* You don't need more gear or genius mixing skills * Make your arrangement dynamic * Don't put too many sounds in the same frequency range * Make room for your vocals * Layer your main sound
@virtualchorus12893 жыл бұрын
You just saved a lot of people 15 minutes of useless KZbin watching
@AnthonyBecker93 жыл бұрын
@@virtualchorus1289 I wouldn't call it useless--the list is more of a supplement to the video 😉
@Brazlaff3 жыл бұрын
Thanks, skimmed through before downvoting and tried to figure out what the key learnings are or if there are any.
@huntrrams3 жыл бұрын
Thanks 👑
@TheTonyTitan3 жыл бұрын
Put simply!
@themattschulz39843 жыл бұрын
How one sounds pro? Experience. How do you get experience? Make amateur level mistakes. ...
@littv16103 жыл бұрын
Repetition is the father of learning
@onimisilovesonmusic45483 жыл бұрын
Yh ...u are right..
@Sulcrit3 жыл бұрын
I remember Seamless R saying something like"you gotta make ALOT alot alot of projects/ crap before you can get to where you want to be!
@themattschulz39843 жыл бұрын
@@Sulcrit Thats what i experience with my music as well, wise words. Quantity before quality
@marcjustinpascasio99553 жыл бұрын
This is so true and also soak up every useful information you can gather and apply it.
@daigoroec3 жыл бұрын
my prods sound amateur because im an amateur.
@not_porter3 жыл бұрын
infinite iq
@milim31353 жыл бұрын
Same
@alidrumcover82083 жыл бұрын
Well said fellow amateur
@edchong253 жыл бұрын
Same lol, plus, I’m only using GarageBand...
@YellowWalkman3 жыл бұрын
Me too.
@hellopartner183 жыл бұрын
Ok everyone, I wish i could write all the supporting evidence I have to say this but no one is going to read anything that would take that long. So here's the finishline. After 20 years I feel sure this is the secret "thing" no one can put their finger on, a person can ignore it, as many people do, but if anyone explores it and gets weird with it, it will change their life and they'll begin to get the best recordings of their life. I'll try to keep it short so bear in mind this concept isn't little and I didn't just pull it out of my butt one day. This is indirectly related to recording but nothing else will improve recordings more so I'm going to go there: It relates to everything in this video but I want to connect some dots. The obvious thing is emotion. The number of videos that talk about making music and don't say a single word about emotion should disturb us. Everyone knows that music is connected to emotion. Everyone knows performing music is better when it comes from a place of emotion. I'm sure that if you are in your emotions, that are connected to the song you're making, you'll even pick better samples. The reason we love the voice and spend so much time with the vocal track is that it's the sound source with the shortest distance (by far) for emotions to travel to where they can escape the body with an entire language of emotions to express. Here's the reason it's the obvious and the most hidden thing at the same time: No one seems to realize emotion is a skill. We can practice music for years and never practice emotion, so we can write this insane guitar part that no one can get into and we don't understand why. We can connect with our instrument but not with our heart so we don't understand why someone who is half is talented is twice as well-liked. People wrinkle their noses when you try to talk about emotional development like they run you out of town if you keep it up with your sappy frilly feely talkin'. We don't generally think about how becoming more emotionally intelligent can improve our music. We may believe the vulnerability and shame that may come from exploring emotions will derail us. We can think of a perfect take as powerful and perfect, that "I can't get too emotional, I have to think about everything like my breath control, staying in the pocket, listening to the click, staying in key perfectly, etc." We think and think and think and forget to feel. You can practice and sound emotional and it may sound good but, you're replicating emotion you heard instead of having it. I'll say this until I'm in the ground: any literature that helps you understand, process, emotions will help you make better music. Books that focus on emotional literacy will send your songwriting to the moon. Words will pour out like you're possessed. When you analyze music through the lens of emotion instead of skill you'll finally understand things you didn't before and it will hit you in waves and waves of "holy shit that's why I like _____ even though _____." We like things we connect with emotionally. If you like that off-key note or that missed guitar chord it's because that "mistake" had a context that gave it a noticeable feeling, and you connected with that feeling. Top Tip: if you like something that seems like many might define as a mistake in a song: analyze how it was delivered in context, why it struck you, what kind of emotion happened, and don't forget the answers. Write them down. When you like a mistake of your own find out why, and refine it. This is one way to build a signature style. The only thing skill is for is to emote better. To have more techniques to describe emotions in more detail. If you're understanding of how you feel is limited, it doesn't matter how good you are at the instrument: you have the tools to support the fine details that you don't know how to locate. That's like having a billion dollars worth of digging equipment and no map of where to dig. Bad approach: "I am going to illustrate the idea that I once had an emotion with my voice" Good music: "I'm going to let an emotion out with my voice." Arrangements and performance follow emotion as well. Good arrangements are more emotional. Good takes are more emotional. Expressing the emotion as much as possible is the only thing that really matters for recording your songs. When I love a song it's because of how it feels to listen to. If they are expressing emotion successfully it doesn't matter how talented they are or how good the recording is. I'd rather listen to an ok singer get big emotions out and be out of tune than a showcase of perfect control. Remember that too: 100% control: no emotions 100% emotion: no control you want to have enough control to get through it but ride that line of losing control. Chase that line down. The more you do it the closer to your emotions you will get because the more you will learn to go deeper into emotion while keeping control. It is a muscle to exercise and a skill to master. If you find a way to growing in your emotional connection and ability to control enough, to feel even more when you perform - you'll never find a skill to work on that improves your music more. This is super long and I left out tons of info that probably answers a lot of criticism and skepticism but this is basically what has felt like the key to all things music for me and probably always will. To close this all out, consider this: If you achieved just the bare minimum of skill in writing, playing, performing, and recording, then just went hard getting your feelings out better than anyone for the rest of your life - there is no comparison to how much better your material will be than if you did the opposite. You literally won't be able to get your feelings out better than anyone without all the skills flowing alongside. You'll learn because you need it. you need to get what's inside of you into the air, and skills will always climb with you to achieve that. You''ll write a lyric and say "that's not it and I MUST FIND IT!" instead of, "sure that works. next line." Emotions, on the other hand, will never follow your skills. You'll never learn all your modes then look up and way, "oh wow I finally understand all my feelings when that thing happened 3 years ago!"
