MTA stands for something but I cant remember I just grab letters or a word when i start as a working title is a work in progress needs a bit of restructuring and some more detail.
The biggest hurdle i find in making music is aranging the song i think it has more to do with my workflow than anything else. I tend to get stuck in a production loop and fail to expand the sequence if anyone knows of a way to get round this it would be a help ;-)
I cant explain it but there is something about making music i feel like iam part of the universe music is as close as you can get to being high without drugs. its actualy better :-)
great synth. very rich. I think you've got a lot of great pieces here to create a fantastic song. Keep at it. This is a HUGE reason I love hubski. I love to see other people's creations. It inspires me. It reminds me to dust off the midi gear and push some buttons once in a while. Thanks Khaan!
I wasn't a huge fan of this in particular, but I've been listening to this soundcloud all morning. I like "Auto Tune" a lot, as well as "Skint."
Really cool sound so far, I definitely like the melody a lot. Can you give more details on what your workflow is like? For example, do you just sit and work on a piece until it is 'mostly' done? Or do you come back and do little bits at a time? Thanks for any info you give! Been thinking about trying to do some music of my own lately and insight into how others do it really helps :)
I work with 32 or 64 bars? in a loop and build up the song drums, base, mellody, Pad, Lead I get a mellody, baseline or beat in my head and start building it playing the loop and adding things that i feel fit. I mostly pic the instrument then make the notes acording to how the sound feels (if that makes sense) Sounds tend to dictate notes for me but not always. I mostly build the bulk in one go but some tracks i leave then come back to and either rewrite or delete. But i would say i prefer to get it out on one session as the vibe changes when i leave it.
Oh man, this is really good. It reminds me a little bit of Kavinsky, something that would be good for a late night drive. How long have you been making music?
Thanks late night drive is good :-) ive been making music on and off for quite a while but the electronic stuff ive only really been doing about 7 years I started on ableton 4 when that came out and ive just gradualy learnt more as time went on. You could probably learn a lot faster if you focused 100% on it.
That's really cool, it sounds like all that time spent is paying off. I'm going to start learning how to use Ableton soon. Hopefully it's not too bad.