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Friday, May 15, 2009

A Sound Idea: Part 2

In the previous post I touched on the benefits of using music you're in control of in your productions. Now I'll make mention of a few of the sites and services I've encountered thus far. In no particular order. Though I will start with the absolute cheapest option of the things you pay for!

1. SoundSnap - SoundSnap began life as a VERY noble idea. That being that it was absolutely free. All of the music and various sounds provided were largely contributed by talented individuals of the industry. Sort of a side project throwing us little guys a bone. There was a vast assortment of quality music and effects, it was in fact too good to be true. It's not hard to immagine that quality all at the very affordable price of FREE did wonders for their PR. It did. Of course that means higher opperating costs and means of the minds behind it making more money. Now SoundSnap isn't as free as it used to be.

At the most basic level you still have free and complete access to SoundSnap's library. HOWEVER! You can only download 5 files per month. Depending on your particular needs that may be good enough. If you need more than that, you can upgrade your membership to one of their several subscription plans. The lowest being $29 per month for 100 downloads per.

$29 might be a number larger than you wanted to see, but that's still a great deal if you're working to amass a library for your projects. Especially considering that most royalty free places charge that per track!

So go checkout SoundSnap Their library is quite vast and you'll likely find the style tunes you're looking for, or get pretty darn close.

2. StockMusic.net - One of the more "affordably priced" options out there. They have a good and largely original library. I say that because I have actually found some sites selling the same music found on their competitors. You can also download their track demos. Buuuuut, they're "watermarked". So if you plan on using it for anything, you'll have your work cut out for you.

3. Music Bakery - They offer a quality, varied, and original selecion of music. Tracks going from $14 and up depending on their production work/quality. They do offer Lo-Fi selections of their music. The samples are VERY LO-FI. But you can down load them. What I downloaded didn't seem to be watermarked, or it could very well be I didn't hear it. Yeah, that Lo-Fi. All in all they're still an "affordable" choice, depending on what catches your ear.

Music Services and Networking

Apart from royalty free tunes there are a couple of options I've found so far where free is still the name of the game. Including social networking. Basically the sites are geared toward musically talented folks to mingle and share their audio creations as well as mix-and-match the submissions of other site members with provided audio mixing as part of the site.

So you not only have the ability to find new and free music for your production, you might just find a talented person to make tunes for your project and getting a bit of exposure for themselves too.

1. Jamglue - Jamglue is a good place to start rooting around for music or a contributing artist. The site however, is a wee bit buggy. I always had an issue with the mixer freezing up or crashing. Also when combing tracks and loops the mixer doesn't really allow you to seamlessly combine and edit samples. Maybe the place just doesn't like me.

2. Splice Music - I think Splice Music may have been merging with someone else. At least that was the word the last time I tried checking them out. I heard of the place, like Jamglue, while watching Attack of the Show on G4 a long time ago. I have yet to actually see how the site works. Not because I haven't tried, but because no matter where I was or who's PC i was using the site just didn't work. Either the site would crash, or the blasted thing just wouldn't load. So if the link works for you, good luck, the site likely won't. I never said all the options would be good ones.

All in all there's a lot of cyberspace to be covered when looking for sound and music for your toons. I know it's incredibly easy just to use tunes from your favorite CD's or downloads. And the vast majority of independant toons out there on the net do just that. Which I guess is all well and good if you never plan on profiting from it.

Even when you're still learning the ropes, going that extra mile to find music you control for your projects and practice lends a little bit more of a professional touch to the whole thing.

1 comment:

  1. Splice was acquired by RemixGalaxy. The newly upgraded sequencer, with faster performance and better audio quality, can now be found at www.RemixGalaxy.com.

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