BAYU WIRAWAN (KING JAZZ) MASTERPIECES

FOREVER "KING JAZZ" MASTEPIECING

Archive for the ‘DIGITAL AUDIO RECORDING’ Category

Newer Entries »

What is Digital Audio?

Filed under: DIGITAL AUDIO RECORDING,KNOWLEDGEMENT — Tag: , — KING JAZZ (Bayu Wirawan) @ 10.16

What is Digital Audio?

It would be difficult for anyone who watches TV or reads the news to avoid the constant message that the world is going digital, and that digital is better. Digital audio is better than other audio, digital video is better than other video, etc. If you are like a lot of us, you are wondering just what digital audio is, and whether it really is better. The following information should give you a clearer idea of what digital audio is and what it is good for.

The dictionary defines “audio” as “audible sound reproduced mechanically”. Like so many dictionary definitions, this leads to a new question: what, exactly, is sound? We all know it when we hear it, but what is it?

In its simplest terms sound is just a vibration that is transmitted through the air to our ears. Most of us have put our hand on a mechanical device that is vibrating and felt the vibration. Normally we also hear the vibration as it affects the air around us. Sound “waves” are successive areas of air compression or rarefaction. The speed of sound is simply the speed at which those areas of compression and rarefaction pass through the atmosphere.

Think of what happens when you hit a drum. The air directly under the drumhead is compressed. Next to the area of compression there must be an area with less air- an area of rarefication. This is caused by the drumhead bouncing back up. In fact, the drumhead will vibrate back and forth several times, creating a series of areas that are compressed next to areas that are rarefied.

The areas of compressed and rarefied air move out from the drumhead just like ripples on a pond. We call this a sound wave. When it gets to your ears your eardrums move to match the air pressure, and nerves inside your ear pick up the movement and send it to your brain as sound.

If you have ever used a wave editor, or watched someone else use one, you have probably seen a graph of the level of air compression or rarefaction. If you haven’t, take a look at the display of our Wave Creator to see what it looks like. (Note that if you want to experiment with sound waves you can download a free trial version of this software here.

Usually there is a horizontal line in the middle of the display representing no compression or rarefaction. The line representing the sound goes up as air becomes more compressed and down as it becomes less compressed. These changes happen very quickly. The graph of the compression/rarefaction changes over time is often called the “waveform”. Experienced audio engineers can often tell quite a bit about how a recording will sound by viewing the waveform.

Why would someone who is not an audio engineer want to view a waveform? Suppose you made a recording, but there is a loud noise in the middle. With a sound editor and a little experimentation, you can find and even remove that noise!

In the real world the level of air compression or rarefaction changes smoothly. Even a very quick change in the pressure of the air is still a smooth change from one point to another. Analog recordings (usually done today on tape) store all of these smooth changes. The amount of magnetic energy stored on the tape moves smoothly up and down as the intensity of the sound moves up and down.

Computers and other digital equipment are not designed to handle these continuous and gradual changes. Instead, they only understand two values- on and off. The magnetic energy stored on a computer tape or disk consists of ones and zeros- nothing else. If you fed a computer tape directly through an amplifier into a speaker the speaker would interpret the ones as full power and the zeros as no power. The result, instead of being a smooth, gradual shift from one value to another, would be an ugly buzz as the speaker cone tried to keep up with these abrupt changes.

(Note- playing digital data through your stereo system or computer speakers can be hard on your speakers. Take our word for what it sounds like, or turn the volumeway down!)

Fortunately that’s not what happens when playing digital audio. First of all, the ones and zeros are grouped together (normally 8 or 16 at a time) to form larger numbers in the binary numbering system. For example, 00001001 in binary would be read by the computer as the decimal number 9. The sequence of numbers:

00001001
00000111

translates into 9 and 7 in decimal. In this example, using 16 bit numbers, the minimum value would be 0 and the maximum value would be 65335. The change from 9 to 7 within that range would be quite gradual, although not as smooth as would be experienced in an analog system.

Digital audio takes advantage of some peculiarities of acoustics and the human ear. An analog waveform would contain every value between 9 and 7 for at least a very brief length of time. No computer could hold all of these numbers. So, when sound is converted from analog into digital audio, the hardware “samples” the level of the waveform at a specific interval. For CD audio, this interval is 1/44,100th of a second. In other words, 44,100 times each second a special chip calculates a value for analog input and sends it off for use or storage. This process is called “digitizing” a sound.

