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		<title><![CDATA[Find A Way News - Blogs]]></title>
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			<title><![CDATA[Songwriter Catherine Bacque on CBC Radio 3]]></title>
			<link>http://www.findaway.ca/news//blogs/7/Songwriter-Catherine-Bacque-on-CBC-Radio-3.html</link>
			<description><![CDATA[
<div class="post-header">

</div>

Toronto-based singer-songwriter Catherine Bacque is now featured on <a href="http://radio3.cbc.ca/bands/Catherine-Bacque" target="_blank">CBC 
Radio 3</a>, a new service of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation 
that's billed as the home of independent Canadian music. Her limited 
edition EP <i>Letting Go</i>&#8212;produced by yours truly&#8212;can be streamed 
live from Radio 3, and is available for download on <a href="http://itunes.apple.com/ca/album/say-that-you-want-me/id337905157?i=337906096&s=143455&ign-mpt=uo%3D4" target="_blank">iTunes</a> and <a href="http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/CatherineBacque" target="_blank" title="link to CD Baby web page">CD Baby</a>.<br/>
<br/>
Each of the CD's five songs spotlights a different facet of Catherine's 
amazing talent. Kicking off with <i>I Did, I Will, I Do, </i>the album 
hits high gear right away with a brash, no-nonsense anthem featuring 
Catherine's insistent acoustic guitar figures and the incisive 
Telecaster of Tim Bovaconti (Burton Cummings, Ron Sexsmith) in a 
take-no-prisoners paean to the power of love.<br/>
<br/>
In <i>Fly, </i>we hear in Catherine's voice and lyrics the determination
 of a triumphant survivor of the fickle fates of love. Montreal-based 
virtuoso bassist Alain Caron (Alain Caron Band, Uzeb) underscores 
Catherine with his six-string fretless in a riveting melodic duet.<br/>
<br/>
Next,<i> </i>the haunting melody and lyrics of <i>With You&nbsp;</i> are 
perfectly complemented by Jack Gelbloom's (Take Five) evocative jazz 
piano and Doug Cotton's (Format, John) tasteful precision drumming.<br/>
<br/>
Kicking it up again with <i>Say That You Want Me,</i> Catherine shows 
that she knows how to rock with the best of them. Tim's guitar 
punctuation and Jack's joyously infectious B3 are anchored by my 
Motown-inspired bass line.<br/>
<br/>
The album wraps up with <i>You're Still Mine,</i> a love song of 
steadfastness and faithfulness in the face of life's struggles and 
shortcomings, aimed as much at your children as your lover.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<img style="width: 275px; height: 275px;" alt="Letting Go cover art" src="http://abcbuzz.com/music/cover%20s.jpg" title="LG" border="0"/><br/>
<span style="font-family: comic sans ms,sans-serif; font-size: xx-small;">(Photography by Doug Cotton. CD design by Paul Kelly, Gecko 
Graphics)</span><br/>
<br/>
<span class="caption">Catherine is a Canadian singer/songwriter with 
roots in 60s and 70s folk, pop, and rock. Her style ranges from jazzy 
ballads to straight out country rock. According to her mother, Catherine
 sang in the cradle while her father played Vivaldi and Benny Goodman on
 the stereo. Later, her parents introduced her to the Beatles, Elvis, 
Duke Ellington, Gilles Vigneault, Monique Leyrac, Gordon Lightfoot and 
Joni Mitchell.</span><br/>
<br/>
<span class="caption">Catherine went on to discover Emmylou Harris, 
traditional Canadian folk music, and classic American country artists 
such as Patsy Cline and Hank Williams. Today Catherine loves to listen 
to Sarah McLachlan, Dala, The Dixie Chicks, The Tragically Hip, Melissa 
McClelland, Kathleen Edwards and Sheryl Crow.</span><br/>
<br/>
More information, photos & lyrics: <a href="http://www.catbacque.com/" target="_blank">www.catbacque.com</a> 
and <a href="http://www.sonicbids.com/CatherineBacque" target="_blank">www.SonicBids.com/CatherineBacque
 </a>]]></description>
			<author>no@spam.com (Alan Hardiman)</author>
			<pubDate><![CDATA[Fri, 07 May 2010 00:00:00 EDT]]></pubDate>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.findaway.ca/news//blogs/7/Songwriter-Catherine-Bacque-on-CBC-Radio-3.html</guid>
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			<title><![CDATA[What is sound design, anyway?]]></title>
			<link>http://www.findaway.ca/news//blogs/5/What-is-sound-design-anyway.html</link>
			<description><![CDATA[I get asked this question all the time, so I guess it's confusing. In a 
