Tuesday, 31 March 2009

Too much to do

Concerned at how I'm beginning to struggle to get things done, with a little too much falling by wayside I recently had a chat with a friend of mine who's into the whole personal development time management side of things. Turns out I'm just trying to do too much. So it's less my inability to manage time effectively and more that I just don't have enough of it, or more accurately that I'm trying to do too much with it.

With spring now here I think the first thing I'm going to do is make sure that I take more time out to really do nothing, or at least relax and read.

The whole sabbath thing is probably the key to this. I haven't been observing it particularly carefully. Ok I haven't been observing it at all. I subscribe to the idea that the day isn't all that important. What matters is there's a day, a whole day that's devoted to resting, to spiritual matters, to God.

That I haven't been sticking to this eminently sensible idea is daft and I'm really beginning to feel it now. So as of this week, Sunday (for that is the day that fits best in my week) will be that little bit more special. Let's see if that helps.

Monday, 23 March 2009

Any economists out there?

For as long as I can remember whenever I've heard talk of national debt I've found myself wondering who a nation can be indebted to. I always figured it was a richer country (which it is in the case of many) or banks, or some really rich guy who had a few spare dollars he found down the back of the sofa.

But right now, as far as I can tell, every country is hugely indebted by sums of money that are completely mindblowing. When the richest country in the world is in debt, all the banks and indeed some previously well off countries are broke and the economy is seemingly falling apart... From who are we borrowing money?

Wednesday, 18 March 2009

Twittering Archbishop

It seems Archbishop of York John Sentamu has joined the twittering masses so you too can keep abreast of his latest thoughts, even as he's having them.

Though he's new to Tweeting, or so it seems, it's slightly disappointing how few people he's following. One thing that's often struck me about Sentamu is his disconnectedness with people in the church. He just doesn't seem interested.

I like his focus on international injustice and on making the church relevant to modern culture. However I do wonder if he isn't doing enough to take people already in the church with him... Just a thought.

Saturday, 14 March 2009

is modern paint rubbish?

I've been decorating a small room for what feels like 900 years. Interestingly all domestic wood/metal paint now seems to be water based. This is good for the environment, and doesn't have the same tendency to give you a headache.

The downside seems to be that it just isn't very good. I've been painting something that was white a subtle off white colour and it's taken four coats.

I'm really bored with painting.

Thursday, 5 March 2009

Good room, good mics, what more do you need?

Just got back from recording two live band sessions for BBC Introducing. Sounding pretty good considering... Considering that is the whole evening takes four hours and in that time me and my colleague take all the gear to the venue we use (a church building) setup record two bands and then pack up and put it all away.

We're getting pretty good results too. Often as good as those from much higher profile and better equipped studio facilities on big bucks network radio. Partly that's down to our extreme skill (we're modest too) but mainly it's about the space.

Half decent instruments in a good space with some reasonable mics are going to sound good. Get the space wrong and you spend an age messing about trying polish that particular turd.

We're lucky in that the mics we have are good ones. So even though the mixing desk is cheap and the compressors are Behringer (shudder) the results are still pretty good.

Sunday, 1 March 2009

Roland Digital Snake - a thing of wonder



Anyone who's done a significant amount of live sound or location recording will be familiar with the joys of lugging around huge heavy multicore cables. This is the way of getting the signals from the stage to the mixing desk. Good quality cable is expensive and cable of any quality is heavy. Then you have the interference and loss problems of long cable runs, especially when lighting's involved.

Bring on the (relatively) affordable Roland Digital Snake. It uses gigabit ethernet to link the stage and front of house boxes. The stage box contains mic preamps, so low level mic signals don't have very far to go. Then it's all converted to digital at 96k 24-bit. Nice.

At the other end there's a front of house box that brings it back out in analogue. There's a simple controller that lets you set the channel gain, pad and switch phantom power. The base system is 16 channels with eight returns. At approaching £2000 it's considerably more expensive than a long piece of cable, but far more flexible.

For example if you're working in a building with structured cabling installed, you can run the digital snake through that (although don't plug it into a network or you'll upset people as it all stops working). You can have the boxes 100m apart, but if you fancy going further, just stick a gigabit ethernet switch in the middle and go another 100m.

Having played with one of these for a few jobs it just works. Roland have kept it simple and done a great job of building something that's really as easy as it could be.

The only criticisms I have are: the controller isn't always as reponsive as I'd like. When you switch channels it takes about a second before you can change the gain. Not a problem really, but slightly irritating. I'd really like the FOH box to have ADAT outputs. Digital desks are very common these days so by breaking out in analogue there's another unneccessary digital conversion.

These are small gripes however, it works, it's light, and... well, that's enough.