Sie sehen gerade die Germany Version der Website.
Möchten Sie zu Ihrer lokalen Seite wechseln?
9 MIN LESEZEIT
TALKING SHOP

Loukeman

The Toronto producer talks Sd-2, saturation plugins and pitch-shifting the master bus

Working under the alias Loukeman, Toronto’s Luke Fenton makes fuzzy, fractured beats that sound like they’re breaking apart at the seams. Lifting vocals from pop, indie and R&B, Fenton runs his samples through pitch-shifters and saturators to gift them with ghostly textures, before setting them against glowing synth lines and crunchy analogue drums.

There’s no blueprint to Fenton’s music; his latest project, Sd-2, takes in tempos spanning hip-hop to drum & bass, with a few fruitful detours into beatless ambience and guitar-led instrumentals along the way. The thread that ties the tracks together is Fenton’s talent for recontextualizing unexpected samples through his truly unique take on effects processing, which makes everything sound beautifully degraded.

We caught up with Loukeman to hear more about the making of Sd-2.

How did you first get involved with electronic music-making?

“I started in university. My best friends and I just started making music. My laptop broke and I had FL Studio on it, so I got a new laptop and got Ableton, and from then on I was hooked, and I just started making beats every day. .”

Tell us about the background to the new project.

“The first record I put out, Sd-1, was very much just a mixtape. It was a compilation of beats. I was flipping random samples and making random stuff. I made it within a month, mixed it and I didn’t even get it mastered. I uploaded it, and it chilled for a while and some songs got picked up. That was unexpected.

“Sd-2 was different, because it’s the first time I’ve put out music with some folks watching. It took me a little while to figure out what to do there. I spent two years nerding out on production stuff and just tried not to overthink it.”

Talk us through your current home studio space? Is that still mostly based around the laptop?

Schalten Sie diesen Artikel und vieles mehr frei mit
Sie können genießen:
Genießen Sie diese Ausgabe in voller Länge
Sofortiger Zugang zu mehr als 600 Titeln
Tausende von früheren Ausgaben
Kein Vertrag und keine Verpflichtung
Versuch für €1.09
JETZT ABONNIEREN
30 Tage Zugang, dann einfach €11,99 / Monat. Jederzeit kündbar. Nur für neue Abonnenten.


Mehr erfahren
Pocketmags Plus
Pocketmags Plus

Dieser Artikel stammt aus...