nutshell, sound design is the art  or craft (depending on your 
perspective) of recording, editing,  processing, assembling, and mixing 
sounds together to create  informative, convincing or emotionally 
suggestive listening  experiences.   While powerful software&#8212;such as 
ProTools&#8212;is available to facilitate  many sound design processes on 
personal computers, keep in mind that using  these tools doesn't 
instantly make someone a qualified sound designer,  any more than having
 Microsoft Word on your computer makes you a  professional speech 
writer.<br/>
<br/>
The term &#8220;sound design&#8221; originated  in live theatre to describe the 
creation of sounds and aural montages  specifically for stage plays. In 
theatre, sound design is a unique department, like lighting design. In 
the film world, the term first became synonymous with sound  editing in 
1969, when the great Walter Murch was credited as  sound designer on 
Francis Ford Coppola&#8217;s <i>The Rain People. </i>Coppola  recalls that, 
because Murch &#8220;wasn&#8217;t in the union, the union forbade him  getting the 
credit as sound editor&#8212;so Walter said, Well, since they  won&#8217;t give me 
that, will they let me be called &#8216;sound designer&#8217;? We  said, We&#8217;ll try 
it&#8212;you can be the sound designer . . . I always thought  it was ironic 
that &#8216;Sound Designer&#8217; became this Tiffany title, yet it  was created for
 that reason. We did it to dodge the union constriction.&#8221;<br/>
<br/>
David Collison&#8217;s fabulous new book, <i>The Sound of Theatre, </i>is  a 
wonderful, illustrated introduction to the development of sound  design 
for theatre from the ancient Greeks to the modern digital  age. For more
 information: <a href="http://www.lsionline.co.uk/books/?jzpz5l" target="_blank" title="link to Sound of Theatre book on LSI web site">http://www.lsionline.co.uk/books/?jzpz5l</a>]]></description>
			<author>no@spam.com (Alan Hardiman)</author>
			<pubDate><![CDATA[Thu, 01 Apr 2010 00:00:00 EDT]]></pubDate>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.findaway.ca/news//blogs/5/What-is-sound-design-anyway.html</guid>
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			<title><![CDATA[2 Million Watts Power Sound Systems at the Winter Olympic Opening &amp; Closing Ceremonies]]></title>
			<link>http://www.findaway.ca/news//blogs/6/2-Million-Watts-Power-Sound-Systems-at-the-Winter-Olympic-Opening-amp-Closing-Ceremonies.html</link>
			<description><![CDATA[
<div class="post-header">

</div>

The aurora borealis dancing in the northern sky served as a guiding 
metaphor in the design of the elaborate Opening Ceremony of the XXI 
Winter Olympic Games in Vancouver on February 12, as light and 
projection were employed in place of scenery to dress the gargantuan 
stage in the 65,000-seat bowl of BC Place, where the ceremony was held 
indoors for the first time in the history of the Olympics.<br/>
<br/>
Lighting director Bob Dickinson went straight from Vancouver after 
wrapping up the Closing Ceremonies to light the 82nd Academy Awards in 
Hollywood. Two days later, he was on the phone with me, downloading his 
thoughts and feelings about the experience. I then caught up with audio 
director Bruce Jackson&#8212;founder of Apogee Electronics&#8212;who used 2,000,000 
watts of amplifier power in his sound system design, design director 
Doug Paraschuk, and other members of his team to get their take on 
producing the largest spectacle ever mounted on Canadian soil.<br/>
<br/>
Featuring the largest air-supported stadium roof in North America, BC 
Place offered executive producer David Atkins and his designers an 
unprecedented opportunity to stretch the boundaries of spectacle using 
state-of-the-art lighting, projection, sound and special effects. The 
fabric roof presented almost insurmountable challenges in rigging, 
projection, and sound reinforcement, however, and was sensitive to 
changes in barometric pressure, temperature, and wind conditions that 
caused it to rise and fall continuously 1.3 m (4&#8217;) during the course of 
the ceremonies. Furthermore, it limited the total hang in the stadium to
 some 150 tons.<br/>
<br/>
&#8220;We were in a somewhat inhospitable environment that generated a lot of 
technical issues, just in terms of gravity alone,&#8221; said Paraschuk. 
