Royalty Free Background Music Library » Background Music Articles

New special offers are available!    

more offers
 

Interzone: Floating Spirits: Music For Hotel Spas and Relaxation Spaces

Posted: December 2012 in Background Music Articles
06

Music For Hotel Spas & Relaxing Spaces

Interzone: Relaxation & Meditation Music

Interzone provides Background Music Library with a few pieces of music perfect for hotels and chilled spaces.

 

Interzone’s Floating Spirits Sample: 

 

 

More about Interzone’s Music :

What current projects are you involved in for making music for the business market?

I’m in the middle of building a brand new electronic recording studio – Studio Inkwell – and unfortunately it steals a little of the time and energy I would like to spend on writing music. But I know that when it’s all dome the result will be very good, keeping my creativity alive.

But in spite of this, I am currently working om material for two different albums. One will be pure ambient and has the working title “Organic Universe”, and the other one will be more ‘normal’ tracks.

 

What instruments do you end to lead with when composing?

Synthesizers. I use a nice combination of software ones and quite a few hardware keyboards as well. Some of my setup for ambient music production include Roland JP-8000 and JV-1080. The Korg MS-2000R and Kurtzweil K2000 are also often used. For more organic sounds I tend to rely on my little analog monster box – the DSI Tetra, wonderful mashine.

On the software side I have the Arturia Moog and Yamaha plug-ins, the Mellotron and a vary good sampler for my pianos.

 

What are your favourite production tools you could not do without?

Well, first there is my DAW – Cubase. Then I have a rather unique combination of soft- and hardware compressors and other effects, but no favourite really, it very much depends on the track I’m making.

 

What sort of business locations could you imagine, or you have experience with using your music in for relaxation use?

Spa and health clinics. Book shops. Hotel lobbies. Certain types of clothes shops (as an counterpoint to the omnipresent top-20-music in the big stores). Cafes and restaurants. Museums and art centers. Also the public space. Places like bus terminals and open squares could benefit from that kind of music.

 


RSS Feed
By: Guy

Michelle Qureshi: Music For Chilled Retail & Restaurant Spaces

Posted: November 2012 in Background Music Articles
12

Music For Spas & Restaurants

Michelle Qureshi: Relaxation & Meditation Music

Michelle provides Background Music Library with a few pieces of music perfect for restaurants and chilled spaces.

 

 Compilation Mix Of Michelle’s work :

 

More about Michelle’s Music :

What experiences have you had licensing your music for film, TV, advertising or corporate branding?

I have had a variety of experiences while working with a handful of companies, most of which
have been discussed in previous questions. The refrain is that music licensing is a marathon,
not a sprint, so I guess I’m in that part of it for the long haul.

 

Do you have any collaboration projects underway or ongoing?

Yes, I’m working on a project with an artist, Rebecca Ruegger, who sculpts and paints. Her work inspires me; my music inspires her. The album artwork for Of Light is based on her painting. I’m also working with an online company to produce a music theme for their brand. Some of my

acoustic guitar and banjo music has been chosen for a film for the upcoming Sundance Film Festival. I am also collaborating with a guitarist who has launched a big initiative in India, Guitarmonk, for the teaching, performing and distribution of guitar music throughout South Asia. And in another collaboration that utilizes the many genres I perform and compose in, I provide the break music for a radio program. Plus there are ongoing licensing deals for my music in various media.

 

What sort of business locations could you imagine, or you have experience with using your music in for relaxation use?

Yoga studios, spas, hotel lobbies, restaurants, public spaces that need some quiet ambient background music, clinics, massage centers, art galleries, personal and at home use.


RSS Feed
By: Guy

Music For Chilled Spaces by Stu Dugdale

03

Relaxing Music To Chill Your Customers

Music for relaxing customer environments

Stu Dugdale provides Background Music Library with a diverse collection of music for use in production to background music in customer environments. To follow is more details of Stu’s music.

 

Stu Dugdale has a vast collection of music for varying business needs. Here I ask him a few questions about his music making.

Stu Dugdale royalty free tunes

Prolific royalty free music producer, Stu Dugdale.

What are your favourite production tools you could not do without? Sonar and Kontakt.

What sort of business locations could you imagine, or you have experience with using your music in for relaxation use?

I have provided my chilled out, tranquil music to Spa’s and beauty salons. I have placed music with all sort of waiting rooms from doctors to car showrooms. I have sold my music for use in restaurants and cafes. I would say that I have music for every business location, its just a matter of taste and style.

 

What demographics and consumer groups have businesses or what would you expect would find your music works well with your music styles?

I find that the chill out, tranquil music is preferred by the Spa’s and beauty salons whereas the rock and pop stuff is favoured by the hairdressers and waiting rooms. For my recent magazine music I found that a very light and summery guitar and piano was suited.

 

What current projects are you involved in for making music for the business market?

I have just finished a corporate music track for a new magazine called Simple Things. It is a craft magazine and had a big You Tube launch.

 

What experiences have you had licensing your music for film, TV,advertising or corporate branding?

I have a lot of experience licensing my music for TV and Film as well as corporate and advertising. I have just completed a set of music cues for a weekly channel 4 show.

 

What future plans do you have within the music for business market? In particular, music for retail, restaurants, spas, gyms and hotels?

My plans are to target my music for these groups by creating specific albums with these businesses in mind.


