May 2007 - Oct 2007 Super! Alright! Operated camera and edited various productions including Voxtrot's "Firecracker" music video and "Dinner with the Band" which has since been purchased by IFC. Jun 2008 - Sep 2012 Hewlett-Packard Designed promotional and advertising solutions in a variety of mediums with Melodeo and later joined the software design team at HP to create engaging visual media in promotion of cloud-based services. In early 2013 I worked with Kindle to create a pilot for the Kindle Tips series, a proven success as episodes continue to be produced and featured on the Kindle CS website. Our videos have over 2,000,000 views and continue to enlighten Kindle users around the globe. Play online or download to listen offline free - in HD audio, only on JioSaavn. Our team of four created over 50 engaging customer support videos offered in a wide variety of languages, saving the customer support center thousands of call hours. Listen to Messin Around on the English music album For the Ladies by Richie Aldente, only on JioSaavn. The bands that performed were: Richie Aldente / The Harper Conspiracy / The Black Chevys. When was the last Richie Aldente concert The last Richie Aldente concertwas on Januat Sunset Tavern in Seattle, Washington, United States. Check out Richie Aldente at Last Supper Club in Seattle on Februand get detailed info for the event - tickets, photos, video and reviews. Created visual assets, motion graphics, and quick-turnaround edits of Kindle customer service videos. Richie Aldente is most often considered to be Acoustic Guitar Cover. Recent clients/collaborators include Seattle musicians Lori Goldston, Richie Aldente and award-winning filmmakers Linas Philips and Jeff Stillwell. May 2013 - Present Freelance After years of working for The Man, I'm breaking free from old patterns and taking on challenges that truly inspire, fulfill and excite my lifelong interest in filmmaking and photography.
0 Comments
Systweak’s Duplicate Photos Fixer Pro is an awesome de-duplicate image cleaner that is AppEsteem certified. Why Trust Duplicate Photos Fixer Pro?ĭeveloped by Systweak Software, a famous software development company known for its system utility and security tools. Looking at this, I am certain they will soon add more features to make it a more robust duplicate image-cleaning tool. However, recently Systweak Software added new options like scanning Dropbox and finding duplicates from rotated and flipped images. Scan rotated and flipped images for duplicates.Ĭertainly, we can’t overlook these disadvantages. The time interval only shows duplicate images clicked within the last 24 hours.Ĭompares similar & duplicate images by content. The trial version allows cleaning only 15 duplicates.ĭifferent matching levels to accurately scan the device for duplicate & similar photographs.Ĭannot scan Google Photos & Lightroom for duplicatesĪuto Mark duplicates and saves yourself from manually selecting detected duplicate pictures. You can scan the internal drive, removable drive, Dropbox, and Google Drive for dupes. However, the unavailability of certain options makes me sad.
What was your first studio like? How and for what reasons has your set-up evolved over the years and what are currently some of the most important pieces of gear for you? This helps so much with realising your ambitions for a record. But now with new technologies in production you can get much further down the line before you have to start reaching out to other collaborators to get involved. I usually had an end goal in my head, but lacked the skills to achieve it … I got close sometimes though. As producer you have to become a good judge of character as fast as you can, but that only comes with experience, so early production projects were quite frustrating for me. It’s not all about getting the best players you can, but getting the right blend of players for the record or project you’re working on. GREG: Main challenges were always the musicians for me. What were some of your main challenges and ambitions in terms of your approach to production when starting out – and how have they changed over time? I’d learn from other people's arrangements but adapt them for my needs. It took a while though :) … This is still something I like to do but find myself more playing keyboard parts on guitar (or vice versa) … using horns to play string arrangements etc … It’s the finessing of parts to make them work on other instruments that usually steers me in interesting directions when I arrange or produce. I had a great sax teacher at the school, who had me playing with his big band on Saturday afternoons by the time I was 16. My favourite pianist was and still is Oscar Peterson and I used to enjoy transcribing parts of his solos so I could learn to play them on sax. The school recognised this and asked me if i wanted to learn to play any other instruments. GREG: I started piano lessons at the age of 9, so by the time I arrived at secondary school aged 13 I had a solid grasp of musical theory and performance. What was this like for you? How would you describe your own development as a producer and the transition towards your own voice? What is the the relationship between copying, learning and your own creativity? That realisation has served me well over the last 30+ years of music making.įor most artists, originality is first preceded by a phase of learning and, often, emulating others. I loved the process involved in multitrack recording, but what I realised very early on was that the success of a recording was more about the arrangement of the music and instruments than how good your microphones and preamps were. I learned how to engineer in an analogue studio based around a 1inch, 16 track machine through a trident desk. GREG: In 1984, at the age of 17 years , I started working at a recording studio in Glasgow called Berkeley Street Studios. What was your first recording-related job - and what or who were your early passions and influences? What is about music and/or sound that drew you to it? Hue And Cry will also tour the UK this November. Website / Contact: If this 15 Questions interview makes you want to find out more about Hue and Cry, visit their facebook profile or personal website to find out more and order releases directly from them. And the book that will change you life is called Infinite and Finite Games, by James Carse. PAT: You should listen to Rain Dogs by Tom Waits about once a month. GREG: Have a look at the architecture of Zaha Hadid and the design of Giogetto Giugiaro. Current Release: Pocketful of Stones on Blairhill Records |