Navin Kala – Pastoral Electronics

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

Roland RS-09

Right now, the RS09 Tuning knob. I like the little struggle that happens inside our brain when a note is slowly approaching the “tuned” area.
Five months ago, was the Grandmother cutoff filter, it’s addictive, I guess they know it and that’s why they made it so big.

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

Gibson EH150 lap steel

My Gibson EH150 lap steel, from 1937. It’s 84 years old and sounds like it has always been here and always will. I feel inspired just by looking at her. And I’m not a guitar player myself, just an aficionado. It makes me wonder how my Digitakt is going to look in 84, by the year 2104.

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

If I have to leave home, I’ll take the iRig2, the reface CP, and the garage band on my phone. It’s a frustrating experience though, it reminds me how little is needed to make music technically acceptable nowadays.

iRig, Yamaha Reface and cat

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

Studio desk and racks

I don’t use software. Two months ago, I bought Reaper, but I’m using it strictly as a multitrack recorder. Paired with the Softube Fader, so I can have a more tactile experience.
Don’t get me wrong, plugins and VST are as good, and many times better than the real thing. But when I see my studio with all the gadgets, I feel inspired to play. If instead, I see a computer screen, I don’t feel the call at all.
It’s like masturbating versus having sex, you’ll reach the same level of satisfaction. But you’ll miss the joy of the process. Although it will be less tiring, that’s true.

[Editor: Literally I laughed out loud at this comparison…. it’s so true]

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

TC Electronic Finalizer

Due to logistics, I can’t sell anything. The post office is 100 km away and parcel companies are few, and they never find our house. If I was living in a city, I would definitely be selling stuff.
I do regret buying several things, one of them the TC finalizer, I still don’t know what it does. But there’s a small revelation in buying the wrong gear, you slowly find what is adequate for yourself, by elimination.

[Editor: I totally agree, this kinda process is also an essential part of learning and growing. The only thing, is that people get so bummed out by their regrets. Enjoy your regrets! You’ve learned something and it means you’re willing to take creative risk, so it’s all good (I actually just picked up a Finalizer too 🙂 haha)]

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

Piano and pussy

Just like others already answered on your blog, the piano. I sit in front of this massive primitive device, and there’s an instant communion. It’s like the whole mechanism is holding plenty of new songs, waiting for someone to take them out. It is an utter physical experience. And this is something I exclusively feel with the piano.

[Editor: Yup, I got that with the acoustic guitar]

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

I started years ago with Cakewalk and a Dx7, I don’t wish this on anybody. I suffered so much with the membrane buttons, and the menu written in extraterrestrial code. That was a huge technological wall between electronic music and me. And actually, that’s why I completely stopped making music in my first reincarnation. And also why choosing the right tools, for oneself, is pivotal in the engagement with music.
Today, I would buy the Korg Minilogue, functional, intuitive, and with a great sound. I don’t have one though.

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

Cables and patchbays

The Patchbay, but not the front side, the backside of course. It was a pain to set all the cables, but once it’s done, it makes everything much easier. Until you need to change some routing.

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

Korg Monologue

I like to use the Korg Monologue as an analog drum machine. I started diving into this thanks to Oscillator Sink’s rhythm collection on Korg’s site.


Artist or Band name?

Navin Kala

Genre?

I’m still experimenting and trying to find a comfortable place. Right now, this place must be somewhere between electronica with ambient and a bit of experimental.

Selfie?

Navin Kala

Where are you from?

Brazil, with mixed blood.

How did you get into music?

I began piano lessons as a child, it was either that or karate.
But it is extremely frustrating, learning with music you don’t like or feel. Stuff like “What Mozart composed when he was 5”. And I was 10, so it was like saying, you are retarded.

What still drives you to make music?

It makes me feel good, I know that without music I don’t feel fulfilled. Creativity, of any sort, sublimates our existence. This and the fact that I have a 70% of hearing loss, since a child, and at some point, I might lose it completely. I want to play as much music as I can before my only working ear falls under a functional threshold. Funny fact, Stereo does not exist in my universe.

