The first of our ongoing regular Beat submission competitions has begun!
And we can happily announce that we are being helped out by those kind people at Etnies with a box of clothes and goodies to give away to the top 5 producers this month.
The top producer will receive a brand new pair of Mickey Taylor trainers.
Tuesday, March 31, 2009
Bristol collective aim to change the face of sample libraries
Thursday 16th April sees the launch of “BeatBlocs.com” – an innovative sample library and community for music producers, featuring a unique mix of professionally produced and user-generated sample loops & beats, prepackaged & ready to be plugged straight into music production software such as Logic and Cubase.
Respected, independent and cutting-edge producers such as Michael Fakesch, Minotaur Shock, Blue States, TM Duke, Unforscene and Broadway Project will regularly contribute beats to the site (with many more exciting names having signed up to come in at a later date), as will members of the BeatBlocs community, who can enter their beats in the ongoing competition.
The winners of the competitions get their beats added to the ever-evolving BeatBlocs library, complete with a detailed profile, the opportunity for other community members to comment on their work, and of course the ability to sell their beats through the BeatBlocs.com site and make a profit.
BeatBlocs provides a truly democratic and inspiring hub for music producers of all kinds, and through featured Articles and Tutorials written by respected industry specialists actively encourages its users to learn about beat production and discuss current issues and trends.
Why introduce a new model?
Bristol-based brothers Dan and Chris Berridge created BeatBlocs after struggling with the current music sample library model for a number of years.
“I work on a lot of tight deadlines producing music for TV Ads,” Dan explains, “and would often need to reach out for beat loop samples that were inspiring and bang-up to date stylistically, as media clients demand. I found time and again that ‘traditional’ sample library beats were sounding generic and dated.”
Chris continues - “At the same time I was getting into music production using Garage Band which came with my Mac. I’m a long-term fan of IDM and electronica of all kinds and like Dan I was looking to beat sample libraries for inspiration. What I heard just didn’t reflect the music I was hearing on the albums and 12”s that I was buying and playing. They just didn’t have that
edge…”
This raised the question – what if the cutting-edge artists and bedroom producers could submit their own beats to a new kind of sample library?
As a professional music producer and creative director respectively, Dan & Chris were in an ideal position to realise the vision of a nurturing and inspiring place for producers to find and share cutting-edge beats, and brought together a team including cult illustrators (the much celebrated
McFaul), a digital agency (Block Interactive), and a dedicated development collective to put it all together.
After an exciting gestation period of 12 months the site is due for launch on April 16th, with a number of respected industry professionals having already contributed fantastic beats, including TM Juke (Tru Thoughts), Michael Fakesch (Funkstrong/K7), Minotaur Shock (4AD/Melodic), Jon Kennedy (Tru Thoughts/Grand Central), Broadway Project (Memphis Industries/Grand Central), Blue States (Memphis Industries/XL), Unforscene
(Tru Thoughts), and Ian Boddy (De Wolfe).
Respected, independent and cutting-edge producers such as Michael Fakesch, Minotaur Shock, Blue States, TM Duke, Unforscene and Broadway Project will regularly contribute beats to the site (with many more exciting names having signed up to come in at a later date), as will members of the BeatBlocs community, who can enter their beats in the ongoing competition.
The winners of the competitions get their beats added to the ever-evolving BeatBlocs library, complete with a detailed profile, the opportunity for other community members to comment on their work, and of course the ability to sell their beats through the BeatBlocs.com site and make a profit.
BeatBlocs provides a truly democratic and inspiring hub for music producers of all kinds, and through featured Articles and Tutorials written by respected industry specialists actively encourages its users to learn about beat production and discuss current issues and trends.
Why introduce a new model?
Bristol-based brothers Dan and Chris Berridge created BeatBlocs after struggling with the current music sample library model for a number of years.
“I work on a lot of tight deadlines producing music for TV Ads,” Dan explains, “and would often need to reach out for beat loop samples that were inspiring and bang-up to date stylistically, as media clients demand. I found time and again that ‘traditional’ sample library beats were sounding generic and dated.”
