@@Like-a-PROinBERLIN naja Künstler, gibt wohl hunderttausende die so wie diese Frau mit irgendwelchen Geräten zu Hause sitzt und herumspielt. Finde lustig wie die das jetzt 20, 30 Jahre später immer noch machen, ist eigentlich total retro so wie Blues, das wiederspricht eigentlich dem auf Innovation gerichteten Geist elektronischer Musik.
Felt the same way when she was talking about synthesizers and modular but didnt know how to put it. Infectious enthusiasm and curiosity nails it though.
I don't speak German, but I am enough of an old school Tangerine Dream and Kraftwerk fan to think that German is the proper language for discussing electronic music and equipment.
I found it fascinating, although I had no clue what she was talking about. Was happy to recognize one word: Ableton. Her next words "I don't use it". Whaaa, so there goes nothing :-)
It's interesting how young people, this generation of musicians, have found usefulness and aesthetic beauty in concrete music and electronic textures. It seems as if this type of thinking has gone (almost) mainstream. I think it's cool. Years ago, pre-Internet, the only folks who dug this stuff (myself included) were geeky music types who were willing to go beyond the basic musical elements of rhythm, melody and harmony and explored texture and randomness. This young artist is fully exploring that realm and interestingly enough, others who are watching this clip dig it too. There is hope in the world after all...
Yes! The democratisation of technology has enabled so many of us to delve into abstract and critical thinking. The singularity is not strictly about becoming one with the machine, but it's more of understanding and thinking like one. It's not what the AI can do for us, but what we can do for the AI.
It's all down to the rise of dance music, which was (and still is) unlike any other form of popular music: rather than being based around the song form, it emphasised extended time spans and laminar structures, demanding a very different way of listening, And dance music was descended from disco, which in turn developed from the idea of listening and dancing to recorded music as a secret social occasion when the Nazis invaded France (black music and dancing to it was banned as 'degenerate'). Thus Adolf Hitler was the inadvertent godfather of modern beat-based electronic music, which is very, very weird.
It’s so cool. As more powerful hardware becomes available at lower price points, an entire world of programmed and semi-programmed music opens up to the creative minds of the world. The Moog synthesizers of the 70s were so out of reach for most, yet today for a modest investment you can have exponentially more power on your desk.
Why would 126 people (as of September 4, 2020) give a "thumbs down" to this video? I find JakoJako very inspiring and want to go make music after watching this video.
When Jako said "if it paid more, I would prefer to produce music exclusively" I felt that. I would love to create all day, every day, but it doesnt pay and I'm stuck working for Corporate overlords, which eats 70% of time and my energy. *sad artist noises*
Hi David, You should totally learn to speak German, it's a wonderful language and honestly it's easier to think in German as it is to think in English. German has far fewer exceptions to keep track of and though there are some long words, those words are often smaller words put together. Germans are by nature incredibly organized and efficient, they are also incredibly honest even to your face which is actually refreshing.The first time I went to Germany I had only taken one semester (16 years old) but it was still worthwhile for me to go because it gave me many more reasons to learn the language and the culture. I returned almost 5 years (21 years old) later with the ability to hold a basic conversation, however after working as a waiter for 3 months my German drastically increased (4x). It's now some 28 years later and I still speak German fairly well. I try to listen to German television several times a week plus speak to anyone I happen to run into who is either German or speaks German. My experience is that yes most younger Germans who study English and went onto college speak English fairly well, however older people and those who went onto trade school instead don't speak English quite as well. By in large Germans unlike Americans speak many more languages but Europe is a much smaller place with far more languages being spoken. Similar to how many more Americans can speak Spanish in our border states or have Latin ancestry, in fact when I was living in Mexico City briefly I actually got by speaking German several times because my girl friend's nephews were studying in a German school or family friends were German...go figure.
@@milododds1 I agree. I've been to much of Europe and spent lots of time with real people from the places I was touring in and while much of Europe is very friendly, I'd say Germans are the friendliest.
