Classical Musicians suck at Electronic Music

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  • Опубліковано 29 бер 2023
  • Ever seen a classical pianist sit down at a synth for the first time and play it like a piano? That was probably me. So, maybe I can explain why electronic music/production is a difficult thing for most classical musicians to approach...or maybe I can't.... Let's find out....
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 743

  • @JamesonNathanJones
    @JamesonNathanJones  Рік тому +83

    The number of folks who will comment on a video without watching it is pretty surprising innit?

    • @tubitubi2434
      @tubitubi2434 Рік тому +6

      That's what you get when you give a clickbait title to a nuanced 13 minute essay

    • @JamesonNathanJones
      @JamesonNathanJones  Рік тому +19

      @@tubitubi2434 You’ve just described how this platform works

    • @piotrmalewski8178
      @piotrmalewski8178 Рік тому

      I'm gonna only comment, that I'm not gonna watch. And this: what did you expect when you made a provocative title?

    • @JamesonNathanJones
      @JamesonNathanJones  Рік тому +12

      @@piotrmalewski8178 To get more views. UA-cam titles are like argumentative essay headlines. They state an opinion and then either support or disprove it.

    • @piotrmalewski8178
      @piotrmalewski8178 Рік тому

      @@JamesonNathanJones You know, a few hundreds years ago, even popular novels had ridiculously long titles, explaining what exactly is the book about. If we're not dumb to be fooled forever, at some point I think people will get tired of flashy and confusing titles and will look for long descriptive ones. I opened this video only because I got angry when I saw but I don't feel like watching. Although perhaps there would be things in the video we could argue about, I clicked in few places, noticed that you seem to know what you're talking about and the title is merely a provocation, so I passed. But even if you needed to be corrected, I feel like I should value my time and learn new things instead of keep arguing about the old ones. So I mainly passed because you seem to be talking about things I already know.

  • @nkronert
    @nkronert Рік тому +11

    "How can I activate the reverb on this organ?"
    "Put it in a church"

  • @robertsyrett1992
    @robertsyrett1992 Рік тому +508

    We all live in brian eno's 1979 dream world of vertically stacked asynchronous loops. It's worth acknowledging that linear composition still has a place in ambient music.

    • @JamesonNathanJones
      @JamesonNathanJones  Рік тому +24

      Absolutely

    • @lazylazy871
      @lazylazy871 Рік тому +86

      Well I live in Finland at my house.

    • @xxSk8ing4christxx
      @xxSk8ing4christxx Рік тому +11

      I have no clue what you said but Eno is a maestro

    • @curioso....
      @curioso.... Рік тому +4

      ​@@FloatingLeaf1111 banjo? Cool, any ambient examples you'd recommend?

    • @theheresiarch3740
      @theheresiarch3740 Рік тому +6

      Parts of the Outer Wilds soundtrack get a sort of ambient banjo thing going on. Especially Space (track 4). I'll link the whole OST below. After playing the game, I can't hear those three notes on the banjo without tearing up anymore, I'm misty eyed just from going to find the link.
      ua-cam.com/video/C59AUL804WQ/v-deo.html

  • @PanopticMotion
    @PanopticMotion Рік тому +415

    Have you noticed how many classical musicians start using those dreamy, new-age synth sounds when they get into electronic music? It's totally cool though, there's nothing wrong with that :)

    • @tukoijarrett9155
      @tukoijarrett9155 Рік тому +22

      Made me think of how the CS-80 seems to take some inspiration from organs (the sliders even work like drawbars)

    • @TorutheRedFox
      @TorutheRedFox Рік тому +7

      @@tukoijarrett9155 I mean it's in the same line of synthesizers as a synth organ Yamaha made around the same time (it's actually a direct descendant of one of them i think)

    • @dbweinhaus
      @dbweinhaus Рік тому +9

      Yes, and it makes me feel like I've taken for granted all the various synth textures I've absorbed from pop and dance music over the years

    • @AzoSBear
      @AzoSBear Рік тому +3

      Dream Trance?
      I feel kinda called out though since I was a choir kid

    • @AzoSBear
      @AzoSBear Рік тому

      Though I still do contemporary classical stuff now

  • @Dsch28
    @Dsch28 Рік тому +139

    As a classically trained violinist going to do a degree in electronic music production this is devastating news

    • @JamesonNathanJones
      @JamesonNathanJones  Рік тому +27

      Haha well if it helps, it’s a UA-cam title and not a blanket truth. Just some things I struggled with when starting out personally.

    • @hoi4847
      @hoi4847 Рік тому +12

      ​@@JamesonNathanJones first year undergraduate pianist here! I made the tragic mistake of falling in love with modular synths just months before I started conservatoire😂 I did literally dedicate all my life to this one instrument, but any tips to survive the next few years without dropping out?

    • @JamesonNathanJones
      @JamesonNathanJones  Рік тому +22

      @@hoi4847 That's definitely a personal decision you'll have to make, but I would never discourage anyone from specializing in something. I think when you go that deeply into something you learn skills that translate to everything else you will go on to do - so rather than thinking of it as wasted time, think of it as immersing yourself in something for a season. You can always learn about synths on the side and then turn your attention to it later, and since you've already developed an interest in it, you already have an advantage.