Chris continues - “At the same time I was getting into music production using Garage Band which came with my Mac. I’m a long-term fan of IDM and electronica of all kinds and like Dan I was looking to beat sample libraries for inspiration. What I heard just didn’t reflect the music I was hearing on the albums and 12”s that I was buying and playing. They just didn’t have that
edge…”
This raised the question – what if the cutting-edge artists and bedroom producers could submit their own beats to a new kind of sample library?
As a professional music producer and creative director respectively, Dan & Chris were in an ideal position to realise the vision of a nurturing and inspiring place for producers to find and share cutting-edge beats, and brought together a team including cult illustrators (the much celebrated
McFaul), a digital agency (Block Interactive), and a dedicated development collective to put it all together.
After an exciting gestation period of 12 months the site is due for launch on April 16th, with a number of respected industry professionals having already contributed fantastic beats, including TM Juke (Tru Thoughts), Michael Fakesch (Funkstrong/K7), Minotaur Shock (4AD/Melodic), Jon Kennedy (Tru Thoughts/Grand Central), Broadway Project (Memphis Industries/Grand Central), Blue States (Memphis Industries/XL), Unforscene
(Tru Thoughts), and Ian Boddy (De Wolfe).
BeatBlocs is born
So it's been a long time. And I guess the story here is of how three busy creative people managed to build a sophisticated web application in their spare time, but I imagine that's not a new story.
Now it's here, we've had many of our original ideas and visions confirmed by hugely positive response from artists and press alike. Some fantastic artists have contributed their time and creativity, delivering some crushing beats, based on nothing more that "that site is a great idea". And now the site is alive and functioning we can see how FUN the thing is to play with and use, browsing and listening through the beats, reading about the personalities behind the sounds and finding out that this is all open for everyone to contribute to.
We are soon going to be seeing a raft of profile networking facilities added to the User control panel which will really allow users to share knowledge and interact with each other.
But right now its time to get out of the shed and into the shop.
Now it's here, we've had many of our original ideas and visions confirmed by hugely positive response from artists and press alike. Some fantastic artists have contributed their time and creativity, delivering some crushing beats, based on nothing more that "that site is a great idea". And now the site is alive and functioning we can see how FUN the thing is to play with and use, browsing and listening through the beats, reading about the personalities behind the sounds and finding out that this is all open for everyone to contribute to.
We are soon going to be seeing a raft of profile networking facilities added to the User control panel which will really allow users to share knowledge and interact with each other.
But right now its time to get out of the shed and into the shop.
Friday, April 25, 2008
?uestlove needs Beatblocs
http://music.guardian.co.uk/rock/story/0,,2275858,00.html?gusrc=rss&feed=39
This article illustrates perfectly the battle that faces even an established act like The Roots in making a sustainable living from releasing their albums.
?uestlove will be getting a call.
This article illustrates perfectly the battle that faces even an established act like The Roots in making a sustainable living from releasing their albums.
?uestlove will be getting a call.
Wednesday, April 23, 2008
Beatblocs; a new revenue stream for recording artists and producers.
We’ve explained how we anticipate the majority of our content to come from our grass-roots user-base; street level producers, and how this content will be aimed at both music production beginners looking for a professional sound and busy music professionals looking for quick beat solutions for their remixes, pitches, submissions, etc. This is just one element of what Beatblocs offers.
A new remix culture is unfolding. In this hungry climate signed recording artists and their managers are looking for ways of making an income from their music other than the traditional (and new) distribution models. Even Ad agency budgets are shrinking (something I know about well).
Artists are beginning to find out that elements or pieces of their music have value too. Bedroom music production is now big business. People want the opportunity to buy into the way a particular artist makes music. When you love a piece of music, there is a fascination to find out how it was done, or at least a wish to add a bit of that magic to their own music.
Radiohead recently posted an online competition to remix their track “Nude”. The site contains links to each element (“stem”) of the original track available for sale on iTunes. Also included is a Garage Band file (ubiquitous Apple music production software) where each of the “stems” are saved as Apple Loops files, with all the contained metadata, making the process even simpler for budding remixers. While this is promoted as a competition, all of the combined stems cost a total of £4, where as the individual track on the album could have been downloaded for free. Thus Radiohead, understandably, place a higher financial value on the elements within their music than the final product. The competition is also a lure for what is at heart additional revenue stream.