How the hell can anyone dislike this video? I cant even understand half of it nor do i play and i was mesmerized. Her energy and enthusiasm is palpable, infectious even! amazing!
lol i cant help myself but compare this with charlotte de witte and her video when beatport visited her 3 years ago (beatport studio sessions). after that no one was sure anymore whether she actually produces her music herself lol. and here we see true knowledge and passion, this is a difference like day and night. this lady seems like she could go on forever and ever about her stuff, real artist. great video, thanks
@G E T R E K T 905 Not sure what you're trying to achieve here, or what you even mean with your comments, but for one thing, you certainly appear to have some problem with women / girls generally, or for their work to be considered equal to that of men. For another thing, I couldn't care less if the artist in this video was male or female; my original comment was about how rapidly that artist creates their art. Simp-le as that.
Listened to JakoJako so much during loockdown, her music is just fantastic - not at all surpirsed to see how engaging and interesting she is when talking about her setup!
Great feature, her music is bliss. I think as we are all human, the key is to not put to much pressure on ourselves - that's when things get difficult. Learn and create, the rest will fall into place.
You don't see passionate people like that too often! So enthusiastic, experimenting (and learning) with the analog stuff, creating all sorts of music waves. Awesome
Schön wenn jemand im Musikmacher versinkt, und Spaß dabei hat. Schon geil so viele Schalter und Knöpfe soundtechnisch ausprobieren zu dürfen. Und sich dabei verliert immer was neues zu finden.. Dann noch viel Spaß dabei und danke für den Einblick... Interessant auf jeden Fall....... MFG
How you at TEB keep coming up with these fantastic artists just baffles me. I have yet to see an artist on this channel that doesn't inspire and spread enthusiasm for the love of sound and machines. Thank you and thanks to JakoJako, great interview.
@@southpole76 haha, hysterical cheeky comment; but to be fair this was a particularly engaging and inspiring episode, jakojako does seem like one to watch, and thoroughly one of my favorite TEBs for a while..
Night Nurse would have been a great moniker too :D i love watching people get giddy talking about music making - the passion just shines through. I'd have to say that out of all the people ive heard with modular setups, nobody has made more enjoyable tracks than JakoJako - tight, yet evolving/varied and still melodic. Really, really impressive stuff - listened to her Patchnotes set 3x today
Berlin school of electronic music just gained a poster child. No more middle-aged, balding, beer-belly carrying, glasses wearing, German-looking nerds. Long live young, fit, professorial looking, gloriously Asian, German-speaking, chicks to carry forward the BSEM tradition! Not to mention those intriguing tattoos. I'm in.
Ihre Leidenschaft für Musik ist so groß, das kann einen einfach nur von vorneherein fesseln. Es ist so schön zu wissen, dass es Leute da draußen gibt, die genauso für die Musik brennen wie ich. Danke an euch, dass ihr so viele tolle Videos produziert, die sind nämlich neben dem ganzen Trash-Content den man auf TH-cam findet ein krasser Mehrwert. Love geht raus an euch
Pro tip: Just start something somehow. Even if it's just opening a crappy DAW and doing a simple pattern for 5 minutes a day. That shit gets you flowing man!
Everyone has their own means, of producing something. Just because you have top dollar gear, doesn't make you any less creative then this young lady. Its never about the gear, or the complexity of your work space, its about the desire and imagination to make something uniquely yours.
This feeling is what other companies prey on, "Get our new FlowX VST and it will unlock your potential! *Full video of a guy you've never heard off talking about the software*" You just need to practice daily. Don't get down on yourself, open up the DAW and get crackin!
"Art is not a product, it's an exploration. What you bring into your home is a crystallization of that journey" -- Jordan Peterson. That's brought to mind by this wonderfully articulate introspection about her interaction with the complex of modular synthesis. Great!