@dwlas3 жыл бұрын
I needed to hear this, thank you!
@imakeshapesnstuff3 жыл бұрын
This is a good a read. Worth mentioning as well, once you play with emotions and the emotional delivery and writing of a song/track, the more you do it the more you'll find yourself flowing into a flow state. It's a beautiful state to be in.
@hellopartner183 жыл бұрын
@@imakeshapesnstuff absolutely! Emotional connection is key to flow.
@TheMCCraftingTable3 жыл бұрын
Well said. It is applicable to art in general, and as I also draw/paint it is really relatable for me.
@timmytheturtle25123 жыл бұрын
yessss music is feeling before it is sound, its self expression!!! Music Theory is not self expression its just math and science. You gotta be able to tell stories through music or else its pointless. Theres no rules to art, its all really just opinion at the end of the day. You cant prove a song sounds "good or bad" or that something sounds "better or worse " than something else, cuz its all just opinion
@joshualane17163 жыл бұрын
As soon as you mentioned the "if only I had better gear" (toolbox fallacy), that ad with the producer saying "if I had this when I was 20 I would have been a millionare". An interesting coincidence.
@virgo_langa3 жыл бұрын
Hitboy😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
@urm9.m3 жыл бұрын
Theres no such thing as a coincidence
@derek_underwood3 жыл бұрын
@@urm9.m no such thing as *random* coincidence. If you break the word down and define it literally, events co-incide all the time, but not without reason.
@urm9.m3 жыл бұрын
@@derek_underwood Dude its a meme
@jaredrains2 жыл бұрын
It's amazing that ik exactly what ad you're talking about
@velonoir76483 жыл бұрын
I like your style of just giving genuinely good advice without a million jump cuts and without trying to be endlessly quirky and funny... refreshing. Thank you sir!
@freemanmoser28293 жыл бұрын
I like that your first point was basically “not knowing enough music theory”. Voicing and development is essential and even studying some basic theory will be a game changer for people without a more traditional music education
@chrisstout84513 жыл бұрын
I’ve always thought my songs would sound a lot better if I had other people write, sing, play, mix and produce them.
@undertaken52003 жыл бұрын
It’s all in the mix bud
@riffmaster58053 жыл бұрын
thats what you thought.... me myself... try and try until I die🤣
@4rg0nnnnnnn3 жыл бұрын
Just mix how you think those people would mix them. Produce how they would produce, or how you would want them to produce.
@chrisstout84513 жыл бұрын
Let’s just say my own material isn’t like most other stuff. It’s not that it’s way out there, it’s just not pop type stuff.
@undertaken52003 жыл бұрын
@@chrisstout8451 your best tool is your ears. Start your mixes quiet and slowly increase everything til it balances out. A bad mix is the most common issue.
@AlmostHomeSounds3 жыл бұрын
One thing I really want to be more mindful of is playing midi instruments on the keyboard instead of drawing midi or dragging midi chords from folders etc. If you're just starting out and wondering why your stuff is missing that feeling (ie: sounds like a fisher price toy) this is the answer in a lot of cases. I got a new piano vst today and just dragged chords in and I was pissed cause it didn't sound magical. But once I actually played the keyboard with my hands, it sounded great. Velocity dynamics and human errors are what give music life. Humanizing instruments has been the most impactful thing I've learned to implement, bar none. This comes naturally when your productions are based on recording physical instruments, but if you're just getting started with a DAW and MIDI, this is one of the first things you need to know.
@charlesbrown87373 жыл бұрын
Amen to that. Just told a friend who used to quantize everything that. It took time before I discovered what difference the timing makes. Its not just about emulating a real musician.. It's about the groove and the feel. I don't see YT producers talk enough about this.