The result, if we were to graph it as we have with analog waveforms, would look quite different. Instead of smooth, gradual changes we would see stair steps as the line jerked from sampling data point to sampling data point. Here’s a picture showing the difference:

analog vs. digitalThere are two useful terms here- the “sampling rate” and the “sample size”. The sample rate is the number of times per second that the analog signal is measured. The sample size tells us what number is associated with the maximum value. The maximum value of the analog data doesn’t change- if you try to add power past a certain point you just start blowing up hardware. But if the range is from 0 to 1000 the values stored will represent the analog data more closely than if they range from 0 to 10.

Still, if analog data is smooth and digital data is made up of stair steps, why doesn’t digital audio sound bad? The answer is fairly technical, but what it boils down to is that, as long as the samples are taken often enough, the noise created by the stair stepping is too high in frequency for us to hear. According to the theory, the frequency of this noise will always be at least twice the sampling frequency. This is called the Nyquist Limit.

Very few if any humans can hear above about 20,000 cycles per second. Note that the speed chosen for audio CDs is 44,100 cycles per second. It is no coincidence that CD sampling rate is just over twice what our ears can hear.

The conversion of analog data to digital and back to analog is accomplished by special chips. A chip that converts analog to digital is called an ADC- an Analog to Digital Converter. The ADC measures the amount of current at each sampling interval and converts it to a binary number. This is called “digitizing” the sound. On the other end is a chip called a DAC- a Digital to Analog Converter. This chip takes a binary number and converts it to an output voltage.

Here’s what happens if you record your voice using a microphone plugged into your computer, then edit it and play it back over your speaker system: the microphone generates an analog waveform corresponding to the compression and rarefaction cycles generated by your voice. This smooth analog waveform is converted into a series of binary values by the ADC which are then transferred into the memory of your computer. Once you are done editing (if you’ve ever tried editing analog tape you’ll appreciate how much easier digital editing is!) the computer sends the resulting series of binary numbers to the DAC, which converts them to a (relatively) smooth analog waveform that drives your speaker.

Is digital better? Think of the seconds readout of a digital clock as opposed to a smooth sweep second hand on an analog clock. The analog clock can be more accurate, since it shows all of the positions between seconds. The digital clock can be more precise, since it only shows the exact second. Each approach has benefits and drawbacks.

Digital, or digitized, sound is easier to reproduce and manipulate without loss in quality. Some question whether the quality is quite as good as analog sound, but it can be very good indeed, and CDs don’t wear out like records used to. Digital audio can also be compressed much more easily than analog, which is why MP3 is a digital format.

Digital is not necessarily better, but it is different, and offers advantages to engineers and end users that will increase its dominance in the coming years.

 

Taken from http://www.blazeaudio.com/howto/bg-digital.html

Comments (0)


ANALOGUE TO DIGITAL SAMPLING TECHNIQUES

Filed under: DIGITAL AUDIO RECORDING,KNOWLEDGEMENT,Tak Berkategori — Tag: , — KING JAZZ (Bayu Wirawan) @ 09.48
SAMPLING TECHNIQUE

(1) In statistics, the analysis of a group by determining the characteristics of a significant percentage of its members chosen at random.

(2) Converting analog signals into digital form. Audio and other analog signals are continuous waveforms that are analyzed at various points in time and converted into digital samples. The accuracy with which the digital samples reflect their analog origins is based on “sampling rate” and “sample size.” See A/D converter.

Sampling Rate – When to Measure
The sampling rate is the number of times per second that the waveform is measured, which typically ranges from 8 to 192 thousand times per second (8 kHz to 192 kHz). The greater the rate, the higher the frequency that can be captured. For a comparison of high-quality samples, see high-resolution sampling rates.

The sampling rate must be at least twice that of the analog frequency being captured. For example, the sampling rate used to create the digital data on a CD is 44.1 kHz, slightly more than double the 20kHz frequency an average person can hear. The sampling rate for digitizing voice for a toll-quality conversation is typically 8,000 times per second (8 kHz), twice the 4 kHz required for the full spectrum of the human voice. See analog and Nyquist theorem.

Sample Size – The Measurement
Also called “resolution” and “precision,” the sample size is the measurement of each sample point on a numeric scale. Known as “quantizing,” the sample point is turned into the closest whole number. The more granular the scale (the more increments), the more accurate the digital sample represents the original analog signal. See oversamplingquantization and PCM.

Sampling Sound
The faster the sampling rate and the larger the sample size, the more accurately sound can be digitized. An 8-bit sample breaks the sound wave into 255 increments compared with 65,535 for a 16-bit sample.
Sampling Dialog
This recording dialog from an earlier Sound Blaster sound card shows typical sampling options for digitizing sound into Windows WAV files.