Ich hab ihren Werdegang in Berlin verfolgt. Ihr Ehrgeiz steckt an, ihr Fachwissen macht manchen DJ beim shoppen sprachlos und dann ist sie auch noch so sweet. Ich hab auch ihr Set im Berghain erlebt, ein ganz feiner und talentierter Mensch 😍
Super smart 👍🏽 und schön zu sehen mit welcher Passion 💚 die Musikerin dabei ist. Ich bin ehrlich beeindruckt (auch wenn das weder ihr Ansinnen sein muss oder soll❕) und wünsche weiterhin viel Erfolg und tolle „Experimente“ 🎶🎵🎶🎶
Hallo JakoJako ! Du machst total die Dinge, die ich machen will. Danke, daß du mir einen Weg gegeben hast. Ich plane auch einen Eurorack zu bauen. Ja, wir sollten die Regeln brechen. Übrigens, danke, daß du eine Krankenschwester bist, die dich um Menschen kümmert. Du machst nicht nur großartige Musik, sondern bist auch eine sehr fürsorgliche Person. Das Geheimnis ist Octatrack. Du hast auch herausgefunden, wie du deinen Workflow vereinfachen können. Vielen Dank !
I also do something similar with the songs I create in that every song must contain something new I've never done or tried before. It forces me every time to go outside of my comfort zone and experiment. I like how you get inspired by the manuals, you should try creating your own modules, look at Emilie Gillet but yeah I get that you love the process...someday you might make your own hardware. I too prefer to pre-build my drum beats but unlike you I'm not doing live performances which I have huge respect that you can do that. Instead I tell musical stories by picking a person who the song is dedicated to, a genre, and a topic or object. Laying down drum beats first, bass, chords and some sort of lead. Anyways I am going to rewatch your video a few more times, it's very helpful. You say that you get emotional and then inspired, I believe you're just allowing yourself to play with uncertainty about what's going to happen in the moment. You're creating the space for something exciting to happen, something random...that's what Jazz is all about and improvisation. JakoJako you're becoming a true musician....so happy for you. Btw if you still want to hear the loud amplifiers there is a cool Kickstart project I'm currently backing called "Stomplifier" though it's sort of ending in a few days and likely won't get funded but I'm hoping that eventually it will someday because it gives you the sound of various tube amps in a very small profile. I'm trying to convince the guy behind it to build it also as a Eurorack module. I believe this guy is Canadian. There's also another cool project called Anyma Phi (A hybrid monophonic synth) coming out of Lille, France that's very cool along with past projects like the Artiphon Orba. If you all get a chance you got to watch Emille Gillet's workshop Parts 1 & 2 about how she goes about building modules, though sadly she's not building anymore for the time being.
Es ist schön zu sehen, dass auch andere einen Job haben und dennoch die Zeit finden sich mit elektronischer Musik zu befassen und es sogar schaffen auf ein Niveau zu kommen, wo die Musik nicht nach einem Amateur, sondern richtig professionell klingt. Ich weiß noch, als ich damals als Knirps mit meinem Walkman Jean-Michel Jarre rauf und runter gehört habe und mir vorgestellt habe, wie schön es wäre selbst solche Musik machen zu können. Kinder Träume halt. Sobald man herausfindet, was die Hardware kostet, wird einem bewusst, dass solche Hobbys zu teuer sind ^^. Mit einem Job, hatte man dann das Gefühl, dass es zu spät ist mit sowas anzufangen und man versuchte es gar nicht erst. Ich habe dieses Jahr das Tool VCV-Rack für mich gefunden. Es bringt einem die Hardware Module virtuell und kostenlos auf den PC. Damit war zumindest der Kostenfaktor kein Hindernis mehr. Was die andere Sache betrifft, dass es zu spät ist und man keine Zeit findet um es vernünftig zu lernen. JakoJako zeigt in dem Video, dass es nie zu spät ist. Sehr motivierendes Video, Daumen hoch. 😊
Super Duper Nice Person ! Met her at Schneiders and had a really good talk and modular introduction from her ! And now i can also listen to her doings on TEB and Fact Magzine, i like that ! ! !