@skippyzk3 жыл бұрын
I don't agree with this. I've gotten great results just using my mouse. You do need to manipulate velocity and stuff though
@charlesbrown87373 жыл бұрын
@@skippyzkIf you manipulate timing and velocity there is no difference. You can use your mouse if you know how you want it to groove, but it's easier to find that by playing the keyboard.
@AlmostHomeSounds3 жыл бұрын
@@skippyzk Sure! Me too. My point wasn't that playing is the only way, but there is just no way to 100% replicate the feel of actually playing the instrument. And the tedious hours you spend trying to make your midi perfectly imperfect could be better spent learning and recording the instrument. Not to mention it is way harder to feel connected to your music and flow with it when you have to interrupt the momentum of creativity to make those velocity/delay tweaks etc. Again, there is a time and place for both methods, but my personal experience has been constantly leading me towards caring more and more about human connection to the music. And recording imperfect passes of keys, guitars, drums, etc. is the best way I've found to feel that level of connection. ymmv
@thebarf92353 жыл бұрын
@@AlmostHomeSounds Well said.
@evaplavalaguna3 жыл бұрын
I agree 100% with everything stated. However, I want to add that very often, our own ears decieve ourselves. After working and mixing the same track for 4 hours, you can't even differentiate what sounds good and what doesn't. I like to rest my projects for a few days, work on something else, and then come back at it with fresh ears. Most of the time, I can then objectively listen to my track and identify problems, because I have less emotional attachement to it.
@marklangsax11683 жыл бұрын
"The most important thing is musicianship." Preach brother.. I'm fairly new to producing but have 30 years of studying saxophone and, before that, drums. I've been amazed at the amount of people who say they are serious about producing but have no interest in learning about the craft of being a musician. Pro tip: If you are serious about making music, music theory and musicianship is not optional!
@evaeilea3 жыл бұрын
So true!! I’ve been teaching myself music theory and especially key signature and the circle of fifth and I believe it makes my time way easier getting into production with an understanding of key signature, harmonies, etc !
@shan54452 жыл бұрын
BS
@NICUofficial Жыл бұрын
actually one of the best videos about real music production on KZbin songwriting, sounds/performances, arrangement, vocals = 99% of the job listeners will cope with a bad mix they won't cope with a bad song or a bad performance
@zappep3 жыл бұрын
Some more tips to remember: If you put shit in, shit will come out... Less is always more. In order to break the rules you have to know them first... Mute tracks instead of solo (to find the problem) Hope this helps
@SophiasHeir3 жыл бұрын
Good!
@proj3ktil3 жыл бұрын
well said
@colderosion3 жыл бұрын
I appreciate the fact that there are so many of you out there that just want to actually HELP home producers. That's amazing all on it's own. Thank you for helping people, so that the possibility of more good music can exist more prevalently.
@tonal.states3 жыл бұрын
"I don't want to be so harsh as to say why does it suck" Underbelly literally naming his channel "You suck at producing"
@agentsmythmusic68243 жыл бұрын
Underbelly is too precious to be mad at
@arifarrafi33023 жыл бұрын
his channel? you mean his thumbnail?
@tzetzo_tzetzov3 жыл бұрын
And the coolest thing I noticed about him is that his label is named "We suck at producing".
@MrCanto793 жыл бұрын
Ooookay, so check it
@xMario913 жыл бұрын
@@tzetzo_tzetzov wowzers!
@finngeometry75703 жыл бұрын
That recommendation about not overloading the low mids just saved a track of mine. Thank you.
@maxk42773 жыл бұрын
Digger ich bin anders der King ja jetzt chill mal Kollege ich mach das seit 2 Wochen und die Beats gehen mies ab also halt mal dein maul
@connorphilipp3 жыл бұрын
@@maxk4277 lol
@OTisnochOT3 жыл бұрын
@@maxk4277 ja safe man
@unburdenmusic3 жыл бұрын
On point! People fall for gear and plugins and all sorts of marketing trickery when a lot of times 80% of the "sounding good" can be achieved with good songwriting/arrangement. Everything else in my opinion is seasoning. All those effects, vsts and technique will only work if you have a good arrangement.
@archangelroyalofficial10 ай бұрын
I appreciate this, I’ve watched one of your videos about arrangements. I compose my music on my iPhone 📱
@CollaborationNation3 жыл бұрын
Panning all the instruments across is essential. Even doubling a guitar track and panning it left and right, and slightly have them off time will create a powerful stereo sound. EQ, compression should be used as needed, and a peak limiter is also important.
@JonValtandtheEvilRobots3 жыл бұрын
Just a note. This does work, but it's 100x better to record two separate guitar tracks. Doubling the same track and adding delay is an amateur hack and is very obvious. (I'm not insulting - I'm all for amateur hacks!! :-) )
@CollaborationNation3 жыл бұрын
@@JonValtandtheEvilRobots I agree, two takes is better for almost all scenarios. When I said "even," I meant, even doubling a single into stereo is better than having a mono track in the middle. I'd say that's 100x better. It has it's place in the tool box, I doubled a single guitar track into stereo for an acoustic guitar/vocal soloist, worked very well.
