@dabrenn.
The sound design for what they use is rather simple and can be demonstrated in just a couple of brief tutorials.
I'm sure i'll end up doing a tutorial showing exactly how to get the "omni style generic wubwubwub"
But that will have to wait for another day (although it's a terrible idea to show people how to make these sounds in the first place because then they'll just go on to make more generic dubstep, so in retrospect, I probably won't show how...)
Man Kyoga, you love to rip on EDM, yet I've never seen you produce an EDM track. You go around all the time saying how generic and easy it is to produce a "WUB WUB WUB" track that sounds awesome, seemling implying that Alex S. Omnivore, and even Skrillex are talentless producers riding mainstream bandwagons.
You are right, there are tons of tutorials on how to get big wubs with pirated software and how to make a crappy bootlegg Skrillex track, but I honestly think you severely underestimate the disconnect between big sounds and a track that is
enjoyable, original, and fun to dance to.And I agree, there are tons of generic dubstep producers out there who aren't super great at what they do (Alex S. really treads this line, I'm not a big fan of his stuff) and encouraging that is a bad thing. But I'm not really a fan of dubstep and I've really only made one dubsteppy type song and my goal was not to sound generic and it turned out alright, I don't think I've even posted it here. By the way, Omi's style is not very generic, he's actually got a
fairly unique and interesting style and he's super young.
Anyways, I'd really like you to show us all your dubstep production skills before you run around ripping on the people who make it. Seriously, I'd love to hear it, not trying to come off super passive aggressive.