Dan Clark

All posts tagged Dan Clark

Sirens of the Sea

SIRENS OF THE SEA!!

We just released our new digital single EP “Sirens of the Sea”! The CD includes remixes from I:Scintilla, Endless Blue, Loss and Killcrop! One original and five remixes are FREE to download on our Sensuous Enemy at Bandcamp account. You can also pick it up from our Sensuous Enemy at Soundcloud account.

Thanks go out to Dan Clark of Listless Works and Eric Oehler of Submersible Studios for recording, mixing and mastering this fabulous single EP for us!

Our sophomore full length CD “Voyager” will be released this November 2013!!

Post by JAI

Award winning composer, vocalist, and superheroine

Casket Recording Booth #1

Casket Recording Booth #1

We recently built a new vocal recording booth under our basement steps, where the band rehearsal room is located. With all the padding, it’s about the size of a casket when you close the door, so I’m glad I like the coziness of enclosed spaces…NOT. John had large bass traps from his studio he brought over and we cut them to fit into the corners of the bottom of the stairs. They are made out of insulation and gauze.  Wait…that’s what a mummy is made out of right?  Hmmm I’m sure I won’t be in there for more than an hour at a time, so I’ll just have to think about it as being ‘headspace’ and it will be a lot easier to not feel clausterphobic.

Speaking of  ‘headspace’ that lil box could also be used for sensory deprivation sessions.  Well whatdya know, that closet will serve two functions!

Casket Recording Booth #2

Casket Recording Booth #2

We recorded some sample backing tracks last week and I think the space is going to work out perfectly for us.  This will save us a lot of time traveling to other cities in order to just record Vox.  Although we love spending time with our recording and producing friends Dan Clark and Wade Alin, time is a rare commodity and most of us understand how valuable it is. We will however still need to record grinding guitars, so I’m sure we’ll make some visits from time to time.

We’re pretty new at all this live recording stuff, so we’re going to need some pointers to make sure we’re doing it correctly.  If you have any suggestions, please let us know and we’ll try to implement them if possible.  Until our next release, we’ll keep plugging away at recording stuff to see what we can come up with!

Related Links:

http://www.audio-production-tips.com/recording-vocals-basics.html#

http://www.homestudiocorner.com/processing-vocals-part-1-recording-the-vocal/

http://www.soundonsound.com/sos/oct98/articles/20tips.html

Post by JAI

Award winning composer, vocalist, and superheroine

We all know someone or a relative of someone who has fought cancer and either survived it or didn’t.  For those who beat it, after enduring chemotherapy, radiation and a host of other torturous treatments, there is always the question in the mind of the cancer survivor…will it come back again?  Cancer is a disease that affects all of us in one way or another.  It’s especially difficult to swallow when it happens to someone who has made such a positive humanitarian social impact.

Electronic/Industrial/Rock music scene promoter, DJ and Rein[Forced] frontman, Jim Semonik is the brains behind the Electronic Saviors compilations. Jim survived stage 2B colorectal cancer in 2008, and then created one of the most successful compilations with 83 musicians, presented in a lovely 8 panel digipak with 16 page booklet titled Electronic Saviors: Industrial Music To Cure Cancer.  This project raised over 20K for Charities.

This new release,  Electronic Saviors 2: Recurrence,  includes 142 artists from all over the world with exclusive tracks from Wisconsin’s very own Sensuous Enemy,  The Dark Clan, Caustic and Null Device,  along with bands Covenant, I:Scintilla, The Gothsicles, God Module, System Syn, Project Pitchfork, Rein[Forced], 16Volt, Ayria, XuberX, Ego Likness, The Azoic, Bella Morte and many more . This incredible project includes beautiful and insightful artwork from Jeff Confer and Samantha Johnson.  The boxed set will be released on May 8th and can be pre-ordered from Metropolis.

“Jim dedicates this body of work to all who have suffered with cancer as well as survivors and loved ones touched by the disease.”

Related Links:

http://metropolis-mailorder.com/product.php?prodnum=MET+777

http://clubinferno.com/events/5382/e-s-2-cd-caustic-sensuous-enemy-dark-clan-null-device

https://www.facebook.com/events/119084264882489/

Post by John Freriks

Programmer, guitarist, geneticist

I was digging through my backup hard drive, and came across some of the original project files for songs off our last 2 releases. So just for fun, I’m going to walk through the parts and give you an inside look at how our tracks come together.

We’ll start with Intentions. Everyone seems to like this track. No two songs are written the same way for us – Sometimes Jai has a melody and lyrics that I build soundscapes around; sometimes I’ll have the backing tracks 90% done before she starts putting words to them; sometimes we just jam until it sounds good (or it doesn’t, we drink heavily, and then quit in dejection.)

