Doubt you could get far in months honestly.bennyfroobs wrote:libertine
it takes months
the only short cut i spending more of your free time messing around with fl
Maybe if you have someone who does the mixing.
Doubt you could get far in months honestly.bennyfroobs wrote:libertine
it takes months
the only short cut i spending more of your free time messing around with fl
Agent 47 wrote:Next time I can think of something, I will.
it took me just a few months to grasp the technical stuff tbh. i'm pretty computer literate though, i pick new software up fairly quickly. learning the music theory stuff though.... you could be doing that shit for years and years and still be turd with it. shits confusing )-:AxeD wrote:Doubt you could get far in months honestly.bennyfroobs wrote:libertine
it takes months
the only short cut i spending more of your free time messing around with fl
Maybe if you have someone who does the mixing.
TopManLurka wrote:FTR, requirements for being a 'head':
-you have to be youngsta
-you must have been in that infamous room of ten people.
-a DMZ release is preferable but not necessary.
-please note that being youngsta is mandatory.
Music theory is complicated, but not impossible. Just learn all the major keys first. Learn one major key a week. When I say "learn a key" I mean learn the notes of the key, then learn the major and minor chords that are used in that key. It helps to learn a song that is in the key you want to learn so you have something to apply your knowledge to. After you know all the major keys you should already have a lot more knowledge than what you had before. Once you know the major keys, go learn the minor keys. This will be easy because every major key also has it's own minor counterpart. For example, C Major shares the exact same notes as A Minor.bennyfroobs wrote:it took me just a few months to grasp the technical stuff tbh. i'm pretty computer literate though, i pick new software up fairly quickly. learning the music theory stuff though.... you could be doing that shit for years and years and still be turd with it. shits confusing )-:AxeD wrote:Doubt you could get far in months honestly.bennyfroobs wrote:libertine
it takes months
the only short cut i spending more of your free time messing around with fl
Maybe if you have someone who does the mixing.
I'd say learn key structures first, that way you don't need to remember all the notes of every key, you can work it out by the shape of each key. For example a minor key will always start with a tone interval, then a semitone, tone and so on....same goes for any other mode. I looking at this from a guitarists view rather than a piano players though, so it depends on what instrument you play.ChadDub wrote:Music theory is complicated, but not impossible. Just learn all the major keys first. Learn one major key a week. When I say "learn a key" I mean learn the notes of the key, then learn the major and minor chords that are used in that key. It helps to learn a song that is in the key you want to learn so you have something to apply your knowledge to. After you know all the major keys you should already have a lot more knowledge than what you had before. Once you know the major keys, go learn the minor keys. This will be easy because every major key also has it's own minor counterpart. For example, C Major shares the exact same notes as A Minor.bennyfroobs wrote:it took me just a few months to grasp the technical stuff tbh. i'm pretty computer literate though, i pick new software up fairly quickly. learning the music theory stuff though.... you could be doing that shit for years and years and still be turd with it. shits confusing )-:AxeD wrote:Doubt you could get far in months honestly.bennyfroobs wrote:libertine
it takes months
the only short cut i spending more of your free time messing around with fl
Maybe if you have someone who does the mixing.
Dead Rats wrote:Mate, these chaps are lads.
well there you go then... search the 'goldmines' for the guides and watch youtube for tips on fruityloops. i found some videos "boring" to watch, but i learned a lot. there isn't a quick/easy way.Lib3rtine wrote:Google and other online informational sources really should be treated like gold mines these days...this stuff was unavailable to all 20+ years ago.....when all there really were....were outdated information in books and libraries.
A video editor, If I understand correctly.nowaysj wrote:And wtf is pinnacle studios, or what ever that was called?
Glad you came back, OPLib3rtine wrote:wub, I like it all. Nothing specific.
Everything you need to learn about FL can be picked up from YouTube, reading the manual, and practice. A college course would only showcase the instructors preferences.Lib3rtine wrote:With Linux, sometimes you just need 1 command to do what needs to be done. With FL Studio, you need almost everything to work in harmony together....to get perfection. Which is why I commend you guys that know Fl Studio in and out. Eventually this might be a program that 'should' require a college course.![]()
Nothing is better than anything else, it's all a matter of which workflow you prefer. For hardware, the novation controllers do the job well enough, same as the M-Audio Oxygen series. If you've got the chance to play around on both before buying, do so. If not, I'd go for whatever your budget allows. I have an early model M-Audio because at the time it was all I could afford and it works just fine.Lib3rtine wrote:Since we're hung up on Software, watcha guys think about hardware ? like Novation ? Seems like a new piece. Heard it's fully integrate-able with Fl Studio and Ableton Live....and that's another thing, Ableton better than FL ? hmmm.
Definitely required, IMO. You get to learn piano playing skills, as well as moving away from the mouse in terms of setting parameters to controls etc.Lib3rtine wrote:I feel like I want hardware and software...feels more rewarding / creativity factor = increased when using hardware...no? always being at the computer = feels like work.
midi keyword required or no? Novation = good enough ?
lullzz.nowaysj wrote:Libertine, I was going to play with you and tell you that ableton was better, but I'm too tired... flstudio is fine.
Thanks!Lib3rtine wrote:chaddub, sick track in ur sig.
see, I wanna be able to make stuff like that from scratch...but also remix current and popular drops.
for instance, the first thing I thought about when hearing this -
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jAtYyZ2HNUk
was dubb'ing it up like crazy...but I don't have the skillz. (yet) and I can't be the only one that thinks some amazing-ness could come outta that one... (currently, not even 1 dub version of it on youtube)
My current thinking is Novation + FL ...I wanna be able to do everything professionally..think it'll be enough? (i know it'll probably take me forever to learn...but i'll take my time)
My thought process is that the Novation part will enhance my creative edge in wanting to learn it more and quicker, since it's the hardware part. Working from scratch with just FL Studio, could bore me to death...me thinks.
lullzz.nowaysj wrote:Libertine, I was going to play with you and tell you that ableton was better, but I'm too tired... flstudio is fine.
yea, it's like 50/50 everywhere it seems when comparing the 2. I heard Deadmau5 uses it..instead of FL.
Merry Xmas all..
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