Obviously, at Beatblocs, we concentrate on the beat alone, rather than the whole track (for now, at least), but the point I am illustrating is that there is a value to each element of Radioheads’ music. People want to buy into the magic of their music, even if it is just remixing it in their bedroom.
Artists and their managers should not underestimate the value of simple elements of their music. That other people (fans and non-fans) can see the magic and the skill that goes into these elements and want to buy into it. Even if its in the comfort of their bedroom.
The artist will not be giving away any secrets or credibility (if anything, a good producer will be adding more cashe, by showcasing his/her production talent) and would be able to recycle unreleased tracks in a positive (and hopefully lucrative) way. The content will be presented with articles and background to expose the artist to a new potential fanbase.
Bottom line, if your artist has profile, he/she will sell beats. If anything, there is more value today, right now, on a simple beat produced by a favourite artist, than the whole album of the same artist that will probably have been downloaded for free.
It’s food for thought.
A new remix culture is unfolding. In this hungry climate signed recording artists and their managers are looking for ways of making an income from their music other than the traditional (and new) distribution models. Even Ad agency budgets are shrinking (something I know about well).
Artists are beginning to find out that elements or pieces of their music have value too. Bedroom music production is now big business. People want the opportunity to buy into the way a particular artist makes music. When you love a piece of music, there is a fascination to find out how it was done, or at least a wish to add a bit of that magic to their own music.
Radiohead recently posted an online competition to remix their track “Nude”. The site contains links to each element (“stem”) of the original track available for sale on iTunes. Also included is a Garage Band file (ubiquitous Apple music production software) where each of the “stems” are saved as Apple Loops files, with all the contained metadata, making the process even simpler for budding remixers. While this is promoted as a competition, all of the combined stems cost a total of £4, where as the individual track on the album could have been downloaded for free. Thus Radiohead, understandably, place a higher financial value on the elements within their music than the final product. The competition is also a lure for what is at heart additional revenue stream.
Obviously, at Beatblocs, we concentrate on the beat alone, rather than the whole track (for now, at least), but the point I am illustrating is that there is a value to each element of Radioheads’ music. People want to buy into the magic of their music, even if it is just remixing it in their bedroom.
Artists and their managers should not underestimate the value of simple elements of their music. That other people (fans and non-fans) can see the magic and the skill that goes into these elements and want to buy into it. Even if its in the comfort of their bedroom.
The artist will not be giving away any secrets or credibility (if anything, a good producer will be adding more cashe, by showcasing his/her production talent) and would be able to recycle unreleased tracks in a positive (and hopefully lucrative) way. The content will be presented with articles and background to expose the artist to a new potential fanbase.
Bottom line, if your artist has profile, he/she will sell beats. If anything, there is more value today, right now, on a simple beat produced by a favourite artist, than the whole album of the same artist that will probably have been downloaded for free.
It’s food for thought.
Thursday, February 28, 2008
Beatblocs re-invents the music library paradigm?
I suspect that the first entry to this blog (and the bold premise above) may pose more questions than it answers, so here’s a few why-what-when’s.
What is Beatblocs?
Beatblocs.com is a Beat Shop and Community. It’s an active community of like-minded users, with a commercial front-end interface that operates as a “Beat shop” where users can browse, buy and download universally interchangeable beats for musical arrangements. The large majority of our content is supplied by our community base of producers and re-mixers week by week, the rest is supplied by pro-producers and labels.
Right now Digital Music Production is in a boom period. Improved access to faster computer processors and cheaper and cheaper software interfaces, means that more and more people are getting involved in producing music, whether as a hobby or as a profession. With the recent launch of Apple’s Logic 8 vastly reduced in price and the inclusion of Garage Band within all versions of OSX, we believe the market for packaged universal format audio files, such as Apple Loops and Rex2 files is accelerating.
