Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Released Harry Up Harry part 1




Uploaded on Jamendo and Last.FM Hurry Up Harry part 1, first record of three in Harry's breakbeat-trip/hip hop-chillout saga.

It's a series of songs clocking 2 minutes, except a couple of 30 seconds ghosts tracks and Rusty Nail / Cruisin' in El Monte "twin tracks" (one 1:00 @ 180 bpm, the other 3:00 @ 60 bpm). Scheme is very strict and the overall impression is a fast, brief record, with a series of short hooks one after the other.

The trilogy is dedicated to my friend - drummer in Death in Venice - Marco Bianchi aka Mark Winnipeg. This first part is about his hyperactive youth, expressed through an hysterical travel among California, Panama and Jamaica.

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Update to HD for three clips on Youtube

I rendered again Belief: Wrath, Belief: Greed and Thar Desert in HD 720p and uploaded on Hox Vox Box channel. I also added some variations.


Belief: Greed got no blue tint now, and it's tighter to original "Peyote" animation.



In Belief: Wrath I added sparkles when hammers land on the anvil and a couple of motion blur fx. Few and small retouches.



Last was retitled Thar Desert 2.0 because I added circa 150 new animations. Essentially is the old Thar Desert populated by many other moving elements.


Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Jeanne d'Arc clip is online now

Just uploaded last videoclip from Étoile, Jeanne d'Arc. This time I worked with paint effects on some footages about Crusades, Jeanne d'Arc and east europe (looking like a little middle east) singers. Track is, briefly, about the juxtaposition of western guitar arpeggios and middle east vocals.

My intention was putting together women from both sides in Cusades: a western woman, the "étoile" in this case, which dared to act like a male soldier in a demented inquisition environment; and docile eastern singers. They got no moments of glory followed by dying on a pyre, but a continuous subordination, so actually it's a pondering about women's troubles in western or eastern world. Different ways and degrees of cruelty, same patriarchism.

Clip simply follow this scheme and adds a movie picture support. I needed just a couple of days to finish it as it's a "punk" expression in videomaking. This time I tried to catch the result on the fly, without exceeding in refurbishing every single frame. Not a draft, but a quicker language. And a different subject, it wasn't the right place to unleash some After Effects frenzy quirknesses. At the opposite, I worked on slow motion footages, to achieve a relaxed but a little gloomy mood.

I found quite cruel in the last sequence to put side by side Jeanne d'Arc in flames and a smiling singer. It was not intended as a revenge of muslim on a christian, but the cruelty in life itself. While one is dying, the other is enjoying his art.

Monday, October 5, 2009

Зимний дворец recommended videoclip of the day at Jamendo

I received an email from Jamendo telling me Зимний дворец videoclip is recommended clip on their blog today. This is the review:

Hox Vox is a progressive rock project by Italian artist Gianluca Missero. His track “Zimniy Vorets (the Winter Palace)” is an experimental piano piece evoking the Russian revolution.

The video that goes with it is an interesting assemblage of old footage from the early 20th century and animated film made with collages, set in the Winter Palace in St Petersburg. Not your typical pop music video; then again, Hox Vox’s stuff isn’t your typical pop music either.

Enjoy the weird atmosphere emanating from the whole thing below. This is taken from the album “Outskirt“.

Source blog page is HERE


Hell if the guy was scared the music was too avantgarde! :-)) The small, but proportionally decent feedback says that dance people escaped as it was logical to expect, and the few adventurous listeners had a taste.

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

I made a videoclip for IfSounds

This time I had a new esperience: first time I make a clip for another band.

My friend Dario Lastella sent me some DVDs with IfSounds footages about Midsummer Raving, a track enclosed in their (then) namesake record If, a collection of songs from '93 to 2005.
They changed in these days their name from If to IfSounds, enrolled a couple of new bandmates (for singer Elena it's a coming back, plus a new drummer) and decided to give another spin to Midsummer Raving.

To me it was a double challenge: first of all, I had to assemble footages shooted without a storyboard. Second, I usually make videoclips from my most unlistenable / avant tracks (quite masochist, under a commercial point of view); while this track is a melancholic ballad about loneliness and abandon, with no bass nor drums - just voice, guitar, piano and viola. Very melodic and pop.

