http://www.sendspace.com/file/ibd12h
New to producing
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codebraker
- Posts: 9
- Joined: Thu Feb 15, 2007 12:27 pm
New to producing
Hi people, im a dubstep lover and really love the music, i got a copy of reason and cubase and have started to try and make a dubstep beat, i only used reason cos i cant use cubase cos its confussing. ive put a clip up of what i have made, i tried to make it dubsteppy lol, i know im probally going to get alot of neutral comments but i dont mind, its my first dubstep attempt and im pretty new to producing, so i just thought i would share it with you all and maybe get some tips, thank you for your time n soz bout the spellings lol 
http://www.sendspace.com/file/ibd12h
http://www.sendspace.com/file/ibd12h
Nothing wrong with Reason. Have you read this?
http://dubstepforum.com/viewtopic.php?t=14797
Subtractor is a perfectly good 'analogue' synth for your bass, and with samplers & ReDrum for percussion you're ready to go.
http://dubstepforum.com/viewtopic.php?t=14797
Subtractor is a perfectly good 'analogue' synth for your bass, and with samplers & ReDrum for percussion you're ready to go.
Even though I'm just getting started with the whole dubstep thing, I've been producing my own tracks (in other genres) for many years now.
What I did at first was try to reproduce, from scratch, some of my favorite tracks. For instance, I would listen to a tune I was really into, and try to break it down in my head. For example, I would first listen to the high hat line, then try to reproduce that. Then I would listen to the rest of the beat, and separate that out one hit at a time. Then move to the bass line and try to reproduce the sound. And so on and so forth. This really helped me learn my gear (There weren't really softsynths at that time, it was all hardware). But it taught me a lot about sequencing and sound design.
Once I felt comfortable with the gear and the sequencer, I started making my OWN tunes. It helped a lot.
What I did at first was try to reproduce, from scratch, some of my favorite tracks. For instance, I would listen to a tune I was really into, and try to break it down in my head. For example, I would first listen to the high hat line, then try to reproduce that. Then I would listen to the rest of the beat, and separate that out one hit at a time. Then move to the bass line and try to reproduce the sound. And so on and so forth. This really helped me learn my gear (There weren't really softsynths at that time, it was all hardware). But it taught me a lot about sequencing and sound design.
Once I felt comfortable with the gear and the sequencer, I started making my OWN tunes. It helped a lot.
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