Teaser Poster for Oct concert
Use this picture/poster in your blogs to tell the country that we are Meant to Live for something more!
Live in Manila! 7:30 pm at Phil Sports Arena (formerly ULTRA)
Use this picture/poster in your blogs to tell the country that we are Meant to Live for something more!
Posted by ultradust@gmail.com at 6:46 PM 1 comments
Posted by ultradust@gmail.com at 6:43 PM 1 comments
Posted by ultradust@gmail.com at 6:39 PM 0 comments
Switchfoot comes to Manila on Oct 2005 at the Araneta
Coliseum. Hear them perform their own brand of High-Energy Rock
singing "Meant to Love" (Spiderman 2 OST), "Date you to Move" and "Only Home" (A Walk to Remember OST)!
For inquiries, email PinoySiJerome@gmail.com.
In the tradition of their song Chem6a, teaser announcements will sometimes contain jokes. : ) If you didn't get the jokes, just email PinoySiJerome@gmail.com
Posted by ultradust@gmail.com at 3:37 PM 2 comments
“There are a couple things that Korg does that no other keyboard companies do,” Jerome shares.
“There is this feature called RPPR (Realtime Pattern Play/Recording) that no other keyboard manufacturers can emulate.
And because Switchfoot is a live band, we have to trigger everything live. That function is the one thing that I value most about my Korg gear. The new TR has it, and when I was using the TRITON Classic, it had it as well. I love it.”How about the sounds?
“Well the thing about me, ‘cause I’m old school, is I make all my own sounds. With Korg, all of the factory sounds that come with the workstations are great, but I like to manipulate the sounds to make them my own. I made a few cool pads on the TR, you know, you start with the sine wave and manipulate it. Some of the Korg effects are really cool, too, so I like to put some of them in the mix. And I like what Korg has done with their pad beds.
“I remember the T3 when it came out years ago,” continues an excited Jerome. “I was drooling over it at the music store for months thinking, ‘I have to have that keyboard because it has a sequencer built-in.’ It had the technology, the layered sounds…back then that was big!”
“Well, I grew up in an analog world, so everything I know and learned about keyboards had to do with tweaking knobs, filters and oscillators. When I saw the new Korg RADIAS it really got my juices flowing. The possibilities are endless.
Obviously my sound has a lot more analog in it than your classic ‘rock’ sound, so I don’t normally use a preset sound like a piano. I have to tweak. It’s just what I do. I do use an analog keyboard live, and I’m thinking the RADIAS has a lot of versatility.
I could see myself using it live. It’s polyphonic, which is a big thing for me, and the vocoder is something I’ve wanted to get into.”