If you'd like to learn more about the compositional concepts that have helped me the most over the years, I made this FREE eBook for you: bit.ly/FREEcompositionguide
@seedmole9 ай бұрын
This is also essentially the same way that really good context-appropriate videogame background music is made. You get a bunch of different loops that all go together, but each bring different vibes or some such, and fade between different combinations of them according to the circumstances. It's how you get what feels like live musical accompaniment in Breath of the Wild and stuff.
@JamesonNathanJones9 ай бұрын
Absolutely. Really cool stuff
@d3tuned3788 ай бұрын
The way riding Yoshi in super Mario added drums 💓
@andreas-wismann9 ай бұрын
The same approach I take on my AKAI MPC: Start "full house" with a crammed sequence, copy everything multiple times, then decide which tracks/parts/notes to mute - and add new ones.
@TheAdamMalcolm9 ай бұрын
Pas mute? So that’s what it’s for! 😂
@garygimmestad42728 ай бұрын
There’s a Jenga aspect to this. I’m also reminded of some Beethoven slow movements which reveal their fully-realized design gradually. Op. 7 is a good example.
@DrJ3RK89 ай бұрын
This has always been my favorite way to compose. Once I get the subtractive elements taken care of, I make some custom parts to bring in and out during transitions. I usually add things like drum fills at the end of a percussive section or say a crash cymbal at the beginning of a 4 or 8 bar section, that sort of thing. Noise sweeps here an there, or any other embelishments. After that, I go in and add some automation lanes to sweep filters, fade sections in and out, etc.
@davidRios6229 ай бұрын
I used to that in reason , connected the Nectar P1 , loop around with all the instruments , mute them , add dry/wet to effects , like if was a live session , and help me finish my tracks and make sense of all of that.
@TrevorOuellette9 ай бұрын
Me too. I use blocks to do the layout then muted to shape the arrangement.
@activatealmonds9 ай бұрын
I find that just shifting one part forward a few bars can sometimes create interesting syncopations that I wouldn't think of otherwise. Or it can just end up sounding wrong.
@JamesonNathanJones9 ай бұрын
Never know until you try it :)
@CapriciousBlackBox9 ай бұрын
You are a mensch Jameson, thank you.
@paulcole11719 ай бұрын
I have learnt a lot from this video I have watched your videos when ever they come up and I get a kick out of your humour.
@drjthornley8 ай бұрын
Glad I found you. I've been going down a dead end for a few months and this breathes new life into the work. Thank you
@half-arsedmusic9 ай бұрын
I do this all the time. Probably a bit differently as I do alt rock rather than electronic. It's basically recording all the parts I want, then first removing everything that isn't necessary and finally controlling the flow of the tune by doing just what you're doing here - but it's often over a progression of different parts, to keep things interesting and to showcase, as you said, parts that might be buried when rendered alongside everything else. Drop the bass and drums, bring the bass back in, bring the drums back in, remove one of the guitars, bring it back, remove the other guitar. Just makes it more interesting to listen to for me, more exciting and tends to be the thing that moves a track from not quite there to finished. Rather than subtractive arrangement, I call them "dynamic cuts".
@DerekPower9 ай бұрын
Along those lines - and I believe you've talked about this in other instances - allowing for "silence" will add drama when that silence is broken. Similarly, whenever you introduce or reintroduce a bass element, that will add a tasty punch. A really great example of this is in Jenny Hval's "Female Vampire" (listen for the bass drum pulse). I ended up doing this myself on the track "Spectre", both with silence and a nice bass entry, in that case it was a deep pad played at the lower register.
@ghfjfghjasdfasdf9 ай бұрын
@ 11:30 Love your tune. Wicked stuff 🫡
@Feldspar__7 ай бұрын
Nice to hear about your history with organs.
@Aisjam9 ай бұрын
I do this a lot with trackers. fill up a loop with all the music then moving the blocks around to make the arrangement. then going through each one to bring the music together.
