Thanks I'll give that a try.Narrow Q 800hz-ish boost on your kicks, got that tip from Chris Lord-Alge, gives them presence on shitty speakers. Also saturation on the bass can add some presence for shitty speakers. The biggest challenge is translation of the low end on speakers that just dont go low, and then having that same song sound great in a car where low end is plentiful.
This might help...I still cant get a good hold of the bus routing, i often want a full signal of a plugin..without quality being sacrificed and volume going up..and somehow cant seem to manage that.
So i choose 1 plugin sometimes i fully wanna route and send it trough the stereo output to a bus,.but you can only do that 1 time..
gonna check that out tx!!This might help...
The Logic Pros: Routing 101 - creating multi-track FX Sends and Submix groups - 9to5Mac
In this week’s episode of The Logic Pros, after looking at some high quality hardware over the past few weeks...9to5mac.com
The problem I have with it is that you can't manually draw in your chops. Or at least I'm not aware of any way. I like that about Edison you can be super precise, even sample stuff just a little long or short so it fits the time stretch better etc. Time for a rant on FL versus Reason:reason has ReCycle which is better than edison to me
In recycle you can draw your own chops or make it chop for you (I rarely let it chop for me lol). edison and recycle kinda works the same but I like recycle more because I can view my chops better, create a rex file, wave files and midi without messing up my work flow. I dont use reason that often. i'm more of a Flstudio/Mpc type producer but recycle is my goto for chops for my flstudioThe problem I have with it is that you can't manually draw in your chops. Or at least I'm not aware of any way. I like that about Edison you can be super precise, even sample stuff just a little long or short so it fits the time stretch better etc. Time for a rant on FL versus Reason:
Lately I've been fitting samples into time stretch a "lazy way" because I hate having to manually adjust the little knob. So I'll start with the sample and then just adjust the BPM til the sample fits 1 bar, 2 bars, whatever, then use that to select how long in the time stretch box. Then once I get that right I go adjust the BPM back to whatever BPM I initially wanted.
Here's a few little examples of how Reason kills FL in this regard:
1. In Reason the knobs are way bigger, easier to see, easier to turn. With FL's stupid little knob unless you hold control if you barely move the mouse you move the knob like 5000 units. That's why I hate using the knob to adjust the time stretch when I'd rather figure out how to fit the sample into those specific time units.
2. In Reason when you're tweaking knobs the value pops up right by your cursor. In FL you have to adjust the stupid tiny knob and then find the tiny little value in the upper left corner and hope to God you didn't move it 54235903 points in the process.
Get trigger happy with that Ctrl + S my guy.How about......when you got I got a dope beat going, and I haven't saved yet, and boom.......power goes out.
Just make what you feel to make, if there's something contesting with the vocal it can always be removedLeaving room for the artist. I want them to sell well but I don't wanna feel like I'm limiting my creativity, either.
I feel like it's a really underrated thing, though. A few weeks ago, I referred a rapper to a producer friend of mine and the rapper picked the one beat that neither the producer nor me really liked. What was different from the other ones? It had almost no instruments, was super minimalist and left a lot of room for the rapper. All the cool melodies on the other beats … the rapper didn't want them.Leaving room for the artist. I want them to sell well but I don't wanna feel like I'm limiting my creativity, either.
Having somewhere to post my beats that would be worthwhile.
What's stopping you?Actually posting my beats anywhere.
Not completing my beatsis stopping me.What's stopping you?
Thank you. If there wasn't such a motive to post beats daily to keep up with the algorithm on beatstars, I would probably do a separate producer's cut and a production track version. I might do that anyway before I launch on spotifyI feel like it's a really underrated thing, though. A few weeks ago, I referred a rapper to a producer friend of mine and the rapper picked the one beat that neither the producer nor me really liked. What was different from the other ones? It had almost no instruments, was super minimalist and left a lot of room for the rapper. All the cool melodies on the other beats … the rapper didn't want them.
Same if I'm freestyling on a beat. I like some inspiration from melodies, etc., but I also don't want to be overwhelmed.
Looking at the beats on your profile, though, I think that you're doing well in this regard.
To be honest, I think that it doesn't really matter what you post first. Just start somewhere. It doesn't have to be perfect. Just putting yourself out there will open up new opportunities that you hadn't even thought of.Not completing my beatsis stopping me.
Partly because i dont see the point in fully finishinf a beat if the arrangement will likely change with a song written to it.
Also i jave so many beats now what do i post first. The older ones may be less good, so i dont wanna post them after posting newer good ones. I also dont wanna spam post tjem in a rush to get my new ones out.
So the idea of how when where and why to post em is proving a bit of a dilemma.
I should have figuredthat out and started posting when i started making maybe. I dunno.
Yes, you could post the two versions on separate channels on YouTube, for example. I really like that idea!Thank you. If there wasn't such a motive to post beats daily to keep up with the algorithm on beatstars, I would probably do a separate producer's cut and a production track version. I might do that anyway before I launch on spotify
I just generally dont wanna put full beats online. Verse n hook should be enough for someone to know if they like it or wanna use it.To be honest, I think that it doesn't really matter what you post first. Just start somewhere. It doesn't have to be perfect. Just putting yourself out there will open up new opportunities that you hadn't even thought of.
So I'd say pick a platform you like (YouTube, SoundCloud, BeatStars, Instagram, etc.), pick a beat that you like, and hit post. Don't overthink it, just put something out. The rest will come with time.
Remember: making beats and posting them is supposed to be fun.
As for the arrangement, I'd say just pick something, it doesn't matter too much as long as it's a somewhat standard arrangement (e.g. Intro/Verse/Hook/Verse/Hook/Outro). I, for example, like to freestyle, and I can only do that if the beat has an arrangement. I don't really care which one in particular it is.
If you're still feeling overwhelmed/unsure, feel free to show me one of your unfinished beats and I'll give you some feedback.
I dont think it matters besides the fact you gain more followers by posting more, so eventually you gain a bigger following when being more committed to post on a regular base.P.S. Does BeatStars place so much value on posting daily? Have you tried different intervals? If yes, what were your findings?
You dont have to when sending it out to people man...but your music has got to be ''ready'' the moment you send out a snippet/preview. So you gotta have it ready anyway, and a platform with ready made contracts is good for such things. I think its the biggest struggle we all encounter,...arranging a song w/o working with an artist..its so shitty.I just generally dont wanna put full beats online. Verse n hook should be enough for someone to know if they like it or wanna use it.