Dan D’Agostino Master Audio Systems has begun shipping the Progression Integrated Amplifier, the latest addition to the award-winning Progression Series. The Progression Integrated combines the elegance and detail retrieval of the Progression Preamplifier with the power and dynamic capability of the Progression amplifier topology housed in a chassis the exudes the D’Agostino aesthetic. Built on a modular platform, the Progression Integrated fills every need of today’s music listener and audiophile.
—> Read more about Dan D’Agostino MAS Progression int. amp.
Category Archives: World News
Los Angeles, CA (April 20, 2020)—Roland has expanded its categories for Roland Cloud Academy, an online learning platform providing free music and video production training. The new offerings will add livestreaming, synthesizer and Zenbeats courses to the current lineup of offerings covering Roland’s DJ and production instruments.
In the Cloud Academy’s interactive, multimedia online platform, instructors provide real-time responses to questions submitted via live chat, voice, and webcam. Launched in 2017 as a free program, Roland Cloud Academy has reportedly doubled in both attendance and course offerings in 2020.
Upcoming Pro Audio Training Webinars
Sessions at the academy showcase Roland DJ products such as DJ-202, DJ-505, DJ-707M, and DJ-808 controllers, with MC-101 / MC-707 GROOVEBOXES and TR-8S Rhythm Performer recently added in February 2020. The newest course offerings announced today feature FANTOM Synthesizers, Zenbeats music creation app, and a general knowledge livestreaming course including two of Roland’s award-winning products, the VR-1HD AV Streaming Mixer, and the GO:LIVECAST Livestreaming Studio for Smartphones.
The new Livestreaming program familiarizes students with livestreaming fundamentals like online platforms, technical requirements, production basics and monetization options. An overview of several Roland streaming products and third-party cameras / accessories is also covered, with focus on video conferencing, remote teaching, live performance, worship services, gamecasting, and more.
Meanwhile, the newly added FANTOM curriculum, offered over three separate courses, aims to teach students the foundations of keyboard synthesis, performing and controlling external applications like Mainstage. The Cloud Academy’s two-tiered Zenbeats program offers users the chance to learn directly from product specialists and advance their skills and creative scope within the music software.
Roland Cloud Academy • www.Roland.com
emm labs’ DA2 V2 is their updated flagship 16xDSD / DSD1024 stereo D/A converter (DAC). It is the next evolutionary step within their line of award winning, critically acclaimed range of high end converter systems. The DA2 V2 features a multitude of inputs and support for PCM up to 24-bit/192kHz, DSD, 2xDSD, DXD (352/384 kHz), and MQA via USB. MDAC2 is said to be the world’s first true fully discrete DSD1024 / 16xDSD D/A converter and still built in-house at our manufacturing facility in Calgary, Canada.
—> Read More about emm labs DA2 V2 Flagship Stereo DAC.
Harmonic Resolution Systems’ (HRS) custom VXR amplifier stands are based on HRS reference level patented VXR modular frame architecture. This design architecture allows the company to build custom amp stands in a wide range of custom widths and depths to match any amplifier design. The modular VXR frame system can also be expanded vertically or horizontally at any time. They are available in both six leg (34″ and 38″ depth design) or traditional four leg (up to 29″ depth design) configuration and come in black, silver, and custom color finishes.
—> Read more about HRS VXR amp stands and E1 Isolation Base.
Legacy Audio provides one of the most versatile lines of high-performance loudspeakers including mains, on-walls, subwoofers, soundbars, towers, centers and surrounds featuring the latest in DSP technology. Legacy speakers consistently provide wide bandwidth, lower distortion, greater efficiency and high reliability. They are celebrating over three decades of relentless pursuit of perfection in audio reproduction. Today’s 24-bit recordings afford 35dB more dynamic capability over 16-bit.
—> Read more about Legacy Audio expanding their i·V amplifier series.
