Past student, Evan Chapman, gets interviewed for Modern Drummer magazine

Read the interview here: Evan Chapman of Square Peg Round Hole: Juniper Album, “Name Not One Man” Video World Premiere | Modern Drummer Magazine

Wow! Check out past student of mine, Evan Chapman, in this interview with Modern Drummer Magazine.

The interview celebrates Evan's band, Square Peg Round Hole, their new (and fantastic) album, Juniper, and the world premiere of their "Name Not One Man" music video.

Square Peg Round Hole combines the best of electronic, post rock, and contemporary percussion idioms. I can tell Evan is totally nerding out explaining some of the grooves on the record (which are just as inspired by the band's classical/contemporary percussion background as they are modern rock and electronic):

MD: In “A-frame” off of Juniper, there’s a groove around the three-minute mark with single hi-hat hits that first occur a 16th note after the backbeat, and then during the second half of the phrase they sound like they come before it. It almost creates this push-pull motion, or feels like the groove is swirling. Do you have any specific approach to writing patterns like this?

Evan: This kind of writing draws from my love for process music. I’ll admit that I’m a total nerd when it comes to math in music, and I’m fascinated with permutations and serialism. On a larger scale, the group will often throw in compositional processes like addition, diminution, and phasing. But on a smaller scale, I’ll occasionally throw permutations into my drum parts. The “A-Frame” groove that you’re referring to is a subtle example of that. A more obvious example is the ending of “Unraveling,” where the bell of my ride cymbal cycles between every fourth 16th, then every third, then every second, then every downbeat, and then back again through the cycle in reverse. Like I said, I’m a nerd.

The SPRH sound has the rich expanse of a modern rock ensemble, all coming from just three percussionists. Rock music can be straightforward and often improvised. Likewise, a lot of SPRH ideas don't strike the ear as very complex at first, but the sound is very intently composed.

MD: At certain points it feels like standard drum grooves are dropped in favor of creating more of a percussive approach. For instance, using floor toms almost as a melody instrument. Is there any concept behind this approach?

Evan: I’m generally drawn to drummers who think more like composers and percussionists. Glenn Kotche is a perfect example of this. He’s expanded his drumset to be more like a multi-percussion setup, which causes him to think about his parts differently. I think along those same lines, using different drums and cymbals as different parts of the melody. I use a non-traditional setup with SPRH, which also inspires me to come up with more unique parts.

Our floor toms are a very large part of our sound and the drum patterns that develop between Sean [M. Gill] and me. Sean plays a floor tom in his setup as well, and we’re often coming up with patterns that work together to create something that no single player could achieve. During the section beginning at 6:07 in “Unraveling,” the two of us build a hocketing drum part in an additive way. With every repetition, Sean builds his part note-by-note from the back to the front, and I build mine from the front to the back. The result is a section that gradually evolves from seemingly chaos to a powerful groove.

Not to mention, it is very gracious for Evan to list me as an influence during his musical education, of which I am honored to have had any part in.

After John Gleason retired from teaching drums, I went on to study with several other wonderful private instructors—Grant Menefee, Scott Tiemann, and Robert Burns—who each taught me a unique set of skills including orchestral, Brazilian, and Afro-Cuban percussion, four-mallet marimba, chart reading, sight reading, and more. All of this prepared me for a degree in music.

Check out Square Peg Round Hole. Congratulations Evan!

Apple improves iCloud Music Library matching, ditches copy-protected matched files for Apple Music users

Apple improves iCloud Music Library matching, ditches copy-protected matched files for Apple Music users:

When Apple Music was released just over a year ago, Apple also debuted iCloud Music Library, a way of storing your iTunes library in the cloud. There were two ways to seed the cloud, either with iTunes Match or Apple Music. If you were an iTunes Match subscriber, matching your songs in your local library to your cloud library was done one way, and if you were just an Apple Music subscriber, matching was done differently.

This created some confusion about the way tracks were matched and stored in iCloud Music Library. Now, Apple is changing this, and will use the same matching method for both services. The company said in a briefing that Apple Music now uses acoustic fingerprinting and provides matched files without digital rights management (DRM), or copy protection, just like iTunes Match.

It seriously blows my mind that this isn't the way it worked from the start. Even after reading this article, I am still unsure if it is safe to cancel my iTunes Match subscription or not.

Subscribing to Apple Music is a huge risk on my part. For the record, I keep two local back ups and one cloud back up of music files in addition to my iTunes Match/Apple Music subscriptions. I of all people want Apple Music to succeed but things like this make me wonder why Apple isn't doing more to secure their footing as a musically relevant tech company.

For the times that Apple Music works as I want it to, it is still worth the experiment. More often than not, it syncs my iTunes Library across all of my Macs and iOS devices. But there are still frequent syncing bugs, in particular, the accuracy of metadata like album art and song titles. And don't get me started on how my MacBook frequently logs me out of my account. At the end of the day though, Apple Music shows potential to be much more than other streaming services..

If you are looking for a music subscription service like Spotify or Google Music, I think Apple Music is getting close enough to complete. But if you are more like me, and you keep a vast library of rare and live albums, personally created and uploaded mp3s, and rely on iTunes to get your job done, it might not be worth the headache.