@leeduli9 ай бұрын
This seems like a cool idea for composing video game music. I notice a lot of modern indie games different tracks turn on/off depending on whats going on. I think the classic example is when you ride Yoshi in super mario world the drum track turns on
@JamesonNathanJones9 ай бұрын
Absolutely. They're often arranged as layered stems that can be activated or deactivated based on player activity.
@synth-eticfantasies56839 ай бұрын
This is a cool way of composing! Make everything first, then arrange it! I'm not certain it fits with my style but I will give it a go in the future! Thank you as always for the excellent video :) !
@fxdaly9 ай бұрын
I use a very similar approach to arranging but I often use 8, 16 and 32-bar loops and not only disable various loops or parts of loops but I also disable some notes in the loop parts to give them variety and space.
@5PawZ9 ай бұрын
Works well with groove boxes also
@CCL16039 ай бұрын
Great video. Ive been already doing a version of this and this helped me narrow it down better! Also hey, could we get a “Drones are boring” video? I love writting with them and id love your take on the matter!
@JamesonNathanJones9 ай бұрын
*writes idea down in trusty notebook
@AndyNicholson9 ай бұрын
I really like the Arrangment track in Cubase for doing this sort of subratractive technique, it lets you create alternative arrangement versions and compare them really quickly without losing anything. Great vid JNJ!
@waltersir73069 ай бұрын
Layer cake is great
@JamesonNathanJones9 ай бұрын
I agree
@Erick_T49 ай бұрын
Thank you! Nice sound 5:59
@ghfjfghjasdfasdf9 ай бұрын
I have a feeling that a ton of folks work in this fashion. You basically make your idea or “loop” and then flesh it out over time.
@Knardsh9 ай бұрын
This was the exact trick that finally helped me turn loops into songs.
@bagfacedog9 ай бұрын
I learn so much from your teaching. Thank you!
@Turtlpwr9 ай бұрын
So grateful for you and your channel. Learn so much from you
@daviHuggMonster9 ай бұрын
good tip, seen it in many streams too, still struggle with my workflow and decided might give this technique a shot. *huggs Jameson* 🤗
@InstantNoddles9 ай бұрын
Descant - learned a new word. Thank you!
@in.stereo9 ай бұрын
Great tutorial thanks
@dmreturns64859 ай бұрын
Great video. Great way to describe this arrangement method.
@andycordy51909 ай бұрын
You have a refined palate of course. The presentation of Kept was, to my mind, a better representation of both your stacked ideas and the editing you do to create a logical progression. Thank you. The "Long reverb tail." was a monster🤕 Hands up anyone who's ever, knowingly, heard a Bach chorale. Anybody?
@birdsofvyraj929 ай бұрын
Nice one as always! :)
@danbient9 ай бұрын
This is why session view is the magic that makes Ableton great. I just hit record and start launching clips from APC.
@------YeahOK------2 ай бұрын
A man after my own heart.
@indigosnow_9 ай бұрын
neat concept, will give it a go soon. hope to get the course soon too. Saving up for a nicer hardware synth atm.
@wanderingfool71369 ай бұрын
Ok now I actually have to go listen to your music.. It sounds crazy af
@alexeykurilo43819 ай бұрын
Nice video! Hope it helps me to transform from loop artist into real artist. Thanks for sharing, i would like to see more arrangement content like this.
@RoyChartier9 ай бұрын
Great video! Your channel is one of my favorites.
@JamesonNathanJones9 ай бұрын
Thanks Roy!
@Victorcolongarcia9 ай бұрын
I started making music like this too.
@weddy57009 ай бұрын
Gush… I didn’t know you can deactivate clips in Ableton. I have to investigate that. I have always arrange my songs like this. Not for ambient, but towards a singer/songwriter approach, with elements to add tension for different verses or choruses. Very effective and a nice way to finish a song. Thanks for this video!
@tonyrapa-tonyrapa9 ай бұрын
Very cool. And then, if you're able to get the loop out of your head, you can add in other sections (choruses, middle 8s, tangents, whatever) which will give you a more varied track.
