If you are looking to make electronic music start here:
https://producerdj.com/product/ill-methodology-workshop/
If you want to get serious and you have some money (want to invest in it
because you want to make music your career) check out the courses on
dubspot.com
There are also a ton of good stuff on YouTube (and a bunch of crap). Focus
on stuff from people who are actually making music professionally.
And most importantly, make music, every day. Try not to spend more than 5 -
10 hours on a track and then move on to a new one.
If you want to make it to the top 10, you might want or find people who
have done that before or worked with those people and show them that you
are dedicated and passionate. Maybe they will let you sit in the studio or
let you remix something.
Start a soundcloud now if you don't have one already.
--Andrew
On Jul 1, 2015 12:04 AM, "Adam Munich" <adam(a)aperture.systems> wrote:
I've found that music comes from my emotional /
feelings side of the
brain, and not from the technical side I'm so used to using. It's very
strange and unfamiliar, so I must master this art as well.
As for fractals, I don't think they have any frequency dependence, to be
honest. They're something that forms because of conduction, which would be
largely unaffected by frequency in this case as wood is too insulating for
the skin effect to occur, and the electrodes are too small for capacitance
to matter.
On Jun 30, 2015 11:51 PM, "Cere Misc" <cere.misc(a)gmail.com> wrote:
IMO, the best way to "get into" music
is just to learn music from people
you like and then your own stuff will take shape after you get fluent with
the patterns that inspire you based on the work you have learned. I find
"getting into" music as a purely emotionless theoretical excursive to be a
non-starter.
In piano, for example, you'll find lots of cats doing cool videos on how
some of these chord thickening patterns work, and a lot of it is sort of
beyond theory and a little bit more about patterns and frameworks that they
have developed, but that insight has come from many hours of learning other
peoples work and then developing patterns of there own via improv.
On Tue, Jun 30, 2015 at 11:36 PM, Marc Juul <juul(a)labitat.dk> wrote:
On Tue, Jun 30, 2015 at 11:18 PM, Adam Munich <adam(a)aperture.systems>
wrote:
Hi all,
No one gives a rat's ass about my mission to build cheap x-ray units
for the unprivileged world
Almost no-one knows about it. You haven't even run a crowdfunding
campaign for it (which you should do just for the attention). I assure you
people (and the media) would care if you pitched it correctly with a nicely
made video. We have a film-makers collective at Omni you know.
But maybe you _should_ take a long break from that project and do
something creative. One piece of advice though: Before you shelve it for
months/years take an hour to go through all of the files, write notes about
everything for future you and back them up offline in multiple locations.
Future you will thank past you.
As far as music, I'm kinda looking for some music theory learning stuff
myself. Playing instruments is one thing, but composition is another. I
haven't found anything good.
--
marc/juul
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