    • @hoi4847
      @hoi4847 Рік тому +5

      @@JamesonNathanJones really really appreciate this Jameson🙌 and all the good work you're doing here!

    • @user-bf6gz8ej4o
      @user-bf6gz8ej4o Рік тому +3

      I'm always kinda shocked by how foreign musical genres except for classical stuff are to classical musicians.
      No front btw.

  • @zachary963
    @zachary963 Рік тому +13

    There’s a video of Andrew Huang and Rob Scallion where Andrew introduces Rob (a very skilled guitarist) to his huge modular synth. Over the course of the video, Rob catches hold of this concept. He initially tries to program a chord progression into the synth, which just does not work. Once he embraced the sound design aspect that Andrew was trying to teach him, the creativity and excitement of music make just exploded. It was incredibly fun to watch.

  • @johnvance5118
    @johnvance5118 Рік тому +240

    Gary numan still writes every single song on piano first and then translates it into the industrial sound he gets. I love your videos recently. Keep up the good work. I really appreciate it.

    • @JamesonNathanJones
      @JamesonNathanJones  Рік тому +13

      Thanks John 🙏

    • @JonathanKillstring
      @JonathanKillstring Рік тому +8

      Gary Numan is an absolute legend :)

    • @mk1st
      @mk1st Рік тому +3

      Just saw him in Milwaukee, great show.

    • @gladtobeangry
      @gladtobeangry Рік тому +10

      Vince Clarke (Depeche Mode, Erasure, Yazoo) said in an interview he writes all of his songs on acoustic guitar. He said something about the sound design getting in the way of the melodies and harmonies while writing. That stuff comes in later when he's doing arrangement and production. Seems like a sensible approach.
      There also is this female synthesist I can't remember the name of, who spent her entire career playing only the Arp 2600. When asked why she stuck to just one synth she stated that she felt like she was still learning the Arp every time she played it. In other words, she treated her synth like a classical musician would treat their acoustic instrument, perfecting her mastery of it through a lifetime of experience.
      Incidentally, I have no classical background, but my introduction to playing a musical instrument was on an old electronic organ at the age of 6, and I think my love and my understanding for messing with different timbres began there, so your comments about how the organ helped you understand synths resonated with me a lot.

    • @solarlarvae
      @solarlarvae Рік тому

      @@gladtobeangry I think you are referring to Eliane Radigue and her ARP 2500, an amazing artist ua-cam.com/video/lcy5fLcAsQQ/v-deo.html

  • @garygimmestad4272
    @garygimmestad4272 Рік тому +34

    Your video resonated with me on many levels. I’m also a classically trained pianist whose career was sidetracked due to arthritis. I could play at a lower technical level in more improvisatory settings. I love jazz but the physical limitations also became profound in that world as well. Arthritis interfered not only with velocity but also with rhythmic articulation. But, still, I’ve had a fun and mostly satisfying career in theater, music directing, arranging and composing, and other musical pursuits. Now in my 70s, I’m drawn to synthesis where limited keyboard technique is not a barrier, and a wildly wide world of sound is available. I haven’t gone Euro but I have a couple of semi-modular Moogs that I love, a Typhon, access to a Microfreak, plus a bunch of software synths. Finally to my point: I struggle with finding my ‘voice’ in synth world partly because of the structure and limitations of sequencing. I’m not drawn to EDM in any serious way. Endless pattern repetition with a 4-on-the-floor kick can actually be fun, but I have other interests. The story you tell about synthesizing (pun intended) your classical bent with sound design encourages me to continue with similar ideas I’ve been experimenting with - writing linearly and contrapuntally and, in my case, incorporating some of the harmonic language of jazz, of Bartok and Prokofiev, of Messiaen’s scales of limited transposition, of Ravel and Debussy, etc. I’ve realized a few turned on Bach pieces which was fun and instructive, but, of course, I want to create my own path. - as you are doing. Thank you for the insight and inspiration! Cheers.

  • @GianmarioScotti
    @GianmarioScotti Рік тому +19

    The music starting at 9:47 is so stunningly beautiful, I went immediately looking for it. And I found it! You are very talented.

  • @vsevolodalipov4375
    @vsevolodalipov4375 Рік тому +11

    The background music while he speaks is magnificent, I like how it demonstrates what he's talking about a lot of the time. It's so nice.

