Carl Sondrol

Composer and Music Producer

Los Reyes Omitidos



This haunting animation about the origins of Cuzco, Peru is by one of my favorite Chicago filmmakers, Gus Gavino. Check out more of his work at middle mind project (I especially love his music videos.)

My main focus with this score was tone. It features a lot of accordion.. but more for mood than melody (e.g. the “breathing”, key rattling, shakes..) Other elements instruments included: string bass, a few woodwinds, harp, faint whistling, and some close mic-ed “low sighing” for the skulls scene.

Thank you Richard Howarth for assisting with sound design on this one! With this piece especially, the sound FX are just as important as the music in making the piece feel right.

Also, my old intern Alex Wand (who gave a very inspiring MFA graduation recital at CalArts on Wednesday by the way) was kind enough to translate the text of the story:

The story begins with the telling of the founder of the Incan dynasty, Ayar Manko. Legend has it that he turned to stone once he got old. Others say he magically flew away to a place where he continues to protect his town. His Successors maintained that they were children of the sun and in this way, they were able to secure the obedience of the nations of Tawantisuyu.

The text then explains how the Spaniards, who came with an ambition for gold, conquered the land. (i.e. barbaric mistreatment of women, murders, destruction of sacred monuments). Manko II attempted to retake Cuzco from the Spanish, but ultimately lost.


Finally, thank you Mike Ambs for letting me use the audio from his project The Lonliest Mix in this animation. It’s the wonderfully low sound of a “last-known hybrid blue whale” which sings at 52 Hertz… much higher than its fellow whales, whose calls fall in the 15 to 25 Hertz range- hence the nickname, “The Lonliest Whale.” Beautiful… you’ll hear it for a few seconds starting around 1:03.

Fact Checkers Unit - season 2

Back to work! FCU is a web series by Dan Beers- one of the most talented, easygoing, and collaborative directors I’ve ever worked with. (This is our second time working together- we also worked on an ESPN web series, release pending)

This was a lot of fun, as there were plenty of diverse music needs (often the case with comedy)… here’s a walkthrough of the first few eps:

Episode 1 (ft. Moby):

Made a quick instrumental version of Moby’s “Sleepy Sleepy Grandma” for when she wakes up at 3:01. The second piece I made was described thusly in the script:

INT. JORDACHE’S OFFICE - LATER

Jordache sways to some bizarre indie music. Amy watches.

JORDACHEYou’ve never heard this song. No one has. The band made one song then they all died. Their early stuff was better.


Heh. I recorded a bunch of random parts and “sang” through a pitch-shifter overtop, resulting in the potentially the strangest piece of music I’ve ever been contracted to make (at 3:30).



Episode 2 (ft. T-Pain): I produced/recorded the song “Party in My Mouth” for this one, and co-wrote it with the illustrious Pete and Brian aka Russell and Dylan. Pretty impressed by T-Pain’s acting in this.



Episode 3 (ft. Kyle Gass!, TJ Miller) Did a little angelic cue for when “Mirage” is floating around the sky at 0:40:



More episodes coming soon..

Adjoa Skinner - live at a Sundance afterparty



Sundance is a blast! I’ll definitely post a few pictures and what not once I get back and caught up. In the meantime, above is a little behind-the-scenes vid.

I had the pleasure of meeting a wonderfully talented singer named Adjoa at Sundance this week. Amidst a room of endearingly tipsy partygoers, she played this song.

Enjoy. You can help fund her album here (1 day left!):http://indiegogo.com/adjoaskinner

BAMMO!



Starting the year off with a bang! I scored & sound-designed this spastic promo for frequent/fantastic collaborators Rebecca Rerdel (motion gfx) and Angeline Gragasin (director). This was my first time working on a project with DP Jeff Katz (his work is awesome, check it out!)

Thank you, moment’s-notice live musicians for breathing so much energy into this music:Max Crowe - guitarBrian Mantz - trumpetAndrew Conrad - bari & tenor sax

All the guys IN this video (Mystery Guitar Man, Mike Diva, DeStorm Power, Corridor Digital) are monstrously creative, hard-working badasses who I have a lot of respect for. Hopefully we did them proud.

And last but not least, special thanks to my pal Steph Belsky for throwing such a fun project our way!

Short film binge

This week I found myself down for the count with something flu-like, which left me plenty of time to indulge in vimeo/youtube exploration.. so much fun.

Here are a few favorites from what I found:



Overtime: an incredible & moving Jim Henson tribute by Damien Ferrie (thanks Jordan)..http://vimeo.com/26784202(thanks Angeline)..http://vimeo.com/12155835(thanks Kerstin)

SEEKING: versatile lyricist for mega fun/creative project

If you’ve read this blog before, you might know I spend most of my time making music for films & internet shorts (which is a blast). However, for the first time in years I now also have a “strictly for fun” studio project going!

I brought in a great singer to add vocals to one of the tracks and we had so much fun we decided to record something every week. She’s a filmmaker by trade (a gifted one, IMHO) and we even have plans to make videos for as many of these songs as we can.

Here’s where you come in: it turns out neither of us have much legit experience writing lyrics. We figure, why not find a lyricist who cares about words as much as we do about writing/producing/singing? We’re thinking some songs will be more collaborative (we have snippets of words here and there that might be promising starting points..) whereas for others we’d lean on your amazing abilities more.