More information about JakoJako's Modular System www.modulargrid.net/e/racks/view/1103502
Rad! Was hoping for this.
@@Crabdust1 i'm poor and from mx hahaha nooo
@@Crabdust1 Me whenever I see a modular setup
@@Like-a-PROinBERLIN naja Künstler, gibt wohl hunderttausende die so wie diese Frau mit irgendwelchen Geräten zu Hause sitzt und herumspielt.
Finde lustig wie die das jetzt 20, 30 Jahre später immer noch machen, ist eigentlich total retro so wie Blues, das wiederspricht eigentlich dem auf Innovation gerichteten Geist elektronischer Musik.
What kind of case is it?
Infectious enthusiasm and curiosity. Makes me want to immediately start building a new patch on my modular synth. She’s rad.
SIMP
José Charles stfu. Can someone not simply be a fan of female’s work without a small brain like yourself thinking it’s sexual?
Felt the same way when she was talking about synthesizers and modular but didnt know how to put it. Infectious enthusiasm and curiosity nails it though.
I was literally going to comment exactly the same words!
@@livinagoodlife I think it was a joke
I don't speak German, but I am enough of an old school Tangerine Dream and Kraftwerk fan to think that German is the proper language for discussing electronic music and equipment.
Well it is a part modular language...
Jawohl
I speak German, but understand nothing ;-)
Well... i would agree, but gotta represent. th-cam.com/video/gWMA_iRQSFg/w-d-xo.html
There are hardly tiny bunch of people who know these pioneers of electronic music. we gotta build a spaceship n welcome aboard all such people :D
I found it fascinating, although I had no clue what she was talking about. Was happy to recognize one word: Ableton. Her next words "I don't use it". Whaaa, so there goes nothing :-)
I love the comments here. It’s a good sign when an artist presenting her gear gets us to talk about music and not just technique and tools.
It's interesting how young people, this generation of musicians, have found usefulness and aesthetic beauty in concrete music and electronic textures. It seems as if this type of thinking has gone (almost) mainstream. I think it's cool. Years ago, pre-Internet, the only folks who dug this stuff (myself included) were geeky music types who were willing to go beyond the basic musical elements of rhythm, melody and harmony and explored texture and randomness. This young artist is fully exploring that realm and interestingly enough, others who are watching this clip dig it too. There is hope in the world after all...
Yes! The democratisation of technology has enabled so many of us to delve into abstract and critical thinking. The singularity is not strictly about becoming one with the machine, but it's more of understanding and thinking like one. It's not what the AI can do for us, but what we can do for the AI.
So refreshing to hear a perspective that's not just straight up complaining about other generations or calling them weird. Thank you!
It's all down to the rise of dance music, which was (and still is) unlike any other form of popular music: rather than being based around the song form, it emphasised extended time spans and laminar structures, demanding a very different way of listening, And dance music was descended from disco, which in turn developed from the idea of listening and dancing to recorded music as a secret social occasion when the Nazis invaded France (black music and dancing to it was banned as 'degenerate'). Thus Adolf Hitler was the inadvertent godfather of modern beat-based electronic music, which is very, very weird.
It’s so cool. As more powerful hardware becomes available at lower price points, an entire world of programmed and semi-programmed music opens up to the creative minds of the world. The Moog synthesizers of the 70s were so out of reach for most, yet today for a modest investment you can have exponentially more power on your desk.
@@zaxzaxx4561 Great comment, now make the youtube video!
Es macht einfach Bock, jemandem zuzuhören, der für etwas offensichtlich brennt.
Haha! Selber!
@G E T R E K T 905 wasn mit dir los du vogel ? Hat dich jemand ueberhaupt gefragt ? 👾👹
Yep, wünschte mir ich könnte solche Frauen kennenlernen, zeig mir mal so jemanden, über 40.
