Author: jarome

  • 10 Best Things We’ll Say To Our Grandchildren

    Wired’s 10 Best Things We’ll Say To Our Grandchildren:

    1. Back in my day, we only needed 140 characters.

    2. There used to be so much snow up here, you could strap a board to your feet and slide all the way down.

    3. Televised contests gave cash prizes to whoever could store the most data in their head.

    4. Well, the screens were bigger, but they only showed the movies at certain times of day.

    5. We all had one, but nobody actually used it. Come to think of it, I bet my LinkedIn profile is still out there on the Web somewhere.

    6. English used to be the dominant language. Crazy, huh?*

    7. Our bodies were made of meat and supported by little sticks of calcium.

    8. You used to keep files right on your computer, and you had to go back to that same computer to access them!

    9. Is that the new iPhone 27G? Got multitasking yet?

    10. I just can’t get used to this darn vat-grown steak. Texture ain’t right.

    * Translation: “English used to be the dominant language. Crazy, huh?”

    http://www.wired.com/culture/culturereviews/magazine/17-10/st_best

  • Information rich, attention poor

    An interesting article in the Globe And Mail recently discussed how technology and the digital revolution has created a corresponding scarcity of attention. In becoming information-rich, we have become attention-poor.

    Quite extraordinary how fast the technology has accelerated actually as this amazing video I posted illustrates… It is as if a house that cost half a million dollars in 1964 could be bought today for a nickel, or if life expectancy had been reduced from 75 years to four minutes.

    And with almost all of the world’s codified knowledge at your fingertips, why should you spend increasingly scarce attention loading up your own mind just in case you may some day need this particular fact or concept? Far better, one might argue, to access efficiently what you need, when you need it.

    The concern is that for now, the just-in-time approach seems to be narrowing peripheral intellectual vision and thus reducing the serendipity that has been the source of most radical innovation of the past, when brilliant minds studied concepts for hours before gaining their important insights.

    The article suggest that our challenge is to adapt, and then to evolve, in a world where there continues to be an exponential increase in the supply of information relative to the supply of human attention.

    I have certainly found this to be a challenge as an instructor for material that is ever changing.
    More in depth discussion regarding this can be found after the article:

    www.theglobeandmail.com/news/opinions/information-rich-and-attention-poor/article1285001

  • Improving vocal performance

    An important part of my role as a music producer is to get the best possible performance from artists in the studio both technically and emotionally.

    I find I often fall short in this area though because unless they are professionals who have done large live performances for many years, most vocalists are often unable to deliver to their full potential. This doesn’t necessarily mean they don’t give great performances, it just means they could have done even better.

    This is usually because the vocalist is not in optimal physical shape. Your health and physical fitness level has a huge impact on your vocal performances in the studio, and of course live. Sure, how comfortable you are with letting go and giving your all emotionally in the studio is also very important.  But to get a great performance, you really need to have a lot of power to deliver strong, clean vocal phrases. Without this power and energy, your performances will sound weak and shaky, quivering, particularly on the ends of longer words or sustained melodies and this drastically reduces the quality and impact of the performance.

    Studio tools and tricks can rarely correct these problems effectively, so that’s why it’s so important for singers to keep in top physical shape if they want to give the best performance they’re capable of live and in the studio. Eat healthy food that gives you lots of energy, and adopt a regular cardio exercise routine at least 4 times a week.

    Another recommendation, in addition to warming up properly before a performance and singing regularly in a choir, is opera training, or a great vocal coach such as Brennan Barrett, to help you get as much power as you can without exerting yourself more than you have to, and to assisting with effective breathing techniques that will give you better phrasing and power in the right places.

    A producer can only do so much, and in my case, I can work a lot of miracles to make you sound great no matter what, but ultimately, I can only use the best you give me! Make sure that really is your best, as you never know who will hear your finished performance, or how far it will spread.
    Recording vocals in studio

  • 1912 Prediction of the decline of the news media

    “There are good and bad newspapers…Those who play for their own little selfish ends give no true light to the world and perish of their own futility”
    Abdu’l-Bahá
    , New York, 1912

    Abdul Baha in North America
    Abdu’l-Bahá in America

  • My latest production: Medieval Europe & the Crusades

    Last year, I edited video and did all the post production and consulting for an educational DVD, ‘Medieval Times in China and Beyond’. I recently completed the companion DVD for this series, Medieval Europe & the Crusades:

    If your interested in these DVD’s which come with detailed teachers guides, visit TeachingForThinking.com

  • Stevie Wonder: 1,2,3 Sesame Street Song with talkbox

    If only learning was this cool, and the music this good for children these days!

  • Herbie Hancock plays Fairlight CMI, Quincy Jones watches

    Music Legend Herbie Hancock plays Fairlight CMI, Quincy Jones watches. Great insights after the funky grooves about music and technology…

  • Tron 2 aka Tron Legacy trailer HD

    Oh, man, this is just so beyond words! So I’ll stop trying to use them. Tron Legacy:

    Don’t let the Disney name distract from the fact that this is going to be the coolest thing since the Matrix. Coming to theaters 2011 in Digital 3D. Filming in Vancouver, BC!

    Rumours are that electronic music duo Daft Punk is involved in the music…

  • Roller hockey bruisin

    My latest roller hockey bruisin looks a lot like a tattoo. I don’t even remember how I got it at the last game…

    More hockey photos on Facebook if for some reason you care.

  • Fitness video shoot at the beach

    I am working on post production for a DVD for some fitness products by Zenzation and they also asked me to assist with the production, so I had Tobin Smith work on the video shoot with me and found a location on the beach for a nice background:

    There was a lot more seaweed and junk that the day before when I checked the location, and all we had as this kids rake to clean it…

    We used a wireless headset mic to avoid background noise and get a clean sound while the instructors were doing a lot of movement. It sounded great despite extraneous noise. At the start of the shoot the city was cutting down trees, luckily that didn’t last long enough to kill the shoot…