The Story So Far…
Date: January 30th, 2010When I turned eleven, I received a keyboard for my birthday, the Casio CTK-611. I was an eager learner and delved straight into the instrument. I’d spend hours messing with the synthesis and try to recreate sounds and strange ensembles. Nobody else in my family was musical, and I guess I wasn’t either at that stage so I can imagine I hearing me play was particularly annoying!
As I played, I’d record the music onto a cheap cassette recorder, but eventually found that quite limiting as I could only record what I could physically play myself on two hands. Using a dirt cheap PC microphone and Windows 98 I began my next recording technique. Each layer of a track would be recorded onto Sound Recorder from the drums to the lead instruments merging each layer on top of the last. I had nothing to keep me in time, so the results were a bit messy. Later on I began trying connecting the keyboard to the computer with MIDI, but the system wasn’t fast enough to allow me to really experiment and figure out how to use the sequencers properly, so I had to give up.
When I was around thirteen a friend recommended the eJay series to me. This was my first real venture into composition. Whilst it was fun and taught me more about songwriting and the elements in pop songs, I found it more limiting as I’d have to record each layer on a different eJay package, export the layers and then mess around with time-stretching (which wasn’t brilliant on the software). The results were always far from perfect.
For the next couple of years I’d play around with different software packages to see if I had the technology at my hands to complete a decent song. I discovered Cubase alongside other software and by then also had a faster computer. I started recording music onto the sequencer and the system was powerful enough to support editing. Until then I was only writing music for myself, but some friends managed to get hold of my tracks and were impressed. This surprised me as I’d never really thought of playing my music to anyone else and hearing compliments about my work was quite a new experience.
As I approached the middle of my teenage years, most of my friends started picking up guitars, drums and the other usual band instruments. I’d regularly jam with them on keyboards and vocals. My computer music skills attracted the attention of others and I began collaborating with live musicians. At this point the only computer in the house was in my parent’s bedroom so I started spending the money I’d saved purchasing more equipment, including a portastudio, a mixer, more microphones and tons of cables so I could record on the move. I also began remixing music for other bands and ‘beefing up’ friend’s tracks with added instrumentation.
Now it’s over ten years from the start. After recording and playing live shows with others, I feel the compulsion to sit with my gear, (including the CTK-611 I still have in perfect condition) and write some music. I wonder what’ll happen next.




Nads Hassan you are my hero! Site is looking very professional.
Nadsy, you’re a legend! I’ll be keeping tabs on this site.
Hope to see you in a couple of weeks.
x
Some really interesting information there, it looks like you’ve been using whatever technology you had available to make the most of your music.
From what I remember – sound recorder had a short time limit, 60 seconds I think. Were all your songs short, or how did you get over that limit?
Hank S.
Thanks for your comments.
Hank, it was pretty frustrating when you’re in a creative mood and you have to go through so much just to record some music. Sound Recorder had a feature which enabled you to import other .wav files into your recording, so what I figured out was to record a minute of ‘blank sound’ and import about seven of them into a file. That way you could go back to the start, record over the track and have seven minutes of sound.
Just from a quick search it seems this was the only option. Microsoft even recommend doing it this way!
a few cool sounds on those excerpts in the Music section. that ethnic reel reminded me a little of Jean Michel Jarre’s ethnic sounding stuff, good mix of electronic and more natural sounding stuff
Wow Nads, you’ve really outdone yourself! *Pats on your back* I didn’t expect your site to be this good, KEEP UP THE GOOD WORK!
An inspiring story! Mabe I should pick up my keyboard and have a bash to! Can’t wait for new music.
Really nice sight Nads! Sorry it took me ages to visit as I nearly forgot,keep up the good work an I’ll keep a note of your site.
Thanks for linking to your music. I like it very much and you’ve built a great internet operation to get it out there – exactly as the technology and the new media should be used. I look forward to hearing more and reading your blog. I’ve followed you on Twitter.
Phil