I've had many questions from people just starting out wondering if I could give them any advice on how I approached doing this whole music thing.
So instead of typing up emails all the time, I've compiled a good chunk into this oh-so enlightening piece of material that I like to call...
When I was starting out making music, the three best things I ever did were:
1. Read, practice read and read. I lucked out; I had a computer job where all I did for 6 months straight was join every bulletin
board & magazine related to electronic music. Then I would find every tip, trick and article and compile them into different sections and
print ‘em out. You –will- forget almost everything you read if you do not print it out and review it every now and then. There is so much
content available, you will just overload. I’ve got about 6 of the 3” binders full of printed material that I gathered. I would read the
article, and then try what they were talking about. Then do it again with a different article… and again.
2. Realize that I’ve gotta make shit before I can start making decent sounding stuff. EVERYONE has to go through this; it is like an
initiation of sorts. Deal with it, and have faith that it will just get better with age and practice. (Look for a book called The Artists
Way, it focuses on all this. Oh, and no it isn’t all stoner hippie stuff).
This next one is a biggie for most people. I have seen so many guys just starting out who ask “How come I don’t make stuff that sounds like my
favorite group/producer??” or "How do I get that professional sheen to my tracks? Do I have to use the flux mambo super EQ, or the Barry Wood compressor pro?".
The bottom line is that it comes down to experience, and/or a crack team of sound engineers who have been
mixing/mastering for a living for the past 30 years.
Make the crap first, and FINISH it too. Just finishing a project/tune is a mental reward. It gives you a little subliminal boost that says
“Okay, now on to something new!”. If you have hundreds of 8 bar loops saved, but nothing that is actually ‘finished’, you will always
regurgitate the process, and just keep on making 8 or 16 bar loops! The trick is to finish all your projects, and then that will become your
habit.
Nobody has to hear it, and it could be laughably horrible, but you can smile and think that it is completed. Then back it up so you can laugh at it later, take a deep breathe, and go
down some other avenue you haven’t explored yet!
3. Limit yourself (and sometimes your tracks). I made a promise that I would only use the gear that I bought, until I could use them with my eyes closed, then I would
add a new piece. It started off as me not using a computer, because I worked as a programmer all day, and the last
thing I wanted to do was to stare at monitors again when I was at home. With all the free warez stuff flying around, it is way too easy to
pick up thousands of plugins and software programs. All this does is cost you time trying to figure them out. Time which could be used
practicing, or ‘gasp’, even making some tunes!
So my basic gear list was a keyboard, a glorified 4 track recorder and a small drum machine/sampler. Three things I know absolutely inside
and out. However, when I use them together, cool things start to happen.
Now that I've moved out of the country for a while, I had to leave all that at home. I've now had to venture into the land of the laptop, but I'm still trying
to hold onto that principle of not getting overwhelmed with all the newest fancy stuff out there (Although it's hard!).
Instead of thinking “Man oh man, do I ever need a nice hi-hat sample for this track, I better download a copy of Reason/Fruity etc and rip
some samples out of it!” I start to think how I can accomplish it just using the tools I have. Why not just make some white noise with the
keyboard, maybe add a volume envelope, and a ring modulator or some other effect it has built in, sample it with the drum machine and voila,
synthesized hat!
Limiting myself makes my brain work overtime trying to figure out a cool solution to an audio ‘roadblock’ that I might hit. It will also
force me to think in a different light about what I am making, and will also surprise me when some crazy stuff starts flying out of my
monitors (Oh yeah, BTW – Get a nice pair of monitors).
Bottom line… research and know your gear inside and out, THEN add new stuff. Biting off more than you can chew gear/software-wise is a major
killer.
I haven’t been doing this long, but those are the things that have helped me the most. Of course, some things may pertain to you, and some
won’t. Most people in the electronic music scene are pretty cool and helpful, because they all started at the exact same spot…the bottom
rung of the ladder.
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Hey, If you've got anything out of this, jump over to the Contact Me page and let me know!
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