View Issues
Future Music
May 2024
ANSICHT IM LAGER

Andere Artikel in dieser Ausgabe


Future Music
Future Music
Editor-In-Chief Si Truss, simon.truss@futurenet.com Reviews Editor, Music Technology Simon
WELCOME
The ‘pro’ touch
One of the great stuggles when it comes
REGULARS
Is Natural Drums the future of AI beats?
DAACI claims that its “AI co-pilot for drums” will improvise like a real drummer and generate beats for you in real time
Excite Audio’s new drum plugin promises “instant breaks”
If creating the perfect drum break is supposed
Turn guitar riffs into ambient soundscapes with NUSofting's free Sosir Freeze-Delay
A new effects plugin from NUSofting promises to
DataMind Audio's Combobulator resynthesises audio through neural networks to recreate other artists' styles
Artificial intelligence is fast revolutionising music software; recently,
Kurzweil goes back to the ’90s with the new K20 series synths
Released in 1991, the Kurzweil K2000 was a
Free Native Instruments plugin lets you conduct thousands of Jacob Collier fans
A new free plugin from Native Instruments and
Pittsburgh Modular Taiga gets upgraded with a keyboard and expansion bay
Last year, we reported on the release of
AlphaTheta pivots from Pioneer DJ with high-end rotary mixer
AlphaTheta, the parent brand that owns Pioneer DJ,
Orbital Orbital
FFRR, 1991
Let’s make a track… in the style of Fred Again.. and DJ Seinfeld
Watch us build a melodic house track using FM’s Sample Archive in under an hour
How can I quickly create new percussive textures for my drum pattern?
Choosing the right drum sounds for a track
Claire Rousay, Sentiment
ALBUM OF THE MONTH
ON OUR PLAYLIST
SINGLE Daniel Avery, Wonderland/Running Fabric Originals After the
Various Artists, Club Moss
ALBUM Launched in 2014 by British producers Facta
aya, Lip Flip
Self-released
Native Instruments Kontrol S61 Mk3
Get up to date with NI’s latest hardware ecosystem, discover how it works… and what all those acronyms are about
Eurorack percussion
Master your modular percussion patches
ARTISTS
RIDE
Ride frontman Mark Gardener chats to Danny Turner about the shoegaze tag and the driving force behind their seventh album, Interplay
NAUM GABO
20 years after first starting, Jonnie Wilkes and James Savage finally release their debut Naum Gabo LP, F. Lux. Danny Turner learns more
KELLY MORAN
Matt Mullen speaks to the New York-based composer about her latest project, which places the Yamaha Disklavier front and centre
Brian Eno
Producer, collaborator, hard-touse synth champion, ambient maestro, app developer and chancer Brian Eno is certainly a pioneer, but of what? Well, how about everything?
TECHNIQUE & FEATURES
MIX LIKE THE PROS!
Ever find yourself struggling to capture that ‘pro’ polish? Do you find your tracks lack that hardto-define quality that separates an amateur-sounding mix from the releases you hear from your favourite artists? Fear not. We’ve all been there – and we’re here to help. This issue, we’ve sat down with a varied selection of producers, engineers and artists to quiz them on their essential mixing advice and studio insights. Over the following pages you’ll find tips to help you work faster and smarter, from the start of a session to finishing that final mix.
GEORGIA
Solo artist, collaborator, songwriter, producer, remixer and drummer Georgia Barnes is also a self-confessed synth nerd, which she has every right to blame on her upbringing. Here she explains how she works within that electronic world with producers and artists including Rostam, William Orbit and Olly Alexander…
SCANNER
Electronic artist, producer, gear explorer, film composer, and modular master Robin Rimbaud has been releasing music as Scanner and other acts for more than four decades. Here, he gives us a more electronic expert viewpoint on what separates a demo from the finished article…
REVIEWS
UDO Audio Super Gemini £3,595
Just like the astrological sign Gemini, UK company UDO’s “bi-everything” synth is double the fun, says Andy Jones
Oeksound Bloom £169
Following the widely-loved Soothe, Si Truss asks if Oeksound’s latest might become another must-have
ALM Busy Circuits Powered Case from £199
Is this your new best case scenario? Rob Redman finds out
PreSonus Eris Pro 8 £429 each
Well designed coaxial monitors can offer substantial sonic benefits. Jon Musgrave hooks one up
The t.bone HD 815 £28
Headphones designed for both recording and mixing? Jon Musgrave is intrigued
Røde NT-1 Signature £139
One of the world’s most popular studio microphones gets back to basics. Matt McCracken finds out more
IK Multimedia ARC Studio £299
This all-in-one room correction package means no more excuses for a muddy low-end, says Chris Corfield
Klevgrand OneShot $149
The Swedish developer launches a sample-based drum machine. Si Truss gives it a shot
Inphonik RX1200 £26
> Most of the reviews featured on these
Impact Soundworks – Shreddage 3 Hollomatic $139
> Just enough space to squeeze in a
Audiotent – Infinite Space
Standard: £45. Deluxe: £55
HIGH-END POLY SYNTHS
UDO Super Gemini £3,595
HARDWARE GROOVEBOXES
Teenage Engineering EP-133 K.O.II £299
DAWs
Ableton Live 12 From £259 While some of
SEMI-MODULAR SYNTHS
Intellijel Cascadia £2,025 Full Review: FM401 A bit
ADVERTISEMENT
SOUNDTOYS
www.soundtoys.com
LEWITT
lewitt.link/lct240pro-future
Musicradar
musicradar.com
Find Your Perfect Tone
www.magazinesdirect.com/guitarist-magazine
TOTAL Guitar
WWW.MAGAZINESDIRECT.COM
Future Music
Future Music
www.magazinesdirect.com
LOOPCLOUD
LOOPMOSTERS
Magazines Direct
www.magazinesdirect.com
Oeksound
RODE
Rode.com
Chat
X
Pocketmags Unterstützung