“Apple music loops becoming big business”
http://www.pcwelt.de/news/englishnews/114663/
This is no secret, and has been the case now for a while, so;
Why Beatblocs?
This poses a number of different questions. Lets break it down;
Why Beats?!
Not surprisingly, this comes back to hip-hop and sampling. We at Beatblocs, like many others still appreciate the ancient art of Crate Digging, searching for breaks and beats from old Vinyl. While we might have moved on creatively from sampling straight from records (as we should), the aesthetic of cut-and-paste still lives strong, that is, appropriating two disparate pieces of music together and making them work, forcing them to work and coming out with something new and entirely unexpected.
Geoff Barrow from Portishead (the band, not the place) puts it well;
'With samples, in those days,' he continues - 'Before time-stretching and all this Pro Tools tomfoolery,' qualifies Barrow 'you were actually forcing notes against notes, so there was a proper clash and everything was slightly out of tune. Because you want this riff to go over that beat and you've just got to make it happen, you end up with this kind of roughness, which is what made Public Enemy or Eric B so exciting.' (Observer 2008)
Fortunately, these days with Apple Loops and Rex2 files, the process is much simplified (despite Barrow’s protestations) and tempo can be locked almost immediately.
This puts us in the position of being able to have an existing musical arrangement and dropping-in ANY Rex2 or Apple Loop Beat file in time with the song. The right beat can transform a musical arrangement in ways you never would be able to predict and putting 2 unlikely pieces of music together can lead to wonderfully creative results.
This is the kind of progressive experimentation we want to foster in Beatblocs. And the progressive nature of our content reflects this.
And of course beats don’t rely on melody or key either, they have become universal (duh!).
Why User-led content?
The traditional model for delivering third-party sound files for music production is on Sample CD libraries. This is where a company see’s an established musical genre that has become popular that it believes its customers will want to emulate. The company then employs a number of producers to compose that musical element (Beats, basslines, whatever) to a controlled brief. These compositions are then marketed and released as a physical product or increasingly, made available online (but the process remains the same).
At Beatblocs we believe this model is radically flawed and out of date (at least within the electronic music sphere) . There are lots of reasons but the crucial points are;
1. By the time the content hits the marketplace it is usually 2 to 3 years out of date. That is, it takes around nine months from the brief until the CDs to hit the shops… a brief that was formed after the musical genre in question hit the mainstream (which, for producers who wish to stay ahead of the game, is too late).
2. the briefs put in front of producers are designed to cater for all tastes ie. Middle of the road, and are thus washed of any cutting-edge. I know, as I have produced content for a number of Sample CD collections myself (not that I'm middle of the road, but you get the point ;-).
We have realised that to have constantly updated, user-submitted beats, produced by young, hungry, street-level producers will unite 2 needs;
1. The need for established and busy professional composers/producers to tap into the ever-evolving dance music scene for their productions and the inability of traditional music library models to cater for that need.
2. The need for novice producers to add that element of cutting-edge production to their arrangements, quickly and easily. Novice producers of electronic music should not be under-estimated or patronised. They are very often from a DJ background and at the very least have a very discerning taste and knowledge of the various musical genres. Currently this need is not catered for in a way that stays up-to-date.
Where will the content come from?
Everyone knows that the music business today is in a state of flux (trust me, I know!). There are legions of talented producers releasing amazing albums but unable to make a decent living from doing so. We know that artists are understandably looking for new revenue streams and we aim to provide a convenient and relatively simple one.
In fact, producers who sell one 4-bar beat file on our site, will make more than selling an entire track on iTunes. Many producers find writing creative beats very natural and easy. We hope to provide them with an opportunity that will extend their creative career.
More of this situation soon in a future post.
What is Beatblocs?
Beatblocs.com is a Beat Shop and Community. It’s an active community of like-minded users, with a commercial front-end interface that operates as a “Beat shop” where users can browse, buy and download universally interchangeable beats for musical arrangements. The large majority of our content is supplied by our community base of producers and re-mixers week by week, the rest is supplied by pro-producers and labels.
