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Things you learned but was uncomfortable at first executing but now accustomed to,
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PaULiN0
Here's another if you knew back then what you know now thread.

I haven't been comfortable lately with higher octave melodies and other parts of theory.

another one is i use to like my beats in full maximum power without taking anything away which i found out be dumb but than i learned that is just being hard headed

so i got insight from TA's thanks to the wip thread which imo works, it has sure helped me.

How about your self, cmon let it out.

Imo making a track is like being an artisan hehe.
meriter
/r/titlegore
AlphaStarred
I would like to eventually say MIDI, but I'll need to get another poly-synth to finally try and learn it. Though I hear the oldschool analog way is a pain in the ass (which is probly why I haven't learned it yet) so I might take the Cubase route, ultimately.
PaULiN0
quote:
Originally posted by meriter
/r/titlegore


Can you post something useful for once?
DJRYAN™
I used to spend a lot of time looking for that perfect kick.. now I find one and use the filter and resonance to change it to how I want..
Evolve140
scorpradio
lol...don't laugh at me...but ....sidechaining (i'm such a noob)
Seandroid
Singing I suppose.
djshire
Is this about butt sex?
DJ RANN
Working seriously fast, under pressure on protools. I remember the first couple of times I was sweating bullets but over time, you got used to it and it became easy. Having said that, I'm probably rusty as now.

aquila
MIDI for me too. My dad spent almost a decade getting a Korg X3 to communicate with an Amiga sequencer - two machines notorious for their MIDI capabilities, so I guess the complexity scared me for ages.
LoveHate
wanted to resurrect this thread, because i seem to have fallen in a vicious cycle of reading countless articles on soundonsound, and various other sites, feeling as though that acquiring the knowledge itself would make my music better. Although implementing it and actually doing is a entire different ball game as i almost rarely use most of the stuff i learn , at least right away, or give up when i feel i have hit a road block with applying it correctly.

ah there's so many different variables to having a great song, sometimes i feel like just pulling up a random plugin that i never thought of using, and is totally not designed for the job, but just leaving it , if it sounds good to my ears.
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