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MOK
Senior tranceaddict

Registered: Dec 2007
Location: Seattle
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Yep, there's no such tutorial mate. I wish I could better explain why, but it simply doesn't work like that. In some ways it just requires the knowledge, experience, and skill. To be sure, there aren't step-by-step processes, nor even much for vague ordering guidelines. Every producer is different, and there bound to be a lot of difference from song-to-song from the same producer.
That said, I'll venture a guess on what you're REALLY interested in:
You want to see what a pro song looks like inside a DAW, originally. To see what went in to it, what complexities exist, what was given how much attention, etc.
Yeah, I'd love to see more of that myself.... But there's just not much out there for such. Music magazines' video interviews are going to be about as close as you can get, barring a local producer friend.
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Jan-14-2009 19:23
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JmanNZ
tranceaddict
Registered: Sep 2008
Location:
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Ive been producing for just under 6 months now and have had to learn stuff like this, the question you are asking is one that had me confused for quite some time, but like you will read, you pick these things up one bit at a time. If I am right, you are wondering things like how do you start a track (with a kick and bass, or with sounds, or with a melody etc...) how do you put a track together (ground up or right to left), how do you know when to add another element to the mix or just make what you already got bigger...
I've been thinking about writing a tutorial which basically goes over all this stuff I have figured out over the last 6 months, but I think it would only apply to me (my genre, style, VST's, DAW etc...), and also, I need to stop wasting time thinking and writing about music and more time producing!
Prob one of the biggest turning points for me was to copy a favourite trance track, one that sounds simeple with no vocals etc... That way you learn a little about what works with what, and you will be amazed at all the little things you never knew were there that make it sound great. As you go through you can add your own preferences to it and it can eventually turn into something completely original. Actaully, I still really struggle starting from cold, and usually do this just to get momentum and change it all later.
EDIT: Just noticed that this is what you are going to do, good stuf, you don't need a tutoria for this, just start from the beginning with the drums etc... which will take longer than you think, and you need to spend time to get the right sound btw, dont rush or it will sound shit, but dont be too picky because you will never get it to sound identical. Then progress to what ever comes next, piece by piece, A/B between to compare and hear what yours is missing, and on you go...
Last edited by JmanNZ on Jan-15-2009 at 03:03
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Jan-15-2009 02:55
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jason_bradberry
Junior tranceaddict
Registered: Jul 2008
Location: Chichester, UK
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| quote: | Originally posted by JmanNZ
Prob one of the biggest turning points for me was to copy a favourite trance track, one that sounds simeple with no vocals etc... That way you learn a little about what works with what, and you will be amazed at all the little things you never knew were there that make it sound great. As you go through you can add your own preferences to it and it can eventually turn into something completely original.
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This also really helped me develop, would definitely recommend this method. If you give it a go, really try and listen to each individual element and work hard to recreate it as faithfully as you can. Break down the sounds and think about how they might have created them. Like JmanNZ has already said though, use this method to create your own original take on whatever track you're recreating, and you will create parts and synth presets that you can use in your own tracks.
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Jan-15-2009 11:10
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kitphillips
is actually a guy.
Registered: May 2006
Location: Sydney, Australia
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A lot of these posts are a bit irrelevant, because there was a future music or electronic musician tutorial which was posted online which detailed the structure and creation of a complete trance track. Search maybe? It might be in the stickies but I can't remember.
I think the important caveat though with that is (as some have mentioned) that all tracks are quite different, so you need to take the whole thing with a grain of salt. Ideally its something worth looking at once you've developed your own style and already have some experience.
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New Mix: March 2010 Promo
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Jan-15-2009 12:42
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Ludikruz
Senior tranceaddict
Registered: May 2003
Location: MA
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hey thanks for that great defected link.. ive also been learning production for the past 6 months and it does help alot to see someone elses track laid out
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Jan-15-2009 16:12
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flutlicht junky
in das haus

Registered: Oct 2001
Location: Bournemouth, UK
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Jan-15-2009 20:02
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