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King Britt and how he used an iPhone 4s to make an album
HI guys,
I find this is a very interesting read for any iOS musician and aspiring producer.
Check out what the DJ and producer King Britt wrote about the making of his latest production, the Berlin-based singer-songwriter Clara Hill.
Comments
I follow him on Twitter. He's a huge proponent of iOS apps. He regularly tweets about Elastic Drums and Borderlands Granular, for instance. It's great to see someone who recognizes what a valuable resource iOS music apps can be.
Lord.... I couldn't imagine doing any serious studio work with my 4s. I remember that reading about Africa Hitech (Mark Pritchard & Steve Spacek) made much of their 2011 LP '93 Million Miles' on an iPhone, and trying to incorporate my 3G into my setup....nothing but frustration!
Well, limitations can help being more creative but you have to carefully plan around them, and in this case it seems they did...
That Africa Hitech album is amazing too
Say I made an entire album with nothing but Ikaossilator, would people even listen to it? Assuming the songs are good, or is there, I dunno, a timbral variance threshold required to maintain people's interest?
Sure, why wouldn't they? Good music is good music, regardless of the tools used.
Thats cool to see ios getting some respect from established artists. I met King Britt in a snowstorm 20 years back waiting for train, was really nice bloke
Lucky ole' fella you. I like his Deep House Music very much. Good producer.
Really intersting reading. @anr thanks for sharing.
I think that mobile music production is ripe to be a new form of art, with its own worthliness, like happened for the mobile photo/video.
Actually, what KingBritt says points towards the advantage of using iOS where it's more useful and desktop means otherwise. Accordingly he made his mixes in Ableton, not in NanoStudio.
Thanks @zarv much appreciated, and I agree with you
He talks some more about using iOS apps for music making in this video from Ableton's Loop event last year: https://www.ableton.com/en/blog/practice-what-you-teach/