@G E T R E K T 905 Wieso? Sie trägt doch eine Schutzbrille damit nichts ins Auge geht.
Ganz meine Meinung!
Why would 126 people (as of September 4, 2020) give a "thumbs down" to this video? I find JakoJako very inspiring and want to go make music after watching this video.
Thumbs down to those haters thumbs up just found her she is exemplary.
Young boys and girls are really into this these days. Bellissimo
When Jako said "if it paid more, I would prefer to produce music exclusively" I felt that. I would love to create all day, every day, but it doesnt pay and I'm stuck working for Corporate overlords, which eats 70% of time and my energy. *sad artist noises*
That's it ..I'm learning German!
Viel Erfolg;)
@Claudia Solomon true dat. Aber dafür macht's verdammt viel Spaß mit der deutschen Grammatik zu spielen xD
@Claudia Solomon So schwer ist das gar nicht. 😊
Hi David, You should totally learn to speak German, it's a wonderful language and honestly it's easier to think in German as it is to think in English. German has far fewer exceptions to keep track of and though there are some long words, those words are often smaller words put together. Germans are by nature incredibly organized and efficient, they are also incredibly honest even to your face which is actually refreshing.The first time I went to Germany I had only taken one semester (16 years old) but it was still worthwhile for me to go because it gave me many more reasons to learn the language and the culture. I returned almost 5 years (21 years old) later with the ability to hold a basic conversation, however after working as a waiter for 3 months my German drastically increased (4x). It's now some 28 years later and I still speak German fairly well. I try to listen to German television several times a week plus speak to anyone I happen to run into who is either German or speaks German. My experience is that yes most younger Germans who study English and went onto college speak English fairly well, however older people and those who went onto trade school instead don't speak English quite as well. By in large Germans unlike Americans speak many more languages but Europe is a much smaller place with far more languages being spoken. Similar to how many more Americans can speak Spanish in our border states or have Latin ancestry, in fact when I was living in Mexico City briefly I actually got by speaking German several times because my girl friend's nephews were studying in a German school or family friends were German...go figure.
@@milododds1 I agree. I've been to much of Europe and spent lots of time with real people from the places I was touring in and while much of Europe is very friendly, I'd say Germans are the friendliest.
She's so pretty 😍
Her words are really inspiring, much of her introduction I nodded, instantly relatable.
JakoJako hat 1000ende von Herzen gebrochen mit diesem Video 😄
Genauer gesagt hunderttausende 😉
Voll sympathisch. Und sie hat richtig plan von ihrem Equipment und man merkt die Leidenschaft! Respekt.
How the hell can anyone dislike this video? I cant even understand half of it nor do i play and i was mesmerized. Her energy and enthusiasm is palpable, infectious even! amazing!
This feature is pure gold. Great attitude, music and completely relatable. I didn't know her but I will check her music out for sure.
this is a sample goldmine. I mean: her voice
I've never fallen in love so quickly in my life.
creep
Sehr gut!!!
❤sehr gut😊
"Every module has its own philosophy" - great and very apt comment. Nice sounds!
She is so positive and deep involved girl ! Lovely interview. Thank you telecom beats team for such an inspirationionail videos.
lol i cant help myself but compare this with charlotte de witte and her video when beatport visited her 3 years ago (beatport studio sessions). after that no one was sure anymore whether she actually produces her music herself lol. and here we see true knowledge and passion, this is a difference like day and night. this lady seems like she could go on forever and ever about her stuff, real artist. great video, thanks
Her brain is running at approximately double the clock-speed of mine!
Same here xD
@G E T R E K T 905 What a sad, pathetic thing to say about somebody.
@@mikebailey783 that's not sad. It's beautiful :)
@G E T R E K T 905 Not sure what you're trying to achieve here, or what you even mean with your comments, but for one thing, you certainly appear to have some problem with women / girls generally, or for their work to be considered equal to that of men. For another thing, I couldn't care less if the artist in this video was male or female; my original comment was about how rapidly that artist creates their art.