If that sounds interesting to you, email me with a little info about yourself, and we’ll send you a few snippets of our work-in-progress tracks to see if they pique your interest.

Let’s see what you’ve got, internet. Excited to hear from you!-Carl

My contact info is up at: sondrol.com

Cogitat Ergo Sum

http://vimeo.com/17467930

Well hey, a film I posted about last december has finally been released! Congrats to director David Fishel on wrapping up this ambitious 12-minute short. It was a nice challenge making music that pulses, swells, and occasionally waltzes.

Thanks to these very talented musicians (remember Eleanor from last week?) for playing on the score:Eleanor Weigert - clarinetScott Copeland - trumpetMichael Beach - violin/viola

I must give a shout out to the amazing Frankie Cordero who played and “designed” Felix (you’ll see..) I’ve had much fun working with him in the past too.

BOSS MUSIC bass clarinet recording session

http://vimeo.com/32586333

I recently collaborated with Richard Howarth on music for the game “Critter Chaos”, available soon on the Apple App Store. It was a treat working with creators Ryan Sandberg and Tim Wood on this, and I look forward to writing an in-depth blog post when it’s released!

For now here’s a peak at our BOSS MUSIC recording session with clarinet extraordinaire Eleanor Weigert.

Happy Thanksgiving!

Ugly Sweater Store - dream sequence



I recently made this track for Lawrence Daufenbach and the good people at uglysweaterstore.com. They requested something with a “summertime, chill, but kind of trippy” feel that “sounds a little off”. Thus: mellotron drifting in and out of tune, with healthy dose of Waves’ Enigma plugin

I was lucky to have the supremely talented Danielle Birrittella on la-las.

5 year anniversary!!

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I’ve been making music full-time for 5 years now :) Well technically, 5.5 years. Thanks those of you who made it out to my 5 year get-together a while back! We even turned the audio booth into a photo booth for the night.. the results of which are above (sorry it took me so long to post, friends).

Add me on facebook to see & comment on the album!

Scribble design



A glimpse of a quick foley session featuring talented collaborator/intern/professional scribbler Richard Howarth. While sound-designing a bumper at the end of my pal Angeline Gragasin’s video we began searching for the perfect scribble sound. We tried highlighters, sharpies, but finally settled on a plain old ballpoint pen.

Angeline’s vid is below, which documents (and nicely captures the spirit of) last weekend’s “Occupy LA”. Rebecca Berdel, another recent Chicago-to-LA transplant, made the awesome scribble motion graphics. Thus, a mini-reunion for team Man v Candy Machine!

Ray Kurzweil



I’m in NYC this weekend and will have a chance to hear Ray Kurzweil speak (heard of Kurzweil keyboards?) Above he appears on TV as a teenager in the 60’s. I won’t spoil it, but you definitely get a sense this kid is going places.

His company Kurzweil Music Systems has been making synthesizers for decades. Their very first unit in ‘84 was actually inspired by a bet with Stevie Wonder over whether a synthesizer could sound like a real piano.

Kurzweil’s Wikipedia bio is fascinating: he’s a grad of MIT, invented the first flatbed scanner, text-to-speech synthesizer, etc. as components of the Kurzweil Reading Machine for the blind. Stevie bought the first production model in the 70’s which was the start of their lifelong friendship.

More recently, he’s become known as author and “futurist”, writing books on events such as the moment artificial intelligences surpass human beings as the smartest and most capable life forms. Sounds straight out of a sci-fi movie. I find it pretty interesting that Kurzweil is one of the few bold enough to make predictions with dates.. and he’s been right, many times.

So, if you have any questions about The Future, send them my way!

A sincere thanks to my good friend and associate Paul Lazarre for the invite.

Michel Jean-Michel: Overexposed



Here’s a short I worked for one of my favorite filmmaking duos: Giancarlo Fiorentini and Jonathan Grimm. A candid glimpse into the life of the world’s most famous paparazzo, starring the amazing Thomas Middleditch (talk about “inhabiting” a character… sheesh)

I made an uplifting sort of “everything’s going to be alright” cue for the ending, and Danielle Birrittella stopped by to contribute some perfectly airy & sweet “buh buhs”.

It’s always a pleasure to work with Giancarlo & Jonathan. A few of our past collaborations include Elevator and The Old Man and the Seymour.

A Little Waltz



Here’s a little waltz I put together last week. Someday I will make a full-on grand, sweeping one… :) In the meantime, this taste will have to suffice.

Anyway, it features:Brian Mantz: TrumpetMax Crowe: Guitar

For some reason I recorded a few scratch vocal “mmmmmmmmm” tracks.. then ended up leaving them in for texture. I really feel myself growing as a lyricist.

Davey Dance Blog - Field of Dreams



I shot* the above video for my buddy David Fishel’s Davey Dance Blog on a recent midwest vacation. He describes DDB thusly:

A project started while traveling Europe during Spring 2007. Armed only with an ipod and a Canon, Davey picks a location and a pop song. Then Davey records an improvised dance.


He’s now made over 120 of these! They always make me smile.. here are a few of my personal favorites:







* stood very still while holding a fancy camera. You might say the first video is a retrospective of my DP work.