you create the most amazing stuff in VSTi's and presets. Your presets alone have inspired much of my work.
I look at your creations with awe.
Just the act of planning and plotting might be enough to get you started. Photo/videography {visual equivalent} works pretty well for me.ugo wrote:i've been threatening to buy a portable recorder of some sort for years now. i would really like to work with the audio equivalent of "found objects." i've got a few sample cds like that and i built ironhead to kind of be like that, but i would like to grab my own samples from the real world too.RTaylor wrote:Best bets for inspiration... forget everything you know {it's constraining} and experiment... pull everything out of the kitchen cabinets and spend some time recording sounds... wander through town with a tape recorder, etc. Pick a technique and make music with an eye to learning it. Pick a concept and come up with ways to learn and illustrate it. Carry a notebook. Focus every minute of your day on achieving one goal. Develop an obsession...
every year my brother and i pick an auto race to go to (formula 1, grand am, etc.) and there are some great sounds in the pits that i'd love to caputure and write with. (oddly enough, few are picked for the car sound sample cd's that race enthusiasts produce.)
Iue that method also...tconrardy wrote:sometimes I start out with a chord progression. But lately I have been working a bit differently. When I folling around, I record short performances of sounds, progressions, whatever comes to my head using different synths or setup in eXT. ( using the audio capture) Then, when I get a good library of short files in a folder, I open up Tracktion or Acid Pro6, and start experiemnting putting together the short segments into a complete piece. Once I get the main structure down, sometimes I go thru the whole thing with a live track, or even an acoustic something to give it continuity.
For synth demo's, I do the same thing. Make a bunch of short performances using a variety of patches, then assemble the whole thing in Tracktion or Acid. It seems to work. You can also experiemnt with effects at the same time. Anybody try this method??
Tim
i havent tried working like that yet but a friend of mine works similarly and has been recommending i try it. (particularly considering my tendency to write 8-16 bar sequences, then do nothing else with them.)tconrardy wrote:Anybody try this method??
This is basically how I've been doing it all along, but, I seem to end up with a lot of small wav files that simply don't work well together. I can't figure out if it's the bpm, key, volumes or some combination, but it certainly keeps me from realizing any results.tconrardy wrote:...I record short performances of sounds, progressions, whatever comes to my head using different synths or setup in eXT. ( using the audio capture) Then, when I get a good library of short files in a folder, I open up Tracktion or Acid Pro6, and start experiemnting putting together the short segments into a complete piece...Anybody try this method??
A number of years ago a friend of mine and I were conversing, and, the forgotten details aside, he basically said something to the fact that he finds it funny when people get all enthusiastic about the tools instead of their purpose. "Oh, I'm really into this new hammer I got..."deaf dunderkwac wrote:The tools are there to be used.
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