Simp-le as that.
@Kitami Jun I quite clearly mentioned speed, ie. the speed at which she appears to work and think. - Brain size was never mentioned.
Every tech geek just fell in love.
Two times. With the girl and with her setup.
Oh shit. That's exactly what happened.
simp
exactly
Ha ha ha ha, for sure!
:-D
(although tattoo's don't look nice to my eyes but blahfuckingblah, eh?)
Listened to JakoJako so much during loockdown, her music is just fantastic - not at all surpirsed to see how engaging and interesting she is when talking about her setup!
WOW such girls really exist, nice to see that girls like cables, computers and stuff too :)
Keep doing your great job!
Great feature, her music is bliss. I think as we are all human, the key is to not put to much pressure on ourselves - that's when things get difficult. Learn and create, the rest will fall into place.
habe ich mich gerade spontan verliebt! die positiven modular vibes aus Berlin sind def. hier angekommen! 😜
Talented and precised. We need much more artist as her. So happy to listen to her and enjoy so much knowledge. Thanks for sharing.
It's always a pleasure to talk to her at Schneiders. She always has great advice.
Absolut fähig JakoJako👍👍✌✌✌😊💪💪💪💪
Nice video bro
LOVE her story & the machine sounds!!
The future of electronic music is in good hands...
Just to balance all the love letters here, huge respect from a girl:) JakoJako, you're my dream best friend!
You don't see passionate people like that too often! So enthusiastic, experimenting (and learning) with the analog stuff, creating all sorts of music waves. Awesome
Ich habe nur bruchstückhaft verstanden, was sie eigentlich gesagt hat, aber den Enthusiasmus fühle ich ❤. Hoffe ich sehe die mal live hier irgendwo...
Schön wenn jemand im Musikmacher versinkt, und Spaß dabei hat. Schon geil so viele Schalter und Knöpfe soundtechnisch ausprobieren zu dürfen.
Und sich dabei verliert immer was neues zu finden..
Dann noch viel Spaß dabei und danke für den Einblick... Interessant auf jeden Fall.......
MFG
Nice!
What a voice!!
beautiful lady, making beautiful music. bravo.
How you at TEB keep coming up with these fantastic artists just baffles me. I have yet to see an artist on this channel that doesn't inspire and spread enthusiasm for the love of sound and machines. Thank you and thanks to JakoJako, great interview.
Wow, thank you!
hey Soren, who's your dealer? ;-)
@@southpole76 haha, hysterical cheeky comment; but to be fair this was a particularly engaging and inspiring episode, jakojako does seem like one to watch, and thoroughly one of my favorite TEBs for a while..
Night Nurse would have been a great moniker too :D i love watching people get giddy talking about music making - the passion just shines through. I'd have to say that out of all the people ive heard with modular setups, nobody has made more enjoyable tracks than JakoJako - tight, yet evolving/varied and still melodic. Really, really impressive stuff - listened to her Patchnotes set 3x today
Good Music! 🎹🎶🎵
Berlin school of electronic music just gained a poster child. No more middle-aged, balding, beer-belly carrying, glasses wearing, German-looking nerds. Long live young, fit, professorial looking, gloriously Asian, German-speaking, chicks to carry forward the BSEM tradition! Not to mention those intriguing tattoos. I'm in.
amazing artist, btw JAKO means STRONG in Serbian, so quite fitting!
Romantische Zerstörer-Noize mit viel Distortion. Sehr symphatisch.
was für eine tolle Frau-Inspirierend und gut drauf.
Inspiring story. Great music!
Love seeing her passion for modular.