  • @noisemodule
    @noisemodule Рік тому +32

    get this: I am classically trained in...analogue modular synthesis, composition, 21st c. music history, and theory by a composer who was a contemporary of Schoenberg. (I'm also a certified audio engineer who studied "capital-S" Soundscape, but that's another conversation) ...however many of the excellent points you make, I too have struggled with, despite my training.
    in fact, the points you bring up about timbre, complexity, pacing, and space remind me of discourse which was part of my early training in synthesis - such as the early debate between the RDF studios in Paris and the Elektronich school at the WDR in Köln, surrounding recorded sound objects and "purely" electronic sounds, respectively; or the primacy of onset transients, attack phase characteristics, and sympathetic physical resonances in determining the difference between real life instruments, Soundmarks, ambient environmental keynote sounds, or whatever noise you can (literally) imagine. what makes a pizz'ed violin string sound different from plucked acoustic guitar string, or an emergency vehicle siren distinct from a train whistle or car horn, etc.
    while the purpose was not explicitly to instruct a 'how to' guide to designing synthetic applications of their real-world acoustic counterparts, the exploration of topics like the acoustic properties of wave propagation physics did help me to view sound design as integral to advanced synthesis techniques and vice versa. it makes sense - after all, in real-world acoustics timbre is inextricably linked to pitch, and vice versa, for just one example, and because the synthesizer's signal must eventually be transduced into the same pressure differentials in the medium of atmosphere in order to be heard, the same thing should be true of such so-called 'synthesized' voices.

    • @patriciaoudart1508
      @patriciaoudart1508 Рік тому +2

      🙏💚🧡 j'adhère totalement. Je n'ai pas de formation mais c'est agréable d'entendre parler avec passion experte, de ce que moi même je recherche comme création!👍

    • @alexlokanin3312
      @alexlokanin3312 Рік тому +1

      That's so cool

    • @JewTubeUsername
      @JewTubeUsername Рік тому +1

      Schoenberg? Whatever you're involved in must be pretty degenerate non music then.

  • @GabeChurray
    @GabeChurray Рік тому +71

    Great video, Jameson! I often have my piano students play their pieces on keyboards using different sounds, and then ask them to try and explain how they might change their playing to better fit the different timbres

    • @JamesonNathanJones
      @JamesonNathanJones  Рік тому +6

      I love that!

    • @oldunclemick
      @oldunclemick Рік тому +4

      That must make it so much fun for them Gabe. Expanding their thinking - teaching music, not just piano.

    • @GabeChurray
      @GabeChurray Рік тому +4

      @@oldunclemick it’s a great gateway to composition and even other considerations for keyboard playing. Like Jameson says in the video, organ, even though it has a keyboard it’s a completely different mindset than piano, or Rhodes, or Clavinet, or synth etc etc.

    • @beetheimmortal
      @beetheimmortal Рік тому

      I sometimes do this too. I really like playing Bach pieces using synthwave synths and sounds, just for my own entertainment

  • @moderncannibal9708
    @moderncannibal9708 Рік тому +56

    You can't measure passion. You are a great mind and you are so great to get to know. Have you ever played something you never played before and it moved you to tears, or joy, or a color? Imagine the first humans who discovered around a fire the sound of the universe. They had no rules. Love what you are doing. Thanks.

  • @ackzz
    @ackzz Рік тому +27

    Producing sounds from a synth is truly an art on it’s own, it’s like sculpting clay, you keep shaping it till your pleased with the results. Producing a song from all the different synth sounds is skill on a whole different level, there may aspects and levels of complexity you will need to learn\master from experimenting as you go along or watching video tutorials. Good Luck on your music journey - cheers!

  • @charliecarrot
    @charliecarrot Рік тому +5

    Awesome video! This is a journey I've been on as someone who's spent most of my life studying classical piano and just recently getting into the world of synthesizers. So many possibilities with timbre and sound shaping.

  • @stefanherzog
    @stefanherzog Рік тому +7

    I love your recent videos as they bring AFAIK a unique angle to synth UA-cam (synthclassicaltube? classicalsynthstube?)! Please more of this!

  • @eyvindjr
    @eyvindjr Рік тому +10

    I am also a classical musician who bought Ableton Live and started working with sound design fairly late. I can absolutely relate to your problems, but as a brass player, we actually have more control over attack, decay vibrato and sound color than on keyed instruments. Working with synths has actually introduced another approach to what the a trombone does and wants to achieve in different contexts!

  • @itsWHOM
    @itsWHOM Рік тому +26

    As a former music student, I have felt so much of what you have so eloquently put into words. Also, the music in this is brilliant. You are a god damn genius.

  • @Johnnysimz
    @Johnnysimz Рік тому +1

    Very glad I've stumbled on your channel! The video itself was also revealing for me as I'm jumping into synthesis myself from a more formal pianistic backgroung. Thanks for sharing your thoughts on the subject!

  • @stateazure
    @stateazure Рік тому +7

    Always interesting, Jameson, thanks for sharing your thoughts! Also, from someone who is practicing and trying to improve their piano playing and theory, I appreciate these and other recent videos. Great stuff!

  • @kjeltpieper2194
    @kjeltpieper2194 Рік тому

    This was realy inspiring! And tanks for the Ebook

  • @samueltiradovillaescusa2325
    @samueltiradovillaescusa2325 Рік тому +1

    I am a classical pianist and I you nailed some of my questions with great answers. I love your videos and your thoughts! Thanks!!

  • @PBVideo1962
    @PBVideo1962 Рік тому

    An inspiring video with great depth and warmth. Subscribed. Helped me overcome a particularly bad period of option overwhelm. Thank you.

