Reference Artists For Arranging
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Re: Reference Artists For Arranging
dubstep: the widdler
reso
drum and bass: anything signed by hospital
electro : boys noize
soulwax
reso
drum and bass: anything signed by hospital
electro : boys noize
soulwax
Re: Reference Artists For Arranging
+1 for the hospital producers ^^^
Also the widdler, Mala, Skream, Venetian Snares, Nathan Fake maybe Nightmares on Wax too...just off the top of my head, i'm sure I have loads of people in my music collection that have fantastic arrangements.
Also the widdler, Mala, Skream, Venetian Snares, Nathan Fake maybe Nightmares on Wax too...just off the top of my head, i'm sure I have loads of people in my music collection that have fantastic arrangements.
Re: Reference Artists For Arranging
Myself, but when I check back, most of my transitions and arrangements seem to be influenced by metal bands (though my music doesn't (usually) sound very metal influenced).

namsayin
:'0
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silkpantsman
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Re: Reference Artists For Arranging
I use Live and find finalizing arrangements quite hard because there is no end to the expression and creativity that can be added (i always try to keep things simple but my head wont let me). Rather than fight it i try look to artist with similar arrangement styles Mount Kimbie, FLy-lo. They have a good grasp for really expressive but still cohesive as a whole.
Echoi wrote:anyone who willingly puts 'lil' in front of their name needs to fuck off
Re: Reference Artists For Arranging
venetian snares, meshuggah, aphex twin, wagawaga, flying lotus, eskmo the rest of the mothers against noise crew, and myself
mainly. anything that just has really good grooves, and a flow to the tune that sounds like it was just kind of jammed out live, made up as it went along from start to end. i like dat. complicated shit too. i also like dat
mainly. anything that just has really good grooves, and a flow to the tune that sounds like it was just kind of jammed out live, made up as it went along from start to end. i like dat. complicated shit too. i also like dat
soundcloud / discogs / bluh
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silkpantsman
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Re: Reference Artists For Arranging
^^ thats a sweet track. the hats are epic
Echoi wrote:anyone who willingly puts 'lil' in front of their name needs to fuck off
Re: Reference Artists For Arranging
nice one man, thanks!silkpantsman wrote:^^ thats a sweet track. the hats are epic
soundcloud / discogs / bluh
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deadly_habit
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Re: Reference Artists For Arranging
Speaking of hats, referencing my inner drummer now, slicing up drum patterns every bar and changing velocity and timing like I would if I was playing (and was hella tight) Small variations are definitely one of the key aspects to keeping a passage flowing.
Something else I picked up from listening to Bonobo was using even a very short break to diminish the monotony of repeating a section over again. A one bar tag with dub delay, or an alternate ending with different harmony added on to the last part will draw the listener's attention away from the fact that you're repeating the same part again. You don't need to necessarily have an 8 bar verse in between choruses, sometimes a few little short breaks will add in enough variety and will keep the vibe up.
Another good reference artist: Rush. I'd wager the majority of my approach to arranging was influenced by prog bands. Good examples on how to get in and out of different parts.
Something else I picked up from listening to Bonobo was using even a very short break to diminish the monotony of repeating a section over again. A one bar tag with dub delay, or an alternate ending with different harmony added on to the last part will draw the listener's attention away from the fact that you're repeating the same part again. You don't need to necessarily have an 8 bar verse in between choruses, sometimes a few little short breaks will add in enough variety and will keep the vibe up.
Another good reference artist: Rush. I'd wager the majority of my approach to arranging was influenced by prog bands. Good examples on how to get in and out of different parts.
Blaze it -4.20dB
nowaysj wrote:Raising a girl in this jizz filled world is not the easiest thing.
If I ever get banned I'll come back as SpunkLo, just you mark my words.Phigure wrote:I haven't heard such a beautiful thing since that time Jesus sang Untrue
Re: Reference Artists For Arranging
i dont really reference them when making my tunes, like i normally reference with more straight forward arrangements like joy orbison or julio bashmore, but i really like the arrangements fly lo and mount kimbie are rocking, like how they just have the first part of the song leading into the second which is almost totally different.