Ihre Leidenschaft für Musik ist so groß, das kann einen einfach nur von vorneherein fesseln. Es ist so schön zu wissen, dass es Leute da draußen gibt, die genauso für die Musik brennen wie ich. Danke an euch, dass ihr so viele tolle Videos produziert, die sind nämlich neben dem ganzen Trash-Content den man auf TH-cam findet ein krasser Mehrwert. Love geht raus an euch
Wow du bist die perfekte Frau :-)
Das war seit langem das spannendste und inspirierendste Video, das ich auf TH-cam gesehen haben👏👍
Im in love😍😍😍
When I have a daughter I want one like this.
Very, very much enjoyed watching this... 💎
It seems so like Berlin to me: "Hi, what do you do in your spare time from being a nurse?" "Oh, I make experimental electronic music."
Her strategy with the manual is really good advice (6.44) . I'll be stealing that.
Yes, amazing tip
Ich bin sehr, sehr beeindruckt. Sie hat mich total neugierig auf ihre Musik gemacht.
Cool! Wieder was dazu gelernt 😊
ein artist mit viel herzblut für die musik. was für ne leidenschaft, sehr sympathisch
I could listen to her explaining modular the whole day.
There’s this amazing lady then there’s people like me who own a $3500+ laptop and a bottomless bag of excuses :(
Pro tip: Just start something somehow. Even if it's just opening a crappy DAW and doing a simple pattern for 5 minutes a day. That shit gets you flowing man!
Everyone has their own means, of producing something. Just because you have top dollar gear, doesn't make you any less creative then this young lady. Its never about the gear, or the complexity of your work space, its about the desire and imagination to make something uniquely yours.
This feeling is what other companies prey on, "Get our new FlowX VST and it will unlock your potential! *Full video of a guy you've never heard off talking about the software*" You just need to practice daily. Don't get down on yourself, open up the DAW and get crackin!
Start with VCV Rack on your laptop, it's free
Thank you guys for the feedback! Awesome tips and suggestions :)
the spark of curiosity that ignites the fire of creativity
You are good.....
That was a really nice interview! Thanks for sharing.
Excellent!!!!!
This was excellent! Thank you very much!
Traumfrau😍🤩😎👌🙌🏽👉
Great JakoJako
Die ist einfach sau cool und weiss genau was sie tut! Respekt!
The world needs JakoJako and Stimming to do a joint show discussing music gear...
that is an amazing euro case, and i love JAKO!!!
"Art is not a product, it's an exploration. What you bring into your home is a crystallization of that journey" -- Jordan Peterson. That's brought to mind by this wonderfully articulate introspection about her interaction with the complex of modular synthesis. Great!
Very interesting and really good!
Thanks for sharing.
Fascinating stuff...thanks for posting this....Jako Jako is a good teacher....
Wow❤
OMG diese frau spricht meine sprache ....nicht schlecht sie hat ja mal richtig plan..und ihre musik ist auch sehr sehr niice.
Super cool!
I love Elektron stuff. A+ Modulars are the way to go if you want your own sound.
Romantishe melodie.......immer ❤️❤️
Modular - Open Box and eats your social life and all your money 😂😂😍😍😍😍😍
Amazing work
Ich hab ihren Werdegang in Berlin verfolgt. Ihr Ehrgeiz steckt an, ihr Fachwissen macht manchen DJ beim shoppen sprachlos und dann ist sie auch noch so sweet. Ich hab auch ihr Set im Berghain erlebt, ein ganz feiner und talentierter Mensch 😍
Nice! Da spürt man den Spaß am Gerät und einigen Haecksen-Spirit.
Unglaublich sympathisch, ehrlich und mega von dem was Du rüberbringst.
Danke für die lässigen Einblicke.
Ab jetzt folge ich deiner Musik ;-)
Ima gonna watch this 100 times♡
Super smart 👍🏽 und schön zu sehen mit welcher Passion 💚 die Musikerin dabei ist.
Ich bin ehrlich beeindruckt (auch wenn das weder ihr Ansinnen sein muss oder soll❕) und wünsche weiterhin viel Erfolg und tolle „Experimente“ 🎶🎵🎶🎶
I support more videos of this artist.