I pointed on a juxtaposition between B/W and color blasts by still images, slow editing with fades (just one dry cut in 6 minutes), a classical multi-splitted screen. Simple and plain.
I added a drummer video sequence, despite there are none in this track, as Ifsounds with this clip wanted also to present the new line-up enclosing new drummer Enzo Bellocchio.

Well, this is the result, I'm quite happy with it.


Sunday, September 13, 2009

New Videoclip from Outskirt: Зимний дворец (Zimniy Dvorets)

after Intro, from Etoile, I finished another video and released within september!
This time I went back to Outskirt, and chosen Зимний дворец (Zimniy Dvorets, the Winter Palace).
An historical theme: 1905 St. Petersburg bloody sunday. Subject is the Winter Palace, empty after Tsar Nicholas II leaved for Alexander Palace because of that massacre: an outskirts zone. Despite being in St. Petersburg center and rich as a royal manor can be, it was empty like a desert for a while. Interesting, when there are mutations.

Video tells about this story, showcase the palace, outside and inside, then steer to history with original footages - very bad coded, I had to struggle for half an afternoon to achieve a good acceptable quality - and pics, all taken from Wikipedia, pianist comprised.

Clip have a strange old russia taste, not communist nor tsar-like. A generical first last century russian scenario. And it seems more like a documentary than a videoclip, exactly what I aimed to right from the start.

Of course I added the famous stairs sequence in The Battleship Potemkin by Eisenstein, as it was what inspired me that endless scales hook in this song (the other, more romantic classical - opening and closing the track - was after listening the nth time The Carnival of Animals by my beloved Camille Saint-Saëns).

Saturday, September 5, 2009

New Videoclip from Étoile: Intro

I just finished to render and upload on Youtube Intro videoclip. This time I found right tech info on HD movies. Master is in HDTV PAL 1080p (1920x1080), but I rendered it at 720p (1280x720) to follow the exact Youtube HD standard.
No loss of detail as After Effects picks from same original files and redraw from scratch all frames. Rendering time about 2,5 hours. Online HD version of Intro videoclip is broadcast quality, in fact.
I think this is last video I assemble with AE: it's a madness make anim sync with audio. Because you can't hear anything while scrobbling the timeline. It's a powerful tool to make single sequences with FX, but not to manage a whole project, better go for Premiere or the like.


Subject of video is swines. I like them, they're clever and it's a stupid common place they love to squelch in the dirt. Vietnamese little pigs are clean like cats. Video is an operatic dadaist inferno - where pigs are menacingly main characters. Not an happy end (as it's my favorite mood), but everybody knows what's a swine destiny (no gory images, anyway). I think also a good video introduction for a live show, to let the people get at once what's the overall climate.


Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Complete Control is ready

I finished yesterday afternoon (and sent to Lurholm) my track for last Apskaft covers compilation, it's Complete Control by Clash.

I followed more or less the original hooks as usual, and modified, enlarged, shrinked, cutted away parts 'til the result is barely similar to original song.

Briefly, it's composed by three movements: first one reminds Kim Thayil workout, the second is circus sludge, then third is a sudden turn to a latin with Trent D'Arbyesque vocals, and back to the first two movement.

Sunday, August 16, 2009

First reviews at Garageband

Well, of course I copy and paste the most accomplishing :-) ) People came back from holidays and had a dozen of reviews at Garageband for Behind The Curtain in Experimental Rock contest.
Now it's 57th on 129, a little above half chart, with a 3.1 score. A little better than Laguardia 3:00 AM (final score 3.0, sound logical :-D).

Song was Track of the day in July 25th.



REVIEWS

wow
interesting guitar harmonies. This is a crazy ass song, cant really wrap my head around it. Crazy guitar work, not much else to the song obviously. weird drum sampler used instead of real drums. One of the weirdest songs ive heard on here. definately experimental rock>? not sure what to classify this as.
Extra Credit: Guitars.
This is where math and rock meet
This is where math and rock meet, and it's messy. But through all the craziness there is a good melody and it's catchy. These guys are tight. I notices after the song ended I was kinda holding my breathe - cool.