[Editor: Damn good reason!]

How do you most often start a new track?

With Instagram, I force myself to make a post, like an exercise, a few every week. Each time with a different instrument. Something comes up. I see people’s reaction, and from there I decide if I keep working on the idea. Is like a focus group.
This first idea narrows down how the next instrument will interact, and so on. Limiting each time your options. I call it the Funnel Paradox. You begin with a universe of options, and as you add layers, these options decrease.

How do you know when a track is finished?

I don’t have a rational answer to this. I have a big folder with tracks I’ve started. Some go a few years back. And I certainly know that they are not finished. But I don’t know what it takes for them to be completed. Paradoxically, when they are finished, I know they are. I suppose is easier when you work with a client, let’s say making a soundtrack. The deadlines will tell you when something is finished.

Show us your current studio

Navins Studio with a couch, patio doors and a hammock!

Best creative advice that you’ve ever heard?

I was thirteen years old, my piano teacher was pissed with me, again, because I wasn’t able to prepare the lessons before the class. Instead, I was procrastinating playing popular music (the concept of procrastination didn’t exist back then). He asked me eventually; “When you wake up every day, do you feel a compelling need to play the piano?” I said “Nope”.
And he replied; “Then you must find, quickly, something that you feel like doing daily. You’ll be a realized person.”
I quit piano lessons the next day. He was relieved.

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

My second album, Horse. Few months old. I hope you like it.

Navin Kala – Horse album

[Editor: Also check out Navins IG… it’s lovely. C’mon join the funnel paradox]


Prior Use – Andreas Bak-Reimer

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

Gettin’ it on with the Roland SH-1

The power switch on the Roland SH-1. It’s an old synth, and the button has a distinct mechanical quality to it. The way it feels, the way it sounds, and the way the power LED lights up immediately – it just feels like getting it on! The SH-1 does that really swell PWM (pulse width modulation) that I enjoy immensely, and simple as it is, it invokes an atmosphere of a simpler time, with a lot of nostalgia to it.

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

My Roland Juno-106 is close to perfect for it’s purpose. Countless 80’s and 80’s emulating tracks have been born using it, and it’s built in a way that grants plenty of sweetspots, and not so many dead ends. Some people prefer non-DCOs, and have plenty to say about the 106 being a budget synth, but mine’s fresh back from service, and it makes me happy.

Roland 106

I sometimes wish it had another oscillator with an easy option for detuning, to get a wider sound from it, but there is a lot to be said about limitations to foster creativity.

… Also, I am not particularly fond of the way the resonance sounds when it’s cranked way up. It’s glassy instead of being juicy – and rarely that’s a good thing. On the other hand, I don’t have any other things that sounds like that, so it’s probably best to leave that unchanged.

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

Roland TB-03

Laptop, almost certainly. I am no where near anything dawless, and don’t have anything that I could arrange anything with, besides a computer. If I weren’t writing, but merely playing around, I would bring my Roland TB-03, or Yamaha Reface CS – built-in speakers and battery operated, they are 1. 2. go!

Yamaha Reface

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

Absynth, Brain, Modular.

Software -> Hardware: I think Native Instruments Absynth. I have had that since forever, and still use it heavily. Also, I would like to see the physical shape/color/layout of such a thing!

Absynth

Hardware -> Software: My brain. Although it feels soft at times, I consider it hardware. It certainly interfaces like 40+ years old hardware (poorly that is), it is sometimes difficult to control when hot or cold, and it’s almost never in tune. Also – patch memory is severely limited. If I could instantly recall patches, production tricks, channel-settings and export/bounce the tunes and sounds directly, like with a lot of software, then… Well, it might take out the fun at times.

Brain

To be serious: My modular setup would be nice as software – mainly for patch recall.