I also like mosca's arrangements, it seems like he is constantly changing little things to make it different, and greena I noticed his tunes dont really have build ups, or things to prepare you for a different section, they just happen but still sound good.
I also like mosca's arrangements, it seems like he is constantly changing little things to make it different, and greena I noticed his tunes dont really have build ups, or things to prepare you for a different section, they just happen but still sound good.
OiOiii #BELTERTopManLurka wrote: thanks for confirming
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volcanogeorge
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Re: Reference Artists For Arranging
Mr Scruff and Skream mainly
Soundcloud
"Gettin' paid like a biker with the best cranks, spray it like a high ranked sniper in the West Bank"
√BEETS
"Gettin' paid like a biker with the best cranks, spray it like a high ranked sniper in the West Bank"
√BEETS
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zonetrooper5
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Re: Reference Artists For Arranging
Skream
Benga
Rusko
Burial
Datsik
Excision
Hospital Records
Probably more but I can't think of any.
Benga
Rusko
Burial
Datsik
Excision
Hospital Records
Probably more but I can't think of any.
Re: Reference Artists For Arranging
How could I possibly have forgotten Emalkay??!?!? Defo him too!
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deadly_habit
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Re: Reference Artists For Arranging
Benga has a real tight way of just doing little variation and little pauses and just little shits in all the right spots to keep the energy going. Really homie is amazing at that shit.
But all the music we like has good arrangement. I don't think any of us like music that is arranged poorly. Some of it may be standard, sure, but not bad.
Name a track that you like that has absolutely shit arrangement.
But all the music we like has good arrangement. I don't think any of us like music that is arranged poorly. Some of it may be standard, sure, but not bad.
Name a track that you like that has absolutely shit arrangement.
Re: Reference Artists For Arranging
This track, from (oh lord) 8 years back, is a classic example of a track that hardly does anything but still manages to be interesting (on a dancefloor at least):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cnvOcwYA4lg
It builds to a plateau and stays there for a few minutes hardly changing, then changes the string pattern for a few minutes, then changes back. Ten easy minutes.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cnvOcwYA4lg
It builds to a plateau and stays there for a few minutes hardly changing, then changes the string pattern for a few minutes, then changes back. Ten easy minutes.
Re: Reference Artists For Arranging
Been thinking about this for a minute. I want to try an find one but you're right that we're probably not going to like music that's arranged poorly. Emphasizes how important it actually is.nowaysj wrote:Name a track that you like that has absolutely shit arrangement.
The last couple of days have been a lot of laying down listening with my eyes closed. It's already hard enough to be objective but even more so when you're looking at the screen and watching things take place. It's impossible to truly gauge how much anticipation is being built or released when you're looking forward at the next 8 bars.
A lot of very minute things can have an effect on the energy, evidenced by all the hihat tweaks I've been doing lately. Even small changes in velocity will give things a more human feel and reduce the 'looping midi pattern' effect. Some of this stuff verges on subconscious which is why it's kind of hard to pick it out in other artists' work.
Blaze it -4.20dB
nowaysj wrote:Raising a girl in this jizz filled world is not the easiest thing.
If I ever get banned I'll come back as SpunkLo, just you mark my words.Phigure wrote:I haven't heard such a beautiful thing since that time Jesus sang Untrue
Re: Reference Artists For Arranging
yeah man autechre live wasdeadly habit wrote:autechre
incredible
soundcloud / discogs / bluh
Re: Reference Artists For Arranging
yupnowaysj wrote:Straight up, the hardest.SunkLo wrote:Lol yeah we're on about arrangement not mixing. The art of moving from one part into another, seamlessly joining together contrasting elements into a stream of perfect ebb and flow of energy![]()
Shit's hard sometimes
it's the bit with which i struggle most as a producer
got the rest pretty much nailed down but my projects folder has 10000 projects almost all consisting of 8-32 bars
i really struggle with taking something somewhere without losing the feel and vibe i was going for
what helps though is to listen to the stuff that's a little more "out there", ie, autechre, aphex, venetian snares, pretty much all of the brainfeeder guys, etc. helps getting away from the boring 16/32 bar chunks
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green plan
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Re: Reference Artists For Arranging
Milyoo has dope progressions. Submerse too. All the obvious ones as well, obviously.
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