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From the December 1988 issue of Radio And Production
"I Need More Christmas Production Music!!!"
by Jerry Vigil
Yes, it's our favorite time of the year. The time when production orders
will too often include the special instruction; "CLIENT WANTS CHRISTMAS
MUSIC UNDERNEATH". As you're well aware, Jingle Bells and Joy To The World
don't go too far with Christmas starting somewhere in the middle of
November. Here's a way to make your own holiday music. You'll need a sampler
and keyboard for this tip.
The most recognizable sounds of a holiday song, aside from a traditional
melody, are the tubular bells and sleigh bells. Take any slow to medium
tempo piece from your production library. Lay it down on a couple of tracks
and on a third track, play some nice tubular bells. A little musical
background will help you here, but anyone can pick out the first two bars of
"Joy To The World" on a keyboard. Match the key the production cut is in,
and as close to the beginning of it as you can, play the first two bars of
"Joy To The World". Since most basic production music is rather simple
anyway, this will work with more cuts than you think! You don't need to play
the bells all the way through and in most cases you don't want to. You may
choose to bring them up again at the end of the cut, if you wish.
Try other Christmas melodies as well. Another way to use this idea is to
play the short piece of the Christmas song solo then start the production
music. As long as you play each piece in the same key, it'll sound pretty
good.
What you have achieved is a bed for a spot that will definitely sound
like Christmas music when the spot starts, but won't be another 60 second
version of Jingle Bells for your listeners to endure. Spots will not sound
the same because they all have Christmas music under them, and the client,
in most cases, will be happy.
Tubular bells are not necessary to do the job. Those of you into
programming your synthesizer may have a large assortment of patches that
sound like bells of one sort or another. These will work also.
If you really feel like spending some time on it, bells are not necessary
at all. Only a recognizable Christmas melody is needed to give the cut of
production music that "holiday spirit"! So crank up some violins or electric
guitars and have at it!
The sleigh bells are what you would need a sampler for, if you didn't
need it for the tubular bells. Go to your sound effects library and sample
one shake of a sleigh bell. Find some production music and simply "shake"
the bells to the beat of the song. Bingo! Another piece of holiday
production music! (Note: Those of you without samplers can simply find some
sleigh bells and actually "play" them along with the music to get the same
effect.)
Let us know how this works for those of you that try it. If you're
musically inclined and haven't done this yet, you're going to actually enjoy
cutting your next "holiday" spot! If you spend a lot of time on these mixes,
be sure to master and save them for next year. Chances are you'll need them.
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