Final Project

The Final Project consists of music you produce using techniques learned in the course. There are no stylistic or content restrictions. The goal is to come up with something you like and is the result of a strong effort. This can't be done well in a couple of afternoons.

Your grade will depend on your fulfillment of the technical requirements listed below, on my acceptance of a project description by email, and on my evaluation of your musical accomplishment — taking into account your level of experience when you entered the course.

IMPORTANT: The process of mixing down projects that contain both MIDI and audio tracks is much more complicated than just recording Korg MIDI tracks into the computer as audio, which you did in Exercise 3. The complete mix-down process is described in...

You'll learn how to balance your audio tracks with the Korg sound you've captured into the computer, as well as how to include Reason tracks in your stereo mix-down file.

I advise you not to leave the production of your mix file for the last minute, since it can be difficult and time-consuming to do this well.

BE CONSIDERATE! Use the stations that have Korg recording capability only for recording the Korg output. Once you've captured the Korg audio into sound files, please move to a different station so that others can record their Korg tracks.

WARNING: Please maintain multiple backups of all your project data. It's easy to lose all your work if your only up-to-date copy becomes corrupted somehow. Never work on your only copy of a project. Always copy your project to the hard disk before working on it. Keep a "history" of at least the sequence file used in your project. These are tiny compared to sound files, so it's no problem keeping a lot of them around. Read this advice.

LOSS OF WORK DUE TO MEDIA OR FILE CORRUPTION WILL NOT EARN YOU AN EXTENSION! Anticipating problems and learning to backup your work is an important part of working with computers.

What to turn in...

Here are the items you must turn in by the due date. Read these very carefully, as your grade will depend partly on whether the materials you submit are prepared properly.

©2003, John Gibson, Christopher Cook