Eurorack modular

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

I never sold anything ever, so that doesn’t apply. And therefore I never regret selling anything either!

I once bought a portable recorder, thinking I could get a lot of good sample material that way. I only did once, but it never made it into a track I finished. I have fond memories of getting up early to catch a few big trucks on big roads going by, though… So, no regrets I guess…

Tascam Recorder

I bought an Ensoniq SQ-R module, because it features Transwave synthesis. Never used that, but it had a nice belltree sound that I used once or twice. It’s probably the thing I’ve bought that comes the most close to being a regret.

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

My trusty iPod classic 80 GB. That’s a lot of late 90’s goatrance… Listening to that is what inspired me most over the years. It had a growing line of dead pixels over the course of a year, and when the line was fully dead, the pixels started working again from the beginning of the line! A year after, the whole display was good again. That is probably my strangest experience with any electronic gadget ever.

iPod classic

If I should channel this to some sort of an inspirational tale, it would something like how the small and weak Hobbits defeated the mighty Sauron – it might appear to be failing, and an unlikely source of victory, but give it some time, and it will surprise you.

That is also why I have never sold anything. You never know.

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

A decent room for working in. Go all crazy thinking about getting the ‘right’ monitors, nice preamps, the perfect cables (ugh!)… But if your room is horrible, none of that matters. I have sunk a fair bit of time into acoustic treatment, and it has made a world of difference.

Foam

Also: time. So that’s it. Time and space – that’s all I want. At first…. Then a Mac.

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

Laptop

Mac laptop

Again, my computer. Ill timed software updates, one too few CPU cycles in stacked projects, failing disks… The woes are many, but I wouldn’t have written a bar of music without it.

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

Roland JV-2080

About 20 years after I got my Roland JV-2080, I realized it was capable of faux PWM. If I set a regular sawtooth wave on one osc, and an inverted sawtooth on the other, and modulate pitch slowly and independently, then it happens. I wish I had known that 20 years earlier, but that would probably mean I wouldn’t have bought my SH-1 (with the fab power button) – so it’s all good!


Artist or Band name?

I have mainly been producing under the moniker “Amygdala”. Goa and psychedelic trance in the old (old!) sense of the word.

Lately, I have been making some drops in the already over saturated ocean of synthwave music. I enjoy that very much, and as a child of the 80s, it takes me back to a simpler time – worries forgotten. The moniker for this activity is “Prior Use”.

Genre?

Many kinds of trance music: Goa, psychedelic, melodic, uplifiting, minimal, tech-, progressive.
Besides that, a bit of synthwave, and the odd “psy-bient” piece.

Selfie?

Andreas Brain

Where are you from?

I am from Denmark – just a tad north of Copenhagen, but most of my music has been produced in Århus. You can really tell what a big difference those 170 km makes!

How did you get into music?

My parents and brother. Music was omnipresent at home when I grew up. My parents encouraged me to take up playing violin when I was 6, and I have had some great experiences with that. When music production became reasonably available to the regular consumer with computer interest, I was hooooked! At first, it was just another thing I could do with the computer, but rather quickly it was pretty much all I ever did with it.

What still drives you to make music?

The two biggest drivers are probably the “flows” and “highs”.

Flow when I can be completely engrossed in production, enjoying the situation, and getting something done which I like and feel as an accomplishment. Time flying as I ignore my body’s attempts to drag me to the loo, trough or bed.

Highs when I hit something that (in the moment) is spectacular – a catchy tune, a sweet timbre, or a really dope fill or transition. It can still make me laugh after all these years, and the surge of energy and motivation I get from that is unparalleled.

How do you most often start a new track?

Sometimes I start with a very simple idea like a tune, a chord progression or a synthesizer patch concept. Then Drums. Then bass. That’s the most usual case, although sometimes I skip directly to the drums. Lately, I have been thinking that it’s not the best way to go, as I am finishing fewer and fewer tracks. I often end up with a pretty decent groove, but lacking the centerpiece idea that makes the track stand out. I polish the rhythmic section and transitions, until there is not space left in the spectrum (frequency and/or mental) for anything else.