Taken From: http://encyclopedia2.thefreedictionary.com/Digital+sampling

Comments (0)


DIGITAL SAMPLING … WHAT IS THAT.. !!???..

Filed under: DIGITAL AUDIO RECORDING,KNOWLEDGEMENT — Tag: , — KING JAZZ (Bayu Wirawan) @ 09.42

DIGITAL SAMPLING

The controversy surrounding digital sampling has generated quite a bit of misunderstanding among musicians. For instance, many musicians are under the misperception that it is OK to sample anything less than 4 bars of another song. In fact, sampling just a few notes may be enough to cause legal problems.

IS DIGITAL SAMPLING LEGAL?

Most legal experts believe the issue of digital sampling was resolved in 1991, when a Federal District Court ruled that Biz Markie’s use of a few notes from the chorus of Gilbert O’Sullivan hit song “Alone Again, Naturally” amounted to copyright infringement. In addition to citing to the Ten Commandments (“Thou shalt not steal”), the judge barred any further sale of Biz Markie’s album and referred to matter to the U.S. Attorney for possible criminal prosecution. Another court later ruled that sampling phrases like “ooh” “move” and “free your body” may also be enough to find copyright infringement.

Digital sampling may not just violate copyright laws. Failure to obtain permission before sampling a distinctive voice may also violate certain state laws recognizing that famous personalities have a “right of publicity.” A few years ago Tom Waits successfully sued Frito Lay for using an imitation of his distinctive vocal style in a commercial. Bette Midler also won a lawsuit against Ford Motor Co. for imitating her voice in a television commercial without her permission. Sampled artists may also have a claim for unfair competition if their voice or “persona” are used without permission.

IS DIGITAL SAMPLING PROTECTED AS FAIR USE?

So far, no court has ruled on whether digital sampling may be protected as fair use. However, legal experts agree that for a sample to qualify as fair use, it must be used for purposes such as parody, criticism, teaching, news reporting, research or some non-profit use. Using a sample merely because it sounds good is simply not enough to qualify for protection as fair use. [Note: For more information on music and fair use, click back to my recent Fine Print column on the fair use exception to copyright infringement.]

OBTAINING SAMPLE CLEARANCES

To legally sample a song, it is necessary to obtain permission from the copyright holder of the sound recording (usually the record company) and the copyright holder of the composition (usually the song’s publisher). Permission from the owner should also be sought when sampling a television show or motion picture.

Artists should obtain permission from all copyright owners before any song containing a sample is distributed publicly. Waiting until after your record is distributed can result in lost income, expensive legal fees and the removal of your record from the market. Releasing your record before obtaining clearances also reduces your bargaining power if you later attempt to negotiate a sample license.

HOW TO CLEAR A SAMPLE:

Music attorneys often clear samples, although this can be somewhat expensive. Clearance agencies are usually cheaper, and many are familiar with licensing samples. Record companies can also clear samples for their artists, but the cost of negotiating and obtaining clearances will later be deducted from any recording advance or royalties the artist may be entitled to.

Of course, you may decide to obtain a sample license yourself. To clear samples, it is necessary to write to the record company and publisher of the sampled song. ASCAP or BMI will likely have the publisher’s current address. In your letter, ask for a quote for a clearance fee, and identify the song you are sampling and how much is used. Don’t forget to include a tape of the original song, as well as a copy of your unreleased song using the sample.

In granting a license, a record company may seek a flat-fee of anywhere from $100 to $5,000, or possibly more. Record companies may also seek a royalty (from $.01 to $.07 per record sold) as well as an advance. Music publishers may also ask for a flat fee or a percentage of income from the new song, or both. Depending on how the sample is used, some publisher may also demand a percentage of copyright ownership in the new composition. Because copyright owners are not obligated to grant clearances, you may have no choice but to comply with the owner’s asking price, or remove the sample. Of course, a copyright owner may also deny permission to use a sample.

Different factors affect how much money a record company or music publisher will want for a sample. Price may vary depending on how much of the sample is used, how many other samples are used, whether your song has already been released, and the type of rights a record company is willing to grant. For example, a music publisher may choose to license a sample for sound recordings only. In this case, you would be unable to use your song containing the sample in a motion picture, video or CD-Rom without an additional license from the music publisher.

Finally, to keep costs down, some artists choose to create their own samples by first recording their own “cover” version of the sampled song. By using this technique, an artist avoids having to obtain a clearance from the original record company. Nevertheless, when creating your own sample based on another song, you will still need to obtain a clearance from the music publisher of the original composition.

