Here's the problem and I'll relate it to a story that happened to me when I was looking for a job. Prospective employer asked me how much experience I had. I told him 10 years. He asked me what I did. I told him. He said to me, "Well, what you have is one year of experience 10 times."crimsonwarlock wrote: Wed Oct 30, 2019 3:32 pmTime IS always a factor (without defining 'how long'). If you set a limited time frame, you will only be able to do what fits into that time frame. If you get to the end of that time frame, your track is not magically getting good, if it wasn't that already somewhat just before. To make something sound great, you simply need to put in the time it need to actually do make it great.
If you get to a point where you say 'f*ck it, this is it', then you are basically giving up. You also won't grow beyond that threshold that you create for yourself.
My last track is the first one I did record and produce in my new studio. I worked on and off for about 4 months on this one track. It took that long because I wanted to sound certain parts in specific ways and I basically had to learn how to get to those sounds. So it took a whole lot of time, but I also learned a boatload of stuff during those months that will benefit my future tracks.
The way I see it you should never stop to try to grow![]()
I leave it at that and I'm out of here. Wags, have a nice live![]()
No amount of time that I put into a track of music is going to suddenly bring me to a new level if I don't actually LEARN something new. And I'm not going to learn something new working on my own. For that to happen, I need to go to a studio or to some environment where I am working with people who can actually TEACH me things and get me to do things that I wouldn't have thought of doing on my own. Right now, all I'd be doing is randomly and arbitrarily turn knobs and sliders until I MAYBE hit on something. Doing things in that manner, it could take forever to get something beyond where I am IF it ever happened at all.
The only time I ever got better at something was when I actually learned something. That happened by going to Youtube and watching videos. Well, I am now at a point where I don't know what other videos to watch. I don't know what to do next to go to the next level. I need someone to show me. Until that happens, spending 1 week or 1 year on a song is going to get me the same results, if not worse out of sheer boredom working on the same track for umpteen thousand hours.
No thanks.