THERES A LOT TO LEARN. DONT BE AFRAID TO EXPERIMENT.....EVENTUALLY TRY LAYERING SOUNDS LIKE CLAPS, SNARES,HATS ECT......PANNING SOUNDS LEFT AND RIGHT...NOT THE DRUMS THO.......SEND EACH CHANNEL/SOUND THRU THE MIXER AND EQ EVERY SOUND
I DONT KNOW HOW YOU START YOUR BEATS OFF CURRENTLY, BUT ME PERSONALLY...IF I START OFF WITH THE MELODY FIRST I USE THE METRONOME TO KEEP ME ON BEAT. BUT USUALLY I PUT THE CLAPS AND HIGH HATS FIRST....JUST DEPENDS ON WHAT COMES TO ME FIRST.
I start by listening to the sounds on Nexus 2, and playing with the computer keyboard to get a feel for the sound and what could be done with it. Then kicks, claps/snare, bass, hats.
I start by listening to the sounds on Nexus 2, and playing with the computer keyboard to get a feel for the sound and what could be done with it. Then kicks, claps/snare, bass, hats.
A shaker is any of these that can be shaken rhythmically
You can hear the tambourine jingles coming in at 1:55. Helps fill in the beat.
[ame]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ItA3gsfHCfY?t=105[/ame]
When you mentioned transitioning and telling a story, I googled transitioning and find a few videos online that made me think outside the box. With this post, I feel like I can be more creative by applying affects that transition inside the beats.
To be certain 100%, do you mean what Metro Boomin does in this song? I notice that he uses the same melody, but changes the sounds, but between the sound I hear a transition to the next sound
Notice the first minute is just the intro of the album/song.
At 45 second the back melody starts building. but at the end of every bar strings come in and finish the bar. When the second rapper comes in you hear something like a synth choir modulating .
At 2:30 there is a sample of a guy talking about random shit.
3:11 the beat completely changes
There is this always building up then back down. There is always this ability to ride the beat throughout the whole journey of the song instead of just having it fill mathematical formulas. Nothing wrong with mathematics by the way, use it when you need it.
When you mentioned transitioning and telling a story, I googled transitioning and find a few videos online that made me think outside the box. With this post, I feel like I can be more creative by applying affects that transition inside the beats.
Check this out
Notice the first minute is just the intro of the album/song.
At 45 second the back melody starts building. but at the end of every bar strings come in and finish the bar. When the second rapper comes in you hear something like a synth choir modulating .
At 2:30 there is a sample of a guy talking about random shit.
3:11 the beat completely changes
There is this always building up then back down. There is always this ability to ride the beat throughout the whole journey of the song instead of just having it fill mathematical formulas. Nothing wrong with mathematics by the way, use it when you need it.
TO ADD TO THAT, IN OTHER WORDS, BEATS ARE "STRUCTURED". THE FIRST 4-8 BARS ARE THE INTRO.......THEN U GOT 16 BARS...AND WITHIN THOSE 16 IS EVERYTHING THAT WAS STATED PREVIOUSLY....THEN THE CHORUS.....16......CHORUS.....OUTRO
EDIT: THATS KIND OF A STANDARD TEMPLATE.....TWEAK AS U SO CHOOSE
TO ADD TO THAT, IN OTHER WORDS, BEATS ARE "STRUCTURED". THE FIRST 4-8 BARS ARE THE INTRO.......THEN U GOT 16 BARS...AND WITHIN THOSE 16 IS EVERYTHING THAT WAS STATED PREVIOUSLY....THEN THE CHORUS.....16......CHORUS.....OUTRO
EDIT: THATS KIND OF A STANDARD TEMPLATE.....TWEAK AS U SO CHOOSE
emphasis on the tweak as you choose I think.
There are simply so many ways a person can be creative in a song structure that there should be no excuse to sounding the same.
Linkin Park songs for instance all follow the same structure.
Do something unique!
Two examples of being creative. You can hear the beat is sped up and then multiplied in the bar so instead of a beat starting and ending on a bar it loops a few times and still ends at the bar. Now what if you gave that illusion of pace but you sang slow and melodically, what kind of tense ass experience will the listener have to put up with?
In the second track you can hear the drum kit itself is alternated in the middle of the bar.
Or rather than a drum break being a basic drum break frusciante has added some modulation to make it seem to slow down to a stop before it appears to continue right where it left off.
Clearly there is a lot to be said here about attentively listening to what others are doing and learning from them. Frusciante, who I keep using for examples is well known for being a musical genius with balls for experimentation.
The Most Important Thing Is To Imagine Words On Your Beats, If The Emcee Wasn't There, You Wouldn't Be Putting Them Out.
You Might As Well Starting Be Building A Booth Too.
Put A Hook And A Chorus To Every Beat That Is Feezy, Produce Them Out. So When People Step Into Your Studio They Know What Sound You Produce.
Then When Someone Legitimate Wants Him A Beat, Make Him A Fresh One.
Then There Are Beats That Already Sound Like Another Producers Material, They Know What They Are Getting Though
I have another question that I can't seem to find the answer to, that maybe some of you may know the answer to.
When it comes to a beat, what generally comes in the intro, pre-hook, hook, verse, outro? To get a better understanding of my question, what instruments should be turned on and off in each category?
I have another question that I can't seem to find the answer to, that maybe some of you may know the answer to.
When it comes to a beat, what generally comes in the intro, pre-hook, hook, verse, outro? To get a better understanding of my question, what instruments should be turned on and off in each category?
it depends. you are the producer so you get to dictate the arrangement of your beat. generally I start out with an 8 bar intro, 16 bar verse, 8 bar hook. But again, that might change. you may do a 8 bar intro that goes into the hook.
The best way to learn about arrangement, is to study your favorite songs. look for trends/similarities in arrangement. How many sounds do they have in the chorus? What about the verse? It's a lot of trial and error.
I was spit flows with a n old timer the other night and listening into his insight, one is keeping the roots of genre together and busting into that with your own world
Do a lot of tossing up in the air what you are going to produce but do a lot of producing also
I have another question that I can't seem to find the answer to, that maybe some of you may know the answer to.
When it comes to a beat, what generally comes in the intro, pre-hook, hook, verse, outro? To get a better understanding of my question, what instruments should be turned on and off in each category?
as stated earlier, study your favorite music/songs....in the end its totally up to you.....you are the captain of your ship.....which is what will make you unique in the end.