Extra Credit: Guitars, Drums, Bass, Melody, Originality.
wow
amazing musicians.very very tight. sounds a little like primus. very original. i think i just had a convulsion.

Extra Credit: Guitars, Originality, Grooviest Rhythm.
Intersting and progressive
Guitar sound should be improved. Everything else in a mix is ok. Although it's complicated it has a memorable melody which is a good thing. Only problem is that there is no some chill out part. It's on and on all the time. Although nice shift around 1:50. It sure is interesting and original. Should have some more changes and dynamics. But considering it's shorter than 3 min it's ok.

Extra Credit: Bass, Originality.
Blipblop, a jazz for spazzez
What the f..!! did i just step into a japanese arcadegame??
Walking slapp-bass, skilled guitars, and good drummer = much creative jazzjamming. Dont know what to say? Its to much! hehe well for most people anyways. It changes the songcostym to fast and often, around 1:55 is the only melody i can remember 10sec after listning. Well it all depends on what your plans are for this song? No MTV hit i promise ;) haha. As for the for musiclovers its a goodvibe tune, making smiles appear.

Extra Credit: Guitars, Production, Originality.
Wowza
This is definitely out there. It is way interesting though. These are some crazy good musicians from a physical standpoint. Fingers and hands must be flying constantly. I could go for a bit more of a mood range, though. It is the same energy almost throughout the entire thing. Really good job though! The Ending is sweet.
ok
Very trippy. It sounds too artificial though. The midi sounding bass kinda ruins it. Very jazzy. A more natural recording will do this song justice. Sounds like a computer game meets primus.

Extra Credit: Originality.
50/50
Touch of primus sound in there. Would like it better if it was live instruments instead of so electronic sounding. As it is, unsure. Can heard the potential though.
Well, sound very pleasant. Many extra credits for originality, production (very clean, I used dry setups on Guitar Rig) and execution. A couple of guys just hated it and gave me for sure one star, so probably the average opinion in people who liked it (sometimes reviewer are not dealing with "their" genre(s), and I wonder why) is around 4.5.

I think this is quite positive!

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

Summary of activities


Many things are on the go, maybe too much.

  • On Garageband still no reviews, seems like in august most of reviewers are on the beach. Meanwhile, I continue in doin' mine to earn another contest entry.
  • I'm a little stuck with Maya 3D. The usual wall of complexity at 25% of self-instruction, mostly based on the great number of new info (brain refuse to fill in further, it's "bored"). I need it for my job and next videos. Anyway I learnt basics in modeling and rigging, which is the most important thing. I've seen I can re-use my old bevelling basic solids Lightwave tecnique, and add new sculpting features to a defined shape. I prefer to go into deep with these two parts then start with FX (liquids, sparkles, fluids, mass scenes management and so on).
  • I have to do a Clash cover (Complete Control from first record) for Apskaft, we're doin' a compilation based on Rolling Stones top 500. As usual we random assigned tracks, I had to choose among Who's Baba O'Riley, Clash's Complete Control and a song by Springsteen. I eliminated Springsteen immediately :-D, so I was uncertain between clash and one of the very few songs by Who I like, but Clash was nearest to me, I listened a lot to that record (and to London Calling or Sandinista!)
  • Collaborations. I'm keeping contact with various musicians to make a team-up record in the next future, but I'm too busy to start anything. Good luck they are all calm, pacific and patient people :-D
  • I found a NING group pretty interesting, Progrock.ning, and joined immediately. After a half dozen NINGs by electronic musicians, I can talk about avant & prog with a few nice people. They inserted three songs of mine (intro, Behind the Curtain and Møre og Romsdal) in the main playlist, and we started to exchange info and opinions via forum or shoutbox. Friendly, and freaky as prog deserves. Well I'm passing most of the NING-time :-D there.

Friday, July 24, 2009

Behind the Curtain at Garageband contest.

Today I entered Garageband's Experimental Rock contest with Behind the Curtain (from Étoile). I was unsettled on what genre, as this song is progressive but also math rock, a friend of mine told me it's quite kingcrimsonian, and KC are one of the biggest example in oblique music ranging from avantgarde to prog or simple mechanic rock.

