Versilaryan wrote:I almost always start with a chord progression. Then, I just loop it over and over again while humming things to myself and eventually, I'll find something worth keeping.
I think I might try this method, since I always just doodle a riff and then slap the chords that sound best afterwards. I might actually learn a thing or two about progressions that way.
Also... If I think of a nice tune while I'm not sat at my DAW, I have a shortcut on my phone's home screen to a sound recorder. I'll get my phone out and hum or whistle into the mic and it's saved forever.
I recommend that anyone with a phone that has (or can have) a sound recorder at least considers this. Also useful for field recordings that I've used in a few songs. If I'm at the beach or whatever and people are making noise and you can hear waves it's the sort of thing I want to capture, but that's nothing to do with melodies. Still a valid point I guess.
Yeah, get a sound recorder you can carry with you at all times.
When I AM sat at my computer, I'll normally just slap a few notes down, put them on a loop, and move them around while it loops until it sounds nice. OR I'll set the DAW to record my MIDI keyboard input and just jam (or more accurately, as [voodoopony] said, "record myself slamming my head against the keyboard"). Then, if and when I accidentally make something awesome, i'll pick it out of that recording and refine it.
I think that's pretty much everything. Hope I helped, or at least made an interesting read.