CONCLUSION:

Scratching and sampling has created some of this century’s most vital and expressive music, bridging the gap between popular and experimental composition. Nevertheless, using a sample without permission violates two copyrights – the copyright in the sound recording and the copyright in the underlying composition. Because the cost of legitimately clearing samples cuts into an artist’s record advance and royalty rate, it is understandable why many young artists later create their own samples in the studio after they become established acts.

While a sample of 1 or 2 notes is OK only if it is taken from a non-essential or commonly used phrase, another sample of 1 or 2 notes may be infringing if taken from a musically significant part of a song. Thus, taking the recognizable word “Help” from the Beatles’ song, or appropriating the distinctive style of an artist’s performance, such as James Brown’s unique scream, would constitute an infringement. Because there is no hard and fast rule on what is safe to sample, the best advice is “When in doubt, obtain a license.”

Taken From http://www.alankorn.com/articles/sampling.html

Alan Korn
Law Office of Alan Korn
1840 Woolsey Street
Berkeley, CA 94703
Ph: (510) 548-7300
Fax: (510) 540-4821
[email protected]
www.alankorn.com

Comments (53)


Hallo PLANET!!! Welcome To BAYU WIRAWAN’s (KING JAZZ) UNIVERSAL MUSIC MASTERPIECE …

Filed under: CURRICULUM VITAE (C.V),DIGITAL AUDIO RECORDING,KARYA-KARYA MASTERPICES,KING JAZZ LESSON,KNOWLEDGEMENT,Tak Berkategori — Tag: — KING JAZZ (Bayu Wirawan) @ 05.07

Welcome to Bayu Wirawan’s (KING JAZZ) Universal Music Masterpieces here ….

Let me introduced as shortest as possible about my self. (Below is My C.V please).

The CURRICULUM VITAE of BAYU WIRAWAN

No. Telp (H.P): 0838 6242 6203

e-mail: [email protected]

Facebook: KING JAZZ (Bayu Wirawan),

Facebook: KING JAZZ MASTERPIECE

Twitter: KING JAZZ RECORD

 Tempat Tinggal (sementara): Jl. SMA 3 Gang VI.B no 8 – Sumerta – Denpasar Timur – BALI

 

Nama: Bayu Wirawan, Dr.Edu, Dr.Mus, Dr.Hc, M.Mus, M.Art, B.Mus

Agama: Katholik

Tempat/Tanggal Lahir:  JAYAPURA, 14 JUNI 1971

Nama Orang Tua: P. SOESILO, Prof. Dr. (Paulus Susilo, Pensiunan Depdikbud KAKANWIL Propinsi Irian Jaya – Depdikbud KAKANWIL Sejarah Kepurbakalaan Propinsi Timor-Timur, KA Museum Nasional, DOSEN Guru Besar Anthropology UNCEN, UGM)

Nama Ibu: Agnes Martini, drs. Msc (Pensiunan Kepsek SMAN ! Dili – Timor-Timur)

 

EDUCATION’S  HISTORY (PENDIDIKAN):

1)     KINDER GARDEN / TK: 1977 – 1978 TK. KUNTUM MEKAR ARGAPURA, TK. SARINAH JAYAPURA, IRIAN JAYA (WEST PAPUA)

2)     ELEMENTARY / SD: 1978 – 1985 SD. KRISTUS RAJA DOK V JAYAPURA IRIAN JAYA (WEST PAPUA)

3)     SECONDARY HIGH / SMP: 1984 – 1985 SMPK PAULUS VI DILI, TIMOR TIMUR (EAST TIMOR / TIMOR LESTE)

4)     SENIOR HIGH / SMA: 1987 – 1990 SMAN 2 PURWOKERTO, JAWA TENGAH (CENTRAL JAVA)

5)     INDONESIAN OPEN UNIVERSITY – ENGLISH FACULTY –JAKARTA  -1990

6)     LITURGY MUSIC CENTER  – YOGYAKARTA – 1990

 

GRADUATED:

7)     S1 – BACHELOR OF MUSIC IN PRODUCTION – ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY – 1993

8)     S2 – MASTER OF ARTS  – CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY, FRESNO – 2005

9)     S2 – MASTER OF MUSIC – NEW YORK UNIVERSITY – 2007

10)  S3 – DOCTOR HONORIS CAUSA (HONORARY DOCTOR IN MANAGEMENT) – UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII – 2001

11) S3 – DOCTOR  OF MUSIC – UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE – 2008

12) S3 – DOCTOR OF EDUCATION – UNIVERSITY OF TASMANIA – 2008

 

 

