Red Means Recording – Jeremy Blake

1. Favourite knob or fader or switch on a piece of gear and why?

The Hydrasynth main encoder knob. It’s huge.

Hydrasynth main encoder knob – it’s lit from beneath

Second place goes to anything that turns up the volume. 

2. Do you have an ‘almost’ perfect bit of kit? What would you change?

I wish the Synthstrom Deluge had an OLED screen and I wish the Mashine+ could make actual synth patches from scratch. 

Native Instruments Mashine+

3. What setup do you bring on holiday or tour or commute etc.?

OP-1 or Deluge or iPad for granular apps like Borderlands.

4. What software do you wish was hardware and vice versa?

I used to think a bunch about this, but after getting the Hydrasynth I don’t really care about software in hardware. If I could get Pigments as hardware that would be dope. I would love more wacky probabilistic and self-patchable software stuff.

Slow spagettification of a studio

5. Is there anything you regret selling… or regret buying?

Zero regrets in selling. Selling is freedom. 

A corona lockdown audience

Buying, I dunno. Everything I’ve bought I’ve bought because it had a reason to exist in my setup at that time. When I sell it, it’s because it’s redundant or I’ve outgrown it.

Vivid colors of eurorack

6. What gear has inspired you to produce the most music?

Neatified cables

Up until this year, the Teenage Engineering OP-1. This year it’s been eurorack.

A rainbow in eurorack

7. If you had to start over, what would you get first?

I still think a good DAW with a decent sample library, one good synth VST, and a hunger to learn is the best thing you could possibly start with. So I would do that.

8. What’s the most annoying piece of gear you have, that you just can’t live without?

Anything involving my computers, haha. I know that’s a cop-out answer, but like, man. They can do everything, but fuck up harder than anything else.

Can’t get around computers. But you can mount them up high!

9. Most surprising tip or trick or technique that you’ve discovered about a bit of kit?

I think audio-rate modulation, in general, is something that never occurred to me until recently. Everytime I see DivKid do something with it I’m like “oh right, I can do that”. It’s wild.

Audio rate mod everthing… in eurorack

Artist or Band name?

Jeremy Blake for music, Red Means Recording for YouTube

Genre?

Electronica, Downtempo, Alternative Electronic

Selfie?

Jeremy Blake aka. Red Means Recording

Where are you from?

Seattle, WA

How did you get into music?

I started playing the flute in Elementary School. Was lucky enough to be exposed to orchestral playing and jazz ensemble. Flunked out of music performance school because I was spending too much time sneaking into the studio to use the equipment and I didn’t wanna play the flute anymore. Was playing with trackers and anything I could get my hands on. Went to audio engineering school, kept experimenting. Eventually fell into YouTube music production videos. Most recently I’ve fallen hard for modular and I’m having a blast.

Desktop inspiration

What still drives you to make music?

When life gives you cables, make yellow shelving organisers

All the little pieces of things I know can be rearranged to augment some new idea. Everything can be recontextualized and spun into a new idea. There’s no end to the inspiration.

Gratuitios knobalation of the Sequential Pro 3
Knobalicious

How do you most often start a new track?

Lately, a lot. Modular has been a really refreshing platform for experimentation. I’m writing at least one new thing a week.

How do you know when a track is finished?

With modular and hardware it’s easy: when the performance is done and I’ve mixed and mastered it. With DAW-based stuff, it’s when I’ve gone through all my iteration passes, like idea, arrangement, mixing, re-arrangement, ear candy, and mastering. I go by a rule of three approach: if I can listen to a track 3 times and not mess with it, it’s done. If something bothers me 3 times, I change it.

[Editor: That answer is one of the most systematic and quantified approach to that question. That I’ve read. Excellent!]

Show us your current studio

Jeremy Blake’s very red Red Means Recording studio
Blackmagic ATEM Mini and a tuner

Best creative advice that you’ve ever heard?

Limitation breeds innovation, tied with “put a donk on it”.

Promote your latest thing… Go ahead, throw us a link.

I make music performance and education videos here: https://www.youtube.com/redmeansrecording

You can find my music on all platforms here: https://rmr.media/findme


[Editor: There are affiliate links to the relevant gear throughout the articles. It helps to support this blog. In fact, should you be needing some patch cables or guitar strings. Then clicking on one of the above links and buying any product that you prefer, will help the blog… doesn’t even have to be the ones in the link. Thx]]

Modal Plane – Zwuoosh

1. Favourite knob/fader/switch on a piece of gear and why?

I knew this one right away, it’s the “mode selector” knob on the RE-201 Space Echo. It’s big, substantial, and gives a satisfying click when you turn it. It also happens to be super cool looking.

[Editor: Totally agree! It’s a classic knob]

Mode Selector Roland Space Echo 201

2. Do you have an ‘almost’ perfect bit of kit? What would you change?

I think this is going to be the Stillson Hammer MKII by Industrial Music Electronics. It’s like a little CV/Gate 4 track machine. I enjoy keeping my euro sequencing “in the case”, and I love analog style sequencers. I dig that each track can have a different clock division, and you can quickly get polyrhythms going. It’s got a built in quantizer, so, you can set scales. Since it’s digital, you can save and recall all your settings. I really clicked with this module, and now I’ve got two of them. Honestly, I may get a third, but let’s see if they make a MKIII:) I can’t think of anything I would change here.

3. What setup do you bring on holiday/tour/commute etc.?

So, the 1010 Black Box is my go-to for a portable sound station. It’s extremely compact. I’ve got samples of my favorite synths and drum machines loaded in it and it runs on USB power. It’s a proper sampler, so you can record directly into it. It’s also built like a little tank. Just, the perfect micro studio IMO. 

