Who knows where I'll be in the next 5 years. I kinda just take each day as it comes, and make the most of it cause it can disappear in an instant! I'm hoping I'll have a couple of albums under my belt and I'll still be making music that people will enjoy!Disco Nutter wrote:Where do you see yourself heading in the next 5 years in music?
Also when you process material for basses, how do you work? By adding little fx at each step, or sticking a big bad evil distortion at it? How often do you resample a sound on average?
Do you always know where your track is going when you start making it or does it end up being completely different from what you imagined OR you never imagined it, it just came about?
Cheers!
PS Two days left guys, get your questions in before this one ends. Akira Kiteshi is one hell of a producer.
With basses I have a few different ways of working. If I'm using outboard gear that I want to resample, I'll just record a C note and tweak the synth as I record, then I'll start adding effects to it in renoise. Once I have a bass I'm happy with I'll render it again and start adding more effects and modulation to it to see what else I come up with.
I don't really use full on distortion that much. Most of the time it's waveshaping, bit reduction, chorus or flanger, formant filter etc. If I want some grit, I have a E-MU ESI-32 sampler that I stick stuff through. It has amazing filters on it and gives samples a really nice sound.
I never know where my tunes are going. I never start out with a plan. I kind of write them 8 bars at a time, and try to add little changes and variation. I kind of find tunes that do the same thing for 5min without structure or a story to them quite boring and half-arsed. I think that music is supposed to be entertaining and keep the attention of the listener, which is why my tunes have quite a lot going on and a full sound..... Or I might just have A.D.H.D