  • @andy-simmons
    @andy-simmons Рік тому +4

    Man, your content has been so good lately! Great stuff.

  • @martyp7401
    @martyp7401 Рік тому +1

    Really insightful and nicely articulated. Thanks for this, it resonated with me in a most harmonious way.

  • @TheGoggers
    @TheGoggers Рік тому +1

    You're the best creator i've found in a long while! I think your composition is absolutely breathtaking and you've inspired me deeply to go and figure out what keeps a song moving and interesting. As a fellow classical musician myself, I struggle mostly with fluidness when it comes to composing non-classical music but you've cleared out some of the clouds for me and for that i am grateful, so thank you for doing what you do and keep on creating!

  • @rexcellencemagee6729
    @rexcellencemagee6729 Рік тому +53

    I wish every single person in my life that feels I’m wasting my time and money on what I love to do would watch this awesome insightful video you just created! Thank you!!!

    • @earlgrey2130
      @earlgrey2130 Рік тому +11

      How can you be "wasting" your time and money, if its a thing you love? Isn't that the goal of said investment?

    • @rexcellencemagee6729
      @rexcellencemagee6729 Рік тому +6

      @@earlgrey2130 you’d sure think so, wouldn’t you? Some in my family feel I wasted my classical background I think mainly when I grew my hair long and started an eighties metal band! Lol, back then metal was classical so I thought it was an advantage, nowadays there’s no future in it, but my own enjoyment!

    • @bobbygoestoabyss6624
      @bobbygoestoabyss6624 Рік тому +4

      I can relate to that. Have heard phrases my whole live. Something like:"Don't you just wan't to do real work" I absolutely hate this narrow mindset. For some people music seem to be a acoustic stimulus.... and that's it. They aren't able to understand the beauty of it. because it is nothing you can hold in your hand.
      I have to deal with heavy depressions and i can tell. For me, making music is not waste of time..... It keeps me alive...

    • @denver-gi7ot
      @denver-gi7ot Рік тому +1

      Don't worry about people's opinions. Some people will never understand.
      As long as you want to, keep going.

    • @tiderider
      @tiderider Рік тому +1

      Your life. Your time. Your money. Your smiles. Enjoy them.

  • @samborn7120
    @samborn7120 Рік тому +1

    Really appreciate the in-depth perspective. Always remember to consider limitations and what you may bring in from them.

  • @AzamisBox
    @AzamisBox Рік тому

    stumbled upon this video and i felt like it was god sent keep it up man love the way you break stuff down

  • @neuzethmusic131
    @neuzethmusic131 Рік тому +1

    This was such an awesome video ❤ I learnt a lot! Thank you!

  • @muralist_
    @muralist_ Рік тому +3

    You are actually the first who I ever see explaining this 'problem' on a very logical and understandable level in just one video.
    Especially the link between being classically educated, being a composer and then struggling with that other thing that no one ever mentions: the craftsmanship of sound design.
    In the past exactly that has been a burden to me. Getting the knowledge on sound design, because to me - being a composer, with a fully developed classical schooled background - it was the only wall I was constantly running against when trying to record compositions in the digital world. This constantly trying to find the best ways how to translate that what I heard in my mind into the right fitting sounds.
    Absolutely very well done, how you define that issue in this video!

  • @dawid_dahl
    @dawid_dahl Рік тому

    So happy I got recommended this video. I have sense I will listen a lot to your music from now on. Thank you. 🙏🏻

  • @jeanrogerlamoot7632
    @jeanrogerlamoot7632 Рік тому

    Amazed to hear you drop Trent's name an inspiration to us all. Thanks

  • @themusicalcat5412
    @themusicalcat5412 Рік тому

    I currently am still going through classical music training, but ever since Ive been getting into synths I've had this problem, and this video has really helped realise what I've been stuck on and what I should be doing. Thanks so much for making the video

  • @jontrout2010
    @jontrout2010 Рік тому

    What a fantastic breakdown of electronic composition. Im studying electronic music at conservatory and have spent the last 3 years trying to wrap my head around what you explain here in mere minutes.

  • @pjohns92
    @pjohns92 Рік тому +1

    That was a pretty honest look at the process from your point of view. Looking forward to seeing what you put out in the future

  • @GooseTronics
    @GooseTronics Рік тому +3

    great video, ive been a producer for a decade now but have no classical training... never really thought about this... its interesting to see how training different instruments translate over to making electronic music.

  • @synth-hjorne
    @synth-hjorne Рік тому

    Great points. I like your ideas on combining classical composition techniques with electronic sound design.

  • @18nomah
    @18nomah Рік тому

    What a wonderfully well thought out video.

  • @Composer1992
    @Composer1992 Рік тому +6

    I'm also a pianist who plays organ, and I've played with software synths a bit. I loved the sound of the examples you put in here and it got me wanting to try making some more electronic music!

    • @JamesonNathanJones
      @JamesonNathanJones  Рік тому

      Go for it!

    • @JayTemple
      @JayTemple Рік тому

      I asked this in my own thread, but I imagine your perspective will be informative: Between the piano and the organ, how much did your skill and training in the first one you learned transfer to the second? Was it as jarring as what we see with the keyboard?

