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-- Track Production Time - How Long?


Posted by CrowdFound on Sep-11-2007 01:38:

Track Production Time - How Long?

Hey all one thing im very interested to know across the board is how long (on average) it takes you to produce a track, from start to finish (including mastering etc)?

I know everyone is different, and individual tracks are different, but im just interested to know your average.


Posted by Zombie0729 on Sep-11-2007 02:04:

done an entire song in 24hrs(probably one of my best) and still have some in the pipe for more than 12 mos...

there's no way to put a time table on something unless there is a deadline and 3 weeks is usually plenty sufficient for that


Posted by Rusty O'Hara on Sep-11-2007 02:40:

Quickest: 3:43 seconds.

Longest: 10 years and counting..

Average: A few weeks.


Posted by Mr.Mystery on Sep-11-2007 02:45:

This has never been asked before...

2 hours to 2 weeks.


Posted by CrowdFound on Sep-11-2007 02:55:

yeah its interesting, im extremely amatuer when it comes to producing but i have found that i can be stuck without inspiration for ages, then all of a sudden something will work and i get on a roll that will result in a very productive period in a very short period of time.

i read that BT spent 6 months on one track for This Binary Universe, writing the track entirely in CSound - that's intense.


Posted by derail on Sep-11-2007 03:11:

If it's a remix and I have a pretty clear vision of where I want to take it, the track will be done in around 12-15 hours on average.

About 90% of that time is spread over a weekend, with a touchup after a couple of day's break, then listening to it with fresh ears to see what else it needs, production/sequencing-wise.

In terms of sound, after the initial build of the main loop it doesn't change much. The levels/eqs are pretty much set around 2-3 hours in, then the rest is all the sequencing and production. I find it makes the rest of the process more fun if the track already has that "finished" sound to it.

With original compositions, it takes as long as it takes to get the melodic ideas right. But once the ideas are down, it's pretty quick getting the track done.

It's an interesting process, logging the time spent on each aspect of creating a song. It really lets you know where you're spending a lot of time, and whether the end result is worth that investment of time. It'd be interesting to compare production time breakdowns between producers to see if a producer has worked out a way to get something done in half an hour that takes someone else two hours. Everyone would improve their workflow!

p.s. it used to take me months to get tracks done. A combination of inexperience and lack of quality sounds/tools (meaning I had to work a lot harder - you can still do a great job, but it does take longer). I used to use Reason (and still do, rewired into Cubase along with Live) and it can sound great, but it got to a stage where I was trying to do too much with it. If it had a freeze function to free up CPU resources that would have helped me immensely. These days I use a lot of hardware synths which have great sound capabilities, finding good sounds is crazy quick these days. The Waves analysis tools are great, being able to just throw a frequency analyser onto an instrument's channel and see what's going on is handy. And Cubase, for me personally, does everything I want it to do, in such a quick, intuitive manner. I just love being able to grab the physical audio and do what I want with it.

But yes, I'm probably still spending more time on some aspects of production than other people. I'm sure there are tools out there to speed up some of my processes.


Posted by richg101 on Sep-11-2007 12:10:

not usually more than ten hours. this time is usually spread into 4 or five sittings over a two week period.


Posted by soundrush on Sep-11-2007 14:38:

Re: Track Production Time - How Long?

quote:
Originally posted by CrowdFound
Hey all one thing im very interested to know across the board is how long (on average) it takes you to produce a track, from start to finish (including mastering etc)?

I know everyone is different, and individual tracks are different, but im just interested to know your average.


10 hours


Posted by Ry Thomas on Sep-11-2007 15:18:

I have finished stuff in about 6-8 hours before but like to hang onto it for 2-3 weeks before i send out to DJ's, then to labels to make sure there is nothing needs changing after my ears have had a small break, also leave a few weeks before final mixdown as i find this makes it a lot easier


Posted by sterilis on Sep-11-2007 16:39:

from a few hours to 3 weeks after which i scrap it as i'll be forever tweaking it beyond this point.


Posted by zodiac9 on Oct-18-2007 23:29:

I started a vocal remix last thursday, and I pretty much finished it by the following Tuesday. I'm still checking a few levels in the mix, but it's basically done. I'm a little surprised I could knock one out that fast. A remix is a little different though, because you have something to build around. For my original tracks, I can take up to a month, and I usually work on 3 or 4 tracks at a time. I could easily turn out 2 tracks a month. Once you streamline your workflow, things go pretty quickly.


Posted by Storyteller on Oct-19-2007 00:22:

I roughly spend 40hrs on a track

spread over a period of several weeks mostly (2 to 8 in most cases).


Posted by B_man on Oct-19-2007 00:24:

Too much time for an idiot like myself who is in college and working full time simultaneously... [sigh]...


Posted by Khayat on Oct-19-2007 01:51:

quote:
Originally posted by Rusty O'Hara
Quickest: 3:43 seconds.

Longest: 10 years and counting..

Average: A few weeks.

W00T....3:43
I'd love to hear that track ur so fast maaan


Posted by maximlee on Oct-22-2007 19:35:

all depends

i mean i usually have a track done in a few days...but to get it to the stanard that i can take it to a mastering engineer a few months, i mean if your writing for fun or to impress your mates etc cool but if u really want to take ure production to the nest level you need to spend alot of time on tune ....do a version let people listen to it...see whats wrong.... change that let people listen to it....to the point were you are the tune..... this way you learn structure sooo well cau if your inside a tune for days weeks when you listen to music you love sasha pvd tiesto your brain is in structure mode so it listens to music in a different way...you learn.....

hoping this can help

p.s the only difference between you and the pros is they have put in thousands of hours.... sleepless nights.... to get were they are... people just think they are magicians. tiesto woke up one morning installed a program...wrote flight 643 and was number one over night...it took him 10-15years


Posted by daveth on Oct-23-2007 00:37:

quote:
Originally posted by Khayat
W00T....3:43
I'd love to hear that track ur so fast maaan
Wot-eva. I done one in 3.43 seconds. Oh wat?! Don't go givin me evils or nuffin, everyone knows 'is fanny goes sideways, an anyways I met PVD and he said I should definitely come back stage an see 'im and do 'im, and anyway I do know how to make super-fast tracks 'cause I'm his his assistant, an if khayat says I'm not then don't listen to him because everyone knows he's mental because he shoved his knob through armins letterbox.


Posted by Internet TufGai on Oct-25-2007 10:25:

probobly 12-48 hours total for me. I really take my time making songs. I mean, sometimes I'll just take a break and listen to my song and surf the net.



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