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Is it sad that the hardest part of producing a track for me is...
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david.michael
coming up with a title? :nervous:
Mr.Mystery
No, not really. Me & Mart have always struggled with that. We can knock up tunes easily but the titles... oh, the titles :whip:
It just doesn't feel right to have something generic and clichéd as the title. It needs to be special... and that IS hard.

I mean we have about a half of an album worth of tracks done and none of the tracks have titles. Nor does the album have a name. And I don't think we're even quite sure of the project name we're gonna release it under :wtf:
Aquarian
Same here. I sometimes rename tracks 3 times before I finish them. :wtf:
KilldaDJ
nah, just some random bollocks is fine
Final Call
i wanna make a album that is all
Bryant P - Track 1
Bryant P - Track 2

so forth and so forth..xP
Floorfiller
i agree that random stupid names are kinda dumb. so i guess the question then is what inspires you to make music?
StanVoid
i've found that my best tracks have been the ones that were easiest to name. Usually if a track is strong, it evokes a very specific emotion in you, and you can usually pinpoint that emotion with one or few words - thus giving the track its title. But if you're just listening to the track and thinking "well i dunno it kinda sounds like this but it also reminds me of that and bla bla bla", it probably isn't a strong of a track as you could've made it.

or maybe i'm just talking out of my ass :p
Pjotr G
what's in a name

but that's just me, i might just as well call them the current date, it's about the music.
TOR
I love figuring out titles and project names.. The key is to describe the feelings or the images you get from listening to the track, as Stan Void pointed out, but without resorting to clichés. A track title needs to be strong, powerful, personal.

I particularly like titles that have no more than one word, like Kindred Spirits - Warp or my latest track Cosmic Tracer - Fuse, terms that evoke strong images.
thoughtlessjex
I generally try to go with track names that evoke images of what I see, hear, feel, smell, maybe even taste when I listen to them, like The Starlight Was Overwhelming, Drops of Water and Warm Spell. Other times I find that it's more about my mentality at the time, like Regret or Alive. Yet other times I just like to give the songs silly little names like Xifan (The Mandarin for rice porridge) or The Acid Monsters Are Eating Me, that still have some relation to the situation or method in which they were produced.

By and large, though, I agree with StanVoid that my best (or at least favorite) tracks tend to name themselves. These also tend to fill that first tier of tracks.

david.michael
quote:
Originally posted by Mr.Mystery
but the titles... oh, the titles :whip:
It just doesn't feel right to have something generic and clichéd as the title. It needs to be special... and that IS hard.


That pretty much sums up my struggle right there.
david.michael
quote:
Originally posted by TOR
The key is to describe the feelings or the images you get from listening to the track, as Stan Void pointed out, but without resorting to clichés.


It's hard to do one without the other!
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