  • @rodrigolaporte274
    @rodrigolaporte274 Рік тому +3

    What an awesome and insightful video!!! I love the concepts explored here. I don't have musical background, just picked up stuff along the way, so I have the opposite problem, I need to be very aware of not having my creations to rely too much on sounds and not having an interesting melody, need to find the balance

  • @karlklee9418
    @karlklee9418 Рік тому

    One of the best and unique synth channel. Some of my thoughts are similar to yours but not so well articulated.
    Please continue with your journey and take us with you! ❤

  • @ergo-dust
    @ergo-dust Рік тому +1

    Really enjoying your thoughtful reflective videos of composition. I'm in the camp of very happy composing for instruments that always sound like themselves making a very difficult transition to those that might not! Will all be worth it though... probably :)

  • @GrouchyGander
    @GrouchyGander Рік тому

    Dude! The electronic examples you've shown are right up my alley of music! Gave me mad me-bumps~
    Gonna rifle through your stuff, see ya in a bit!

  • @Qwiv
    @Qwiv Рік тому

    Thanks for the insight. Nice video production as well.

  • @InstrumentManiac
    @InstrumentManiac Рік тому +3

    Fascinating video. I always kind of assumed a pianist's skill would be a 1:1 transfer but it was interesting to hear your experience and challenges adapting to the synth. All Things Fade is a beautiful piece, it really does capture that chorale sound really well!

  • @JayM928
    @JayM928 Рік тому +18

    I really love making music, but I can't play any instrument without a decent amount of pain -- something like arthritis from a young age. Discovering electronic music now in my 40s has been a blessing. I can't tell you how amazing it is to be able to play music without the physical dexterity that is usually required. I can push notes around on a piano roll and play with the synth, and take my time with it.
    I've had the challenge (and joy) of tackling the first thing in my life that seems to have no beginning or end. Academically, I wanted to maybe get some degree. Professionally, maybe there's some salary, some company, some accolade a person can have as a goal -- heck, maybe a solid retirement decades later. Athletes usually have discrete goals as well. Music production is the first thing I've ever done that has no obvious milestone for success; no long term goal. That is, I have no aspirations of fame and fortune like some of the kids have. I just do it because I love it. It's not my day job. It's not the thing that pays the bills.
    Even if I were to strive for a long term goal with music, what would it be? If learning an instrument, I assume a goal could be to play a particular piece well. For producing your own music, without a goal relating to how your work is received by others (popularity)... Well, I haven't thought of one yet...
    Anyway, it's a nebulous thing, and hearing what it's like from you and others in the comments that have approached it from the opposite side, where you have all this physical dexterity and muscle memory, and not to mention education generally with music, it is very interesting.

    • @JamesonNathanJones
      @JamesonNathanJones  Рік тому +4

      If you love it, the thing itself is its own reward. Cheers :)

    • @moth5799
      @moth5799 Рік тому +1

      Set the goal of making a piece that *you're* happy with. Listening to others and their feedback is important but at the end of the day it's about making something you enjoy and that you can be proud of.

  • @Zebselcabron
    @Zebselcabron Рік тому +1

    It's the first time i see content from this channel pop up in my feeds...it feels kinda weird because i watch a lot of synths and electronic music content.
    Great content and subscribed 👏!
    Looking from different perspectives when approaching music is something i like to do aswell 😂

  • @Kenshearer
    @Kenshearer Рік тому

    Great video, thank you for the insight!

  • @vraalten
    @vraalten Рік тому +1

    Great video on a essential subject! I love the contemplation and questions that follow. I do recognise where you are coming from. As a composer and sound designer myself, I do think that the silence is as important as the sound. Just like a painter needs the blank canvas as the background, we do need silence as background. And this video also ties nicely with your recent video on composing sparsely without completely filling every moment with notes. Anyway, keep up the great and inspiring work! 👏👏👏

  • @manuelgonzales6483
    @manuelgonzales6483 Рік тому

    🤯 Love your channel ❤️

  • @valdie6614
    @valdie6614 Рік тому

    Damn, super well explained information in this video. Good job man!

  • @heartycoffee4754
    @heartycoffee4754 Рік тому +2

    the synth patch at 4:29 sounded so beautiful and haunting, i love synths like that

  • @davidleary5639
    @davidleary5639 Рік тому +21

    Hats off to you Jameson.Instead of reeling back into the Classical world = real music ,you've learned about the differences and now see the virtues of both .

  • @AndJusticeForAll...1985
    @AndJusticeForAll...1985 Рік тому

    your explanations are really intuitive. You make everything make sense

  • @slimyelow
    @slimyelow Рік тому

    This channel is a treasure trove since I've also studied composition for decades while at the same time producing electronica. I have never found an outlet where folks discuss these topics as a combo and certainly not on a level as passionate as I ponder about them.

