
Discuss...for inclusion in the dubstep bible
one of my last tunes i made a 29 bar intro...Serox wrote:From a DJs point of view the whole point in having a structure is two combine two records and have them both doing the same things at the same time. This is in the producers favour as it means I will play his record for longer and it will sound good mixed with another.
If the record drops out of time and does weird shit there is not much chance I am going to play it.
You dont have to stick to x number of bars for an intro, or a breakdown or anything really. Having a consistency through the record is good.
Only thing that matters really is having the first sound on the record and the first drop all in time. I dont know if it is done on purpose but some people have things dropping out of time
If you look at Techno bar lengths vary LOADS. It doesnt matter at all. I dont think people should stick to any of that at all.spencerTron wrote:
one of my last tunes i made a 29 bar intro...thought i'd fuck with the system
kidlogic wrote:
doing an odd length breakdown before the second drop is a good way to get a dj to play the tune past the second breakdown though as a lot of times they will just wait until after the weird part and mix out where its 'normal' again
disagreespencerTron wrote:i reckon we should all be a DJ's worst nightmare producer...i don't suggest using rules when trying to make music
agreeSerox wrote:From a DJs point of view the whole point in having a structure is two combine two records and have them both doing the same things at the same time. This is in the producers favour as it means I will play his record for longer and it will sound good mixed with another.
disagreeSerox wrote:Dont forget Dubstep DJs are not very good in general.
I am only going by what I hear at clubs/radios bro.FSTZ wrote:disagreeSerox wrote:Dont forget Dubstep DJs are not very good in general.
can we stop makeing these production "bibles"???
ok...Daft tnuc wrote:No I think the term bible coins perfectly considering the amount of bullshit the Holy Bible is filled withFSTZ wrote:can we stop makeing these production "bibles"???
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Just kidding btw. Lot of respect goes to people who contributes.
Is that FM? A lot of the FM podcasts I get hold of are quite bad quality that dont show the errors as bad.kidlogic wrote:^^ you need to listen to dubstep.fm morejust sayin... all our djs are on point.
myxylpyx wrote:dam bro dats sick... off to the garden to eat some worms now.
people seem to be debating in agreement on all aspects of this.Jolly Wailer wrote:not really disagreeing with anything in this thread, but I had some thoughts while reading it:
who's to say you still aren't being 'artistic' if you take a predictable template and do something original with it?
just because something is 32/64/128 bars long doesn't discount all the variety that could be happening within those bars.
there's definitly a line of thinking in edm that embraces the mechanical-ness of repetitive beats.
and also imo the convention in dubstep of a say 32 bar intro of just quarter notes and sparse piece elements is something I have patience for.. that minimalism sounds great from the edge.. to me. the simple intros are actually what i liked most about dubstep at first.
Structure implies convention. Something people just 'get', possibly unthinkingly, but some consensus was arrived at that structures get used. you will have a harder time arguing for there to be 'no structure' when its obvious that the structures are useful to practically everyone. There is a reason that 16 bars sounds like a self-resolving phrase length and 13 bars doesn't, just like there is a reason why most people can't dance to free jazz. If people realize that there is some predictability going on with a beat it will compel them to dance to it because they know they won't be left hanging out to dry by music that falls apart rhymically/structurally. The patterns of body movement have their correlate in the patterns of music. Rhythm, cycles and patterns are the structures that are molded out from chaos, and have something to do with music's usefulness as a cultural tool.
I can't tell you why its multiples of 4. It just is. I suspect the origins are pretty deep.
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