4. What software do you wish was hardware and vice versa?

I really enjoy using Spacecraft by Delta-V on the iPad. I’m not sure how a hardware version could improve upon it. It feels perfectly suited for iOS with its touch interface, but I still think I would buy it in hardware form. As for a software version of hardware… That’s a tough one. There’s so much out there already, and I’m unaware of what software emulations are on the market. I’d say……the Radikal Technologies Spectralis, only because I really want to try one out and can’t afford one right now:) That sequence looks like so much fun.

Spacecraft by Delta-V

5. Is there anything you regret selling… or regret buying?

Oh for sure, a few.. but I always think about my ATARI 1040st with Cubase. My dad bought it for me in like 1998 on consignment, and at that time, all I had was a half broken Teac reel to reel and an Akai AX60. I used it for years, but at some point, ended up loaning it to someone I thought was cool, because they had a record deal and worked with some industrial band (I was young and dumb). Anyways, I never saw it again. It got traded for studio time or something.

6. What gear has inspired you to produce the most music?

A nest of modular

For the past few years it’s been my modular. For me, it’s just a great starting point. Starting from nothing and just getting a little loop going usually ends up turning into a full-on recording session. Other synths start coming into play, and an arrangement begins to form. I really like this workflow, I often feel like, if I had come into the studio 5 minutes earlier, or 5 minutes later, that initial patch may have been something else, and this recording wouldn’t exist. Be it for better or worse 🙂

7. If you had to start over, what would you get first?

Ok, so saying my modular is cheating, right:)? For me, I think it would have to be a groovebox of some sort, just because I really like mixing and blending sounds, and forming little compositions. I would need something that would let me do that, right out of the gate.  It’s kind of a toss up between my loaded E-MU PX7, and my MC-909. It really should be the PX7, hands down, but there’s no sampling, and I imagine I’d start wanting to get my own sounds in there. I don’t know man, this is one of those “desert island” synth questions that feels impossible to answer, lol. I’d want my modular, pedal board, GR-1, and Novation PEAK too! I’m just gonna say the E-MU PX-7 and put an end to this madness.

E-MU PX7

8. What’s the most annoying piece of gear you have, that you just can’t live without?

Ohh, I know the answer to this right away. That’s my Sequential Circuits TOM. It’s really aesthetically beautiful, I love the sounds, and its model #420! What’s not to like? Well, the drum trigger pads may or may not respond one second to the next, same is true for a every button on the panel. What menu setting will you get when you press the function select buttons?? Nobody knows, it will just scroll through and choose one at random! But yeah, I can’t get rid of it, I still love you TOM.

Sequential Circuits TOM

9. Most surprising tip/trick/technique that you’ve discovered about a bit of kit?

I feel like a dummy for this because it should’ve been so obvious. I didn’t know that I could sync the sequencer on my JX-3P with an analog clock. My friend VoidModular had to point that out to me. I mean, it says “SEQ TRIGGER IN” right on the panel. Facepalm.

Roland JX-3P

Artist or Band name?

Modal Plane

Genre?

Downtempo.  Tropical chillwave.

Somebody labeled me as “ambient vaporwave” in an interview I did recently, and I think that works, although I don’t fit in either genre separately. I’m not sure, but downtempo seems to encompass most of what I do. Most of my music is driven by sci-fi imagery, and imaginary landscapes, is there a genre for that? 

Selfie

Where are you from?

Florida.

How did you get into music?

My Grandmother got me a Casio SK-5 when I was 6 or 7, and I was obsessed with it. A couple years later my parents got me that red Yamaha keytar, the SHS-10. I was pretty obsessed with those for a while, just kinda banging on them and making noise. I thought synthesizers were cool because you saw them on MTV being used by RUN DMC, Depeche Mode, KLF, Beastie Boys, Nine Inch Nails, etc. I was a kid, and I liked that all this music didn’t sound like things I’d heard before. When I was a little older and started listening to Aphex, Massive Attack, Tricky, DJ shadow, Thievery Corporation, Boards of Canada, Plaid, Mogwai, etc. I knew, that I wanted to learn to do that… I wanted to make THOSE sounds…I’d say when I got that AX60 and reel to reel from a pawn shop at around age 17, that is when I truly started the musical journey. Shortly after that I got that 1040ST and learned midi and laying things out on a piano roll. That thing was already 15 years out of date by then, lol.

What still drives you to make music?

I’ve been doing it longer in my life than I haven’t. I start to feel a bit lost if I go too long without doing something musical. It feels like it’s something I need to do at this point. It keeps me happy, and sane, and connected.

How do you most often start a new track?

Lately it starts at my modular case, the little one I built for live shows. I’ll get something looping there, then add a bassline from some other synth, maybe the Sub37, or MS10, then some chords from another poly, like the vsynth or JX3P… Things usually start resembling something like a “song” or at least a start, at that point.

How do you know when a track is finished?

This one’s tough, lol. If I start to feel like something is nearing completion, I just try to be aware of what I’m doing, so I don’t overwork things. If I start to feel like I’m overworking something, I’ll put it away and come back to it later. I can get so caught up sometime in editing details, like, I stop looking at the big picture, and how things sound as a whole. I’m making an effort to not do that so much lately.

Show us your current studio

Modal Plane Studio

Best creative advice that you’ve ever heard?

Never stop learning, stay humble.

Promote your latest thing… Go ahead, throw us a link.

https://circuitchurch.bandcamp.com/releases

[Editor: Do you have any tips, tricks or fun techniques with any of the gear mentioned in this interview? Leave a comment]