@JonValtandtheEvilRobots3 жыл бұрын
@@CollaborationNation You're certainly right, and I have definitely used this hack myself. Just writing this for anyone who is earlier in their journey. It's a great tip, but once you track 2 guitar tracks, it's like omg level, not even the same thing at all, as you know! :-)
@CollaborationNation3 жыл бұрын
@@JonValtandtheEvilRobots Agreed! 2 separate tracks. Different tones, even better!
@TachyBunker3 жыл бұрын
Guys, you know that most people listen on their big JBL *mono* speaker, or even i usually use my phone speaker? It has to be mono-compatible. Don't make it all about panoramics.
@AudioHaze3 жыл бұрын
I always find that thickening sounds by doubling parts with different instruments or soft synths is a great way to fill out your stereo image. Mixing isn't the answer to making a song great. It should sound amazing before hand, mixing is the polish!!
@ghfjfghjasdfasdf3 жыл бұрын
Mastering is the polish. The Mixdown is the most important aspect of a tune.
@mem63852 жыл бұрын
I really appreciate your honest, imperfect presentation. Your passion and way of explaining is perfect. The only vid Ive seen on the subject where you never even showed a screen shot of a DAW. You didnt need to. I feel like I learned more in this vid than the last 20 I have listened to. Hope that all makes sense. Thanks!
@jihongluo93562 жыл бұрын
I totally agree with what you said about arrangement. Too many "producers" nowadays pay no attention to the arrangement through the song. It's always just making a sick beat and looping 4 chords over and over again. My thing is that you can have a very simple chord progression to begin with but try to add variations to it. Even just using inversions or adding a 7th or 9th to chords would make it sound richer. But because DAWs are so powerful these days a lot of "home producers" never spend the time on music theory. They just learn the basic progressions and put no thought into it. Asking them to write a good harmony would be too much. For some reason in modern pop music people don't care about harmonies/melodies anymore. It's always just the beat. A song with a good arrangement never gets old because of the many different elements you can hear in it.
@QbanThunder2 жыл бұрын
Thank you! I’ve been doing this for 30+ years and new “Producers” laugh and give me crap when I try to teach them the exact same thing. I’m glad you made this video. For being such a young man, you really have a massive understanding In arranging and sound which most of us know are the basis of production. Thank you so much for this and I wish you continued success in all you do. 😊🙏🤘
@adrian.a.padilla3 жыл бұрын
Why doesn't this man have so much more credit. This deserves so much more attention thank you so much sir this is really the BEST channel I've come across and I've only been watching you for a day this channel is just a must have to produce music in a great way thank you so much. Best part about it is it's free. Great tips thank you so much
@CLaw-tb5gg3 жыл бұрын
This is actually some really great, refreshing advice. I think people tend to forget that production is just about smoothing off sharp corners rather than completely rebuilding the source material, and if you take the latter approach of COURSE you’re going to make it a complete nightmare for yourself. If you start with well-recorded material that’s naturally well-separated because it’s sensibly arranged you’re just adding polish, and production becomes so much more rewarding and pleasant. Over the course of producing my own music, I’ve found that by FAR the greatest thing more than anything else by a huge margin that’s improved my mixes is just making sure what’s underneath all the plugins doesn’t sound like shit in the first place.
@JonValtandtheEvilRobots3 жыл бұрын
@3:15 - he's so right. I'm a computer geek, so I (like many others) thought I could VST and Plugin (ie. SPEND) my way into something that sounded good. Turns out it's not the mix, it's not the interface, it's not the mic. It's the natural sound of the room and the arrangement.
@Kayfear2 жыл бұрын
One thing I learned about mixing is when I loaded Ocean Eyes in logic and disabled everything in mixer the song still sounded fine. Of course effects are big part of it, but arrangement is what makes it.
@frances.dot.84274 жыл бұрын
I never considered your point about layering vocals to create that 'mainstream' texture, rather than a single line! I'll think of that next time. :)
@NathanJamesLarsen4 жыл бұрын
For sure! I've got a video on doubling vocals too that'll help you most likely in that vein
@isaacfausett56623 жыл бұрын
Also might not work for what you want but iZotope has a vst that is a vocal doubler. Which I've used a few times to save me some time in re-recording. I usually only use it on the 2nd layer take of vocals. www.izotope.com/en/products/vocal-doubler.html
@cotedoug57553 жыл бұрын
This makes alot of sense. As far as sound dynamic, I'm lost. I'm just a simple man, trying to produce some music.
@keegan62983 жыл бұрын
I’m not that good but I can give some advice on introducing new elements like he speaks about at 3:40. It doesn’t need to be a new melody or harmony or any change at all just add a new instrument but the trick is automate the volume down on the instrument that has already been playing a lot. Your brain can still hear it clearly in the mix then lower the next one and so on. I forgot what the effect is called but essentially Cos the listener knows the sound you can lower it’s volume in a mix and still perceive the sound as clear. It also works if you’ve only played a sound for few bars. Problem is as producers we listen to the same bars over and over again so your better of deciding with fresh ears with one listen through as a new listener. So leave a track for a few days and work on another.
