A great man wrote:Circuitfry: fries circuits of this whole topic, one at a time (I know that's not how servers work, but Puns work all the time)
Chocolat wrote:Text
Chocolat wrote:Did anyone else have a brain-to-paper disconnect when they were first starting out? Is it the sort of thing where there's a trick to fix it, or is it just a matter of practice? I'd be very grateful to hear your advice.
Chocolat wrote:Did anyone else have a brain-to-paper disconnect when they were first starting out? Is it the sort of thing where there's a trick to fix it, or is it just a matter of practice? I'd be very grateful to hear your advice.
A great man wrote:Circuitfry: fries circuits of this whole topic, one at a time (I know that's not how servers work, but Puns work all the time)
KeepOnRockin' wrote:I started out making music without a keyboard, decent computer or decent speakers/headphones. You dont have to make a gigantic investment in fancy studio equipement to make music.
Just buy or pirate a DAW (I use FL myself, but Ableton, Cubase, Pro Tools, Logic, Reason, etc all get the job done) and look up some tutorials. have fun with it and dont expect too much when you're just starting out.
The thing you said about putting down the melodies in your head, I had that aswell. Dont worry, you'll get better at it. I started out with very simple "melodies." in fact, here's the first song I ever made after 1 week of messing around with FL. http://www.mediafire.com/?19zs3rohdmu9fer
Also Im just going to copy paste what I said in another thread:
Listen to other artists.
Start listening to your favorite tracks, but instead of just focusing on the melody or the beat try to catch every little detail. When and how does he use FX? Are those strings in the background? There's a lot you'd usually miss if you dont pay attention to it, but all these small things really make a huge difference.
Try to emulate some of the things you hear others do in your own tracks.
An artist also doesn't start drawing out of nowhere.
Have atleast a basic idea of how you want your track to sound like in your head. Ofcourse you can still change things on the go, but it helps a lot if you know what kind of track you want to create.
Inspiration for tracks may come at the most random moments.
Ask questions!
Don't know how to create a specific sound, or how to master your tracks? Ask other people on the forum for help! I'm sure there are a ton of ponies on this site that could help you.
There are also lots of tutorials on Youtube and other forums on how to do specific things.
Chocolat wrote:Greetings everypony, and thanks for all the wonderful music! Signed up because I saw this thread and had a question to ask.
I'm also trying to get into music. I have the stuff I figured I'd need - el cheapo MIDI keyboard, decent software, minimal competency with an instrument or two, some general familiarity with music theory, and so on.
However, I'm running into a little trouble. I think the best way to say it is that I don't seem to "think" in instruments or sheet music? I can play songs that already exist, but I don't usually dream up new songs by noodling with keys or writing down notes. Instead I hum, whistle, or just hear something in my head. And as far as I can tell, I'm fine at that. I can hum each instrument into a recorder, play them together, and it sounds like what I imagined.
The problem comes when I try to translate that into actual notes. Imagining the sound is so easy, but when I try to enter it in, it takes hours of tweaking to put in just a few bars. Even then, it doesn't sound quite right - a few pitches will be off, or a note/rest might be too long or too short, and I can never seem to get them all exactly the way I "heard" them. Just kinda go "derp" when it comes time to put everything into a concrete/mathematical form.
Did anyone else have a brain-to-paper disconnect when they were first starting out? Is it the sort of thing where there's a trick to fix it, or is it just a matter of practice? I'd be very grateful to hear your advice.
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