Legion wrote:I'm terrible at remixing. I always have been. And I honestly cannot figure out why for the life of me. Whenever I'm trying to remix something, the ideas just straight up abandon my head, and the finished product is not even a fraction the quality of my original music. My question to you guys: how do you go about remixing? Where do you draw your inspiration from? This has been driving me crazy lately and I'd like to hear from others.
A lot of people have the misconception that a remix has to take the original song and wrap a new genre around it. This often lands you in the territory of bland remix, no matter what the quality of your composition is at the end, it's still not going to stand out.
I'm still working towards being able to do remixes myself, it's a very difficult thing to do. One of the exercises I learned to do was before a remix, I should try and recreate the original as closely as possible. That way I get a more in-depth insight into how the piece was constructed, and I also end up with a toolkit of sounds from the original that I can implement.
It's as already mentioned, you shouldn't be copying the original into a new style, you should take what you can from it, be it the main melody, the vocal line or something that makes that piece unique, and compose something original from it. Taking a vocal or piano melody, stripping it of any chords will give you numerous possibilities. Completely changing the chord progression while remaining in key is a very good way to get started, and you're certainly not limited to the relative key either. Every note could be a key change, as long as you can make it sound good, the possibilities are endless.