Activity
Mon
Wed
Fri
Sun
Dec
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
What is this?
Less
More

Memberships

Beat Academy

Private • 3.2k • Free

Fix-The-Mix™

Public • 24.6k • Free

Unison Producer Growth Hub

Private • 23k • Free

Good Song Club

Private • 48 • $5/m

73 contributions to Fix-The-Mix™
Free VST and Sample Addiction
I have an issue where I spend WAY too much effort and time finding and downloading free effects, samples, and instruments. Way way way too much time. It's rather an "easy" fix by just downloading what I need as I go, but I struggle with the idea that I will miss out on the "perfect" effect, a "magical" sample, or the "perfectly matching" Instrument. Also, if I hear something in my head, searching for it kills the creative process.. I found I had this issue with mixing plugins, but as I built a solid arsenal, I no longer get lost in the weeds with them and no longer download every new one. This issue primarily revolves around production and sound design. So I ask, how much time do yall spend looking for effects for sound design, sounds and samples, and vst instruments?? Is dedicating hours on sourcing new sounds and instruments normal?? Or am I too obsessed? I spend more time sourcing than I do producing. Is this just how it goes? Any tips making this easier other than Splice?(not in my budget.) Any free alternatives to splice? Maybe the issue is that I source free rather than buying larger packs.. anyway, thanks guys👍
2
52
New comment 1d ago
3 likes • 2d
I start with only classic instruments as all vsts are derivative of them. So guitar, piano, bass and drums. That’s it. Those are enough to provide rhythm, harmony, and melody which are the building blocks of all music. Really just drums and one instrument can provide all that. Or even one instrument can do all of that. I don’t get clever with VSTs or effects until I have an arranged song. Once I have a song I’ll know how to best serve it by sound choices. There are nuances of course. I have a drum rack that I go to get started and a piano preset and a template with reverb and delay. If I find that I’m inspired by a certain feeling I’ll go ahead and change out instruments once I know what my song is about. But to start, it’s important to me to focus on what chords I’m using (not what instruments), what melody serves the song (not the sound choice), what tempo and groove feels right (not what drum sample). You dig? This is how I work, by focusing on the guts of the song first, not the skin.
2 likes • 2d
@Steven Casale Awesome! It's just a way I think of things. I'll still find myself choosing sounds and stuff as I go because it's fun and we all have so many options but setting limitations to start tends to help.
Autotune - Yes / No or Maybe?
So I made a track yesterday and as usual, I put autotune on my vocals (on a slow setting) without really thinking, just to stabilise them like we're shown in the course. But actually, I was listening and there were loads of glitchy artefacts, and instead of trying to mess about with Melodyne to fix the artefacts, I tried the novel approach of removing Autotune altogether and going commando. And to me, it sounds way better. So to tune or not to tune, that is the question. Love to hear your thoughts on this.
5
24
New comment 23h ago
1 like • 2d
No auto tune. In most music the biggest thing setting it apart from everyone else’s is your voice and words. The more you tune, the more you pull away from your unique self and more toward all the other tuned vocals.
Are we all sounding the same?
Just came across this video. I know nothing about this gent who was pretty entertaining to watch and also grabbed my attention with content. I think what he points out hits us every day when writing, recording and producing. Have a look and see what you think: https://youtu.be/JZgPKGVJrdc
5
11
New comment 2d ago
Are we all sounding the same?
4 likes • 3d
Yes we do sound the same. We’re all gorging ourselves on the same information. Less watching and more doing. Just make music that is yours. Use your own untuned voice. Play your own instruments. Mix anyway you like.
2 likes • 2d
@Klaus Baedorf “where your fear is, there is your task.” CG Jung
LOFI BEAT DONE: BUT…NOW WHAT?
I am not so much a “beat maker,” not at all. Mad props to those that are because that is SUCH a marketable skill in so many ways! That said, I finished a lofi beat/loop because I feel inspired by the chill vibes of that genre. But…so…UMMMM… WHAT do YOU do NEXT…with a beat…that isn’t a whole song or composition? Please share thoughts, ideas, advice, experience, resources, whatever! I hope by “putting it out there” so to speak, this dialogue might help or give Insights to others!
Poll
4 members have voted
2
16
New comment 2d ago
LOFI BEAT DONE: BUT…NOW WHAT?
1 like • 3d
Done is better than good. Gotta get that thing some verses.
Recording weird things.
What's the weirdest thing you've ever recorded? I'll tell you mine if you tell me yours. Lol 🤣. Mine was flies buzzing around a dog turd. It was for background sound effects at a Halloween party.
10
74
New comment 3h ago
2 likes • 5d
@Monroe Neese adventure, excitement, a Jedi craves not these things.
3 likes • 5d
My kids banging on driftwood at the beach and pouring a sparkling water into a glass (the best white noise/riser cuz it has its own pitch change) oh and farts.
1-10 of 73
Jason Tufts
5
278points to level up
@jason-tufts-9926
I like making music and surfing and riding bikes and playing with my family.

Active 1h ago
Joined Apr 29, 2024
California
powered by