
Now onto the questions.
What MIDI keyboard do you recommend for an avid piano player? I'm really used to acoustic pianos, and this will be my first digital keyboard. What brand offers the most realistic keyboards, in feel, capability, and affordability?
My next few questions are about drum programming. I heard pads help you audition and program drums a lot easier, are they capable of complex (breakbeat-esque) patterns? Would I just have to do each element separately? Is it a smart investment in getting one? Because it seems like I could fill that role by just bashing the keys on a MIDI keyboard.
My drums in comparison to a lot of the Electronic artists listed above sound far too loud and really unrealistic. I've seen tonnes of mixing tutorial, and I thought I had it down, but I don't. They sound really loud and overpower all the other elements, but when I turn the main drum channel down, it loses all dynamics. I don't have monitors and headphones yet (I'm working on it, lol) I just use my laptop speakers, so I normally save a piece and see how it sounds on Windows Media Player with my super epic bass enhancement plugins, lol. I don't really know what the problem is, but in comparison to a lot of Chemical Brother's, Orbital's and Burial's drums (which is the dynamics I'm trying to achieve) it's much more life like and sounds so good. What is the key to making such realistic, well mixed drums? Is it in the samples? Any recommendations on acoustic drum kits? :c
If you could analyse this little drum loop I just made and tell me how I could improve, that would be cool. You don't have to, I don't deserve more attention than anyone else here

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Oh, and if you could give me any tips on programming drum rolls. I can do handle them well on a real kit, but programming is much, much harder. A lot harder than I imagined. I just can't get the timing right. The mouse is the worst rhythmical aid.
If you've ever listened to a Daft Punk or Orbital, or any other progressive tracks, you'll know there's a lot of repetition and sound development. How exactly is that done so well? I used to be an animator, and we had a feature called clips. Which is where you basically animate a small portion outside of the project, then you could load it into the project as a single file and it will run through the sequenced animation without any further editing. Is that roughly the same with Electronic music? Just a lot of loops, arranged and developed? This would explain why my little tracks have been sounding awful, they never loop properly (I'm using an Ableton demo and the bassline is always off the grid) :c
Speaking of bassline, any idea how to recreate that original Acid House bassline, or those deep basslines you often hear in Pinch, Skream, and Hatcha tracks? I'm just using presets with built in synthesizers right now. I tried searching for some on YouTube and could only find "dubstep wobble" and "how to sound like..." ones, but there was never any on Skream :< Tonnes on Skrillex and Doctor P though. If I ever need to make those, I know where to turn, lol.
That's pretty much all my queries, MIDI keyboard, drum programming, arrangement. Thank you for reading all the way through here (or skim reading), and thanks in advance for the replies. I'm enjoying making Electronic music, it's really fun and I hope to get better. Feel free to suggest any good Dubstep producers that I wouldn't find browsing through the general forum.
Oh and if you're wondering, I've been at this for two weeks and a bit.
Another question I had while reading through the production bible, are pads similar to sub basses, as you're supposed to feel them rather than hear them? Or do they single-handedly create the atmosphere?