@SteeVane2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this! Very helpful
@keegan62982 жыл бұрын
@@SteeVane your very welcome
@gion32506 ай бұрын
Shameless plug for Nathan's course: I've been a musician for 20+ years and Nathan is an absolutely incredible teacher. His Producer Accelerator course is a must buy for anyone looking to speed up their learning process. ***Note: I'm not making a cut from this shout out, I'm just a very satisfied student.**
@strangequark4203 жыл бұрын
Spot on. As with anything involving generating something from nothing, success comes at the beginning. With software, the design is key. No code should be written until the application is designed. Same is true in architecture and construction. As it is also with the development of tools, carpets, clothing, cars, planes, anything. You have to put in the work up front to ensure the output is sound. Music is no different. You must be able to play your instrument or sing, first and foremost. Then, you capture that sound as pristinely as possible; your part has to fit within the greater whole for any moment in time, and you have to have a map of that time passage from 0 to end. Nothing says you can't tweak as you go or that the output has to resemble the input (though you need to have intended it that way from the start), but there's no way to fix a crappy performance or recording with hardware or software. Really appreciate your insights. You seem really young to be a pro, but you know your stuff (watched your vid of pro with GarageBand vs. begginer with Logic - awesome). I am a hack at home as a hobbyist and have been frustrated time and again, and it's always the case that the better sounding tracks were better conceived with thought put into the sum of the parts up front. Also nothing replaces practice, rehearsal, and experience.
@NathanJamesLarsen3 жыл бұрын
This is fantastic! Yeah all of this is really goood. And I appreciate that. I've been kinda raised doing this. Started writing at 10yr/old and producing at 14. So been doing it for a long time and basically eat, sleep, drink this stuff
@Yll-Beats3 жыл бұрын
@@NathanJamesLarsen er du go til at mixe
@leswhite35243 жыл бұрын
Gang choir! I did a track years ago with a "drunken gang" choir. I took my lead vox and duplicated it like six times. Then I screwed around with their pitch a little and a slight nudge of the clip back or forward in the arranger. Good times!
@axel.lessio4 жыл бұрын
Great video, Nathan! The "no space left for the vocals" problem is a big one. What I currently do is I try to record good scratch vocals and I almost never mute it when building the arrangements and selecting sounds, because it doesn't make sense to have them work well on their own: they need to support the vocals. This thought process helps a lot with mixing as well because you already start the mixing process with vocals having the right space.
@NathanJamesLarsen4 жыл бұрын
Yep! Love that approach. I do the same and I actually usually start adding harmonies in pretty early even if it's gonna be redone just to get a really good sense of the production
@migzhaleco2 жыл бұрын
I agree with you totally! Though there are times that when I complete the arrangement, i make sure that the arrangement can still stand on its own without the vocals 😁
@paulcamptv18663 жыл бұрын
Definitely didn't click off the video because I don't just like this guy, I freakin' love you bro, thanks for the guidance!
@NathanJamesLarsen3 жыл бұрын
Thanks so much! That's awesome man. 🙏🙏🙏🔥🔥🔥🔥
@jonashellborg83203 жыл бұрын
This is great and very true stuff. Having done a bunch of song recordings with various bands, it is very clear to be that we, and I, never understood what arrangement and composition really is. We could write songs, but then we jumped from essentially songwriting, via tracking, straight to mixing! No figuring out the dynamic flow, and often drowning out vocals with fat guitars or synths in the wrong octave. :-) Great stuff - I just subscribed
@justnelly3374 жыл бұрын
can you do an arrangement video showing how to make variations within the production?
@NathanJamesLarsen4 жыл бұрын
Yes I'd love to do that!
@justnelly3374 жыл бұрын
@@NathanJamesLarsen thank you!😊
@jamstudiostheshed13 жыл бұрын
First be pro level sesion player 5 versiopns on your the guy i new 5 versions off the arangment i ON GUITAR n the BLINK OFF AN EYE he was Scottish no 1 new who he was Except ........ ATB Great Q
@fvcktv29333 жыл бұрын
Pleeease
@GazingSkies3 жыл бұрын
Personally I feel like variations within the production, since it’s a creative thing, that it takes time to get right. I used to do EDM tracks that were 6 minutes long but really boring cause it was so repetitive. Over time I started to get structure and variation because I listened to lots of music and tried replicating the structure. When it comes to the variation, I’ve always been a fan of things like melodic bridges which are little melodic elements that help transition between one section and another
@UnknownUnknown-pc1rb3 жыл бұрын
My advice: collaborate 👍🏼 big producers have a whole team working in a single song, there’s no shame on getting help from your connections
@kevinstoneham1245 Жыл бұрын
I have being doing this for a good many years and you are read right about the dynamic arrangement. I am accurately aware of it and sort of dread it when it comes to doing it. What I try to strive for is an arrangement that doesn’t sound linear, which results in flat, but more random and three dimensional. To do this I think you have to avoid the standard even bar structure, 16 change 32 change 64change.