Right now Digital Music Production is in a boom period. Improved access to faster computer processors and cheaper and cheaper software interfaces, means that more and more people are getting involved in producing music, whether as a hobby or as a profession. With the recent launch of Apple’s Logic 8 vastly reduced in price and the inclusion of Garage Band within all versions of OSX, we believe the market for packaged universal format audio files, such as Apple Loops and Rex2 files is accelerating.
“Apple music loops becoming big business”
http://www.pcwelt.de/news/englishnews/114663/
This is no secret, and has been the case now for a while, so;
Why Beatblocs?
This poses a number of different questions. Lets break it down;
Why Beats?!
Not surprisingly, this comes back to hip-hop and sampling. We at Beatblocs, like many others still appreciate the ancient art of Crate Digging, searching for breaks and beats from old Vinyl. While we might have moved on creatively from sampling straight from records (as we should), the aesthetic of cut-and-paste still lives strong, that is, appropriating two disparate pieces of music together and making them work, forcing them to work and coming out with something new and entirely unexpected.
Geoff Barrow from Portishead (the band, not the place) puts it well;
'With samples, in those days,' he continues - 'Before time-stretching and all this Pro Tools tomfoolery,' qualifies Barrow 'you were actually forcing notes against notes, so there was a proper clash and everything was slightly out of tune. Because you want this riff to go over that beat and you've just got to make it happen, you end up with this kind of roughness, which is what made Public Enemy or Eric B so exciting.' (Observer 2008)
Fortunately, these days with Apple Loops and Rex2 files, the process is much simplified (despite Barrow’s protestations) and tempo can be locked almost immediately.
This puts us in the position of being able to have an existing musical arrangement and dropping-in ANY Rex2 or Apple Loop Beat file in time with the song. The right beat can transform a musical arrangement in ways you never would be able to predict and putting 2 unlikely pieces of music together can lead to wonderfully creative results.
This is the kind of progressive experimentation we want to foster in Beatblocs. And the progressive nature of our content reflects this.
And of course beats don’t rely on melody or key either, they have become universal (duh!).
Why User-led content?
The traditional model for delivering third-party sound files for music production is on Sample CD libraries. This is where a company see’s an established musical genre that has become popular that it believes its customers will want to emulate. The company then employs a number of producers to compose that musical element (Beats, basslines, whatever) to a controlled brief. These compositions are then marketed and released as a physical product or increasingly, made available online (but the process remains the same).
At Beatblocs we believe this model is radically flawed and out of date (at least within the electronic music sphere) . There are lots of reasons but the crucial points are;
1. By the time the content hits the marketplace it is usually 2 to 3 years out of date. That is, it takes around nine months from the brief until the CDs to hit the shops… a brief that was formed after the musical genre in question hit the mainstream (which, for producers who wish to stay ahead of the game, is too late).
2. the briefs put in front of producers are designed to cater for all tastes ie. Middle of the road, and are thus washed of any cutting-edge. I know, as I have produced content for a number of Sample CD collections myself (not that I'm middle of the road, but you get the point ;-).
We have realised that to have constantly updated, user-submitted beats, produced by young, hungry, street-level producers will unite 2 needs;
1. The need for established and busy professional composers/producers to tap into the ever-evolving dance music scene for their productions and the inability of traditional music library models to cater for that need.
2. The need for novice producers to add that element of cutting-edge production to their arrangements, quickly and easily. Novice producers of electronic music should not be under-estimated or patronised. They are very often from a DJ background and at the very least have a very discerning taste and knowledge of the various musical genres. Currently this need is not catered for in a way that stays up-to-date.
Where will the content come from?
Everyone knows that the music business today is in a state of flux (trust me, I know!). There are legions of talented producers releasing amazing albums but unable to make a decent living from doing so. We know that artists are understandably looking for new revenue streams and we aim to provide a convenient and relatively simple one.
In fact, producers who sell one 4-bar beat file on our site, will make more than selling an entire track on iTunes. Many producers find writing creative beats very natural and easy. We hope to provide them with an opportunity that will extend their creative career.
More of this situation soon in a future post.
Tuesday, February 12, 2008
Beatblocs Blog Greetings
Beatblocs Blog. Hello. Thoughts and tings from the people behind www.Beatblocs.com.