Intentions was written over a two week period, which is ridiculously fast for us. We’ll often tinker with a song for months on end (Kali, for instance, took 9 months to complete) so having a track come together so quickly and the results being as good as they were very welcome. We had just recorded three songs for the Parity EP and weren’t happy with one of them. We needed a third track to put out the EP. It turned out to be one of our most popular songs.

Tech stuff: key of A minor, 127 BPM
Gear used:
Access Virus
EXS 24
reFX Nexus
Schecter Hellraiser
Peavey and Mesa Boogie amps

Jai came to me with a recording of her playing piano and singing the first verse. I started with an arpeggiated bass to follow along with the chord progression (Am-F-G-F) – the part started as an arp preset in reFX Nexus, but as the song grew I transcribed the arpeggiator pattern onto a Virus bass patch so I would have more control over certain sections (this is a very common trick I use.)

[soundcloud url=”http://api.soundcloud.com/tracks/37267182″ iframe=”true” /]

Nothing can fill out or wash out a mix like strings. For the into I was going for big and brooding – The string line harmonized with the bass pretty well, but to keep the build up from being too repetitive I ended up cutting the bass out of the first few measures.

[soundcloud url=”http://api.soundcloud.com/tracks/37267190″ iframe=”true” /]

The plinky lead sound is a pair of Virus patches – one is a fuller sound, the other gives the high end some distortion- The verse was MIDI notes drawn onto Logic’s piano roll. The chorus was actually a part that was cut from Whispers and I had always wanted to reuse it somewhere – and it just happened to fit Intentions! The sound is tinny on it’s own, but works in the mix.

Verse

[soundcloud url=”http://api.soundcloud.com/tracks/37267189″ iframe=”true” /]

Chorus

[soundcloud url=”http://api.soundcloud.com/tracks/37267188″ iframe=”true” /]

The intro noises were fun to make. The voice is from the last interview with Lee Harvey Oswald before he was shot – It has nothing to do with the song and I’m not making any statement about whether I think he killed JFK or not. His voice on the lo fi recording sounded cool, and it sounded even better after is was run through a huge reverb and Audio Damage‘s Dr. Device . The other sound is some generic pad run through Audio Damage’s Replicant plugin, then 100% wet through Logic’s Space Designer reverb.

[soundcloud url=”http://api.soundcloud.com/tracks/37267187″ iframe=”true” /]

Guitar – For those of you who don’t know Dan Clark, you should. In addition to his band The Dark Clan, he’s been in Null Device and is currently in Stromkern. He’s recorded and produced Chemlab, Ego Likeness, The Gothsicles, and Caustic among others. And us, of course. What does this have to do with guitar? Well, Dan’s the best guitar player I’ve ever met. Dan uses DragonForce songs as warmup exercises. I should also mention he’s probably the nicest guy you’ll ever meet. Anyways, guitar – I’m a hack on it, so playing in front of Dan was equal parts terror and inspiration. He can hear when you’re gripping the neck too tightly and pulling the strings slightly sharp. He knows if you’re holding the pick wrong for the amount of attack a certain part needs. And he’ll hear this through while the entire mix is playing through his headphones. It’s nuts.

All the parts were played on a Schecter Hellraiser tuned to D Standard, and were recorded through Dan’s Peavy 5150 and Mesa/Boogie Triple Rectifier. If I recall correctly, the verses and solo were on the 5150 and the chorus was the Triple Rec. For the verse I mirrored the low string part, and Dan wrote out a harmony line for me to play over it. I’m glad he did – the harmony moves between consonance and dissonance and ups the tension of the verse.

[soundcloud url=”http://api.soundcloud.com/tracks/37267185″ iframe=”true” /]

The solo (the first I ever wrote no less) is in the A double harmonic scale – I didn’t know this when I was writing it, I just liked the middle eastern feel of the jump between the minor 2nd and major 3rd. It’s double tracked, and you can hear when I fell off time with myself. Dan wrote me in a harmony line and the high notes at the end – more ideas I wouldn’t have thought of on my own, but are the little extra touches that give a song it’s edge.

[soundcloud url=”http://api.soundcloud.com/tracks/37267184″ iframe=”true” /]

Put those all together along with a good beat and some creative flourishes from a ridiculously talented producer, and you’ve got one hell of a track.

[soundcloud url=”http://api.soundcloud.com/tracks/37402118″ iframe=”true” /]
Click the download button to grab the instrumental version

Links:
Sensuous Enemy – Parity on Bancamp.com
Listless Works (Dan’s studio)
The Dark CLan