Archive for September, 2009

Whispers of the Plains – Christopher Tin

christophertinHaving absolutely devoured every sound in his debut solo album “Calling All Dawns”, HPM were dying to chat with Christopher Tin and lucky us, we were able to get a few questions to the musical maestro. Here’s what he had to say:

There are so many different conceptual sides to “Calling All Dawns”, where did they all come from such as the life/day cycle and the decision to use 12 different languages?

I’ve always been a fan of concept albums–I think it comes from growing up listening to bands like Pink Floyd and The Who. Albums like The Wall, Tommy, etc. demanded that the listener appreciate them in total, and not just by skipping around track to track. I wanted to create something like that. I can’t remember where the idea to do a song cycle about the life cycle came from, but the idea to do it in 12 languages certainly came out of an urge to do something unifying, that stretched across cultures. We’re really not so different as a people, are we? We may speak different languages and pray to different gods, but there are certain elements of the human condition that we all share. We all love. We all hate. We all live; and then we all die. And even though we’re in disagreement about the details about what happens next, we all live on in some way.

Why also did you choose religious scripts and lyrical poetry as lyrics for each piece?

It comes back to the idea of pointing out the similarities between cultures, and not dwelling on the differences. Half the songs are sacred; half are secular. Secularity is as much a part of this world as spirituality. Much of the world is not religious, yet has varying philosophies on what happens after death–why not give voice to them?

Were there any cultures or languages you’d have liked to have visited on the project?

Absolutely! I have ideas for a follow up album that I’d like to start working on after the dust settles on Calling All Dawns. There are certain ensembles out there that I would love to work with; for example, I’d love to work with Le Mystere De Voix Bulgares, the celebrated Bulgarian women’s chorus. I’d love to do some more with West African singers, Arabic singers… perhaps touch upon some more South African languages, like Zulu, Xhosa or Sotho. Oh, and maybe I’ll do a song in English, too. I hear that’s a popular language.

1CallingAllDawnsHow did it feel to record in such a large scale at Abbey Road Studios which is steeped in such grand history?

Pretty grand, I would say! But I was actually only in Abbey Road for a little over a day. It may sound crazy, but we recorded the orchestra for the entire album in a single day. I booked the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra for 7 hours, they came in, and recorded all 46:40 of the album, mostly on the 2nd or 3rd takes of each song–they’re that good! After the sessions were over, though, we took a little time to take a tour with one of the assistant engineers. I got to see the speakers that they mixed Dark Side Of The Moon on, got to play the Mrs. Mills piano, the tack piano that Paul plays on Lady Madonna and Ob-la-Di, Ob-la-Da… it was a blast.

There is a particular warmth to the album which is always joyous and uplifting. Was that a conscious decision and how did you go about achieving that?

I tend to go for warmth in my music, and to achieve that you make a series of decisions throughout the entire process to help achieve that goal. It starts right from the very beginning, when you’re choosing what notes you write. It carries through to the orchestration, when you choose what instruments to use to support the vocals–do you double the strings with trombones? Clarinets? How do you mark them dynamically, so that they support the strings without overshadowing them? Then you hire an orchestra. Which one do you want? Different orchestras have different sounds to them. The strings in London sound different than those in Los Angeles. Then you pick a studio and an engineer. That one was easy–John Kurlander, former head of Abbey Road, was my guy for recording at Abbey Road, which has a wonderfully warm sound. Then you mix and master. In that final step, mastering, we took an interesting route–we actually transferred all the digital mixes to analogue tape, and then re-digitized it. Tape actually imparts a certain warmth and glow to the recording, and I think you can really hear that in the final product.

So far the press have loved the album. How does it feel to have such wide acclaim for your work?

Great! This album took almost four years of my life to create, so it’s nice to know that people seem to like it.

Are there any particular moments on the album you feel most proud of?

There are 8 bars in track 10, “Hamsafar”, that I really like actually. It’s the second half of the second verse–I wrote a ton of counterpoint in the orchestra and backing vocals, and put a ton of detail into that passage. Most listeners probably won’t hear it, but it makes me smile to know it’s there.

Are there any other plans for Christopher Tin and/or “Calling All Dawns” in the near future?

After the album’s initial release, I plan on making some additional products available. I’ll be releasing the full score on my website, for example, for anyone who just wants to dig into the notes. And then I’m thinking of making remix packs available for some of the songs, for anyone who wants to do some remixing. I’m all about fan generated videos, remixes, mashups, art, etc. In fact, I hope to be featuring some fan-generated work on my site in the near future. [Ed - I may take you up on that!]