I am Dan Berridge. I came up with the Beatblocs concept. I produce music as Broadway Project (www.myspace.com/thebroadwayproject),
One Divided Soul (www.myspace.com/onedividedsoul)
and write music for films and TV ads (www.danberridge.com).
Chris Berridge is the design and development brains behind Beatblocs. He's a successful web designer developer (www.chrisberridge.com).
And Nick Wheeler who is our lovely Java programmer/developer.
Beatblocs is our attempt to create a space that will feed the creative lifestyle for our users and ourselves. Based on our personal experiences (in music and design) and a kind of old-skool hip-hop aesthetic of freedom of expression, style and creativity, we've come up with this idea that is the “Beatblocs Beat Shop and Community”.
Beatblocs is a Beat shop. On the site you can browse and download beat files (Rex/Apple Loops/Wav) that can be dropped into any existing musical arrangement. Through current technology, the beat has become a universally exchangeable format.
We hope it will be new way for producers of electronic music to connect through that one universal factor in modern music. The beat!
It will be an opportunity for producers of all kind to tap into and to feed the genre melting-pot that is modern dance music.
Style and content are key to us at Beatblocs. The correct aesthetic both in design and music are vitally important to us and to our users (most of whom we expect to be creative professionals of one kind or another).
Where we live (in Bristol, UK) all around us in the studios and clubs, new genres of music are being created almost every week, some off-shoot of another style splitting off and creating its very own unique style and take. At the end of the day, some new BEAT!
Its organic and exciting… It exactly what we want to help foster on Beatblocs.... Creativity and technique. We encourage the freshest and most innovative Beats, supplied by those who know the scene; our user-base.
By the time you read this, the Beatblocs.com site will be live and running. Hopefully you and others will be be checking out the beats that have been posted and adding to the community with your own rhythms and your opinions and input. It's not just about buying beats, its about sharing and learning, pushing things forward creatively. Its an opportunity to check out new styles and genres as they happen and its an opportunity to add to the melting pot.
Feed the beat!
Dan
I am Dan Berridge. I came up with the Beatblocs concept. I produce music as Broadway Project (www.myspace.com/thebroadwayproject),
One Divided Soul (www.myspace.com/onedividedsoul)
and write music for films and TV ads (www.danberridge.com).
Chris Berridge is the design and development brains behind Beatblocs. He's a successful web designer developer (www.chrisberridge.com).
And Nick Wheeler who is our lovely Java programmer/developer.
Beatblocs is our attempt to create a space that will feed the creative lifestyle for our users and ourselves. Based on our personal experiences (in music and design) and a kind of old-skool hip-hop aesthetic of freedom of expression, style and creativity, we've come up with this idea that is the “Beatblocs Beat Shop and Community”.
Beatblocs is a Beat shop. On the site you can browse and download beat files (Rex/Apple Loops/Wav) that can be dropped into any existing musical arrangement. Through current technology, the beat has become a universally exchangeable format.
We hope it will be new way for producers of electronic music to connect through that one universal factor in modern music. The beat!
It will be an opportunity for producers of all kind to tap into and to feed the genre melting-pot that is modern dance music.
Style and content are key to us at Beatblocs. The correct aesthetic both in design and music are vitally important to us and to our users (most of whom we expect to be creative professionals of one kind or another).
Where we live (in Bristol, UK) all around us in the studios and clubs, new genres of music are being created almost every week, some off-shoot of another style splitting off and creating its very own unique style and take. At the end of the day, some new BEAT!
Its organic and exciting… It exactly what we want to help foster on Beatblocs.... Creativity and technique. We encourage the freshest and most innovative Beats, supplied by those who know the scene; our user-base.
By the time you read this, the Beatblocs.com site will be live and running. Hopefully you and others will be be checking out the beats that have been posted and adding to the community with your own rhythms and your opinions and input. It's not just about buying beats, its about sharing and learning, pushing things forward creatively. Its an opportunity to check out new styles and genres as they happen and its an opportunity to add to the melting pot.
Feed the beat!
Dan
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