S-K said:i bin mcing for a while now but Im looking to start useing fruity loops to make beatz, but im completely new to making music and im not quite sure what to buy and what would be good to start with, can anyone give me any advice on programs, software all dat stuff???
S-K
S-K said:i bin mcing for a while now but Im looking to start useing fruity loops to make beatz, but im completely new to making music and im not quite sure what to buy and what would be good to start with, can anyone give me any advice on programs, software all dat stuff???
S-K
droid said:FL is great for getting used to sequencing and making tunes quickly, so its probably exactly what you want at the moment. Ive heard great results from it, but I still have my doubts about its compression and overall sound quality, so IMO its not a very viable long term option...
Tactics said:it depends in whose hands its in...I've heard swagness and brilliance in equal measure and it jus depends on how schooled and gifted the person is at using its features and also basic things like eq, compression and reverb.....
go to the site droid...in its latest update its even introducing mastering features.....
This has been done to death at KvR[1] among other places... the 'Fruityloops sound' largely comes down to the distinctive (and in some people's view, undesireable) sound of the built in effects and synths, and you can use any VST's you like, so this avoidable. However, people have done tests mixing down identical projects to wav and then subtracting the waveforms, and the difference is below the noise floor on any sensible DAC. 64 bit mixing is in the same general area as £10000 a metre speaker cables.droid said:FL is great for getting used to sequencing and making tunes quickly, so its probably exactly what you want at the moment. Ive heard great results from it, but I still have my doubts about its compression and overall sound quality, so IMO its not a very viable long term option...
BrokenFist said:Much like the dude who started this thread, I'm really interesting in making music of my own but I'm fairly lost at the moment. I illegally downloaded (oh gosh!) a copy of FL Studio 6 but simply opening the program and looking at all of the features can be quite intimidating. Now, I noticed that if I register my copy through their website, I gain access to all of their video tutorials and what not. Would it be worth it for me to do this or should I just look for alternative tutorials online?
BrokenFist said:Much like the dude who started this thread, I'm really interesting in making music of my own but I'm fairly lost at the moment. I illegally downloaded (oh gosh!) a copy of FL Studio 6 but simply opening the program and looking at all of the features can be quite intimidating. Now, I noticed that if I register my copy through their website, I gain access to all of their video tutorials and what not. Would it be worth it for me to do this or should I just look for alternative tutorials online?
To be honest, if you can afford a computer to run it on, you can probably afford £30 for eXT or £100 for Fruityloops...droid said:*Disclaimer: you should pay if you can afford it...
bassnation said:what vsts do you use, tactics?
Tactics said:a producer must keep some secrets but personally I use (amongst other stuff):
NI Elektrik Piano
Reason 2.5 (for its sound modules)
NI Kontakt
Recycle 2.1
I find Reason's interface really, really annoying. I'm sure it's useful to have everything in one place and la la la, but it really slavishly tries to replicate a hardware rack setup and I don't really understand why. It reminds me of how even a few yeasr ago Akai still had ads for samplers with celebrity endorsements from some dude from Queensryche or whatever, not Rob Playford or Carl Craig.bassnation said:reason is a funny one - its hugely powerful but i found the ui a bit confusing. i think its one of those things with a bit of a learning curve but worth getting into.
There at least used to be heaps of free samples of single drum hits on the web. I don't know what the legality is of this kind of carry on, but I have WAV files of all the drum hits from a squillion different drum machines, including all the Roland ones, the Linn kit, a couple of Fairlight percussion sets and so on. Hollowsun.org is one place that used to have all this for free, but seems to have recently wrapped it up in a package they can sell.bassnation said:do you ever use sample libraries for one hit drums, or program it all yourself? i was wondering whether it would be worth investing in some.
droid said:Or DL them all on Bittorrent?*![]()
*Disclaimer: you should pay if you can afford it...