Hallo JakoJako ! Du machst total die Dinge, die ich machen will. Danke, daß du mir einen Weg gegeben hast.
Ich plane auch einen Eurorack zu bauen. Ja, wir sollten die Regeln brechen.
Übrigens, danke, daß du eine Krankenschwester bist, die dich um Menschen kümmert. Du machst nicht nur großartige Musik, sondern bist auch eine sehr fürsorgliche Person. Das Geheimnis ist Octatrack. Du hast auch herausgefunden, wie du deinen Workflow vereinfachen können. Vielen Dank !
I also do something similar with the songs I create in that every song must contain something new I've never done or tried before. It forces me every time to go outside of my comfort zone and experiment. I like how you get inspired by the manuals, you should try creating your own modules, look at Emilie Gillet but yeah I get that you love the process...someday you might make your own hardware. I too prefer to pre-build my drum beats but unlike you I'm not doing live performances which I have huge respect that you can do that. Instead I tell musical stories by picking a person who the song is dedicated to, a genre, and a topic or object. Laying down drum beats first, bass, chords and some sort of lead. Anyways I am going to rewatch your video a few more times, it's very helpful. You say that you get emotional and then inspired, I believe you're just allowing yourself to play with uncertainty about what's going to happen in the moment. You're creating the space for something exciting to happen, something random...that's what Jazz is all about and improvisation. JakoJako you're becoming a true musician....so happy for you. Btw if you still want to hear the loud amplifiers there is a cool Kickstart project I'm currently backing called "Stomplifier" though it's sort of ending in a few days and likely won't get funded but I'm hoping that eventually it will someday because it gives you the sound of various tube amps in a very small profile. I'm trying to convince the guy behind it to build it also as a Eurorack module. I believe this guy is Canadian. There's also another cool project called Anyma Phi (A hybrid monophonic synth) coming out of Lille, France that's very cool along with past projects like the Artiphon Orba. If you all get a chance you got to watch Emille Gillet's workshop Parts 1 & 2 about how she goes about building modules, though sadly she's not building anymore for the time being.
Es ist schön zu sehen, dass auch andere einen Job haben und dennoch die Zeit finden sich mit elektronischer Musik zu befassen und es sogar schaffen auf ein Niveau zu kommen, wo die Musik nicht nach einem Amateur, sondern richtig professionell klingt. Ich weiß noch, als ich damals als Knirps mit meinem Walkman Jean-Michel Jarre rauf und runter gehört habe und mir vorgestellt habe, wie schön es wäre selbst solche Musik machen zu können. Kinder Träume halt. Sobald man herausfindet, was die Hardware kostet, wird einem bewusst, dass solche Hobbys zu teuer sind ^^. Mit einem Job, hatte man dann das Gefühl, dass es zu spät ist mit sowas anzufangen und man versuchte es gar nicht erst. Ich habe dieses Jahr das Tool VCV-Rack für mich gefunden. Es bringt einem die Hardware Module virtuell und kostenlos auf den PC. Damit war zumindest der Kostenfaktor kein Hindernis mehr. Was die andere Sache betrifft, dass es zu spät ist und man keine Zeit findet um es vernünftig zu lernen. JakoJako zeigt in dem Video, dass es nie zu spät ist. Sehr motivierendes Video, Daumen hoch. 😊
Wow! Sehr beeindruckend. Da spricht jemand mit einer Begabung und mit Leidenschaft.
love love love this
sie ist ein genie
Super Duper Nice Person ! Met her at Schneiders and had a really good talk and modular introduction from her !
And now i can also listen to her doings on TEB and Fact Magzine, i like that ! ! !
Crazy inspiring. I moved out here to Germany for the electronic scene two years ago...Looks like I made the right decision.
S o nice das Interesse von ihr und Neugier materie zu verstehen und sich rein zu hängen
Thumbs upp arr synthhs upp
Love her nails.