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Storyteller
Supreme tracneaddict

Registered: Feb 2005
Location: The Netherlands
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Dec-02-2014 08:49
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Kthought
Senior tranceaddict
Registered: Oct 2004
Location: Joshua Tree
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I don't necessarily disagree... although the paradigm may be shifting.
the exceptional cases will continue to garner success.
But, just look at guys like TILT. They are a model of specialization and workflow. 2-3 guys handling everything, for the best album out this year.
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Dec-03-2014 02:14
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DJ RANN
Supreme tranceaddict
Registered: May 2001
Location: Hollywood....
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Welcome back Kysora! I wondered what had happened but you did exactly the right thing; Endlessly trying to construct a track on laborious and slow going workflows is a sure-fire way to kill your passion for making music.
I once did a week long session with Omar Rodriguez-Lopez (mars volta, Antemasque etc) - they would even go so far as to completely ban any talk of production among band members when writing, not even little comments while jamming etc. You just play, that's it, and have engineers/tech record it. Period.
It sounds extreme but his method was that role of production itself, kills pure creativity so do not allow one to bleed in to the other.
Not saying that I totally agree, but when you're regarded as one of the greatest living guitar players, you do kind of have a point.
Getting to the crux of the topic, EDM is virtually completely unique in that we have always been expected to do so many roles that in any other music genre, you would have several, if not many other people doing.
We're the sound designer, composer, arranger, sequencer, synth programmer, orchestrator, engineer, assistant engineer, producer, mix engineer and mastering engineer, all in one.
Some do it really well (like PVD and Jaytech) but others need a lot of help.
I once saw a documentary on SisterBliss (of Insomnia) in the studio and she was literally telling a guy "I want it to sound more whoofy" etc and not even touching an instrument, key or mouse.
One guy I know who had quite a successful DJ and track career,
was telling me how he doesn't step foot in a studio without his preferred engineer as he just can't do both the writing and producing without someone technical.
Just like him, some "producers" just write the melodies and have a engineer put it all together and make it sound right.
Even DeepDish would do this. For any recordings, they would hire a studio, have their engineer guy do the recording, they would then do the work in Logic to make the track, but then it was given to a protools engineer to mix.
Personally, I try to do it all myself, but that more because I love geeking out on the process. If I was serious about really wanting to put tracks out, I'd probably just invest in more things that allow me to just jam like electribes and synths etc, then treat the rest of the elements (Sound design, engineering, mixing) as completely separate / compartmentalized stages of the process, not this "do it as you go / wear all hats at once" thing.
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Dec-04-2014 01:50
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Kysora
Supreme tranceaddict

Registered: Aug 2009
Location: Hampshire, IL
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That bit about Omar is awesome, I feel like that's the attitude I have at this point with music. I don't even save most of what I write anymore, I just have a guitar, an electronic drum kit and some Korg synth from the 80's plugged into a mini mixer, which outputs to a TC Flashback X4 looper and finally an amplifier. It's a giant mess of cables and instruments all over the floor and it's just fun as fuck to build up a nice layered loop and jam over it, then just start over and try something else.
The cool part is, I tried picking up FL again after that and I had so many new ideas and approaches that I never considered before. You know how some synths make crazy modulation sounds if you play and hold a patch, then switch to a different preset while it's still playing? I was messing around with Synth1 and really liked those sounds, so I recorded myself doing it with random patches through Edison while the rest of the song was playing and it pretty much made the whole track. You can really hear it when the bass changes and during the breakdown. And the best part? That whole song took me maybe 2 hours to write beginning to end, it doesn't sound polished but fuck, I've put weeks of daily work into tracks that I think sound terrible now, I don't think it's worth the grind anymore.
It's pretty neat what you can learn from going out of your comfort zone. All I ever knew for the better part of 7 years was a 100% software workflow, I wish I realized how much it was holding me back.
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Dec-04-2014 19:12
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Lith
Senior tranceaddict
Registered: Jan 2003
Location: US
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| quote: | Originally posted by Kthought
I don't necessarily disagree... although the paradigm may be shifting.
the exceptional cases will continue to garner success.
But, just look at guys like TILT. They are a model of specialization and workflow. 2-3 guys handling everything, for the best album out this year. |
The exceptional cases will continue to garner success, that's why I was trying to preclude them from the conversation. They're what I consider the exception to the rule.
Edit: misread part of your post. I do agree with what you're saying. And I would like to add: I think many successful artists out there are doing exactly this, but not making it apparent. They act as one, but there are several people behind them.
The comments posted I think reflect a general tendency towards agreeing with the concept that specializing is overall the better approach. I'm concerned that collectively we are experiencing a dilution of output and talent because so much responsibility falls on one person.
I don't think this is entirely unique to EDM either. But the effects are all the same.
Last edited by Lith on Dec-06-2014 at 04:49
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Dec-06-2014 04:42
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DJ RANN
Supreme tranceaddict
Registered: May 2001
Location: Hollywood....
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| quote: | Originally posted by meriter
and at the drive-in, and de-facto, and bosnian rainbows, and ximena sariñana... and le butcherettes.. and a million others..
Just saw Antemasque at the Metro a couple weeks ago. That guy has unbelievable stage presence. Same thing all the legends had. About what year did you work with them? I've read stories about recording Frances the Mute where the band was completely isolated and were told to play their parts with no actual context of the songs |
Nice! I didn't bother listing the other ones because most people don't know them.
This was in 2008. He wrote some the tracks / co-scored (if you for a film with my old boss and I was assistant engineer on the project.
It was bonkers, not because of him - he's a really nice guy, very chilled but at the same time extremely focused on his craft, like most true artists. What was bonkers was that they had been working on the film for 5 years, finally got to the point it had been filmed....
....and we had all of 5 days to compose, record, engineer, mix and deliver a fully finished score.
It was during these sessions that I learned what my limits are in terms of work vs sleep.
Omar is just raw talent in the truest sense. The only other person I've worked with that had that sort of natural un-academic talent was Tom Morello (but that's a story for another time ).
The issue was that with score composing (more so than any other type of music) is the pinnacle of intellectualization of music; By that, you have to think from an incredibly analytic standpoint to compose music that not just conveys the emotion, but both adds to, and compliments the images dialogue - in some cases the score makes the film something greater than the sum of it's parts and the best composers are incredible at making intelligent choices and intellectual analysis on what fits etc.
With Omar, he it quite literally the best example I can think of for the exact opposite. It's all about feeling and letting what comes flow. He even said while we were doing it that he has no idea about the process we were all trying to achieve because he is so far removed from that method of working.
I was chatting to him and his guitar tech (who also happened to play in some of the bands at the time) and they would have this look that would get shot to whoever started tying to talk about the music/what to play or think out loud - basically a cold "don't you fucking dare". That's how they work. It's the extreme end of don't over think it. (Kinda don't fucking think it at all).
All we were given we quite literally a few "sketches" of ideas for themes for certain cues which amoutned to little more than 30 second guitar riffs. We tried a million different things including writing new material from scratch but ended up really just going back to those sketches in the end and recording polished versions. We made it after a week of sleep but I've done a project like it; Thankfully with the talent involved (both Omar and my Boss) the finished product was realized.
It was like putting together a band of talented people who had never worked together, then locking them in a studio and a week later somehow coming out with a finished product.
Sure, you think, why not sounds like a cool idea?
Then you remind yourself this is for a film score on a $20 dollar movie that took 5 years to make and is going to be released in 10 days 
Crazy fucking times.
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Dec-06-2014 22:56
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