Posted by jamesfrankel on 28th June 2008
I am thrilled to announce that we have been working very hard over the past few months at SoundTree to create a unique new education online store that offers educators the absolute BEST prices on all aspects of music technology. The SoundTree Online Store has over 200 “Classroom Tested, Teacher Approved” products that have been hand-selected with the educator in mind. Aside from our guaranteed lowest prices, we are also the only online store to offer free shipping on all orders (except outside of the continental US). No minimum purchase required!
I know that this seems like a shameless commercial, but I can’t tell you how happy I am with this new resource for educators. I urge you to log on to the store today to check it out. Everything is in stock and ready to be shipped - including Kaossilators! If you would like to subscribe to SoundWAVES - the free email newsletter from SoundTree - click HERE and you’ll receive monthly notices about product specials. We’ve got a wonderful podcasting bundle for Mac & PC users!
Start shopping today!
Posted in SoundTree, Cool Links, Website Reviews, Music Technology | 2 Comments »
Posted by jamesfrankel on 14th June 2008

Korg has done it again. A truly remarkable new product was unveiled this past week at the LIMS Show in London (the equivalent of the NAMM Show here is the US). The Nano Series from Korg is a collection of three highly portable USB Controllers that I truly believe will make an important impact on mobile music making. The first controller is the nanoKEY: a two-octave keyboard (with mini keys of course) that is a perfect companion to a laptop. Exactly the same width and height of my MacBook Pro. The other controllers include nanoPAD: an pad controller with twelve pads and an X/Y touch pad - perfect for creating expressive drum patterns, and the nanoKONTROL: a mappable control surface with a transport controls, sliders and knobs that are a perfect compliment to all DAW software packages.
I have had the pleasure of beta testing all three of the controllers and they are AWESOME! I am not sure at all (scout’s honor) what the pricing is and when Korg plans on releasing them here in the US. I strongly recommend Googling Korg Nano Series and reading some of the many blog postings from the UK. It is quite evident that they received a very enthusiastic welcome at LIMS and I am sure that they will be a hit here in the US. Imagine having three great controllers that can easily be carried in your standard laptop bag. I am thrilled that Korg is bringing these to the market - and that they are the first company to do so.
Posted in Gear Review | 4 Comments »
Posted by jamesfrankel on 10th June 2008
Like many other people I know, I have been staring through the window at the iPhone since it first hit the shelves last year. Although almost every one of my friends and both of my siblings have one, and sadly I do not. First it was because I had a two-year contract with Verizon, then it was because my job required that I have a Windows compatible smart phone. This made it even more difficult for me to read about the new iPhone on the Wired Magazine website, and perhaps more importantly, the fact that Moo Cow Music is releasing an application for the iPhone called simply “Band“. This is the from the Wired story:
All instruments will be usable in the same song, while a multi-touch interface will allow up to five notes or samples to be played at the same time. Animated keys and strings will appear to move when activated, and any part can be edited, erased or overdubbed. An included metronome keeps the beat to keep each part on time.
The application looks really cool, and very user friendly. I can just imagine what this will do for home music making and the students that we teach. Check out their video on YouTube.
What do you think? Will there come a day when we will ask our students to pull out their iPhones in our music classes to make music?
Posted in Gear Review | 3 Comments »
Posted by jamesfrankel on 9th June 2008
Korg recently announced that there is a way to double the loop length on the Korg Kaossilator to four measures with a hidden code. Here is the skinny from the Korg Kaossilator website:
KAOSSILATOR “Easter Egg” Lets You Record Four Measure Patterns
KAOSSILATOR does double duty! Yes, those uber-clever designers snuck in a way to record FOUR measure phrases! You can access this capability by holding down the TAP/BPM and LOOP REC/PLAY buttons while turning on your KAOSSILATOR. Once you see “DLY” on the screen, let go. The KAOSSILATOR then allocates its undo memory to recording memory. Once you see program “L.00”, hold those buttons again to enter the length mode, and turn the dial clockwise to select a length of “16” steps instead of the previous maximum of “8”.
Voila! Four measure patterns for twice the enjoyment!
This has some pretty big implications for educators as well all know that four measure phrases are the building blocks of almost all music. If you have a Kaossilator, I urge you to check this out. I tried it mine this morning and it worked perfectly. The only feature that you lose when you try this is the ability to undo the previous loop - a small price to pay if you ask me.
Don’t have a Kaossilator? Don’t worry. SoundTree will be receiving a large shipment of them very soon! Give Eric Davis a call at 1 (800) 963-8733 x6674 and order yours today. The price is $199.99 and we’ll even throw in free shipping!!!

Posted in Uncategorized | 2 Comments »
Posted by jamesfrankel on 5th June 2008
I received an email yesterday from Bill Bauer to join a group on the Apple Learning Interchange network called Music and the Macintosh. There are already 35 members, and the group includes a wonderful collection of experts.
If you use a Mac to make any type of music, I strongly urge you to join the group as well. It is free and only takes a few moments to set up an account. There are also quite a few other group on the ALI that you might be interested in as well. As my friend Rob always says, See you on the circuits!
Posted in Website Reviews, Music Technology | No Comments »
Posted by jamesfrankel on 2nd June 2008
ProTools is the industry standard digital audio workstation software - every major recording studio in the country runs it. Every ProTools users know that when Apple upgraded their operating system to Leopard, their favorite software was left out in the cold. For the past few months, many Mac-based ProTools users I know have asked me when the Leopard update would be coming. It’s been frustrating to not have an answer for them. Frustrating, until now. Digidesign announced on Friday that their ProTools fix for the Leopard Mac OS is now available for download on their site. While not the final version, it will get you up and running. I am sure that you heard thousands of audio engineers cheer last week when the announcement was made. Log on to the Digidesign support site today and download the update. Special thanks to Marc Schonbrun for bringing this to my attention!
Posted in Gear Review, Music Technology | No Comments »