@PanopticMotion8 ай бұрын
What a great video! I struggle to compose melodies; however, I'm quite adept at deciphering chords and crafting progressions. Do you have a recipe for me :)
@Timebandit19 ай бұрын
Got a lot out of this vid - unlocked a lot for me!
@bricelory95349 ай бұрын
I found myself arranging in a very similar way! It's great method for bringing life to generative modular patches as well - I just record each track for the full duration and then start chopping things out in various ways. One more generative way to have subteactive arrangement is to automate the channels off and on (or turning the gain way down and then back to normal - I use the utility plugin in Ableton) with slow LFOs (square wave for sudden cuts, potentially, or I use thr "Shaper" plugin within Ableton for more gradual fades) that are tempo synced and are also at staggered levels for each, so they are off and on at different times from one another. This can bring life to some very pad-based pieces, or elements of a piece while maintaining a certain stability as each element comes in and out at a steady pace.
@JamesonNathanJones9 ай бұрын
Absolutely. Do a lot of those myself :) Great tips!
@andremaranhao15569 ай бұрын
Thank you 🎉 always very thoughtful and helpful….in the wild. Where you can roam free😊
@JamesonNathanJones9 ай бұрын
*looks up from grazing with appreciation
@05degrees6 ай бұрын
I seemed to have known this idea for long but now to actually think about it I see what I actually didn’t used to do and why exactly it was sometimes hard to see where a piece of music should go (and break the loop): I like gradual movement and transitions and I often didn’t start with a solid core to then take apart and filter! That’s probably what I wished to have. And I even see why I tended to go into my usual blocks: I can be anxious of forgetting to do something crucial because I noticed an idea but then got distracted by other things that need to be done and lost the idea forever, leaving only a feeling. Well it still will happen with my brand of ADHD but I need to be more systematic and do these core blocks with many parts to then move horizontally in all the ways I strive to. I wonder though how to make this not clash if I want for there to be several “centers of confluence” or climaxes, in different tonalities and with different instruments or feels. That’d neccessitate more work to be sure to find a way to fit their extensions in the middle!
@Byron101_9 ай бұрын
it´s a bit of "pattern mode" style: mute or activate parts. I use this all the time.
@garygimmestad42728 ай бұрын
I looked for an appropriate place to add this thought and this one seems as good as any. Do you ever begin with physics, gravity, for example. In other words, choosing musical form based on a physical phenomenon. This question popped into my head after watching ‘The Three Body Problem’ and reading the first book in the series. How would I create a musical design that operates as three elements that push and pull on each other but never escape their bonds? Fugue sounds right but maybe just as a background - fugue as ostinato? Would I represent the bodies as harmonies that shift and morph? The POV (as in the story) would be from the planet which suffers and thrives depending on a current position, moving from chaos to peace and peace to chaos. So, just like the book, it’s a narrative scheme based on a physics conundrum. Maybe this is an online composing challenge? Or maybe I’m just thinking way too hard.
@vitaliypredoliak21249 ай бұрын
And... and... endless posibilites ! Like game never end until mom or dad pushing to stop it in a deep night...
@michaelkonomos9 ай бұрын
Question, as it relates to this video and also to others in the series. You develop a set of loops that work together. Then subtract. Which is awesome itself, and a helpful workflow to try. Building up towards a climax. How would the idea of B parts fit into the A parts (or chorus parts, etc.) that you have developed subtractively here fit with the concept of a second set of parts that is different from, but complements the A parts? Not saying it has to be that way, just curious as I am drawn to learning to write in something of a traditional song structure.
@francistomalik6 ай бұрын
Golden Ratio Whatever 😂
@MatthewSwasta9 ай бұрын
Do you like Mogwai at all? Some of these ideas and techniques remind me of their work a bit.
@JamesonNathanJones9 ай бұрын
I'm aware of them but not that familiar with their work. Need to check it out for sure.
@BlackMan6149 ай бұрын
You don't give yourself enough credit, because there is one element you fail to mention: talent (and training, of course). You have to be talented, in the first place, to get to the point where one can start subtracting parts. It is a constant battle with me, and why I have a collaborator who tells me when to shut it down otherwise I would be a failure.