Zappa is one of the Big artists suggested by Garageband to define "Experimental Rock", with Mogwai (!). Really, can't see anything in common. But seems to me I'm more zappian than similar to Satriani, suggested by Instrumental Rock (another hypotesis I pondered on, but left after this evidence).

OK, cross my fingers and let's see what's happening! Wooooohoooo!

Thursday, July 9, 2009

Étoile - world & symphonic progressive meets kraut rock - is out!


Fourth release by Hox Vox, it's a concept album about stars - both intended as prima ballerinas and celestial bodies - and their issues.
Genre is a series of mixes with world music, symphonic progressive, a bit of contemporary and kraut electronics, always with the free approach of Rock in Opposition tradition (from Zappa to Henry Cow): sometime resulting in complex structures with mindbending pairings of melodies and subtle detuned arrangments.

Étoile start with a Residents-like intro sung by a couple of real pigs, then a piece of math/art rock, sounding like a too dry death metal. Then from Rhythmbox the record begins wedging prog, contemporary, world and electronics.

Thursday, May 28, 2009

Updates: new record, new band

I made a song for a cover album by Apskaft. We decided to remake "Spice" by Spice Girls (plus a couple of bonus tracks), and we random assigned tracks to 12 bands. My song was Mama, and I made an industrial-goin'-to-japanese-naive-and-back avant-rock (almost unrecognizable) track.

Record is called Apskaft presents: Spice and is uploaded at Last.FM, plus I enclosed it in ./root: the singles compilation of singles by Hox Vox.

Meanwhile I started new sessions for Étoile, my new record.
This time I'll have a couple of bandmates side by side, they're Gert Breitenkamp (long-experienced drummer) and Sami Hotakainen (whose electronic solo project is Hotsam). We're starting to exchange tracks and refine the scheme I made 'til now.

We are trying to see if we work well together: if the experience will be positive (I think so) we join as a trio, so Hox Vox will be my solo side project and the main activity will be in this band.

Sunday, March 15, 2009

I released Das Chamäleon today

3d release by Hox Vox project, Das Chamäleon is a 5 track EP - about mutant music, obtained through bizarre pairings or juxtaposing uneven genres.
Everything on this record is made by me, cover included (except some crowd cheering samples in Plastic Boots).



Tracks description:

  • Springbound is an electronic/IDM number. I think sometimes its melodies remind The Gasman style, I like his work so this is a consequent fact.
  • Plastique Boots is a fake live act between white reggae and punk rock. Track is very basic, I resisted to add another guitar or some atmospheric pads as I needed a simple but crisp phase between Springbound and Entr'Acte.
  • Entr’acte - inspired by famous Renè Clair movie - puts together electronics and latin. Song is based on an opposition between two solutions in melting cold electronics with a warm melody.
  • Cockroach got the darker Residents influences plus a slow and harsh fusion bass guitar, this is a "dual" song as Entr'acte, but this time it's based on a root melody played first straight then reversed, with different arrangements.
  • Das Chamäleon starts in a funky fashion and developes a series of themes usually considered as incongruous, being the manifesto of whole record: jazz, avantprog, latino à la Santana, post-rock, funk again. Song closing got the best bassline I've conjured in my tiny carrier.

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Back on net

My ADSL works again, so let's summarize what's happened meanwhile.

Endlessly looking for a job in a very hard recession, I'm recording my last record. It's composed of five pieces: first four tracks are almost finished, now I'm working on last one. It's very complex and twisted, so I wonder as usual if I'm goin' too baroque or - worst - quite wanky.
(I don't want to say titles as I can change them on the go, or even 5 minutes before upload; so better be vague)

I already made album's cover, so I only need to finish last song, go back to final arrangments on first four songs, and make last maniac analysis before upload and see if there's feedback.
I think I'll subscribe last song of record to Garageband experimental rock contest if the result will be what I got in my mind. Can't say "exactly" because the track as I said up here is quite zigzagging so it's difficult to imagine all the details in an overall view. This could result in a drastic simplification, but I take this option as very far.

