[sudo-discuss] Music resources

Cere Misc cere.misc at gmail.com
Wed Jul 1 10:56:22 PDT 2015


I'm looking at Bitwig as an alternative.  Industry standards change…though
not soon enough, imo.

On Wed, Jul 1, 2015 at 10:37 AM, Andrew Lowe <andrew at lostways.com> wrote:

> Ableton Live is an industry standard now, if you are doing music
> professionally you should have a copy of that. But, you can make good music
> with anything. I have a friend that makes pretty great stuff using only a
> Nintendo DS.
> On Jul 1, 2015 9:28 AM, "Cere Misc" <cere.misc at gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> Ah, I just saw that it's based on Ableton…. :(
>>
>> On Wed, Jul 1, 2015 at 9:27 AM, Cere Misc <cere.misc at gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>> Andrew.  I'm just like half way through this intro video and really like
>>> his advice.  Do you know if this workshop is based on any particular tool
>>> set?
>>>
>>> On Wed, Jul 1, 2015 at 9:03 AM, Andrew Lowe <andrew at lostways.com> wrote:
>>>
>>>> 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 at 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 at 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 at labitat.dk> wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> On Tue, Jun 30, 2015 at 11:18 PM, Adam Munich <adam at 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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>>>>>>> sudo-discuss at lists.sudoroom.org
>>>>>>> https://sudoroom.org/lists/listinfo/sudo-discuss
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>> _______________________________________________
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>>>>>
>>>
>>
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