@necrokind Жыл бұрын
another important thing, to stay consistent u need to rest properly, dont overwork yourself. stop for 10 min even sometimes and come back witha fresh feel
@von_Apa2 жыл бұрын
The most important info in this video is what you take up in the end. Your gear and your capacity with the mix is just the last part of making good music. Putting the energi on the melody and the lyrics is a very fine time investment! 😇
@oliverguy36892 жыл бұрын
i'm in my 3rd year on electronic music production and still feel my mixdowns arnt 100%, in the music i make (DnB) were taught to have sections such as build ups, drops and breaks so i feel like not everyones problem is structure in itself. rate your vids highly
@thinkman12343 жыл бұрын
Good advice, I've been a Sweetwater customer for decades. No one does it better!
@asteinmetz793 жыл бұрын
This is a very good list for a check on yourself for every production. We can all get lost in the weeds sometimes. It's the curse of creative excitement
@anuscheeaton5133 жыл бұрын
Enjoy watching your videos,I'm 17 and still figuring out how I should do it... This really helps..
@HitfilmSensei4 жыл бұрын
My production sounds amateur because I'm a lousy singer! 🤣
@NathanJamesLarsen4 жыл бұрын
Haha
@poltad3 жыл бұрын
@@NathanJamesLarsen Singing is the weak link for me. Music is decent but without good singing everything else is worthless. ☹️
@Kshitijj3 жыл бұрын
@@poltad I'm not trained or anything but I can give you a good quality recording.... Let me know if you guys need a demo!
@slowpokeproductions3 жыл бұрын
@@poltad You can hire great vocalists on Fiverr. I did, and I'm a professional vocalist. Sometimes you just need that different flavor.
@slowpokeproductions3 жыл бұрын
Here's the vocalist I hired on Fiverr. Her name is Phoebe Carter, but u can hire anyone. kzbin.info/www/bejne/g6HXfmNno95piZY
@krampuslikesoatmilk3 жыл бұрын
The percussion tip to make certain parts more dynamic really blew my mind haha so simple but never thought of it
@gobigrey93523 жыл бұрын
I get the arrangement thing but it's often also overdone so it's kind of a balance. We cant let ourselves fall victim to the ADHD mindset. Sometimes less is more and the story/lyrics have to take front and center. Simplicity can be our friend. Just cant overdo that either. Balance.
@murrylancashire3 жыл бұрын
That's what arrangement is. Arrangement doesn't mean adding more stuff in lol. Often improving an arrangement is removing elements.
@CannedFunkMusic3 жыл бұрын
It easier to take of too much rather than add in the next stage. These errors are corrected when you have knowledge of producing.
@trollingisasport3 жыл бұрын
@@officialWWM Did she leave you?
@kalelisuperman4 жыл бұрын
All this was crazy helpful. Already adding some of these tips and it’s made all the difference. Especially dynamics!
@NathanJamesLarsen4 жыл бұрын
Wonderful!! So glad this help you Phil!
@unoaotroa3 жыл бұрын
There are plenty of genres where the vocal is not the main element, I’d dare to say. But overall, the recommendation to leave enough room for it is pretty good.
@profet13853 жыл бұрын
i have to say out of all the "amazed", "surprised" and "disappointed" thumbnail faces I've seen over the years, your looks actually legitimate.
@Aillman33 жыл бұрын
I'm agree with him 100%. My major problem is sometimes about there's no vocal part left to put into some of my songs. Because so much things going on tracks. My formula is creating the idea first (raw without any DAW) then interpret them into your production. Then BOOM!
@rebirth41193 жыл бұрын
About vocals. Its best to bus your melodic instruments and synths and apply sidechain eq to give space for the vocal.
I dont even have a midi keyboard and I never bought any samples but I get really good feedback right now and I love a lot of the tracks im working on
@gilesramirez42733 жыл бұрын
Dude I think you explain things awesomely. Hats off brother 👍😀
@jackjones8363 Жыл бұрын
Production is key. nowadays. So many top artists singing mediocre compositions, but with dynamic arrangements and production. Thank Christ, there will always be those great songs using minimal production.
@alx15333 жыл бұрын
Classic advice Nathan, thanks. This is by far one of the best takes on music anywhere. You can watch all the gear vids you want, but this is of the utmost. "Garbage in, garbage out". My new goal is now -6 instead of -3db. I hated the sound of my voice until I heard that Hendrix did also. Now I let 'er rip! Respect, fam.
@lorenzokutschki1829 Жыл бұрын
Just found this channel and I love the way you Transport Information, it’s really intriguing and understandable, thank you!