So, from now on, I am trying to start off a new track with an idea, and then build drums and bass around that. We’ll see how that goes.

How do you know when a track is finished?

When a track has all the arrangement elements (intro, good stuff, breakdown, great stuff, climax, outro – or some other configuration), I bounce it and listen away from the studio. I make a lot of notes I want to change, enhance, remove, whatever. When that list feels complete, I do those changes. Hopefully I am happy with the result, because at that point I am usually fed up with the piece. I am not one for endlessly tweaking everything, and I have a tendency to detail focus early – which means I “decide” that this bit is perfect, and then unconsciously prohibit myself from editing it (too much 🙈).

I know there is some degree of contradiction in the above, but I’ll just hide behind “you can’t argue art”.

Show us your current studio

Andreas Studio
Andreas synths

Best creative advice that you’ve ever heard?

I bought a CD from Eat Static sideproject Dendron (Merv Pepler). I think he burned the disc himself and mailed it. Included in the package was a makeshift invoice with the words “always experiment” on it. I think that’s pretty good advice. It’s hard, because as time grows scarce I tend to stick to the beaten path, but even though it feels like it’s safer and more productive that way, I get less enjoyment from it.

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

As mentioned above, I dabble in synthwave. Swing by https://soundcloud.com/prioruse and tell you friends.

[Editor: if you want to check out Andreas psy-trance stuff it’s here: https://ektoplazm.com/profiles/amygdala]


Christian Colabelli – Metalicious Pedaler

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

I would have to say that it’s the pickup selector on my guitar. I think a five-way super switch is essential to my style. There is so much sonic territory and versatility on tap simply by switching pickup positions. It allows me to become a chameleon and tackle any genre I’m trying to cover. I should add that in conjunction with the tone and volume knobs, the tonal possibilities are endless. I feel this is often glossed over by the vast majority and I can never understand why!

Strandberg Guitars Pickup Selector

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

I’ve been endorsing Strandberg Guitars over the last several years. I love everything about them: the ergonomic design, weight relief, playability and sound. Maybe I would drop a middle pickup in on my seven-string version… I don’t know though… It sounds incredible as is.

Strandberg Guitars

Also, I have to give a shoutout to Pickboy Picks which I’ve endorsed for ten years now! The Pos-A-Grip Jazz 1.5mm in Tortoise Shell is unrivaled in my opinion: http://www.osiamo.com/christianColabelli I have a graveyard of picks that I’ve spent an inordinate amount of money on over the years in search of the perfect plectrum. I feel that tone is in your hands and the right pick is essential. I’ve tried pretty much everything out there and I can honestly say that this particular pick is the one for me. I can’t live without it! 

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

Purple-ish Eventide pedalboard

The above picture displays my board from 2020 NAMM. I built this for Eventide demo purposes, and it magically fit into an overhead bin on the plane! My fusion band, Surreal Measures also played at the Eventide Booth and this setup covered everything I needed sonically. This was one of the last live shows I played before the pandemic hit so I’m looking forward to taking this rig out again soon! 

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

The luxury of working at Eventide is that we have such a wide range of hardware and software available. I truly feel like I’m covered. Not to mention, we have some crossover between the platforms in certain products. I think I’m spoiled! 

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

Hmmm… I used to be a guitar hoarder of sorts (I still am). I sold a Peavy EVH Wolfgang, Gibson Les Paul Standard, Fender American Deluxe Stratocaster, PRS Custom 22 Brazilian Limited, Ibanez Prestige S5470SOL and this wild high-end USA parts-telecaster called a Voodoo Special that some guy on ebay used to sell years ago that I probably should have kept! I miss them all. Oh man… I can’t go down this road again… It’s a dark void… 

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

This is a really tough question… Maybe the Yamaha THR10X practice amp/interface purely because of the ease of use (for recording purposes)… not to mention… it sounds great! 

