Ever had this happen?
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bassbeyondreason
- Posts: 240
- Joined: Tue Aug 14, 2007 5:04 pm
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Ever had this happen?
You get frustrated working on a tune cause you think it sounds shit.
You listen to it later and it actually sounds pretty good.
It makes sense when it happens the other way round, but this is just weird.
You listen to it later and it actually sounds pretty good.
It makes sense when it happens the other way round, but this is just weird.
all the time, often within the same minute 
i dont ever delete anything though... who knows what might come in handy later on.
what ive found to really help with this is to give myself a maximum of 5-10 minutes with each sound im trying to introduce into the tune. If it doesnt fit into the arrangement or if im not feeling it after that time i'll remove it and try something else. this has saved me heaps of wasted hours fiddling with a superfluous sound that will never fit in context with the rest of the tune...
i dont ever delete anything though... who knows what might come in handy later on.
what ive found to really help with this is to give myself a maximum of 5-10 minutes with each sound im trying to introduce into the tune. If it doesnt fit into the arrangement or if im not feeling it after that time i'll remove it and try something else. this has saved me heaps of wasted hours fiddling with a superfluous sound that will never fit in context with the rest of the tune...
Subtitles | Area Recordings | Muti Music | Requiem Audio | Subway | Gradient Audio
http://www.soundcloud.com/3rdeye
http://www.soundcloud.com/3rdeye
Re: Ever had this happen?
Yup, all the timebassbeyondreason wrote:You get frustrated working on a tune cause you think it sounds shit.
You listen to it later and it actually sounds pretty good.
It makes sense when it happens the other way round, but this is just weird.
I usually give it 30mins - if I can't make any significant changes to make it sound 'not shit' in my head, then I bounce the whole project, chop it into samples & archive, and move onto something else.
- jobbanaught
- Posts: 297
- Joined: Wed Oct 29, 2008 2:27 pm
- Location: Hamburg / Germany
Hahaha - I have been going through my FL7 project files (use FL8/Cubase4 now) and the ideas are amazing - now just putting them into context of what I know now.. I got like 8 tunes just waiting to be sent around what're some of the best ive ever made- I thought they was shit back in the day cause I was always tryna get a certain sound. now I know what I wanna do an I know how I work , wouldn't say i have a style but I like how I work unlike before..
SoundcloudSoulstep wrote: My point is i just wanna hear more vibes
I remember one time, where I made a tune, which I don't think I'm finished with yet, but I tried to achieve a special sound and atmosphere, but I just couldn't. I tried everything, saw tutorials, read a lot of blogs and articles, but no success. I decided to save the tune for awhile and get on with some new stuff instead. A few days ago I put back on the tune and get a hole new bunch of ideas that made the tune even more sick, so sometimes it's good to make a lot of different things and have a lot of unfinished tunes on hold/standby, if you think you can't get the ideas from your head to the software, or if you can't think of anything to improve the tune.
Sometimes I also get too inspirred. I sit listening to some artist all day long and I decide to make something like the artist and I end up getting frustrated because I can't make the same stuff as a professional highly skilled producer.
That's one little thing I hate with electronic music, you can't practise like a guitarist or a drummer, you can sure try things out etc, but practise is more exploration of a synth, sampler, sequencer or whatever.
Or how do you "practise"? Any comments on that?
Sometimes I also get too inspirred. I sit listening to some artist all day long and I decide to make something like the artist and I end up getting frustrated because I can't make the same stuff as a professional highly skilled producer.
That's one little thing I hate with electronic music, you can't practise like a guitarist or a drummer, you can sure try things out etc, but practise is more exploration of a synth, sampler, sequencer or whatever.
Or how do you "practise"? Any comments on that?
Yeah pretty much like you said, learning the synths you use and such - I am currently really digging deep into EQing and filter envelopes - so much you can do with them if you're willing to experiment..Azair wrote:Or how do you "practise"? Any comments on
that?
I think the best practice to get go 'out to the field' so to say... Just sit down with your favourite synth, samples and effects and just try to make something unique with them
SoundcloudSoulstep wrote: My point is i just wanna hear more vibes
- stapleface
- Posts: 595
- Joined: Tue Dec 16, 2008 11:24 pm
- Location: Bath, UK
I get frustrated but I don't know if it actually sounded good cos I delete my projects when i get frustrated
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Stapleface
Soundcloud
Check out my latest tunes here;
http://www.myspace.com/staplefacedubs
http://soundcloud.com/jaysus91
Stapleface
Soundcloud
Check out my latest tunes here;
http://www.myspace.com/staplefacedubs
http://soundcloud.com/jaysus91
See that's what I think destroys the creative process. Some people expect to finish a tune shortly after they begun making it. They get it fast quick and if they're unable to achieve a wanted sound or if your chords just ain't rolling that day, you shouldn't delete it. Right now I have a tune called "Dubstep #1", and I've spent a long time trying to make some real nasty Burial 2-step drum patterns with no success, but the saved project does still have all the drum patterns I see as a failure. Then you'll listen to the crap once more and you suddenly get a new idea to use the snare or hihat in another or your crappy drum patterns and from there create a whole new rhythm. That's the creative process.I get frustrated but I don't know if it actually sounded good cos I delete my projects when i get frustrated
That sounds like a well good idea actually3RDEYE wrote: what ive found to really help with this is to give myself a maximum of 5-10 minutes with each sound im trying to introduce into the tune. If it doesnt fit into the arrangement or if im not feeling it after that time i'll remove it and try something else. this has saved me heaps of wasted hours fiddling with a superfluous sound that will never fit in context with the rest of the tune...
I'm the King of "All or Nothing".Stapleface wrote:I get frustrated but I don't know if it actually sounded good cos I delete my projects when i get frustrated
I destroy anything that does not please me--months of work, DELETE. Entire folders, TRASH. CD-Rs, thrown out of moving car windows (yes, I've actually done this lol). It's always despressing in hindsight, and I always wish I hadn't, but in the moment of frustration I compulsively and uncontrolably MUST get rid of it. I feel like I can not just "move on" as long as these files / garbage tunes exist. Yet, purging in this way has over the years led me to hights untold in quality. I probably am and have been for a while, at a sign-able level, but due to my own inward "never good enough" feeling, no one ever hears.
Obsessive perfectionism is my curse, as well as my blessing.
As a producer and electronic musician you don't think that way either. Sometimes I think of being a better piano player than spending hours finding the perfect sound for a tune. Using the same sound for a synth in many different songs shouldn't be underestimated. I hate the fact thatHm. Never thought about that. Quite interesting observation.
Definitely, well said. I'm also a perfectionist, but I try to defy it by having a bit of a mess sometimes, but it annoys me.Obsessive perfectionism is my curse, as well as my blessing.
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