Do you recommend starting with the drums?Negoba wrote: Thu Feb 22, 2024 2:02 am If you're truly just starting out, find a relatively simple track you like and then try to re-create it. The process will teach you a lot.
I've been writing songs for 35+ years. Most of them aren't very good. Finish a song, then make another one. Occasionally your inspiration and your skill come together and you get something special. But skill part just comes from learning and repetition.
One Synth Challenge #180: Regency by nakst (ELEX Wins!)
- KVRist
- 169 posts since 9 Feb, 2024
★★★ One can enjoy a wood fire worthily only when he warms his thoughts by it as well as his hands and feet. ★★★


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- KVRist
- 183 posts since 26 Dec, 2020
I recommend to start with something that is most difficult for you.
If it's drums then start with drums.
- KVRist
- 169 posts since 9 Feb, 2024
I think the toughest think for me is the bigger picture of the composition. I hear alot of complex compositions here. How is this achievable?PeterBPL wrote: Thu Feb 22, 2024 8:37 amI recommend to start with something that is most difficult for you.
If it's drums then start with drums.
★★★ One can enjoy a wood fire worthily only when he warms his thoughts by it as well as his hands and feet. ★★★


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- KVRist
- 183 posts since 26 Dec, 2020
I already answered this before.LunarKitten wrote: Thu Feb 22, 2024 11:11 am I think the toughest think for me is the bigger picture of the composition. I hear alot of complex compositions here. How is this achievable?
But when I talk about the hardest thing, I'm thinking about the small components, not the whole song. It's like asking what is the hardest thing about building an airplane - of course, the hardest thing is to build the entire airplane, but this answer makes no sense.
- KVRist
- 169 posts since 9 Feb, 2024
Thanks Peter. I will figure it out eventually. Wait for my next entry.
★★★ One can enjoy a wood fire worthily only when he warms his thoughts by it as well as his hands and feet. ★★★


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- KVRist
- 183 posts since 26 Dec, 2020
Look at my song for example - I made it using single preset. Of course that preset is velocity sensitive, so it can sound more hard or more smooth, but the main thing is - even if that song is simple, it may be more complicated for some people than making song full of various instruments. Maybe not for people here who participates in OSC - they're really good magicians, but for people who just starts making music and have no previous musical experience, making nice beat + bass + some fx + background may be much simpler than trying to base whole song on single sound. So again - it's all about experience (and time) in fact. The more time you spend creating - the better the results will be. And you will have more choice in what you want to do. First, try to do what you think works best for you.LunarKitten wrote: Thu Feb 22, 2024 11:18 am Thanks Peter. I will figure it out eventually. Wait for my next entry.
- KVRist
- 169 posts since 9 Feb, 2024
THank you Peter. Your advice is rock solid. I agree it is about magic and time. This will be the foundation of my efforts.PeterBPL wrote: Thu Feb 22, 2024 11:25 am Look at my song for example - I made it using single preset. Of course that preset is velocity sensitive, so it can sound more hard or more smooth, but the main thing is - even if that song is simple, it may be more complicated for some people than making song full of various instruments. Maybe not for people here who participates in OSC - they're really good magicians, but for people who just starts making music and have no previous musical experience, making nice beat + bass + some fx + background may be much simpler than trying to base whole song on single sound. So again - it's all about experience (and time) in fact. The more time you spend creating - the better the results will be. And you will have more choice in what you want to do. First, try to do what you think works best for you.
★★★ One can enjoy a wood fire worthily only when he warms his thoughts by it as well as his hands and feet. ★★★


- KVRian
- 1277 posts since 10 Oct, 2002 from Barcelona
Use a song of your preference to get a reference about comping parts: intro, phrase, bridges, verses...LunarKitten wrote: Thu Feb 22, 2024 11:11 am I think the toughest think for me is the bigger picture of the composition. I hear alot of complex compositions here. How is this achievable?
It's all about telling something, you can say Hello with 4 bars, but you need hundreds to create a good picture of something.
- KVRist
- 169 posts since 9 Feb, 2024
Be careful, if I get too many tips I'll destroy you all in the next competition.wikter wrote: Fri Feb 23, 2024 6:37 am Use a song of your preference to get a reference about comping parts: intro, phrase, bridges, verses...
It's all about telling something, you can say Hello with 4 bars, but you need hundreds to create a good picture of something.
That's going to be in a week, right?
★★★ One can enjoy a wood fire worthily only when he warms his thoughts by it as well as his hands and feet. ★★★


