The Curse of Sound pt1: Intro

in #music8 years ago (edited)

I want to dedicate this post to @muphy, I really respect what he does here on Steemit.

Now I'll tell you what I do every night when everybody sleeps. Now I do it for my pleasure, but many years I was doing it for living.
I tried to write about my experiences with music production more than a year ago, but those posts weren't successful at that time. People just weren't interested but and I am thrilled because someone like @muphy showed up in the right time. I also wanted to avoid writing about complicated things, now I am thinking about making few simple explanations for the amateurs or for those who wish to try something with low budget and experience.


But let me make one thing clear: being an amateur in music production also isn't cheap!

If you use only your PC with the onboard sound card and a dynamic microphone, with some light DAW (digital audio workstation) you can make some things sound nice to you (but only to you) but when you export a mp3 and place it on a flash drive to listen the song in your car or on your mom's old radio, it will sound awful. When I was younger, I would burn my song on a CD and made a little tour visiting cars of my friends and their Hi-Fi systems. It is really disappointing how things can sound different (uglier) from device to device.
So, if you don't have some money to invest, you can't be neither the amateur.

But from my own personal experience, I know that the more professional equipment you own, the less true raw inspiration you will have.

When I was "underground", it was the most inspiring period of my life and later, when I managed to buy some pro equipment, I started to pay more attention to the details and things started to go slowly.

Especially when I learned about the frequencies, compression, panorama. So step by step, an amateur becomes a perfectionist and it is so frustrating! A perfectionist just hates all that he creates. Every little detail starts to bother you. Then, you start to miss the days when you were with no equipment, but full of awesome ideas.


I made my first hip-hop beat in 1998 when I was 13 on my first computer and I used demo version of software called Fruity Loops 1.5. I had bad PC speakers and I didn't have CD burner so I had to connect my PC with Hi-Fi and record the beat on the tape.
But very soon I became addicted to making those beats. My friends liked it and the whole hip-hop scene in my city actually started in my room.
Then I started to work with Propellerhead Reason. I also had Cool Edit (newer versions are known as Adobe Audition) to record vocals. My friend brought cheap dynamic microphone and we had to put a sock all over the mic head instead of pop-filter. For those who don't know, a pop-filter protects the microphone from the popping sounds. Then I moved to Cubase, Ableton and Logic and now I use more DAWs for just one thing.

So, at the very young age, I started to save money for the equipment!

First I needed a proper Audio Interface. Today I have RME Fireface but the first audio interface that I had was some cheap M-Audio, I don't remember the model. Then I needed studio monitors and I bought Yamaha NS7 and the amplifier for them. Well, today, 15 years later, I stayed faithful to Yamaha and I have two monitors Yamaha HS8 and the subwoofer HS8S, completed with a pair of KRK V6. My first condenser mic was some old Behringer that I bought from one old band from my town. I got the preamp for free! Today I have a legendary Rode NT1 and a pair of Se Electronics X1. Not much, but it fits in my workroom. I don't need to tell you about all components that I have, some are constantly in use, some were just once or twice.

And cables! I tend to keep my cables messy because my wife hates it and it keeps her out of my workroom.

The best parts of equipment that you simply can't without are - YOUR EARS! And the more you listen, the better and more reliable your ears will be! Practice makes perfect but there is a curse: perfectly trained ears can't stand that bad sound in the nightclubs, in cars... and you gotta live with it!

For a week or two you can expect a post about sound isolation and a simple guide how to record a song in your home conditions with your personal computer if you already have an instrumental.


Thank you!

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apologies in advance for the dumb comment ;)
but are you one of the four guys in the poster!!

Hahahaha! Of course. On the first two photos, I am the guy in orange hoodie.

pa nisam znao da si celebrity :DDD

great young man hard worker :)

Thank you!!!

It was not clear to me if you dedicate yourself to the musical production or you are a sound engineer (I do not know much about the subject) but I do know that thanks to the technical and aesthetic work is that a song can be successful. I hope you continue enjoying your technical resources (so be it just for your pleasure) and getting quality music

I am not a sound engineer, I am self-educated and worked many years as music producer

See ya on 20/01/2018 at Hotspot!

See you there

Sounds like Greek to me. ha ha Good to follow your dream. Like the beat!

That's because of mandolin. Man, I had to resteem your story from yesterday;)

Thank you.... I'm still laughing every time I go back to it. You inspired me with idea of parody.

pixresteemer_incognito_angel_mini.png

Your quality post caught my attention and I hope you benefit from my resteem. My followers have a refined appreciation for quality art. You might also enjoy my curated collection. To see the quality posts I have curated via resteem, see my blog @pixresteemer. If you want to know more about me and my mission, please check my introduction.

When I have a lot of time to kill ( like never anymore lol) I enjoy fooling around with LMMS. Its like Fruity Loops but free and open source
https://lmms.io/

Now i saw it, I will definitely download, it works on linux

Definitely not easy job to do! I am not musician, I do play guitar and mandolin just for fun, but have friends who are trying to gain success..lot of investment(money and time), hard work and patience os neccesary...at least steemit community won't judge your for slightly less quality :)

Thanks! The older song was linked with purpose!

Thank you so much for this intro. I am really honored!

I find funny that you started with Reason and Cool Edit. Same here! The difference is I didn't switch! I am still using Reason and the antique Cool edit, which does an amazing job. I added Wavosaur a super simple wave editor (freeware) to my work-flow a few years ago for fast operations and mastering.

I agree so much with you concerning the fact that inspiration seems to run away when possibilities increase (like getting more soft or hardware). I tried Ableton and Cubase, but reverted very quickly back to Reason. I got into Digital Performer for a year, because I really wanted VSTs: I felt it was limiting my sales not to get amazing orchestral sounds...

But then Reason 9.5 came out with VST support, and DP is now taking the dust. I try to keep things as simple as possible, and limit myself sometimes to a set of instruments, just to keep focused... I dedicate separate studio sessions to exploring the tools.

Is the photo before the video your set-up?

Cool track by the way. It's got a little Falco touch to it :-).

I still use Reason to Rewire it from Cubase. Cannot replace good old Dr. Rex! :)
Thank you, it's an older track recorded with my older equipment. It's sampled from an old Croatian song because at the time copyrights were messy here. Do what you do and I will always support you!

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