Christopher Tin’s album “Calling All Dawns” is available at his website: www.christophertin.com

Tori Amos – “Midwinter Graces” New Album Tracklist

toriamosTori Amos will be releasing a Christmas album! Entitled “Midwinter Graces” it will seemingly delve back to the older spirit of Christmas and being more of a Solstice theme. As its Tori we can expect something a little different from your average Christmas album. The only two Christmas albums I own and play outside of season are from Sarah McLachlan and Emily Richards so Tori’s got her work cut out! The track list is as follows:

01 What Child, Nowell
02 Star Of Wonder
03 A Silent Night With You
04 Candle: Coventry Carol
05 Holy, Ivy & Rose
06 Harps Of Gold
07 Snow Angel
08 Jeanette, Isabella
09 Pink & Glitter
10 Emmanuel
11 Winter’s Carol
12 Our New Year

Christopher Tin – “Calling All Dawns” Review

christophertinChristopher Tin, well known VGM artist (“Baba Yetu” from Civ IV) and musical talent returns with his first solo album “Calling All Dawns” and its a cracker of a concept that you normally don’t come across unless you go into the alternative music world.

“Calling All Dawns” has 12 tracks in 12 languages and goes through a day cycle of day, night and dawn. The clever part which you might not notice is that each movement of songs flows straight into each other and when the final song finishes it actually serenades you straight into the opening track again if you play it on a loop. There’s a lot of hidden intricate details for you to discover with this album, but let’s get to the tracks!

“Baba Yetu” is a song any Civ IV fan will already be aware of although it’s been rerecorded and re-jigged. The Soweto Gospel Choir are simply magical with their tonal qualities and the way they can explode into joyous rapture only to give you a soft understated finale which really sets the mood for a new day. Coupled with the world music and track workings from Christopher Tin who builds the track up only to break it down gently again, for me personally its one of best examples of world music to have been made in years. Think Lion King and then some…

“Mado Kara Mieru” is adapted from haiku’s of the four seasons and is sung in Japanese. There is a certain richness to the string arrangements which is present throughout the whole album. There is something very familiar with the track that reminds me of what the film soundtrack of “Shawshank Redemption” would sound like Haiku’ed in Japanese! I love the grandness in this track, Christopher spares nothing for what is a track that almost has an impending doom to it.

“Doa Zai Dan Ye” is a delicate Mandarin piece that is as lyrical as it is operatic. Remember those British Airways ads? It has a similar feeling but with all the regal ladyship of the traditional Orient and holds a lot of graceful fragility to it. Jia Ruhan’s voice sounds so serene with Chris’ multitracking too.

“Se E Pra Vir Que Venha” is Portuguese and has a free flowing gallop to it. Christopher has a way of capturing different languages and their religious texts in a musical soundscape and although all the tracks are orchestrated each one has its own style and space.

“Rassemblons-Nous” is the French song and the first with a male lead and electronic percussion backing up the orchestra. This song features a lot of deep brass sounds and therefore reminds me a bit of Bjork’s “Selma Song’s” album. It’s very dramatic and filmic as it continues to its huge climax and with it ends the Day time section with a bang. Here you can really hear the 200 musicians put to their use with Tin’s magical scores.

Night time starts with “Lux Aeterna” which is of course Latin. This track is led by the harp and signals a pace change. Woodwind instruments float gracefully like night birds setting out for flight and this track which is largely instrumental really sweeps you off to another world. It also reminds me of “American Beauty” but I have no idea why!

“Caoineadh” harks back to old Irish language for a subtle string and vocal track that is almost like a eulogy for the day just gone. It’s downbeat and funeralesque in its tone even though the words talk of nobility. The string sections are particularly emotive in this track.

“Hymn Do Trojcy Swietej” is Polish and just like all the tracks, the words are from some kind of religious text of sorts. This track however is the most church styled track on the album. It almost sounds like you’re inside a huge Cathedral with atmosphere by the bucket load.

Dawn starts off with te Hebrew track “Hayom Kadosh” which sounds like something Lisa Gerrard would release with her otherworldly sound. The track is very short but packs its punch from the outset. It has a certain joy to it too and leads almost unnoticed into “Hamsafar” which is in Farsi and is in a similar vein – joyous and full of spirit and uplifting energy. I challenge you not to lift a smile for these types of songs.

“Sukla-Krsne” sung in Sanskrit is very much like waking up to a new sun rise. The warmth that comes through the speakers on these tracks is due to Christopher’s inspired decision to transfer the tracks from digital tapes to analogue tapes. It really pays off in the dawn section of tracks.

The closing track (or if you loop it the last of the dawn tracks before the day is back upon us again) is the Maori track “Kia Hora Te Marino” which is a traditional Maori blessing and its the perfect way to start a new day. The song is grand, the Maori chants and choirs go hand in hand and the world seems anew again and full of hope.