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- KVRian
- 553 posts since 22 Jun, 2019
Welcome to OSC !LunarKitten wrote: Thu Feb 22, 2024 11:11 am I think the toughest think for me is the bigger picture of the composition. I hear alot of complex compositions here. How is this achievable?
This feels to me like the most challenging part of this thing... And the most interesting too !
The thing is you need to go through a lot of details, really there's no limit to how infinitely precise you can go edit those sounds and midi, but need to see the big picture at the same time.
It's probably different from people to people, but here's how I process.
I often begin this deep journey of swimming around these rabit holes the possibilities/limitation the osc synth creates for us for sound design, then got some loops, phrases, beats that I try to assemble.
Then manipulating and tweaking that first draft may give me an idea of what I'm going for, my personnal 'meaning' of the song.
Once I got that I can work the damn thing until it gets a form that satisfied me...
Some time I search for references to listen to, import sounds in the project, record myself, use other synth presets before recreating all that in the osc synth.
Hope it helps !
- KVRist
- 169 posts since 9 Feb, 2024
I see. You've got to follow the white rabbit down the hole. Once you are down there you've got to keep an eye on the whole, even if that takes three times as long to get it done. There may be selfdoubt. Which direction should I take? Is this the one? You've got to hold on to it and try to navigate your way throu, like sailors looking at the stars. One after another.ElVincente wrote: Fri Feb 23, 2024 9:39 amI often begin this deep journey of swimming around these rabit holes the possibilities/limitation the osc synth creates for us for sound design, then got some loops, phrases, beats that I try to assemble.LunarKitten wrote: Thu Feb 22, 2024 11:11 am I think the toughest think for me is the bigger picture of the composition. I hear alot of complex compositions here. How is this achievable?
Fortunatly I have gone through mixing with Mikes' bootcamp tips. He offers a systematic approach. First EQing then compressing. Does that mean he has his EQs before the compressors or am I getting this wrong?
★★★ One can enjoy a wood fire worthily only when he warms his thoughts by it as well as his hands and feet. ★★★


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- KVRian
- 553 posts since 22 Jun, 2019
That's well resumed ! But keeping an eye on the whole will makes things tree times shorter though in my experience!LunarKitten wrote: Fri Feb 23, 2024 10:04 am I see. You've got to follow the white rabbit down the hole. Once you are down there you've got to keep an eye on the whole, even if that takes three times as long to get it done. There may be selfdoubt. Which direction should I take? Is this the one? You've got to hold on to it and try to navigate your way throu, like sailors looking at the stars. One after another.
Once you got 'the all', you can design the 'all form' roughly to have the entire sight of the thing, then go back to the details puff it until it shines.
Well you sure should eq before compressing the thing you don't wan't they trigger the compressor (mud and lowend good candidates...)Fortunatly I have gone through mixing with Mikes' bootcamp tips. He offers a systematic approach. First EQing then compressing. Does that mean he has his EQs before the compressors or am I getting this wrong?
Other than that there's no rule set in stone for me.
- KVRist
- 169 posts since 9 Feb, 2024
I hope to have it done 3 times shorter then. It is my dream to get the green light by the industry and be working among the star engineers. Got to follow that red line.ElVincente wrote: Fri Feb 23, 2024 10:18 am That's well resumed ! But keeping an eye on the whole will makes things tree times shorter though in my experience!
Once you got 'the all', you can design the 'all form' roughly to have the entire sight of the thing, then go back to the details puff it until it shines.
I'm going to give it a try, when the time comes for the next competition.ElVincente wrote: Fri Feb 23, 2024 10:18 amWell you sure should eq before compressing the thing you don't wan't they trigger the compressor (mud and lowend good candidates...)
Other than that there's no rule set in stone for me.
★★★ One can enjoy a wood fire worthily only when he warms his thoughts by it as well as his hands and feet. ★★★


- KVRAF
- 2481 posts since 22 Sep, 2016
Thanks, LunarKitten. It took me lot's of lessons (trial and error hours spent on youtube, blogs and stuff) in mixing and sound design to get there ...LunarKitten wrote: Tue Feb 20, 2024 8:25 amWow this sounds alot better than my track.] Peter:H [ wrote: Sun Feb 11, 2024 9:48 am +++ Release +++
In The Thin Air Tonight
https://soundcloud.com/p-e-t-e-r-h/in-t ... ir-tonight![]()
But these two are less important. It's like in triathlon ... of the three disciplines, swimming is the least important (mostly 1 hour only in pro iron man triathlon), though very challenging in terms of coordination and overall athleticism... meaning to say: If you try to go up the roaster in OSC, you should first go for composition not "sound".
- KVRAF
- 2481 posts since 22 Sep, 2016
Take a goal at a time. For instance you might want to start with getting basedrum and (sub) bass right. Already this is btw very context dependent. If you go for techno for instance, it might be different than for some weird jazz stuff. I would recommend to watch some videos on youtube and try to mimic what you see there ... and the videos might help you to collect know how, theorie, tools, best practices ... but there's a lot of them. Don't got to deep into the rabbit hole ... don't forget to try out things yourself, rather than only wathicng stuffLunarKitten wrote: Thu Feb 22, 2024 11:11 amI think the toughest think for me is the bigger picture of the composition. I hear alot of complex compositions here. How is this achievable?PeterBPL wrote: Thu Feb 22, 2024 8:37 amI recommend to start with something that is most difficult for you.
If it's drums then start with drums.
If you go for a good basedrum / bass combo I recommend to mix bass only. I use for instance ISLO8 plugin (free 5-band splitter) in the master to mix bass only until the bass sounds right. Additionally you can grab the plugin sub ninja which is free for a few more days (https://dsp.thehim.com/, watch videos of The Him how he uses sub ninja) which helps you to see what's going on in your bass... Then after finishing one track yu'll next time focus on another aspect, then reiterate bass, then ... practice, practice and practice.
If you like visit the yt channel "Alice Yalcin Efe - Mercurial Tones Academy". Shes's a cool DJ, EDM producer and educator.
