Then I found Dubspot in NYC, it seems like a place that i could take some really useful knowledge from that i could apply to whatever i do musically but more so with EDM genres. I was curious if anyone had gone to Dubspot or taken any of their online courses and could give me some feedback about the "Curriculum" there. I don't wanna waste time and money on something that could easily be self taught, but I'm looking to get into music production as a legitimate career and I wanna know as much as I can.
The course's I was lookin at taking was the Mixing & Mastering course & the Ableton Live Producer Certificate Program
In the Mixing & Mastering course there's three levels:
1. you learn EQing, Compression, Panning, Level Balancing, and reverb.
2. you learn routing, gain structure, delay, chorus, phase & flange, and automation.
3. you learn harmonic distortion, metering, referencing, mid & side, mastering.
and in the Ableton program, you learn everything about ableton and how to actually work with and produce using it.
Also, I've been learning music theory for about a week now and i have a good, but basic understanding; I've also started learning the basics of sound design and how a synthesizer actually works and I've already picked up alot of useful stuff from DSF too. So would I be wasting my time going there or saving myself time (in the long run)?
Sorry if this seems like a "noob" question, but I AM a noob!
 
 I just wanna take the right steps to get where I wanna be; on stage, blastin the filthiest shit to thousands of people having the time of their fuckin lives!











 Seriously the only thing any producer will tell you is that you need to do some serious learning and master your craft before committing to trying to make it. Its not just something someone can "teach" it takes years and years of practice, its like playing an instrument, you wouldn't go to uni to study piano if you don't know whether your good at piano or not would you? However admittedly I am in sorta the same position as you, I am wondering whether to go to a uni/course related to production but I'm not sure whether there's a right course for me or whether I'm gonna keep improving
 Seriously the only thing any producer will tell you is that you need to do some serious learning and master your craft before committing to trying to make it. Its not just something someone can "teach" it takes years and years of practice, its like playing an instrument, you wouldn't go to uni to study piano if you don't know whether your good at piano or not would you? However admittedly I am in sorta the same position as you, I am wondering whether to go to a uni/course related to production but I'm not sure whether there's a right course for me or whether I'm gonna keep improving  If you really are serious, (I'm assuming you're UK based) these guys do the best courses I could find
 If you really are serious, (I'm assuming you're UK based) these guys do the best courses I could find 

 If you want to learn production get some software now and start learning. Don't spend tons of money on a course until your sure this is what your gonna do and be successful in, in life. As I said I'm in the same position as you, but I've been practicing solidly for probably 2-4 hours a day at least for a year and I'm only just starting to make decent tunes. I don't know of any producer who's been 'taught' production either. I do understand that you want to make music for a living as well, hell anyone can understand that, but the thing is the music business is an elitist business by nature, if you don't have talent, you won't make it. I'm the same age as you and by all means I haven't even started to make it yet, but I have plans for if it doesn't work out and at least I have something to go on which is the tuens I've been making recently and getting some good feedback on
 If you want to learn production get some software now and start learning. Don't spend tons of money on a course until your sure this is what your gonna do and be successful in, in life. As I said I'm in the same position as you, but I've been practicing solidly for probably 2-4 hours a day at least for a year and I'm only just starting to make decent tunes. I don't know of any producer who's been 'taught' production either. I do understand that you want to make music for a living as well, hell anyone can understand that, but the thing is the music business is an elitist business by nature, if you don't have talent, you won't make it. I'm the same age as you and by all means I haven't even started to make it yet, but I have plans for if it doesn't work out and at least I have something to go on which is the tuens I've been making recently and getting some good feedback on 



