
Keep this in mind and let it be your main source of willpower.
when going to actual making music, I'd recommend four things:
1.) learn about music theory
2.) get some software
3.) get a keyboard
4.) analyze music you listen to
1.) will help you understand how music works, why x sounds good with y or why it doesn't, but there are some people like Supersaw Hoover that will tell you not to look at music theory and just throw random shit together. Unless you want to make gabber/power noise/other ultra hip musics you'll gain a lot by knowing theory.
2.) For beginners I'd recommend MAGIX music maker. It's not a professional grade DAW (A DAW means Digital Audio Workstation, basically it's a music making software), but you're not a professional yet, so why go biting more than you can chew? if you are a mac user you might want to take a look at garageband, on which I heard positive reviews but I can't guarantee it's quality.
MAGIX is good in that it offers a lot of what professional grade DAW's can without throwing you in a pit of chains, automation, clips and whatever.
Once you've made a song or two, there are two main DAW's: Ableton live and FLstudio.
some say ableton Live is easier to learn, some say FLstudio.
I use ableton live, but am trying to learn FLStudio to be able to collab with non-ableton users.
There also are some less popular daw's like reason, cubase, but only a few bronies here use them.
if you need any help with MAGIX or ableton Live, hit me up on skype (bartekko6) or the IRC chat (link is under mylittleremix logo)
3.) Learning piano or keyboard proves to be a very useful skill. You can imrovise your melodies, check out synths before using them, and a lot of stuff you wouldn't be able to do without a keyboard.
4.) Why do my songs sound so thin? Because you forgot about bass.
Learning from masters is the best possible way to learn. If you like a song by any brony musician, you can ask for stems (separate files of song's parts like drums, bass, lead, pad) or if he uses the same DAW, you can ask for the project, but keep in mind they might have some plugins you don't.
analyze everything. how is the bass added, how are the instruments panned, why does this track sound so ambient. These are the questions answers for you'll have to find out for yourself.
listen to lots of music and appreciate all genres.
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