Front of house sound - new challenges with big concerts

Opportunity struck. Or maybe it was just hard work over a long time that eventually paid off. On the back of years of engineering live broadcasts of the orchestras in Auckland, I was invited by the Auckland Philharmonia Orchestra to help them out with a concert for which they needed a sound designer and front-of-house sound engineer. That’s the person who sits behind the big sound desks at live concerts.

The gig was a crossover concert of classical and pop music. Or rather modern soul, as it featured a young emerging New Zealand singer called Teeks. By now he’s hit his stride, released his debut album and in New Zealand most people know who he is. 

The idea for that concert was to strip back his music, let the orchestra play most of it and let his quiet and soulful singing float over the top. Easily said, not easily done. We had to come up with a special design of the line-array loudspeakers. That’s the big column of loudspeakers that you see at big concerts.

Because the event was held in the beautiful Auckland Town Hall, which has a very reverberant room sound, we didn’t want to amplify the orchestra. It would be so much nicer if the orchestra sounded natural. So I had to find a way to amplify Teeks’ singing so that it sounds natural and unamplified so that it gels with the acoustic sound of the orchestra. That’s a biiiiig challenge. But we pulled it off.

The event was sold out, got rave reviews and on the back of that I’ve been hired by the orchestra to do lots more of those concerts. Life is interesting. :-)

New Zealand neo-soul singer Louis Baker and the Auckland Philharmonia Orchestra

Since then we have done a few more of those crossover concerts. For example the neo-soul singer Louis Baker. Then as of writing this blog, we’re planning concerts by Maori songwriter Rob Ruha and Country-girl Tami Neilson. They’re all fabulous singers and songwriters.

Psycho-thriller. Run away... Or write music for it.

Psycho-thriller. Run away... Or write music for it.

Soon after I arrived in New Zealand I started collaborating with NZ filmmakers Rajneel Singh and Craig Parkes. A psycho-thriller they were working on caught my attention and I turned the script into a concept album of predominantly atmospheric music . The music combines electronic and neo-classical elements and is inspired by minimalism. It really takes you for a ride and is melodic and relaxing.

Let's break music tradition!

Let's break music tradition!

Luthier Paul Davies and violinist Sarah Curro were directly responsibly for the direction my music took during the last five years. Thanks to them I embarked on my five-year project Atmosphere.

It’s very interesting to talk to them about their backgrounds and their philosophies concerning the modern music world. So I made a radio documentary about it. It’s a very intriguing discussion with some intriguing viewpoints. Listen here.

Atmosphere - Music that takes you on a journey.

Atmosphere - Music that takes you on a journey.

Atmosphere. That word has a few meanings for me. First of all it’s the project that I’ve been working on for the last five years. Atmosphere - The first of eight pieces of music that build up an emotional arc, an ambience, a story without words. Those pieces make up the new BOSKER album Curious. A sound-world that transports the listener away from reality to wherever your daydreams take you.

Here is a video of Sarah Curro performing the third piece of the album. At that stage it didn’t even have a name yet. Now it does - Phoenix. In this video Sarah plays a semi-acoustic Spur violin created by Paul Davies.

Atmosphere - The beginning

Atmosphere - The beginning

In 2015 I decided to take a year off from recording engineering and just focus on composing. I was very lucky to meet two remarkable people, violinist Sarah Curro and luthier Paul Davies. Sarah and Paul are so inspiring that they set me on a musical journey that I didn’t see coming. An amazing new electric violin. A fantastic violinist. And eight atmospheric and lush electronic pieces that send you on a journey. Five years in the making, the album Atmosphere is released mid 2020. It all began in Melbourne when my mind was blown in Paul’s workshop…

Chinese master of martial arts meets Henry VIII

Chinese master of martial arts meets Henry VIII

Back in 2013 I travelled to Wellington to be part of a recording team of a New Zealand Symphony Orchestra concert. The programme was full of music by acclaimed Chinese composer Tan Dun, lead by the maestro himself. It made me ponder why the bigger and more successful the artist, the more graceful and appreciative they are. An inspiring thought, which led me to absorb some of the power of Tan’s music into my soundtrack for the play Anne Boleyn. Chinese martial arts and Renaissance music? How does that fit?

The piano concert from HELL!

The piano concert from HELL!

I must have been ten or eleven years old, when my piano teacher signed me up to play at a recital. A gaggle of piano teachers got together to let their students show off against another. That's what it seemed to me. I was one of the younger ones and the other players were all much better pianists. The whole experience seemed so unnatural. When I told her I hated it, it was like high noon. The stand-off went something like this: “You have to play recitals, otherwise you're not going to improve!” “If you force me to play one of those things again, I'll quit!” And then she signed me up to play the next one…

It all started when...

It all started when...

Famous musicians are just normal people. That's something I found out in my early twenties. Back in the 2000s I worked in a dingy, smelly and simply fabulous live music venue in Karlsruhe, Germany - The Substage. It was a converted pedestrian subway. Wide, low, no windows, no neighbours, perfect for a fun party or concert. Thrash Metal giants Anthrax didn’t think so.