‘SKILLS AND EXPERTS ON’ –  (TRAMPIL DAN AHLI DI DALAM BIDANG-BIDANG):

 

MUSIC:

  • JAZZ PIANIST, KEYBOARD, DRUM (PERCUSSION), GUITAR
  • MUSIC COMPOSITION AND ARRANGEMENT
  • MUSICS INSTRUCTOR, CONSULTANT, SEMINAR & WORKSHOPS SOURCE SPEAKER
  • MUSICS CRITIC , ANALIST, MUSICS JUDGE IN TV/RADIO BROADCAST, SINGING CONTEST & MUSIC COMPETITIONS / BAND FESTIVALS
  • A JAZZ PIANIST  ( EXPERT ON JAZZ IMPROVISATION ON PIANO)
  • IMPROMPTU JAZZ (LIVE JAZZ IMPROVISATION ON PIANO WITHOUT CONCEPTS)
  • EXPERT IN JAZZ ETHNIC’S COMPOSITIONS AND ARRANGEMENTS
  • A JAZZ DRUMMER
  • SOUND / AUDIO ENGINEER – LIVE MUSICS SOUND DESIGNER
  • RECORDING ENGINEER SPECIALIST (ANALOG & DIGITAL MEDIA)
  • RECORDING DIRECTOR
  • RECORDING MUSIC PRODUCER (MUSIC PRODUCTIONS)
  • JAZZ COMBO MUSICS / LIVE SHOW PERFORMANCE EXCLUSIVE PRODUCER
  • CHURCH ORGEN CLASSICAL COMPOSER & ARRANGER
  • CLASSICAL ORCHESTRA DIRECTOR, COMPOSER & ARRANGER
  • JAZZ ORCHESTRA / JAZZ BIG BAND DIRECTOR, COMPOSER & ARRANGER
  • DIGITAL RECORDING STUDIO DESIGNER EXPERTS
  • MUSIC CONCERTS & PERFORMING ARTS EXCLUSIVE
  • SEQUENCER COMPOSER / DIGITAL COMPUTER MUSIC PROGRAMER
  • ANALOGUE & DIGITAL AUDIO MASTER RECORDING & MASTERING MUSIC ALBUMS (MULTI TRACK RECORDING & MIXING) EXPERT
  • ETHNIC MUSICS & JAZZ FUSIONS COMPOSER & ARRANGER – ETHNIC’S JAZZ PERFORMANCES
  • POP  MUSICS PRODUCER – COMMERCIAL INDUSTRIES MUSIC’S PRODUCTION
  • MUSIC  SCHOOL CURRICULLUM’S DESIGNER EXPERT
  • MUSIC  SCHOOL INSTRUCTOR  EXPERT

 

FILM AND VIDEO:

  • FILM MAKING – FILM MOVIE PRODUCTIONS – PRODUCER
  • FILM DIRECTOR
  • FILM EDITOR
  • SCRIPT WRITER
  • CAMERAMAN
  • FILM MAKE UP

 

COMPUTER

  • HARDWARES & SOFTWARES
  • COMPUTER PROGRAMMING
  • MUSIC PROGRAMMING AND EDITING
  • VIDEO MOVIE PROGRAMMING AND EDITING
  • COMPUTER DESIGN GRAPHIC
  • COMPUTER NETWORKING
  • COMPUTER MANAGEMENT – I.T (INFORMATIC’S TECHNOLOGY)

 

MANAGEMENT

  • BUSINESSES MANAGEMENT
  • SUPERVISING AND MANAGEMENT
  • EDUCATION’S CONSULTANT
  • MARKETING EXPERT
  • PROJECTS MANAGEMENT

 

ENGLISH

  • BUSINESSES – NETWORKING
  • EDUCATION – TEACHING

 

MIND PROGRAMMING – MOTIVATOR

  • HYPNOTHERAPY
  • NEURO LINGUISTIC PROGRAMMING (N.L.P)
  • MIND POWER – SUBCONSCIOUS MIND PROGRAMMING
  • BRAIN OPTIMIZED MEGA CREATIVES
  • SKILLFUL ULTIMATE HUMAN BEING MIND PROGRAM

Please Download My Videos, when Captured any of me in Doing Life Impromptu Recording Spontaneously on the Babby Grand Kawai Piano. “Without The Concept is The Concept” – Bayu Wirawan (King Jazz)

201202058

Comments (2)


Valid XHTML 1.0 Transitional© 2008 | BAYU WIRAWAN (KING JAZZ) MASTERPIECES
'Twilight' Wordpress theme | Powered by Atillus