Yamaha THR10X practice amp

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

I don’t know if I would do it differently. My first electric guitar, a Gibson “The Paul II” is still very near and dear to me. I actually used it for the Eventide Blackhole demo content! I have no regrets and I feel this instrument really shaped my playing. 

Gibson “The Paul II”

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

Probably a USB mini cable because it’s essential to link the Eventide dot9 and Rose pedals to Eventide Device Manager – our free editing software… I have five of them now because there was a period where they would just inexplicably disappear into the ether. They are truly the bane of my existence!  

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

This: https://www.talkingbass.net/grolsch-straplock-trick-for-bass/ This is INVALUABLE! And… you kill two birds with one stone… or… something like that! 


Artist or Band name? 

Circuitry – https://circuitry.bandcamp.com/

Sightharvest – https://sightharvest.bandcamp.com/releases

Surreal Measures – https://surrealmeasures.bandcamp.com/


Genre?

Circuitry – Progressive Metalcore

Sightharvest – Instrumental/Progressive Metal/Fusion

Surreal Measures – Fusion

Selfie?

Christian Colabelli


Where are you from? 

New Jersey, USA! 

How did you get into music? 

I was exposed to music and music instruction at an early age. My parents were always playing a variety of genres around the house. They initially signed me up for piano lessons when I was 7 years old… from there I transitioned to viola… then to saxophone (which I ended up playing for 9 years). At age 13, I begged them to get me a guitar and finally they acquiesced and there was no turning back. It was full immersion. To say I spent a lot of time in my bedroom, endlessly practicing is a vast understatement.

What still drives you to make music?

It’s a never-ending quest. Music is a lifelong study: there’s always something to learn and perfect. I’m always trying to incorporate new aspects and nuances of the language. There are so many absurdly gifted and inspiring players. I really enjoy transcribing lines from the masters and then making them my own. I think the driving factor is continuously trying to develop my voice. I want to sound like myself! That’s a simple statement but when you dissect it, you realize the quagmire it becomes. 

How do you most often start a new track?

It really depends on what I’m working on and who I’m working with. I can easily adapt to other musicians’ workflows as I’ve done a lot of studio work. If it’s my own stuff, I will usually just have a loose goal/harmonic concept in mind and have a guitar in my hands and start playing around until something sticks. Once I get an initial motif, I record a short video so I don’t forget (as I’m constantly writing and everything is in flux) and then I dig in to develop it.

How do you know when a track is finished?

Well, there’s a DaVinci quote that has always resonated with me: Art is never finished… only abandoned… That couldn’t ring truer. A track is finished when every avenue and minute detail is exhausted and you finally decide to walk away from it!

Show us your current studio

I leave the production to the pros… Here is a picture of Matt’s studio (he plays with me in Sightharvest and is also a producer/engineer by trade. This is the setup we used for the EP we just recorded:

Sightharvest Studio

Best creative advice that you’ve ever heard?

“Life is full of mistakes. Don’t be afraid to make one in your playing.”

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

Here is a link to my website: https://www.christiancolabelli.com/ which links to everything I’m working on… 

I just finished recording the newest Sightharvest EP which is a melting pot of genres. It’s a heavy instrumental project that was originally going to be video game music. However, during the writing process of the first record, we realized that it was destined to be more. It became the aural equivalent of the premise of a video game meaning: each track is like a video game level, that progresses in intensity. Hopefully we will have a release date soon! 

I also started my own fishing website/brand: https://www.bigfishsynergy.com/ I’m an avid bass fisherman and it’s been fun to immerse myself in finally devoting the time to making these fishing videos that combine fishing education, comedy, music and art. 

Christian also plays the 1-string for super heavy bass!

[Well, hey-deli-hoo dear Reader – Who would you like to see do an 9 Odd Questions interview? Throw some suggestions via comments below…]