How To Program Any Synthesizer – now available on Amazon!

 

This book has been 12 months in the making.

Borne of frustration with presets, tutorials and the drudgery of synthesizer programming, this book was written to liberate producers everywhere from the struggle that is synthesizer programming. The feedback received so far has been nothing short of excellent, and I have a sincere belief that it will help you create synthesized sounds that you will fall in love with.

Paperback version

UK: https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/1999600304

USA: https://www.amazon.com/dp/1999600304

Kindle version

UK: https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B07H1ZS514

USA: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07

Canada: https://www.amazon.ca/dp/B07H1ZS514

Why Cosmic Raindance by Cybotron is the most criminally underrated B-side of all time

 

In the late 1970s, in Detroit, there was a local radio show hosted by a DJ called The Electrifying Mojo. He played a mix of soul, funk, new wave, hip hop, rock and electronic music. His passion was letting records speak for themselves, to the music breathe by itself – by playing the tracks in their entirety. No waffle, no interruptions.

All of Techno’s early inventors credit The Electrifying Mojo for opening their ears to a new sound – but one producer in particular, Juan Atkins, cites Mojo’s playing of Kraftwerk as having a significant impact upon his development as an aspiring musician. Whereas Kraftwerk had honed the art of synthesis, Atkins, as a mere teenager, was still learning.

Juan Atkins, along with Richard Davis, subsequently created Alleys Of Your Mind in 1981 – a record known amongst many as one of the first pieces of Detroit Techno ever made, hailed as a classic.

Alleys Of Your Mind, the title track, audibly has huge Kraftwerk influences, most notably the synth-funk and slap-back reverberating vocals. The drums were clearly challenging to create – mostly comprised of a snare that fizzes – the clear result of hours experimenting with white noise shaping.

However, the B-side, Cosmic Raindance, in spite of its lesser fame compared to the A-side, is actually far closer to proto-Techno than its illustrious counterpart – in fact, I would call it one of the most criminally overlooked B-sides of all time. It crackles with otherworldly emotion with a wild, screaming lead that is reminiscent of the acid-drizzled psychedelia of Funkadelic’s Maggot Brain. What truly makes it proto-techno is the constant pulsing of the rhythm, laying down a model that would still be heard in club tracks 35 years later.

The theme that stands out in this record, above all, is the imagery; Deep Space Records, Cosmic Raindance – do you get the idea? Kraftwerk explored the tic-toc of modern technology, whereas Juan and Richard had already begun using cosmology and afrofuturism to define their ethos – a theme, once again, often explored within P-Funk’s mythology.

The simple beauty of this record is that it received heavy play on The Electrifying Mojo’s show, giving Juan and Richard that wonderful, irreplicable experience of hearing their own song on the very radio show that inspired them – a moment of catharsis for two artists who were inspired by the musicians before them to create a beautiful sound from finnicky, rudimentary equipment.

Welcome

My name is Ashley Hewitt. I am the founder of Stereo Output.

It’s been something like 20 years since I first fell in love with electronic music, and Stereo Output is the culmination of that love.

Stereo Output will be an umbrella for various odes to the wonderful phenomenon that is electronic music. This will include books, music, blog posts and more. It’s going to be a long, interesting journey, and I don’t honestly know where it will end up.

With Stereo Output, my aim is to examine electronic music and its constituent parts, solving the equation of its beauty without destroying its magic.

I hope you’re on this journey with me. If you’d like to take part, please sign up to my mailing list here.

In the meantime, stay tuned. I’ll be in touch.