@gordongrey58843 жыл бұрын
Just discovered Nathan's videos. I have been recording for over 30 years and his advice is spot on. All of it !! Especially his directions on arrangement, performance and quality of source. Great performances and arrangements mix themselves...and that is a fact! I will be looking forward to reviewing all your videos! Thanks!
@ashlar61583 жыл бұрын
bro im literally sitting here arguing in my head with what ur saying cuz its so hard to hear but ur right lol. i forget that not everyone gets excited by the beat and i dont leave space for them vocals. good shit! ur videos have been very helpful so far dawg
@AdityaMehtaMusic4 жыл бұрын
Highly appreciate your knowledge on production and the way you convey it! It helps us immensely!🎼💯 Also, some points in your video gave me a boost that I already emphasize on the arrangement part haha. Thanks to your trustworthy guidance!
@NathanJamesLarsen4 жыл бұрын
Wow - thank you for this comment! 🙏🙏🙏
@Cryo8373 жыл бұрын
In my case Garbage In = "polished" Garbage out. But at least I now know how to "polish"!!!
@FlatTire3 жыл бұрын
You deserve Polish citizenship 😁
@AlexSaheli2 жыл бұрын
1) Better dynamics (make your songs more interesting and not boring, a wave, a story) 2) Less focus on mixing, problems usually lie in other spectrum (but mixing is still important) 3) Arrangement is not well developed. Overloading frequincies (typical is in the low mids) 4) We need more uniqueness. Percussions/drums are the best for that. 5) Great source (how you capture things) + performance 6) Vocal production. It needs space. Dont be afraid to take things out if they get in the way. 7) You need layers of vocal (double, tripple, pitching, octave up, octave down). That's common standard now. Vocal is tge main thing if you dont have vocal production you are not in the game. None of that has to do anything with gear or mixing.
@didsmusic42742 жыл бұрын
Thank for confirming and clarifying some of the common mistakes . I knew most of it but still nice to know that im doing it right.
@johnkeys223 жыл бұрын
It is really nice to hear the truth and only the truth sometimes!!!
@DraftZJ4 жыл бұрын
just discovering this channel as i surf youtube trying pick up as many tips as i can for my first ever cover i’m recording, wanting to eventually do some of my own music but learning Logic and production skills, I subbed and can’t wait to watch more videos and learn.
@NathanJamesLarsen4 жыл бұрын
Thanks a bunch! Super happy to hear that!! 😎🙏
@KountryCuz19 ай бұрын
This is True Most Bands Around here the music is much louder than the Band and the Drumbs over played !
@setscet Жыл бұрын
I definitely had the arrangement issues. I got better when I tried making orchestral music and realized i couldn't rely on mixing.
@bobbybrown.42573 жыл бұрын
Thank You Nathan. I got beats I made on yamaha keyboard. But poor quality on how beats sounds. Valuable information You teach.
@delgrandephotos3 жыл бұрын
A thing that helped me with my anguish about how I sound was simply thinking "oh well, of course this song i heard in itunes sound better than mine, i have a home studio not a sweeden mixing room with 3 audio engineers to place my mics and set my amps and other 5 professional producers surrounding me to help." when i putted that up in my mind i started to get way more satisfied with how i sound. all tho its not how i want to sound yet. Other thing is to get inspired by other home studio owners and not the big audio engineers and huge artists that have access to them, aim lower.
@liqwiidOfficial3 жыл бұрын
This is very true, Sometimes I barely have to mix if I am picking great sounds, It stays under my desired mixing frequency and I’m like Oh Shit! It’s Mixed Great Already! 😄
@CRASS20473 жыл бұрын
Intro - bread. verse - pb&j sandwich. Pre-chorus - pb sandwich . Chorus - club sandwich with chips and a drink.
@Ventynine3 жыл бұрын
The best tip for me was the leave space for vocals one, it happens to me all the time
@dillonpillay1063 жыл бұрын
Why are you underated man..this is super life changing man
@vennettegloud31283 жыл бұрын
Thank you for letting me know that I am at least on the right track. I have more interest in the creative side. The technical side is fun but some things work so well you need little fixing! That’s how I’m trying to approach this. I’m getting some pretty decent feedback. Bless you, Nathan.
@hugogarcia518944 жыл бұрын
I get tired of hearing youtubers ramble on all these things to do right before they get into the video like, "please like subscribe turn on bell notifications so you wont miss any blah blah blah" but you ask so kindly to subscribe so for getting right into your video, I subscribed. you bring a lot of value to an audience that is the future of music. Thank you for you content bro!
@NathanJamesLarsen4 жыл бұрын
Wow that is awesome - thank you so much!!
@nickash53 жыл бұрын
I just fast forwarded through the whole video. What i got. Stop buying kit and gear. Go take a music arrangement course. What was missing: go listen to the best mixes of the genre and define what makes them interesting and emulate some of the techniques. Then go buy some of those secret sauce plugins and tool that they use. I need a Portico II channel right now.
@animesh30202 жыл бұрын
Thanks, man! ...this video has a lot of valuable takeaways, I am gonna be considering them when I am producing. 👍🔥🔥
@FossilStudios3163 жыл бұрын
These videos are so helpful! Thanks for these bro!