&#8220;Because it was an air-filled venue, we were limited in the amount of 
equipment we could physically hang from the ceiling. The engineering of 
the rigging, which was handled by Riggit Services in Vancouver, was a 
technical nightmare. We had to be very careful about where the rigging 
points were located, and how we articulated the entire rig in order to 
get to where we needed to be. We also had to deal with the issue that 
the ceiling breathed. This caused nightmares in focusing, because it was
 moving all the time, and so all of our flown elements, and their 
relationships to the projection and the lighting were encoded,&#8221; he said.<br/>
<br/>
&#8220;The victory ceremonies every day between the Opening and Closing 
Ceremonies required an entire additional set of truss masking to be hung
 in order to create a kind of concert bowl in the venue. The intent was 
to have it look like a different space on television, and this impacted 
greatly on our ability to maintain focus and continuity for the Closing 
Ceremonies, let alone physically rehearse the Closing Ceremonies. Our 
target for the bowl was 25,000 seats for the victory ceremonies. The 
full seating in the venue is 55,000, and we expanded the lower bowl 
lower for opening and closing so the total capacity was about 65,000,&#8221; 
Paraschuk said.<br/>
<br/>
The fabric roof let in so much daylight that programming and rehearsals 
for the Closing Ceremonies could be conducted only from midnight until 
dawn, following the conclusion of the daily victory ceremonies and 
pre-programming for the following night&#8217;s headline talent. &#8220;The lighting
 department worked 24 hours a day, with some individuals putting in 16 
hour shifts, and that turned out to be more ambitious than we had 
initially anticipated,&#8221; Dickinson said.<br/>
<br/>
Read the full story in the April issue of Lighting & Sound America.]]></description>
			<author>no@spam.com (Alan Hardiman)</author>
			<pubDate><![CDATA[Tue, 16 Mar 2010 00:00:00 EDT]]></pubDate>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.findaway.ca/news//blogs/6/2-Million-Watts-Power-Sound-Systems-at-the-Winter-Olympic-Opening-amp-Closing-Ceremonies.html</guid>
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			<title><![CDATA[Chuck Berry Forgotten By HMV?]]></title>
			<link>http://www.findaway.ca/news//blogs/3/Chuck-Berry-Forgotten-By-HMV.html</link>
			<description><![CDATA[In late 2008 I purchased Ultimate Collector's Edition of Taylor Hackford's Chuck Berry Hail! Hail! Rock 'N' Roll from HMV and enjoyed every minute of it. &nbsp; After thinking back to a recent conversation about Chuck Berry with a recording client at Find A Way Studios I suddenly decided to swing by their store to get an album or 2 of Chuck's songs after finishing teaching.&nbsp; I got there just in time before the HMV superstore (located at Yonge and Dundas) closed and directly headed up to the 2nd level Rock and Roll Section where I was horrified to discover only 1 Chuck Berry CD, a greatest hits at that, in their entire store!&nbsp; The Chuck Berry section was so minimal you might have fitted 3-5 CDs in it at the most.&nbsp; The CD, part of the Universal Music's Green Series titled "The Best Of Chuck Berry", contained about 15 of Chuck's greatest hits and cost $12.99.&nbsp; Noticeably absent from the compilation were songs like "Sweet Little Sixteen, Too Much Monkey Business and Nadine (Is That You?) but Universal managed to include "My Ding-A-Ling" Chuck's live rendition of the raunchy show tune staple that served up Berry's only #1 hit of his career in 1972. <br/><br/>I asked the staff why they had such a poor selection of the artist who was basically one of the founding figures of Rock and Roll.&nbsp;&nbsp; They replied that some CDs were on order (who knows for how long) but that didn't help solve my dilemma.&nbsp; Although I could see a few of the staff were as concerned as I was, most didn't even grasp the significance of this.&nbsp; Maybe they didn't even know who Chuck Berry was.&nbsp; <br/><br/>Leaving HMV I headed directly to Sonic Boom where they had a selection of about 7 different Chuck Berry CDs.&nbsp; I was rewarded for my efforts and got a reasonably priced CD for $15.99 - The Definitive Collection of Chuck Berry from Chess Records that had 30 great Chuck Berry tracks.&nbsp; Why Universal would publish a greatest hits without "Sweet Little Sixteen" is beyond me.&nbsp;&nbsp; For 3 dollars more I had a brand new CD with double the amount of tracks and was a more fitting tribute this founding and contraversial figure of Rock and Roll.&nbsp; Furthermore I would have had to buy 2 Universal Green Series CDs to equal the amount of tracks on the Chess Records release.&nbsp; Although Universal's Green Series packaging is "made with of 100% recycled materials, using vegetable based inks for maximum environmental consideration" aren't they missing a very important point?&nbsp; Wouldn't have it made more environmental sense to include 30 tracks like the Chess Record recording?&nbsp;&nbsp; Nice try Universal but we can smell greenwashing a mile away.&nbsp; Although I applaud Universal for the sticker prominently placed on the shrink-wrap of their 15 track Green Series Chuck Berry Greatest Hits CD "A portion of the sale of this CD goes to The David Suzuki Foundation" I'm curious to know what that portion is.&nbsp; <br/><br/>Whether HMV is in trouble and only stocking items which they think will sell, it's a sad state of affairs when a music genius such as Chuck Berry is so under represented in one of the most hi-profile CD retail stores in Toronto.<br/>]]></description>
			<author>no@spam.com (Glen Alan)</author>
			<pubDate><![CDATA[Thu, 02 Apr 2009 00:00:00 EDT]]></pubDate>
			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.findaway.ca/news//blogs/3/Chuck-Berry-Forgotten-By-HMV.html</guid>
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