![]() ![]() ![]() Like most parents, I angst about giving the kids too much screen time, but Garageband has taught me: Not all screen time is created equal. One of the things we have planned is that Owen and I will email Garageband tracks back and forth - I’ll start something on the plane and he can finish it during his iPad time (and vice versa.) I’m going on book tour this spring, and I’m worried about being away from the kids for two months. (It’d be amazing if the Song Exploder brand branched out into something like this.) Kids could see how recorded music is put together… with their own fingers. Remember when Radiohead and Nine Inch Nails released their tracks as Garageband files and allowed fans to remix them? Imagine if you could download more classic tracks as Garageband projects. I’m constantly thinking about all the musical education possibilities with the program. One time Owen wanted to learn to play some of Bach’s cello suites on the keyboard, so I downloaded a midi file, opened it in Garageband, transposed it to the easy C key, and printed it out. For example, it will import MIDI files you download from the internet and show you the musical scores. Garageband does a bunch of crazy stuff I didn’t even know it could do. (I haven’t even gotten to tell him Marc Maron recorded Obama in in his garage… with Garageband.) He saw the “Podcasts” preset and started recording his own podcasts. (I’m convinced that this is part of the reason he can write and read so well for his age.) Here’s a hilarious screenshot I took of him spending a couple days in the studio with me, using Garageband on my old iMac: He loves, for example, coming up with album titles and band names and album art. Recording music in Garageband is a gateway to all kinds of other activities. Here is a song he recorded for his mom on Mother’s Day last year: He also became a huge fan of Grimes after I played him Visions and told him the whole thing was recorded in Garageband. A whole new language that other players could understand! A revelation! Then I learned how to play what I had written, dreamt. I sent my friend Mike Atkinson the MIDI scores and he did some cleaning up and printed them out. That song became “Marrow.”īecause I was not tied to my human, physical, muscular limitations (hands like to go here, ears like to hear this) I was able to make music that was smarter than I am. Like a facsimile of a facsimile of music. Just me drawing notes, one by one, until they sounded how they should sound. ![]() I have a precise memory of sitting in a hotel room in December of 2007 at Charles De Gaulle, absentmindedly drawing notes in on GarageBand via my laptop. Vincent drew a lot of her album Actor in Garageband: To get him interested in other kinds of music, I told him about how St. Grandma gave the 5-year-old my old Ghostbusters shirt so I played him the theme song for the first time in the car and he came home and recorded a cover in Garageband ? /suAFqiIAzY (“Christmasbahn,” “Trans Polar Express,” etc.) That was around the time he learned how to sample while looking for sleigh bells.Įventually, I built us a little plug-and-play studio so we could record together with my good microphones and instruments. At my suggestion, he recorded Christmas versions of Kraftwerk songs. He came in one day after quiet time with this totally cool and insane version of “Autobahn.” Then he moved into parody. He has recorded 100s of songs. He started out, like most songwriters, covering songs by bands he likes. (He would spend way more if we didn’t limit his screen time, and we have to, because if we don’t he gets that weird zombie recording glaze in his eyes. He spends, on average, at least an hour a day in Garageband. One afternoon a few years ago when we were bored, I showed my son Owen (now 6) how to make simple tracks on his little iPad mini, and ever since then, he’s been completely obsessed with the program. I could then export them and put them on my new iPod, which seemed insanely futuristic and cool. I’ve spent hundreds of hours in the program - when I lived in England in 2004, I bought a USB MIDI controller so I could record tracks in my tiny little apartment on my new 12 inch Powerbook. It’s so accessible and ubiquitous now, it’s easy to take for granted just how amazing a piece of software it really is. Garageband turned 15 yesterday. It was introduced at Macworld by Steve Jobs in January 2004. ![]()
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