@m3rify3 жыл бұрын
I really agree with most of being said here. Although I think if you produce for yourself there no much need to sound "pro". The pro sound comes with practice and a enough dose of discipline.
@patrickcunningham6183 жыл бұрын
The quality of the content is the most important thing.
@stuartschaffner97444 жыл бұрын
Great stuff! I come from a more symphonic and folk background, which often seems like a separate world. Still, much of what you are saying here is at its root similar to what I hear from Guy Michelmore and Michael Baggström.
@NathanJamesLarsen4 жыл бұрын
Awesome! Principles of music don't change too much :)
@justindtackett3 жыл бұрын
“I will follow you into the dark”. By Deathcab. You should dissect why that song achieves greatness with a minimal spectrum of dynamics. One guitar, one voice, singular strum pattern, no layering.
@WatanabeDarko Жыл бұрын
Very useful tips, even though I tend to disagree a bit with the vocals stuff which should take space or being the main element, as there are music genres where vocals are way behind other elements (see for example Shoegaze or certain kind of electronic). There are alternative-rock tracks where the vocals pop in after 2-3 minutes of instrumental and stay there for like 30 seconds, and then other instrumental parts come into play. The effect of vocals being submerged by a thick texture of distorted guitars is imho fascinating, so I would suggest to just follow your ears and musical taste when it comes to mix the vocals.
@JeromeBanaay Жыл бұрын
First of all learn music theory, Music theory plays a significant role in music production, as it provides a foundation for understanding and creating musical elements within a production. While it's not essential to have an advanced theoretical knowledge in every aspect, having a solid foundation in music theory can greatly enhance a producer's ability to compose, arrange, and communicate musical ideas effectively. It provides a framework to make informed musical decisions and helps producers express their artistic vision in their productions.
@Shashli4ok3 жыл бұрын
Thank you! 🙏This is what needed to hear right now!
@williamshaneblyth2 жыл бұрын
Great stuff. The equipment thing is just crazy. Everyone should watch get back documentary on the Beatles. It's very long and I sat and did a few things on phone while it played looking up and listening and it was so obvious the total lack of gear and equipment taped microphones kids playing at their feet the way ideas came together. Everyone should watch that. Arrangement as you said I'm trying to learn it and thanks for emphasizing it here cause in the back of my mind I really wondered. I'm focusing on that craft now thanks again
@erroldtumaque34303 жыл бұрын
gotta say its refreshing not getting this high energy, fast cut editing style thats so prevalent on here
@arjanblad4163 жыл бұрын
Thanks Nathan, awesome vids... Greetings from the Netherlands !
@dreambeliever36523 жыл бұрын
Very good advice my friend Love the end. The STATIC MIX is the KEY to a fantastic mix!
@Zarvy3 жыл бұрын
I started making music in mobile, in the beginning I always focused more on production, melodies, chords stuff like that but later on I started to see more important on mixing and learn more technical side ..tbh it's destroying creative side of production, it's important but still if the main idea is not good no matter if CLA mix your track with fancy studio it won't matter. Anyway, great video mate!
@charlesbrown87373 жыл бұрын
Thats why I never mix while creating. Have sounds you like "ready to go" and then don't think about the mix, you can fix that later.. focus on capturing the vibe you're going for.
@robbievalentine82393 жыл бұрын
ARRANGEMENT!!!!! Thank u for saying that.
@ledusko3 жыл бұрын
Select great quality sounds is the key, your mix can’t turn a bad sound in a good one.
@christdolphin693 жыл бұрын
how about making great sounds? what kind of retard wastes their time producing if they can't actually sound design? what's the point?
@Muehle3 жыл бұрын
@@christdolphin69 u trolling?
@aelphind49543 жыл бұрын
@@faggoat2557 i mean you dont necessarily have to make all of your sounds yourself as long as you change up the presets and samples and do something original with them
@aelphind49543 жыл бұрын
@@faggoat2557 true true
@chappie71233 жыл бұрын
This was great. I need to work on my arranging... it's a whole other skill set, needs work! Great vid man
@VanjaSpirin2 жыл бұрын
Good video. You are right. For me, it is imporant to make a proper 3d scene. From buttom to the top with a choice of instruments, from left to right with good panning and in a depth with good choice of volumes and reverb.
@musictech57893 жыл бұрын
Bro, you are CORRECT!
@writewithangel2 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much Nathan this has really helped now I need to put it all into pratice.
@DJTasawennatekensMusicWorld2 жыл бұрын
My music is not amateur and I'm a home producer I've been making music for years I'm a professional and if anybody ever calls me an amateur they're going to get punched in the face because I do my work with passion in my songs that I make my beats and instrumentals and sometimes my songs that I had lyrics of other people who sing for my songs they come out really really amazing.
@bren6878 Жыл бұрын
Amateur
@t.markcollins90223 жыл бұрын
Arrangement, arrangement, arrangement! Good stuff!