Slowly LaGuardia climb up the charts in Garageband, got a 3.2 score now and it's about at half way in all-times progressive charts (#1,015 of 2,167), but sadly it's only #50 on 66 in active Prog Contest. Still I think it was better subscribe it on Experimental rock contest, but I was a newbie and didn't get the situation.

Monday, February 23, 2009

Future plans

I took a long rest after Thar desert videoclip: I was really overhelmed after three videos in one month - and without a break, I started to work on clips right after Outskirt's end.
In these vacation days I still was thinking to music, some new songs came in my mind, and forgot as well (except one, which will be the first I'll work on). I think what I forgot was not so impressive, resulting in kind of filter for bad material. I mean, thinking this way it's at least conforting.

This time I would make a less eclectic record.
For many reasons:
  • few people can listen to a whole record if it's made of mazurkas, death metal, classical, pop, funky, electronics, punk, general absurdities... the average listener likes one or two... maybe three (not very) different genres.
  • having more than a musical identity result in a vague global identity. People can't remember You, it's the same dynamics in advertising, unfocused=forgettable.
  • I could say I don't care about the previous two points, as I play for my pleasure so if You don't like it, listen to another musician :-D. But I myself want to make a record more compact, and go into deep in a single genre.
It's hard to decide what genre. I think I'll finish to split my ideas on smaller units, like Eight-Bit Deboned which is less than 18 minutes.

Monday, February 16, 2009

Another 2 Awards on Garageband for LaGuardia, 3:00 A.M.

Yes, this time it happened something I couldn't imagine: my composition style impressed reviewers as they massively voted LaGuardia, 3:00 A.M. as

Best Programming overall, week of 16Feb2009

and, consequently,

Best Programming in Progressive Rock, week of 16Feb2009

I'm very proud about this fact, there are many keys to analyze it. Many listeners hate the plastic sound: they called "sounding like midi", referring to the fact I used willfully very basic sounds - bordering GM - in that and other songs on Outskirt, but they perceive as bad (or better: not very cool) result; or - worst - that's an error in choosing samples. They didn't get they're not samples, I used just three in whole Outskirt :-D Anyway, somebody punished me remarking the fact it's "programmed". I'm not so dumb I didn't get it. Somebody else, instead, found it's a positive feature in my music.

So seems like people, for instance, believe real bass is a midi score when it's played tightly and with plastic amplification, and can't hear the difference from another song with a VST bass emulator... or they even believe VST bass is a real bass (or the opposite), so they're totally faked. It opens a wide array of opportunities.

But going back in theme, giving an award to programming means that people perceive it as a coherent work; whether they like it or not, music sounds reasonable and having a logic underneath.

This is important as I had a precise feedback on my work's reliability. I don't really aim to be a rockstar, as I know I'm moving in an avantgarde context, despite there are listenable - not mainstream - melodies in many songs of mine, so I got it that my genre is about 0,1% of world's listeners taste. I mean, the best in this area is a Big Badass if he can sell 5000 copies of his record :-D.
No, I point to a very small group of people around the world who share my ideas. And hopefully find into that number some people are making music in total freedom like me, so we can exchange our tracks and experiences.

Let's see what's next.

Thursday, February 12, 2009

LaGuardia, 3:00 A.M. "Track of the Day" at Garageband

Despite it's in Progressive Rock contest, and probably should stay better in Experimental Rock (but I already had first reviews so I gotta go on) LaGuardia, 3:00 A.M. was elected Progressive Rock Track of the Day on february 8th.

Here's the badge with link:




And now let's hope I got better reviews than last two :-(( One said it seems videogame music, (very interesting carrier opportunity, but wasn't what this guy meant); the other "hold music"... Jeez!

Actually Rockstar's life is very hard nowadays: blood, sweat & tears!!!

Friday, February 6, 2009

HVB - 3rd videoclip: Thar Desert


Yesterday afternoon I modified last tiny details and saved master file for Thar Desert, 3rd videoclip from an Outskirt track.