Plex for Sonos

​Plex has announced that their service can be linked to your Sonos speakers.

Plex for Sonos | Media Server | Media Streaming Server:

Plex can connect to any Sonos system wirelessly, no matter where it is. You always have access to every one of your songs, playlists, and music libraries with Plex.

​ I use Plex to host and stream my video and music library. I also just bought my second Sonos speaker for the living room in my house. I must say that I am thrilled that I will now be able to stream anything from my Plex library to my Sonos speakers.

If you are curious about setting up a free Plex account, it is easy to learn about from their website. Did I mention that you can read about how I use Plex in my forthcoming book, Digital Organization Tips for Music Teachers? You can preorder that here. ​

Excellent writing tool, Scrivener, is available on iOS

Earlier this week, Literature & Latte announced that their writing tool Scrivener is now available on iOS.

I wrote my entire book on the Mac version of Scrivener and oh man do I wish I had this on my iPad throughout the process.

Scrivener is a non-linear word processor that allows you to write and organize lengthy projects. I only scratched the surface while writing my book but you can do all sorts of neat things with it including: clipping urls, images, and other research into your project file all within the same interface that you organize the various written sections of your work.

If you are writing a book, thesis, dissertation, or even just need to organize larger writing projects in a flexible way, you should give this app a try.

Interesting tidbit: Scrivener uses Dropbox instead of iCloud to sync projects across devices. The developers wrote about that decision here. It is interesting that Apple's own syncing solution is not flexible enough for pro software developers to build their apps on. I continue to be worried about Apple's ability to stay relevant with both cloud services and the professional market. This is not a promising story but I am glad that the developers of Scrivener made a decision that ensures security and reliability for their users, even if it does come with some compromises.

Master Plan, Part Deux | Tesla Motors

Elon Musk has posted part two in his master plan for Tesla

Master Plan, Part Deux | Tesla Motors:

So, in short, Master Plan, Part Deux is:

Create stunning solar roofs with seamlessly integrated battery storage Expand the electric vehicle product line to address all major segments Develop a self-driving capability that is 10X safer than manual via massive fleet >learning Enable your car to make money for you when you aren't using it

Bring it on!

Announcing My First Book ---> Digital Organization Tips for Music Teachers!

I am excited to announce that I am writing a book!

Actually, I already wrote it. Oxford University Press will publish the book, "Digital Organization Tips for Music Teachers," this Fall. It will be the first title in the series, "Essential Music Technology: The Prestissimo Series" with series editor, Richard McCready.

The book will focus on how technology can help rather than stifle productivity in the music teaching profession. It will address such topics as: minimizing paper, managing tasks, taking good notes, organizing iTunes playlists, understanding music streaming services, working in the cloud, and managing scores. The book will provide an overview of the apps and services I have found most useful in my teaching experience. It will include sample workflows for using these technologies in music teaching contexts.

Stay tuned to this site for more information. The blog has been quiet this year as I have spent more time writing the book. Upon release, I plan to write posts of a supplementary nature. I also plan to do a miniseries on my podcast that offers commentary on the book. I will be inviting many insightful guests on the show to discuss a different chapter each episode.

I also have a really fun video trailer in the works featuring some brilliant acting talent from my colleagues in the Howard County Public School System and some awesome editing work from the guys over at Four/Ten Media.

I hope you will pick up a copy when it is released.

Steinberg announces Dorico

Steinberg has finally given a name and release date to their much anticipated score editing application.

Dorico will be available Q4 2016. I have been looking for a modern replacement for Sibelius for years and this software really looks like it might deliver. You can read all about it on their blog, here.

The Sibelius blog has a dense (in the best sense of the word) overview of the features of the app here.

MyScript Stylus is a third party keyboard that turns handwritten text to typed text

David Sparks wrote a review of a new iPad Pro keyboard called MyScript Stylus that converts handwritten text to typed text. See his review for a video of this in action.

I have been using this keyboard on my iPad Pro for a few weeks now end let me just say I feel like a wizard. The keyboard feels natural to write on with the Apple Pencil, maybe even supernatural.

I think the thing that makes this app so compelling is the way I tend to hold the iPad Pro. Because of its size, I find that I am more comfortable cradling it in my left arm against my upper chest when using it for long periods of time. While holding it like this, I use the Apple Pencil as input instead of a finger. The length of the pencil allows for me to be able to reach touch targets at this distance and even increases my precision and speed when interacting with various apps. This is not a comfortable position to type on a software keyboard and the iPad Pro does not support the feature where you can split the keyboard in two and type with both thumbs (why!?!?) so the fact that I can continue typing by simply handwriting with the Apple Pencil means I do not have to change my grip, the position of the iPad, or my input device.

This has proven especially useful when using the Canvas SpeedGrader app to assess student performances in person. Using pre-designed performance rubrics, I can tap on the criteria that best describe the performance with ultra speed precision using the pencil, and even have time to hand write some comments in the comments field of each category, all without the pencil ever leaving my grip. This speed allows my to give clearer, richer, and faster musical feedback to students, which is ready for them to read using the Canvas app on their phones immediately after they are done playing for me.