Quite frankly Christopher Tin’s album is a masterpiece. Every track is of such a high calibre and standard and there is so much unconditional love in each one for the cycle of life that you can’t help yourself but join the ride and the day through. It’s the first album for a while that works better played as an entirity than as individual tracks and the concept is both refreshing and fulfilled. Put simply “Calling All Dawns” is not just the best world music album of 2009, it’s one of the best world music albums of the decade. Pure and absolute musical hedonism.

I’m On Holiday!

My apologies for the lack of updates so far this month, I’ve been getting ready for my 3rd ever holiday abroad! That means there will be no updates until at least the 22nd of September which is when the Name that Song 2009 contest will close.

Until then, have a great September, have a look at Higher Plain Games over on YouTube for some retro gaming fun and I look forward to catching up with everyone after a much needed relaxing break!

Final Fantasy X-2 Vocal Collections Bonus DVD Material

megumitoyoguchiAs a parting gift for the next few weeks to tide you over, I have uploaded the full content of all three Final Fantasy X-2 Vocal Collection Bonus DVD’s. Yuna, Rikku and Paine all have their songs, interviews and special preview videos to accompany their singles. Remember these were available way before the game got to Europe (and was probably out before the Japanese game release) so all this footage would have been lapped up:

View the VGM Bonus Features PlayList from my HigherPLainGames YouTube Channel for details.

Rikku’s song Barefoot Miracle is currently uploading and will be available shortly.

Battle Tanks : PS3 Game Review

battletankspsnBattle Tanks from Game Loft is as old skool as they come. A simple yet addictive game best played with friends or online, this is an enjoyable game in short spurts and doses and has great replay factor as long as you can find people to play with.

The Premise

This is an update of an old Atari game but has just as much in common with Bomberman in a way. Basically you have small arena’s, you are a tank and you must make sure you’ll be the last one standing by any means nessecary.

The Gameplay

Now as simple as the premise is, we know that simple games can be the best. Basically each arena has lots of walls and hiding points. You can have up to four players battling at once and you can’t all hide from each other. Therefore your own style of playing detirmines just how you get on with Battle Tanks. You can hide, but you’ll not gain the points you’ll want and the walls can be blown up too. You can’t go in all guns blazing as everyone will pick you off. You could make alliances to take out others but all it takes is two shots and you’ll be on fire and wanting revenge. Basically, no game is ever identical as everyone has to think on the spot and think fast too. Battle Tanks is designed to be a quick game.

The single player mode has 50 levels to get through which is great fun on its own but the mutliplayer shines the most. You have death match, team death match and capture the flag. Most people will be on the deathmatches it seems.

The Graphics

The graphics are poor, there’s no denying it. It’s top down, minimal but gets the job done. Each round is time limited and when the times up the arena is blasted and the slow down during this phase is horrible. Apart from that, everything runs perfectly fun, just don’t expect too much!

The Sound

Sound is passable, again, its one of those added extras and this is a bare bones battle attack game focused entirely on quick rounds for quick hits. Having said that, all the sounds needed are there. *bang*

The Replay Factor

This is where Battle Tanks wins. For a game that last in line for looks and personality, it certainly knows how to get you  hooked in on its gameplay. When you’re on fire and losing your last life in a four player melee, you will want revenge and you will play again and again until everyone else’s tanks are in the scrap heap! What’s great is to have an online battle PSN game that’s not a complete pain to find matches on. Battle Tanks has not yet kicked me out of a match or suffered from lag yet.  Trophies are available but there aren’t very many of them and only one seems like a massive haul for a silver.

The Positives

~Great old school gameplay

~Seemless 4 player battles really pull you in

The Negatives

~Some graphical slowdown ontop of some not-so-great visuals is a shame

The Conclusion

Battle Tanks is a fun little game. The single player mode will keep you going for a couple of hours while the multplayer mode deserves a lot of attention for actually getting everything right in terms of connection and lack of lag. Will it change the face of gaming? Of course not! There’s nothing new here at all, but that’s half the points. It’s a perfect drop in, battle, drop out game inbetween hours of Fat Princess or your other vice game you get engrossed in for far too long.

Most Viewed: August 2009

imogenheapAnd so to August 2009 where we had a four way fight for the top this month, won by Imogen Heap whereby more people actually viewed the tracklisting after the whole album was posted as a streaming audio on the website and people didn’t actually listen to the album itself! However, HPM has not reviewed Ellipse (although I personally love it already) because I’ve ordered the two disc edition and want to hold on until it comes through.

Behind it was all go for OverClocked Remix, Module and Brendan Perry.

01) Imogen Heap (^)

02) OverClocked ReMix (v)

03) Module (NE)

04) Brendan Perry (v)

05) Utada (v)

06) Kento Watanabe (NE)

07) Akira Yamaoka (^)

08) Hiroki Kikuta (v)

09) Vienna Teng (v)

10) Baiyon (NE)

Top 3 Games

01) Shatter

02) Numblast

03) Magic Ball

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