The COVID-19 outbreak could not have come at a worse time for one part of the audio post-production community. “We were gearing up for pilots all around town,” says Mark Lanza, a supervising sound editor and president of MPSE (Motion Picture Sound Editors). “All of those just evaporated.”
As the Los Angeles Times has reported, of the 56 pilot episodes ordered by the five broadcast television networks this year, only one, from producer Chuck Lorre, was completed before the country went into lockdown. According to the report, pilot season, which runs from late February through early May, is worth an estimated $500 million to the entertainment industry.
Lanza, who says he lost three shows because of the crisis, was still working on a stage as everything closed. “The only people there were the two mixers and the engineer. Everybody else was at home,” he says. The only network representative, an associate producer, watched, made notes and left.
Of course, we have the technology to work remotely in most areas of the audio post business. To support those efforts, manufacturers including Avid and Frame.io have offered accommodations such as free subscriptions or additional features and capabilities to professionals working during the pandemic.
In New York City, Goldcrest Post staff members were told to take what they could and head home when the facility shut down. “I’m in the middle of two shows,” says re-recording mixer Ryan Price, noting that many of the facility’s editors and supervising sound editors were already working remotely before the shutdown. “I grabbed an Artist Mix. I’ve been using that in conjunction with the Pro Tools Control for the iPad.” He’s more used to working on the facility’s Avid S6 desks. “I would love an S3, but here we are,” he says.
Price was freelance for two years before joining Goldcrest, working out of his apartment. “I would go in and do final mixes, but I would do editing and premixing at home—so I just had to pull everything out of the closet.”
Manhattan-based audio post house Hobo Audio, which focuses on TV and radio commercials, was ahead of the curve when the shutdown came. “Over the last year or longer, we’ve had our engineers set up remote spaces. If we got overbooked, they could work from home, so my guys were already pretty much set up,” says company founder Howard Bowler.
The work has continued to flow in, he says, although Hobo did lose one project. “We’re working on a radio campaign in the next two weeks. We can record that remotely. On the TV ad side, some of our clients are grabbing existing footage and creating spots. They’re improvising their way through. They’re going to need VO, music and a mix. Those elements can all be done remotely, so our side of it hasn’t changed,” he adds.
“We also do TV shows, which are in the editing process right now,” he says. “We anticipate [television] work coming to us over the next couple of months.”
Ron Bochar, founding member and co-manager of c5 Sound in Manhattan, said in early April that he was still occasionally traveling from the Bronx to work at the facility. “I had stuff that I had started before the lockdown, so I’ve had to go in to wrap it up.”
Working at c5 was his only alternative, he says. “I needed to be in a room that’s set up that way. I’m starting to explore other systems that are claiming they can do an Atmos mix on headphones—a viable option to rough something into shape.”
Working from home may take some adjustment, though. “Today, I tried to do some spotting on a project that’s coming in and my cat decided to sit on my keyboard every chance he got. I don’t know if that’s going to work,” says Bochar.
“At Goldcrest, we have 7.1 Meyer Acheron rooms and they sound amazing. Who’s got that at home?” says Price. He has a Focal monitor setup at home, and Sony MDR7506s he’s had since college: “I know how they translate.”
Goldcrest previously installed Vizio soundbars to check translation. “It’s a good, high-end consumer playback and probably what most people are listening on. I have one at home as well, so I can put the mix onto Plex, hook it up to my TV and watch the mix,” Price says.
Following the Sony Pictures and Larson Sound computer hacks of past years, security is paramount, of course. “As a facility, we’ve had to go through massive amounts of locking down access to the facility and the internet. I’ve always been suspicious of what would happen when it moves out of that realm,” says Bochar.
He says c5 has strict guidelines for working from home. “Whatever system you’re using, it cannot be on the internet. Every drive you have has to be encrypted.”
