Who doesn’t like a Top 10 list? Here’s a provocative one about groundbreaking music technology.
This Thursday, “Sosumi” mastermind Jim Reekes will meet Deep Fried, Live! sound designer Dave O’Neal—and you can be there.
Reviewers always seem to test computer speakers by maxing out the volume knob. What the heck does that prove?
An article about making free phone calls with an iPod led me to a site with downloadable telephone touch-tones. Then I found another use for them....
When a 9-year-old handed me an F’d up CD to fix, the astonishing malleability of digital music really hit home.
Digital Audio Essentials, O’Reilly’s “comprehensive guide to creating, recording, editing, and sharing music and other audio,” is out, and here’s a 20-page sample chapter you can put to use today.
Two of my MP3 players have built-in FM radios, but the reception was so awful I never used them. Then I discovered a silly way to get a great signal.
People often liken my new book to a party; that analogy came to life this week when contributors Stewart Copeland (the Police), Joe Chiccarelli (Beck, U2, Frank Zappa), Albhy Galuten (18 #1 hits), and many more Cool People dropped by Digital Hollywood to help launch it.
What if the top recording and music-technology magazines decided to put hundreds of their past articles online for free—and then someone made a directory? You’d get this amazing site.
Jim Reekes, the wily architect of many of the groundbreaking Mac system sounds, sets the story straight on his wicked beep.
