Lampje4life Posted September 28, 2012 Share Posted September 28, 2012 Hey OCR, So I randomly started working on this song, without the purpose of really finishing / getting anywhere at all. After 3 hours, this is what I've got: http://soundcloud.com/yannicgeerts/forezd Original on Youtube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h0Mp8uMammw Might or might not finish it, but since I uploaded it to a friend, figured it might aswell keep the OCR WIP forums a little more active. Comments and critics are welcome. Keep in mind that nothing is seriously EQ'd and the flow of the song is total garbage Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Chimpazilla Posted September 28, 2012 Share Posted September 28, 2012 It's a bit repetitive and generic (somewhat common sounds and structure), but really enjoyable. I do love that lead in the second half. Great start! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
-Dan Posted September 28, 2012 Share Posted September 28, 2012 I almost started dancing here! ahdhehe. It's cool, but I agree it is a bit repetitive. And I miss heavy basses, but it can be my earphones. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
timaeus222 Posted September 28, 2012 Share Posted September 28, 2012 I think for the most part, it's very quiet, or at least, it would be quiet if the levels were balanced. e.g. 0:00 - 0:28, 0:53 - 1:52, which is about 1:30, or over half the song. It's worth looking into so you can add more elements and make it louder at some parts to give more of a progressive dynamic contrast. Basically, make sure each instrument is only as loud (in terms of amplitude, not relative volume) as you originally intended. If I were you, I'd put this hierarchy on your instruments: "Loudest" (anything below this) Square Lead (0:55, NOT the one at 1:52) Saw Lead (0:13), Square Lead (1:52, NOT the one at 0:55) Kick (0:27) Bass (0:27) White Noise sweeps (1:07 & other places) Pluck Arpeggio (beginning) Hi-Hats (beginning) "Softest" (anything above this) To do that, use a compressor. I'm sure your DAW has one. By the way, if I can identify every single instrument in your mix, that's a sign that you need more going on! ;D Basics of a sound compressor (not a technical compressor for audio files): - Similar to a limiter without the sidechaining capability. - Threshold is the upper limit to compress the instrument down towards. - Ratio is how heavy the compression is. - The compression knee can be Hard, Medium, Soft, or possibly "Vintage". Change to taste. Soft is best for light compression of elements you don't want to sound "overcompressed". - Gain is the dB boost. - Attack is how early the compression starts. - Release is how long the compression lasts. At 1:27, to make things simpler, I'd suggest switching the instrument playing the arp and the one playing the lead. If I'm correct, the instrument playing the lead at 1:27 was the same instrument playing the beginning arpeggio. Or, you could just clone that "arpeggio instrument" (pluck saw) and give it a different gain/boost in the compressor. Then you can just soften the lead's velocities there if it's velocity-sensitive. Actually, at 1:27, it would be a pretty good time to bring the energy back up as well. At 1:52, the square lead is a good volume because it could serve as a good breakdown section. Good luck! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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