Staff members move files between themselves and clients via Signiant’s Media Shuttle, explains Bochar. Others in the industry use Frame.io, Aspera or other secure platforms. The problem is, he points out, a TV show episode requires multiple terabytes—too much for a home internet plan to handle. “Yesterday I drove out to my dialogue editor’s house in Brooklyn and we did an exchange outside my car window. I tried not to make it look like a drug delivery!”
As the pandemic tightens its grip, Bowler has been reading the writings of Winston Churchill, taking one quote to heart: “If you’re going through hell, keep going.” Hobo can stay the course, he reports. “Fortunately we run a very tight ship and have zero short-term debt, so we’re able to navigate with a little more comfort. But we’re headed for a pretty substantial trauma as people run out of cash, which is going to happen really fast.”
Hobo is helping radio and TV clients navigate the new environment by sharing workflows, he says. “The bigger thing we’re doing is using this time to build the entertainment company.” Bowler, who in a previous career was a singer and guitarist with The Marbles, says the property he is most focused on is the autobiographical tale of two brothers whose band found some success at CBGBs in the ’70s.
The industry—and the country and the world—will likely change once we emerge from this pandemic, says Lanza, whose wife is a nurse working on the front line. First, he says, productions have to resume filming before audio post pros can return to work. “The production mixers and boom guys will probably be running around like maniacs trying to get shows done. Then we have to wait until they edit and get it into post.”
More broadly, he says, “Will some of those shows that had a green light not have one anymore? How will it change the scope of what’s being filmed? Will they scale it back? Will they have smaller crews? The ramifications will be ongoing.”
Audio post practitioners are used to change, Lanza believes. “I think our members are ripe to embrace any change, move forward and sustain profitable, long careers, no matter what the new landscape might look like.”
“I imagine that mixes over the next year are going to be more approval mixes,” says Bochar. “People will come in for the shortest amount of time possible, we’ll all wear masks, we’ll hit playback, take notes, everyone will leave, and I’ll be alone in the room again to do whatever has to get done. And in many ways, that’s fine.”
Price, too, is fine working alone, especially when he’s deep into dialogue fixes, “but there’s stuff where you just have to get immediate feedback. It’s way more efficient to have everybody in a room for four to six hours to perfect something. There’s a lot of interpersonal stuff that I don’t think is ever going to go away.”
Having used IK Multimedia iLoud Micro Monitors on last year’s trip, we wanted to kick the power up this time by turning to the iLoud MTM monitors. With 100 W RMS and 40 Hz–24 kHz frequency response, as well as a built-in 0–20-degree tilting stand for easy positioning, we definitely made the right move. At 5.5 pounds each, the pair is small enough to fit easily in one of our gear suitcases. They are two-way/three-speaker bi-amped with 2 x 3.5-inch polypropylene custom-made mid-woofers and a 1-inch low-distortion, back-chambered silk dome tweeter. Connected via XLR-1/4-inch TRS balanced input, there are buttons for LF Extension (40/50/60 Hz), LF (-3 dB, Flat, +2 dB), HF (-2 dB, Flat, +2 dB), CAL/Preset (Cal, Flat, Desk) and SENS (-10 dBv, +4 dBu). On the rear is the AC power input, power switch, USB port, 1/8-inch ARC mic input, volume control and the bass reflex port.
Universal Audio Apollo x4 Interface: A Real-World Review
Each iLoud MTM monitor speaker includes a small omnidirectional mic that allows you to do a custom calibration; although it’s easy to perform, we honestly did not get to do it. (Stay tuned for an update on that.) While they can be placed horizontally, these speakers have been optimized to work vertically, and by using the included stands, they can be titled from 0 to 20 degrees. Unpacking them from the suitcase, we mounted them to the stands, set the tilt to work without setup, connected the XLR input on the back, and away we went. Since the guys had never heard them before, they were blown away when I started playing a pulsing, bass-heavy synth part.
