music theory for techno!
music theory for techno!
Hi I have been trying (unsuccessfully) to make techno i just cant seem to get the basic sounds and beat right. i was hoping someone on here would know of any websites or books that would be of any help. any advice is much appreciated
Re: music theory for techno!
here's my tip, apologise if you already know this. i know all techno doesn;t have a four to the floor beat but a lot does:
start with a four to the floor/disco drum beat:
kick on every quarter beat.
hat on every other eighth beat (between each kick)
snare or clap on the second and fourth beats.
add extra percussive sounds to taste. Use a groove template or shift stuff back and forwards.
add a bassline and some pads, let everything loop and cuts bits in and out.
start with a four to the floor/disco drum beat:
kick on every quarter beat.
hat on every other eighth beat (between each kick)
snare or clap on the second and fourth beats.
add extra percussive sounds to taste. Use a groove template or shift stuff back and forwards.
add a bassline and some pads, let everything loop and cuts bits in and out.
Re: music theory for techno!
The consistently plodding bassdrum represents elapsing time. It might seem simple enough on its own, but when embellished with various other percussive elements, you give the impression that the space between elapsed time is becoming more and more frantic. Play with giving that bassdrum a push using all your other percussion elements. Tension. Then decide which direction you want time to flow using the bassline. Forward, backward, left, right, up, down, repeated glitch in the matrix, deja vu. You are the master of time and space. Once you've committed to all that, the rest of the synths are depending on personal intent and taste
Re: music theory for techno!
lamby123...my recommendation, get a subscription to http://www.sonicacademy.com/ (no I don't work for them...) Their "How to sound like..." tutorials are the best I've seen (and I've take quite a few)...will get you hands on Live training for a specific genre you want to produce. Here's a song I did from their "tech trance" lessons:
http://soundcloud.com/tim-scudder/sonic
http://soundcloud.com/tim-scudder/sonic
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ScudMan
ScudMan
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Re: music theory for techno!
http://drop.io/dancemanual
Actually quite helpful...has some formulas for synth timbres in there that are pretty good starting points.
Actually quite helpful...has some formulas for synth timbres in there that are pretty good starting points.
Re: music theory for techno!
thanks for all the advice its making a big difference already got the beats sounding right so it should all start flowing... ps that dance music manual link is ace
Re: music theory for techno!
i was recommended a book called Music Theory for Computer Musicians
im gonna buy it in the new years
cheers
im gonna buy it in the new years
cheers
https://hiddensound.net/
https://linktr.ee/hiddensound
Sound Devices mix pre 3 and 10Tii, various Sennheiser mkh, dpa, LOM, Audio Technica microphones
https://linktr.ee/hiddensound
Sound Devices mix pre 3 and 10Tii, various Sennheiser mkh, dpa, LOM, Audio Technica microphones
Re: music theory for techno!
If you're stuck with choosing what notes to use in a bassline and you have no idea about chords or scales, just use C Major (no sharps or flats). That way you won't get any dissonant sounding notes that sound out of place.
Of course, feel free to transpose up or down as you please.
Of course, feel free to transpose up or down as you please.
Twitter//@donkeykonga | Soundcloud//PalaNIN | MySpace//The Empathy Concept | Using//Ableton Live 8//Korg padKontrol
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Re: music theory for techno!
I really love this answer, thanks. Not a practical approach, but a metaphysical purpose for making your own sound within the techno paradigm. Cool. More important than technique maybe?yur2die4 wrote:The consistently plodding bassdrum represents elapsing time. It might seem simple enough on its own, but when embellished with various other percussive elements, you give the impression that the space between elapsed time is becoming more and more frantic. Play with giving that bassdrum a push using all your other percussion elements. Tension. Then decide which direction you want time to flow using the bassline. Forward, backward, left, right, up, down, repeated glitch in the matrix, deja vu. You are the master of time and space. Once you've committed to all that, the rest of the synths are depending on personal intent and taste
http://soundcloud.com/1nfinitezer0 - dj forage
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Re: music theory for techno!
what exactly are you getting at? social experiment? artistic reflection of electronic music's repetitive nature?sigmainfotech wrote:hi...
i am quite new here..
hope you all help me out....
http://forum.ableton.com/search.php?aut ... 9&sr=posts
http://soundcloud.com/1nfinitezer0 - dj forage
Re: music theory for techno!
Reminds me of an NPC in an RPG
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Re: music theory for techno!
elements have to "balance". i.e. thumping kicks need to be offset by piercing hats and everything in between needs to FLOW. think of writing rhythms like melodies, i.e. with continuity and direction.
or just go boom tish crack tish boom tish crack tish and stick some shit over the top.
or just go boom tish crack tish boom tish crack tish and stick some shit over the top.
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Re: music theory for techno!
some spambot was able to register and searched for "friends"1nfinitezer0 wrote:what exactly are you getting at? social experiment? artistic reflection of electronic music's repetitive nature?sigmainfotech wrote:hi...
i am quite new here..
hope you all help me out....
http://forum.ableton.com/search.php?aut ... 9&sr=posts
http://davepermen.net my tiny webpage, including link to bandcamp.
Re: music theory for techno!
use the 909 drum racks that come with live... thats a good starting point if you are after that early techno sound.
Ableton Suite 8, Komplete 6, Macbook + IMac, Nuforce Icon HDP, Art tubefire 8, Korg MicroKontrol + wacKMK, Oxygen 8 +++
http://soundcloud.com/ashtonron
http://soundcloud.com/ashtonron
Re: music theory for techno!
no offense, but musictheory/techno seemed like an oxymoron to me
no serious i listened a lot to techno, but i guess, that would be my tip:
Listen and rebuild some of your favorite tracks, put em on an audio track in ableton and there you go. TRy to rebuild one by one BD, HH and so on, try to match the sounds
It ain`t to hard at the beginning, it gets hard, by the time you want to form/create your own vision, that sounds fresh for all those serious and interested people in that genre.
no serious i listened a lot to techno, but i guess, that would be my tip:
Listen and rebuild some of your favorite tracks, put em on an audio track in ableton and there you go. TRy to rebuild one by one BD, HH and so on, try to match the sounds
It ain`t to hard at the beginning, it gets hard, by the time you want to form/create your own vision, that sounds fresh for all those serious and interested people in that genre.