that has a strong showing on the LP. In fact, the album’s best moments tend to lean this way, with a few tracks drifting pretty far into more abstract realms. “Brink of Dawn” goes the furthest in this regard, closing things with a reverb-washed piece that paints a large but minimal picture with big strokes of evolving synthesis.

There’s also a strong current of music that would hit hard on the right kind of subterranean dancefloor. Some of this retains Tang’s atmospheric leanings, such as on the Detroit-flavored “Sunspot” and “Disconnect to Connect,” but the best of this stuff can be heard on the pure muscle of “Heat Bust.” There, he flattens his usual wide depth of field and makes a pure rhythm track of spiky bass and untreated drums.

More noteworthy is the way Tang utilizes the LP format to its fullest by drawing an unbroken line across the length of Disconnect to Connect. Like the tracks themselves, it feels like he’s worked subtractively, stripping out all extraneous material to leave only the bits that really need to be there. What’s left is an album of no-frills dance music presented in a format devoid of pretension. Its conservatism might not make it a hit with everyone, but for those who do enjoy this kind of thing, it would be difficult to recommend it more.

Daniel Brooks “Higher”*Immersed Audio*

England’s Daniel Brooks is about to release his Dark City EP next week, but before that occasion, the DJ/producer has opted to share one of its three original productions. The bouncy “Higher” tune balances garage-minded rhythms with playfully scattered vocal samples and heavy basslines, but despite its club-oriented nature, there are some distinctly desolate emotions here—particularly during the quieter moments when an eerie synth rings out undisturbed. However, these darker inclinations are quickly forgotten when Brooks slams the tune back into full gear, and a catchy groove takes over the mix. Before the producer’s Dark City EP drops on July 22 via Immersed Audio, previews of the record’s five tracks can be found after the jump.

Higher

Listen to Kid Smpl’s Upcoming ‘Armour’ EP

Following last year’s impressive Skylight LP—and a Bubblin’ Up feature shorly thereafter—burgeoning Seattle producer Kid Smpl is set to drop a new collection of original material next week with the five-track Armour EP. But before then, that record can now be streamed in full exclusively on XLR8R. On his new EP, the recent RBMA grad dives even deeper into the glacial atmospheres and pensive R&B-isms which mark his style, even enlisting fellow Seattle producer DJAO to assist on the effort’s opening cut. Kid Smpl’s Armour EP officially drops on July 22 via Hush Hush, but can be heard in its entirety before then, below.

Trevino Preps New EP for 3024

Not that this necessarily comes as a surprise, but veteran UK producer/DJ Marcus Intalex has been particularly busy as of late; he already announced a forthcoming EP for The Nothing Special label earlier this month, and now, he’s unveiled details of another Trevino record for Martyn’s 3024 label. Set to drop via the label on August 26, the 3 and 1 EP will feature a set of four new productions that Martyn himself has been fond of for some time. In a press release, the label boss explained that the lead track from Trevino’s new record “has been a staple in my sets ever since I first heard it,” and described the “Regnie” tune as “possibly one of the best nighttime highway driving tracks.” The tracklist and artwork for 3 and 1 are below.

01 Gone
02 Twelve
03 Regnie
04 Pimlico (Digital Only)

Watch Mumdance Give His 909 Tutorial

London producer Mumdance—who recently returned with a new EP after a brief hiatus—is a veteran user of Roland’s classic 909 drum machine, and being the pro he is, has recently given a video tutorial on how to use the rythym box both live and in the studio. Catching up with the man in his home studio, FACT TV tapped Mumdance’s in-depth knowledge of the unit in video form, capturing the veteran producer as he shows the different sequencing modes available to use with the 909 and how beats can be built live on the fly. The full 909 course can be watched below.

Seams “Rilo”*Full Time Hobby *

Just last week, we learned that Berlin-based producer Seams would be returning after a quiet 2012 with his debut full-length, Quarters, arriving on September 16 via Full Time Hobby. “Rilo” serves as the forthcoming LP’s first single, and is a track which sheds some of the Four Tet-reminiscent vibes of his earlier work in exchange for a sharpened focus on lattice-like synth patterns and propulsive rhythms. In truth, there are not as many layers in “Rilo” as one might suspect, but the fact that Seams is able to create such an immersive labyrinth of buzzing melodies and straightforward momentum with such efficient means only bodes well for his debut album just around the corner.

Rilo

Rilo

Download a New Mix from Ikonika

Hyperdub-affiliated DJ/producer Ikonika is set to drop her second album, Aerotropolis, on July 29, but before then, she has offered up a fresh mix of tracks that helped inspire her during the process of creating that record. Ikonika described her podcast for Dummy, which was created in her garden using Serato and vinyl, as “a look back… some of these tunes really helped the process of Aerotropolis, but also the healing from locking myself away.” The hour-long mix features cuts from the likes of Ricardo Villabolos, Omar S, and Legowelt, as well as unreleased tracks by Bok Bok and MikeQ. The whole thing can be streamed and downloaded below, where its tracklist can also be found.

Ikonika – Beach Mode (Percapella)
Soundhack – Untitled 2
Gesloten Cirkel – Moustache
Omar S – I Just Want
Legowelt – Elements of Houz Music
Gesloten Cirkel – Yamagic
Ricardo Villalobos – Enfants (Chants)
Soundhack – Devil’s Run
Shed – Well Done (033472-edit)
Dirty House Crew – Cantina Tango
Steve Poindexter – Work That Mutha Fucker
Geeman – Computer Jackin’
Photek – Mine To Give
Zoltan – Saturn
Mick Finesse – They Sex Machines (Perc’s Dub Decision)
MikeQ feat. Fade – Pussy Cunt
Fidel – Andreas
Ikonika – You Won’t Find It There
Ph0t0machine – Technicolour (Optimum’s 808 Reduction)
Marcel Dettmann – Apron
Mr. G – Potent
Fingers Inc. feat Robert Owens – I’m Strong (Instrumental)
DJ Vague – Porche Trax 2
Eric Martin – Emergency (Steve Poindexter re-edit)
Bok Bok – And Dancin’
Ikonika – Praxis

Silkie Readies New EP for Deep Medi

Set to drop next month via Mala’s Deep Medi imprint, Silkie‘s The Lost Tapes EP gathers six previosuly unheard productions culled from the London producer’s “computer archives.” The forthcoming record is said to find its creator “further exploring a crossover between interstellar bass-driven sounds and more melodic, jazz-infused musings.” While no audio has surfaced to give us a better idea of what exactly that might mean, Deep Medi has shared The Lost Tapes‘ artwork and tracklist, which can be checked out before the EP drops on August 12, below.

A1 Preacher’s Pain
B1 Time Delay
B2 Jazz Dub
C1 Anymuzik
D1 Boogs Noogs
D2 Daylight Savings

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