  • @neonjams
    @neonjams Рік тому +11

    I like your search on new sounds, the journey from classical instruments like the organ/ piano to new territory combining it with synthesis. Also the knowledge on theory is pretty inspiring. I also came from an organ background and later on the bass and now also totally into synthesis. But the only thing I can do is test and improvise. But also growing in it. Nice movies, cheers from Holland

    • @JamesonNathanJones
      @JamesonNathanJones  Рік тому +2

      Thanks Rene! The experimentation process is a tremendous amount of fun. Happy exploring!

  • @obscenemachinery
    @obscenemachinery Рік тому

    Loved it! Subscribed and looking forward to your other videos, thanks :)

  • @nicolesoukalova
    @nicolesoukalova Рік тому

    Hi. Thank you so much for this video and your arguments. You speak from my soul. Thx.

  • @end-quote
    @end-quote 10 місяців тому

    happy I found this channel, beautiful music

  • @janbo8331
    @janbo8331 Рік тому

    Excellent presentation. I'm not a composer, a musician nor a sound engineer and many of the concepts discussed were new to me. You have a very nice pace and you use language very concisely, making your thought process easy to follow.
    Now, I'll go have a listen to some of your pieces. Perhaps the algorithm is onto something here.

  • @TheMcShay
    @TheMcShay Рік тому

    Amazing video and beautiful music!

  • @chukah9484
    @chukah9484 Рік тому

    Your perspective has been great - as an electronic musician that has begun taking piano lessons so I can get more classically trained.

  • @noelvox
    @noelvox Рік тому

    Fast becoming my favourite YT and your videos seem as timely as when I discovered your channel (if you can say that that within a month or so ago).
    I started as a singer (always will be) then a guitarist, then synths and finally and more recently concentrating on piano, not so much to be a pianist (that ship has sailed) but to improve my keyboard skills (the attack of a note, the decay etc feels no less real than a synth but is more an extension of the player, not unlike a guitar) but on the way I wished I had the opportunity to play piano a long time ago.
    It is such a fantastic compositional tool and is quick to let you know your compositional limits, ones that can't be covered by sound design, it makes no more or less than synths or any other instrument and is not without its own limitations of course but it is an incredible tool to express the melodies one can hear in their head or instinctively want to reach for and the transferrable skills can be a great short cut on other instruments.

  • @Station2Station-du2gh
    @Station2Station-du2gh Рік тому

    Thanks Nathan, as a pianist myself (classical training for 8 years in my younger years) who now has too much synth and modular gear, keep up the good work and the informative videos.

  • @patrickp9624
    @patrickp9624 Рік тому +2

    In the middle of the video I picked up my guitar (im not at all trained at it), put together some delays and reverbs and "played" for an hour or two. And your video made me do that instead of going to bed. thanks

  • @jooh4450
    @jooh4450 Рік тому

    Thanks so much. Super informative and interesting!

  • @wetpaperbag1346
    @wetpaperbag1346 Рік тому +7

    Your insight and approach is incredibly great. I'd say an artist who combines classical piano training with electronic music is Haywyre. He writes absolutely beautiful piano pieces alongside complex, layered electronic textures.
    Musicians sometimes get too focused on trying to emulate XYZ instead of first playing what sounds or feels good to them, then stretching a bit outside their comfort zone until they find something novel and beautiful.

  • @EELMO
    @EELMO Рік тому

    Beautiful video, humble mindset! Greetings from Brazil

  • @Kung_Fu_Jesus
    @Kung_Fu_Jesus Рік тому +4

    Superb advice. It’s taken me almost 2 decades to detach myself from my classical training and fully immerse myself in electron composition.

    • @prosperlost4046
      @prosperlost4046 Рік тому +2

      I'd like to be the first to make an ionic comment, but I'm positive that will be taken negatively.

  • @Timetraveller2208
    @Timetraveller2208 Рік тому

    That was a really very interesting video. Subbed!

  • @NTeKLullaby
    @NTeKLullaby Рік тому

    I've gotten into electronic music production last year, when I got sick for a longer period of time. As someone who avidly listened to music my entire life, I had funnily enough never really learned Music. I still try to wrap my head around scales, tempos and everything else. Envelopes and LFOs were a great mystery at the beginning, as I tried to work out the difference.
    Time skip a bit to today, where I stumbled upon your video. I've learned a lot thanks to it and was positively surprised as I have been doing things that you mentioned. These are two of the things, which kind of combine into a whole:
    Firstly I try to find/create interesting sounds and then create my melodies on a stock Grand Piano Synth, that comes with the sample project of the DAW that I am using, just to make sure that it sounds interesting enough, before putting both together and then proceeding to fine tune from there.
    Thanks for the great video.

  • @deltavoltmusic
    @deltavoltmusic Рік тому +2

    this is so crazy to me. as a synthwave artist with no classical training, i thought it would be like cake for a classically trained musician. i had no idea how demanding sound design is. glad have that skill in my pocket 😅

  • @maxricemusic656
    @maxricemusic656 Рік тому

    Fantastic video. I went to Point Blank Electronic Music School, and I totally see what your saying. I got into music playing guitar, but now sound design and synths are by far my main musical tool. I love classical music by the way, and have a lot to learn from it so you just got another subscriber!