RSS Feed
By: Guy

Composing Music That Will Work Well Within A Consumer Environment / Public Space

Posted: September 2012 in Background Music Articles
26
How to compose and product music for use in public spaces.

Bouncing hard walls can make mushy tracks un-listenable.

As a composer or producer writing background music or any type of soundscape for use in a public space, there are important things to consider when writing and mixing your finished piece. Pitch, tone and the final EQ all play an important part in how your music will sound in a particular area whether it is a dentist office or a lounge bar. There is a reason waiting room music sounds the way it does and although we regularly make fun of it we should take heed of the production methods, before you get to the mixing, think about the instruments you use and sounds you’re making. Your music must be catchy and sociable without being monotonous or obtrusive. This is especially important for drums and percussion parts. A thudding bass drum may be overwhelming and subconsciously people will be distracted by it and your piece of music will suffer, but get it right and you can create a hypnotic sound that people take in and tap to without realising. Experiment with different cymbals and percussion, you may not need to use an actual drum beat if you can come up with a repeating pattern that sounds good. In fact you may find an actual kit overpowers the other instruments. Speaking of other instruments, you will obviously be aiming for your core sounds: bass, guitars, light vocals and some synths. They should obviously compliment each other not just in melody but also in pitch as you may not know exactly where your music is being piped out and the pitch of the instruments and a poor audio system could result in an awful sound that does more harm than good to your reputation.

A big part of this is mixing. Ideally you will be mixing in the mid to high frequency range, avoiding tinny high end sounds or muddy low end. As mentioned earlier, getting your percussion right is half the battle. Hi- hats and any cymbals should sound soft and rest in a mid-range frequency which will still give you a good sound but omits the harshness that can come with cymbal hits or hi-hat patterns (especially in ostinatos.) Bass and snare should only need a little tweak unless you’re looking for a new interesting sound. Before you even get to the mixing process make sure you’re using the closest sound you could get to what you want for the finished piece. This should allow you to make enough little adjustments to perfect it without losing the original flavour of your chosen sample. Mix With the volume as low as possible. If something sounds too loud when the volume is at a minimal you have to turn it down. By listening to the beat at a low level during mixing, you get to hear exactly what is overpowering if any and out of wack frequencies.
Generally for this type of music one good kick drum should suffice as opposed to several mixed into one sound. You may find this doesn’t work for music intended as background noise without spending a lot of time working on just that sound and you may be on a tight deadline, 24 hours in some cases.

As always, compression and overall EQ are what will help your music sound better when played through different sound systems.
Compression is the process of automatically adjusting the volume of the input sound so that the quiet parts are louder and the loud sections don’t distort. It is the equivalent of someone automatically and very quickly adjusting a volume knob, keeping the volume levels within a set range. Most compressors generally have the same controls: Threshold – This will set the level at which compression starts. Any sounds below this threshold remain unaltered and any sounds above will be compressed. Ratio – Ratio is the degree of compression above your set threshold level. Mild compression would sit at 2:1 so for example, your incoming level rises by 10db the outgoing level you hear will only be 5db. Higher ratios such as 5:1 are used for vocals and other instruments but the higher you go the more noticeable to the listener.

Attack – The time your compressor takes to work once the signal passes the threshold level. Measured in milliseconds.

Release – The length of time it takes for your compressor to return to its normal state after the signal goes below the threshold again.

Gain – Gain serves to make up for level that is lost through compression. The more compression you use, the lower the outgoing signal and gain will help build back up some of that lost volume.

Stereo link switch is also an important control when it comes to compression. If you compress a stereo signal both channel levels will be uneven and constantly change. Without a solution both channels will have different levels of compression and the stereo image will move from one speaker to the other depending on which channel has the most compression.
Stereo link switch will mix the control signal of the gain elements together and each channel is then compressed equally.

Ratio and Threshold controls involve fine tuning and a delicate balance to provide the right amount of compression while Attack and Release must be tweaked to ensure the compressor is not intrusive on your mix. Attack and Release controls are principally there to help you make compression come and go unnoticed. They must be measured against the attack and decay of the signal. Drums will have a fast attack and decay so if your attack and release settings are too slow the compression won’t be quick enough and the signal passes through unchanged.
The best method for attack and release is to match it with the attack and decay of the signal itself.

Balancing volume across all the tracks within a collection is also important to us here at background-music-library.com as we always need to ensure all compilations and music services have consistent volumes across all tracks.

You will find that a bit of time spent EQing your mix will make all the difference to your track sounding intrusive and loud or steady and level. Monitoring your signal levels will allow you to have a piece of music that is appropriate for use in public space because it is well mixed, clear and remains at it’s very core, musical.

RSS Feed
By: Guy

Burger King Commercial Pulled Due to Music Licensing Issues

28

“The unconventional advertisement in which she is featured, belting out her great affection for Burger King’s poultry and all its toppings, has been pulled, the Associated Press reports. The issue, the chain told the AP, is that the spot used music for which they may not have properly obtained the rights. A spokesperson for the company said that they hoped to re-launch the ad soon.”

It really shouldn’t be that hard to license  music. At Background-Music-Library we make things simple: all our tracks are pre cleared for the license options in the drop down menu on each track page. Need anything else? Just ask.

Full story here.

RSS Feed
By: Guy

Copyright © 2009-2013 Kesseny ltd. Royalty free production in store music at Background-Music-Library.
All Rights Reserved.