These speakers not only put out a lot of volume, but they put it out across the spectrum with amazing clarity. The strong spot to me is the way they handle bass, and the port on the back makes it truly sound like there is a subwoofer attached. We used them mercilessly, cranking everything through them, from heavy guitars and huge synth parts to drum impacts and even the drum kit itself. They took everything we threw at them and never blinked once. The reason we didn’t calibrate them is simply because they sounded so good as they were, we just thought “leave it as-is.” I look forward to doing a calibration session soon on them, however. Without hesitation, I can highly recommend these for not just a mobile rig, but virtually anybody’s home studio.
IK Multimedia • www.ikmultimedia.com
Kingston, Jamaica (April 20, 2020)—Sam Clayton Jr., a noted producer/engineer for numerous reggae acts, died of coronavirus in Kingston, Jamaica on March 31. Clayton led a colorful life, as he was also a founding member of the storied Jamaican bobsled team that competed in the 1988 Winter Olympics in Calgary, Canada, which later became the focus of the 1993 Disney film, Cool Runnings.
Ironically, while he was among the first four athletes chosen for the country’s Olympic team when Jamaica made its push to enter the Winter Olympics, Clayton was ultimately not part of the four-man sled that famously crashed that year during its third run. Climbing out of the bobsled after the crash, the team pushed its sled over the track’s finish line, perhaps losing its chance at medals, but becoming part of Olympic history by cementing an indelible image of determination that exemplifies much of what the games are about.
Producer/Engineer Knox Phillips, Dead at 74
In later years, Clayton moved into producing and engineering, working with the “Harry J. Studio” label and with acts around the world, including Toots and the Maytals, Ernest Ranglin, Horace Andy and Steel Pulse. In a remembrance post on Facebook, Steel Pulse’s David R. Hinds, noted, “Sam Clayton Jr. will be missed terribly by all that knew him, primarily because, a man that is so upright, fair, honest, eager to work under any challenges or conditions, and possess an arsenal of talent, is a very hard commodity to find in this industry of ours, today. He was a jack of all trades and most important of all, a sincere friend who had a solution to practically any problem that came into play.”
Remembering Clayton to The New York Times, Hinds added, “Most important of all, in this thieving, cutthroat music industry of ours, he was trustworthy. Where Sam towered over the rest of his peers, is that he held dearly every task he did, no matter how small, or how tedious. They all got his relentless undivided attention.”
Clayton Jr. is survived by his wife, Annie; daughter, Joelle; sons, John, Simon and Ice; four sisters, Nicole, Sophia, Aiesha and Suzzanne; and three grandchildren.
In light of the just-announced NAB Show Express, the deadline for nominations for the Special Edition Best of Show Awards has been extended. The new deadline is 6pm (PT) on Friday May 1—meaning all interested companies now have an additional chance to participate. Winners will be announced during the week of the NAB Show Express (by May 14, 2020).
The Special Edition Best of Show Awards are designed to recognize outstanding products that are new since the 2019 spring NAB Show. You can submit nominations to any of our 10 market-leading media brands: TV Technology, Radio World, Digital Video, Video Edge, Pro Sound News, Sound & Video Contractor, Government Video, TVBEurope, B+C and Next TV.
Here’s a few great reasons to enter your product(s):
✔ Showcase your products to 95,000+ readers in the Best of Show Program Guide.
✔ All entrants receive an official ‘Nominee’ logo to use in marketing and promotions and winners will receive a ‘Winners’ logo and accolade!
✔ Option to choose a promotional package to add to your entry for increased awareness and exposure for your new product(s).
✔ Feature your product in the Best of Show Must-See newsletter and/or have your product video featured on a special article page on our leading media industry brand sites
✔ Entries are judged by a panel of industry experts and companies that nominate benefit from thought leader awareness among the industry’s engineers and editors.
Entry deadline extended to 6pm (PT) on Friday May 1.
Please note there will be no further extensions after this date!
NOMINATE ONLINE NOW AT https://future.swoogo.com/bestofshowspecialedition
For inquiries about the entry process please contact Kate Smith – [email protected]