  • @hi-gi1zz
    @hi-gi1zz Рік тому

    i’m so happy the youtube algorithm decided to throw you on my homepage, I was just about running dry for interesting ambient pieces to listen to and now i’ve been introduced to a whole new level of auditory beauty

  • @SharkUte
    @SharkUte Рік тому

    This was really interesting insight. As a "casual" musician at first (drums, guitar...) I slid towards more and more electronic genres as ambient/drone/psy-trance/experimental, and all those really pushed sound synthesis focused music. I always thought that the abilities that synths provides us to invent new music is beyond imagination. I remember the first time I recorded guitar on a proper DAW and went ham into absolutely annihilating the sound of the instrument and making something totally different and unexpected. The secret lies in the marriage of both I believe as well.
    Glad I randomly stumbled on this video, I was never trained in classical music and it helped me understand the subtilities you guys can bring.
    I'm also getting strong vibes of Nils Frahm from your music, who for me revolutionized how you could integrate organic feelings with electronic music so wonderfully.
    Thanks !

  • @SchubertDipDab
    @SchubertDipDab Рік тому

    Great video. Coming from Piano myself and now dipping my toes in the synth world, I tend to find some inspiration in the synth sounds themselves - there's no way I'd ever come up with particular ideas while sat at a piano keyboard.

  • @EK-gr9gd
    @EK-gr9gd Рік тому

    Great lecture!

  • @jamiestewart1644
    @jamiestewart1644 Рік тому

    Superb video and after years of of building and tinkering with modular and synths from a sound design perspective, just what I've been looking for. I'll never be 'classically' trained but I feel a real need for some theory and structure. Thanks

  • @belleepoque4597
    @belleepoque4597 Рік тому

    Great video. It has already been stated in the comments, but in my own way I struggle with this too. I love traditional counterpoint, voiceleading, harmony, form, etc... but also a deep love of industrial/noise, experimental electronic, etc... and my own journey involves integrating these things. You have given a lot to ponder. Thanks!

  • @altogethernow
    @altogethernow Рік тому

    I’m really enjoying your channel.

  • @xSaintxSmithx
    @xSaintxSmithx Рік тому +2

    I'm liking and commenting on every video you post cause this channels is CRIMINALLY underrated.

  • @PianistErikOsterberg
    @PianistErikOsterberg Рік тому

    Great video. Also, I really appreciated the last piece, "all things fade"

  • @__vidarr
    @__vidarr Рік тому

    Great valuable insights, thanks!

  • @danpreston564
    @danpreston564 Рік тому +1

    As someone who’s been making synth noises for the last 30 years I’m loving your music. You’re obviously a great writer of music, and your sounds are gorgeous.
    I find the more complex the sound I design is, the less suited it is to be used in a track. I use a Novation Peak to do my most complicated sound design, but I rarely end up using the sounds in an actual piece. They’re too big, too dense, too harmonically rich to fit in with other instruments, and I hate to compromise them by filtering out chunks of them to allow vocals, bass, or whatever, the space to breathe. So they remain as detached sounds, things I listen to in isolation whilst watching fractal videos on UA-cam. When I need to make sounds for actual pieces, they become much more like piano or guitar sounds.

  • @dublinimal
    @dublinimal Рік тому

    class video mate. much love from ireland

  • @nebula0697
    @nebula0697 Рік тому +8

    I think your (stunning) synth-based compositions in some cases reveal your classical training, because of the coherence. I'd be interested to see you make a short groove-based non-ambient track with drums and without reverb, just for kicks. Maybe there's already material like that on the channel, I haven't listened to it all.

    • @JamesonNathanJones
      @JamesonNathanJones  Рік тому

      I think there are a couple tracks on my last album that venture into that territory, though there are still some ambient elements: Turning and Roots maybe.

  • @soulwynd
    @soulwynd Рік тому

    Nice to see a video on the topic. About 30 years ago, I was a teenager learning classic piano, but also composing electronic music on a computer. For me, electronic music was using a tracker and a computer keyboard. I didn't even bother with midi controllers for tracker style music as they can be highly impractical. And best of all, it was all free.
    I tried getting back to it and just ended frustrated. Lots of tools evolved but now you have to dish out money everywhere or grab the exact same tools I was using 30 years ago to make tracker music. I feel there is a gap in music making currently.

  • @johnwright5126
    @johnwright5126 Рік тому

    Thank you for this! I thought it was just me. Moving to synth has been quite a challenge.

  • @gustavoturm
    @gustavoturm Рік тому

    Dude, I hope you keep exploring electronic music with your background of classical pianist. I came first from electronic music and went to study a bit of piano, classical musicians are always fascinated/confused by stuff I tell them about electronic music.

  • @mournblade1066
    @mournblade1066 Рік тому +1

    Isoa Tomita did AMAZING realizations of classical music on the synthesizer.