This time I worked on a more ordinary videoclip concept, but I couldn’t just trace out. I recorded by a viewcam me playing Thar Desert and extracted a discreet number of frames (a nightmare cutting them out, really), then assembled again in animated sequence form.

Alberta Marchiori gave me pictures she shooted in Egypt last December, so I made a great use of them to create the environment and some absurdities (as usual).

The result is obviously grotesque as I still believe in The Residents / Frank Zappa / Pere Ubu and share at 101% their nothing-is-sacred approach.



Saturday, January 17, 2009

HVB - Belief: Greed videoclip online


Belief: Greed videoclip is OK, I uploaded it in Youtube Hox Vox Box channel.

I worked on a video of mine which won a couple of animation contest prizes in first 90s, called "Peyote". The strange process was 1) clean the video like it was done nowadays 2) add animation part missing and create... an aged film aspect, like it was an old documentary film. :-D Seems strage but the real video damages were very bad, the computer-generated are somewhat pleasant, they look like vintage but without destroy too much the footage.

Plot is about a peyote experience by a late 60s hippie on mexican mesa. I think is a good companion for Belief: Greed, as song and images are both dealing with psychedelic (but song is more aptly tagged as avantprog/rock in opposition).



Thursday, January 15, 2009

HVB - Working on two new videoclips


In these days I'm doing a fierce battle with Garageband technicians to solve a problem about a double subscription. It was my fault, I made a mess between iLike and Garageband: didn't get I was wrong making artist page in iLike, and then another on Garageband...
I should do that ONLY on Garageband. Then iLike build automatically a copy of info and music. I'm upset but mostly with myself.

Back to my battle, they have only to change my definitive band account from Hox Vox 2 (temporary name to permit deletion of othe band account) to Hox Vox.
I can't submit songs to contests and radios as I don't want feed confusion. It's from December 12 I'm writing dozen of email, but delete a couple of letters from a name via database query seems a very hard chase to accomplish.

While I'm waiting for the miracle, I'm working on a couple of videoclips. The one for Belief: Greed is almost finished, maybe I'll close and upload tonight.

The other clip is for Thar Desert: I'm stuck with a missing camera cable, but I'm going to solve it this afternoon thanks to Cianoiz. Tomorrow morning I can work on that.

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

HVB - Belief: Wrath videoclip online


I just finished first videoclip from Outskirt, and uploaded to my new Hox Vox Box channel on Youtube.

I've chosen Belief: Wrath because that anti-song (which I tag as "grindcore classical") was very apt to a sarcastic point of view about live concerts. I was always surprised how people are totally mad during them, but calm and serious just before and after. :-D

I mean, it's more noticeable than people disguised in carnival... seems like they were waiting for eons to give vent to their need of raising against normal boring lifestyle. It sound me as a clear pent-up driven expression.

While I respect it, I got the right to kid it. I used a mixed technique (die-cuts in the usual way but also 2D puppet which gives movements a gummy elasticity) so the result is very near to Terry Gilliam's (of Monthy Python) animations, it has the same "Max Ernst meets Tex Avery" taste.

Probably frenzy animation rhythm override music in itself, I mean it tends to steal the lead role; as the music is mechanical and obsessive, so it goes on the back. Not the steel snare, of course, it stick in your cranium as a nail. You can't forget it.

I think it's exactly what I wanted: a video not confortable, but funny all the same.


Hox Vox Box: my new video channel on Youtube

As I was at the end of Belief: Wrath videoclip, I opened a Youtube channel, called Hox Vox Box (a little cacophonic, but very modular so I like it).

According to the name I created a logo, a carton box with some blue (my favorite color) stars coming out. I love ochre + warm blue (with a little % of yellow in it) pairing, so I didn't spend too much time searching for right colors. That's what I like in a solo project: nobody disagree :-D.



I'll use it like a TV channel logo, superimposing it in classical position - on the right corner down.

Now the page is a little basic, with a tiled background with the name of the channel, but I think few more will be done as YouTube pages' scheme is quite rigid, with few customization possibilities.
Seems like You can change box colors but not shapes, or put a texture behind a title area: just have a background, and not bigger than 256 KB).

Anyway, after a couple of days needed to make the channel start, now it's ready to fill with videos.