  • @mybachhertzbaud3074
    @mybachhertzbaud3074 Рік тому +5

    Isao Tomita got me completely into classical music. Still love to revoice classic Midis through my synths.😁🎵🎹🎶Play On

  • @yushee1324
    @yushee1324 Рік тому

    thats a very interesting video, makes me think, thank you so much! keep goin

  • @SKySWiM
    @SKySWiM Рік тому +2

    Interesting to hear your own saga of bridging the gap from classical piano to synth playing/composing. I can only partially relate to your struggle. Even though I started with classical piano taugh to me at age 5 by my grandfather (who played in the Boston Symph), I was exposed to a lot of orchestra and jazz music on the radio. Probably the single thing that helped me bridge the gap to synths (in hindsight) was starting to play trombone in the 7th grade. Playing a brass wind instrument intuitively gave me a general understanding of ADSR and high pass filter functions of synths, because music for trombone varied enough to give me real-life experiences with such things. Fiddling a lot on my high school friend's electronic organ also filled a few gaps for me.
    The pop synth song, "Popcorn," really opened my eyes (and ears) to possibilities that went beyond "real" instrument's ability to produce sound. And because of peer pressure in the 8th grade, I was more and more was getting over my aversion to pop music, because here and there, I heard a very well-crafted song, some of them being enhanced by early synths. I was very intrigued with Nights in White Satan by the Moody Blues, not just for its classical music ending (which is what initially attracted me), but with the haunting lo-fil violin sound, which turned out to be made by a Mellotron, which was the equivalent of an analog (non-digital) sampler.
    Like many classical synth lovers, I enjoyed Walter/Wendy Carlos Swiched-On Bach and all of Tomita's stuff. But I was blown away by Keith Emerson of ELP, who was taking synths into a realm that went beyond classical, beyond jazz, and into a wonderful new genre of progressive rock. Arguably, Chick Correa's Return to Forever was also an important and (in my opinion) the only true fusion of rock and jazz, which nicely included synths as something that held that genre together.
    During college, thanks to a job I had as a sound engineer at a theme park, being constantly indunated by a another engineer's obsesson with 80's music, I finally "got it," and started to see new ways to use synths. Groups like Devo, Yello, Art of Noise, Depeche Mode, ended up being major influences for me initially.
    By the 80's, I also started to run into a growing number of synth HATERS. Trained musicians hated them, because they say synths as taking their jobs (it did in many ways). Possibly more interesting (and defintetely more irririating to me), where NON-musicians, especially those who went to high school BEFORE the 80's, thought of synths as "CHEATING." They would say, "those are not REAL instruments," and often would say it takes "NO TALENT" to play one of them. In their mind, synths only required you to hold down one note for an entire song. 80's music, and the growing electronic music set of genres tended to produce more modal (and/or mono-chordal) music, so in a small sense, their criticism was correct. But as you pointed out in your video, one can argue that much of the work done to create synth music involves the PROGRAMMNING of the synth. Thanks to great increases in music technology, especially in the digital realm, aspects of synth programming has jumped far beyond synths, but have become integrated with a vast array of software algorithm apps that can take sounds of not only the synths, but each and every track of a song, and be able to "re-synthezie" all the sounds into just about anything else you want to make it, which is only limited to the abilities of the user to use these apps to manipulate the sounds.
    Because of all this music technology, it has created a kind of music genre that I have not really heard people talk about directly. I call it "EAR CANDY" music. This is not meant to sound derogatory. What I mean by it, is to listen to what I consider to be cutting-edge electronic music that shows off a lot of heavy creative editing work, but also includes a good amount of great song-crafting, which I think provides a kind of emotional basis of the song (similar to all older genres seem to try to do). "Ear candy" in music has been around for a long time. When the celeste was invented, there was a race between different composers to use that in their music. I think Tchaikovsky won it, when he used it in his Nutcraker music.
    I have greatly enjoyed and continue to enjoy my journey with synths and all its related music technology. But one irony, that at least as a composer, I have found that after treading through numerous genres in my songs, I seem to more and more infuse my original classical music influences into them, albeit, I always try to tweak something in the songs to go places that my composer heros of the past have not gone before.
    Please forgive me for being so verbose. And if possible, take it as a compliment. Your video triggered a lot of thinking, and I greatly appreciated that.

  • @InXLsisDeo
    @InXLsisDeo Рік тому

    Love your music and subbed immediately. I hope Nahre Sol will see this video soon.

    • @JamesonNathanJones
      @JamesonNathanJones  Рік тому

      Nahre is great! Her video on synths was certainly an inspiration, as I could relate to it a great deal.

  • @marco1941
    @marco1941 Рік тому

    Second of your videos watched. Nice, you got my sub. I’m interested in finding out more about your channel. Sounds pretty promising.
    Have a good day.

  • @strangerting7818
    @strangerting7818 Рік тому

    Very insightful. Subbed!

  • @subspeciez
    @subspeciez Рік тому

    New subscriber, I loved the video. I really enjoy the composition of the music you create!

  • @zeeshantariq1984
    @zeeshantariq1984 Рік тому

    intro vid!💖lovely score!

  • @musiclover-lh2hb
    @musiclover-lh2hb 29 днів тому

    Brillant James, thank you.