Man, thank you so much for this tutorial! You taught me more in these 20 minutes than I learned from 12-hour tutorials! You're amazing. I'm subscribing and checking out the rest of your content!
From what I understand it is mostly preference or just ability. Like if you play instruments and want to be as original as possible you would like make your own melodies and just loop it after recording it. Same applies to the drums I guess. As long as we are following the general rule while making them it should be alright. Otherwise buying the beats and loops is what most people do as it is easier and does not require any instrument skills.
Depends on how many people are in on the project and how much you’re getting paid haha. But seriously though, mixing as you go along is like doing the dishes as you dirty them instead of waiting til the sink is full and you’re searching for a clean fork lol
its kinda funny and sad how you're constantly like "we dont do that anymore" to basically everything that requires even a bit of extra effort. great vid tho thanks
Bruh, this is a beginner's tutorial. In other words it's about learning the fundamentals of song structure, i.e. what's most common, and you can therefore reliably use as a format to finish your first or first few beats and not be immediate recognized as amateur. (Well not for your arrangement anyway. The rest could still give it away, lol.) Only after you've gotten the framework down can you make effective variations that still fit the genre. This is true if you're making beats to sell rather than use especially, because you're going to want to make something an artist can actually use. I mean, you could go totally avant garde, follow no pattern at all, and see what shakes out. Especially if you're making beats for yourself. Music is art afterall so there are no actual rules and there's always room for experimental stuff in any genre. Like, I've seen hip hop written in 3/4 (waltz time, no back beat), I've seen people sample everything from classical music to the weather channel, I've even heard rappers trying on silly voices in their work. Artists do be experimenting in hip hop, no question. That's not what this video set out to cover, though. Plus, arrangement is rarely where the artistry comes in anyway. This format probably applies to some of the best hip hop ever made as much as the shittiest, because it really doesn't have much impact of the quality of a song. Well, on improving one I mean. You could certainly wreck a song with bad pacing.
@@Jezzbo But are they original? And, buying loops off of him would suggest no musical skill needed if you purchase them. You buy his loops and stack them, then pretend you're a musician. My overall point still holds up. Edit: Laugh emoji normally shows a lack of intelligence since you obviously believe that laughing at people is productive in conversation.
I agree, I don’t want anyone to have me listen to “their” beat if they used other peoples loops, you are basically a dj, just selecting what you think sounds good, and what’s funny is it’s just gonna get worse, now we are gonna have to hear people tell us “look what The beat i made” when really they just typed a prompt and told ai to make them something, I’d rather listen to a bedroom rapper than the best ai rap song ever made.
Thanks!
These are fire tips. Very impressed with your fast WORKFLOW!
Man, thank you so much for this tutorial! You taught me more in these 20 minutes than I learned from 12-hour tutorials! You're amazing. I'm subscribing and checking out the rest of your content!
I didn't have any idear until I watched this video, thanx ❤️❤️❤️
Wow man this is such an awesome Hip Hop tutorial I love it.😃👍❤️
Thanks!
Wow thank you!!
Man... this was good... You have a gift with communication - Continued success
You sir, are a blessing!
look at 2pac man, so inspirational thank you man, salutes from brazil
😅😅😅
16bars intro, 16bars refrain, 16 verse, 8 bar bridge, (so verse is 24bars) 16bars refrain, 24 bars verse, 16 bars refrain, 8-16bars outro
Man, this guy is pretty amazing at what's he's been doing that's why he's got a 1M.
"Ima let you do the hard work" 🗣
This genre is nothing like me but I’ve wanted to try it lol. Thanks
I really need this...thank you...
GREAT walkthrough Thank you
Personal Timestamps
Fading Audio 3:34
Chopping Audio 10:18
Making Clips Unique 14:30
Busy, with your help i made an absolute banger🔥🔥🔥
Preciate you man, this taught me a lot.
Blessup mi geegiven thanksmi general
These are great tips. Thank you :)
Smooth work🙏🏽
Thank you, de verdad vato, gracias
Amazing tutorial bro, thanks for sharing!
Busyyyy💪🏾💪🏾
5:57 THE BRAINROT HAS GOTTEN ME
HAWK WHAT?
Really nice teach keep it up bro thanks alot
i learned a lot from you brother !!
THANK YOU BRO !!
Nice
🙏🙏🙏 thanks man
Thank you
Nice!
Hey. BW, i wanted to know how to set fl 21 to auto crossfade ? i just downloaded it please advise
Lmk if you find out
Such great info, thank you!
What's the best FL studio to get for making hip hop and vocal recording?
🔥🔥
Super easy
So, is it normal to just buy beats and loops and put them together to make a song? You don't have to make all of it yourself?
yeah that's what i'm thinking
From what I understand it is mostly preference or just ability. Like if you play instruments and want to be as original as possible you would like make your own melodies and just loop it after recording it. Same applies to the drums I guess. As long as we are following the general rule while making them it should be alright. Otherwise buying the beats and loops is what most people do as it is easier and does not require any instrument skills.
No, he just demonstrated it with loops. I'm sure he doesn't work with so many loops otherwise.
@@danthemalay Using other people's loops means you aren't a musician. The people who created them are.
I cant tell u how many time i used gross beat while its trial version then its not there wen i come back ....ugh
I'm confused as the producer am I in charge of mixing the beat or is that the artist and sound engineer job?
if you learn how to mix its pretty advantageous to be able to do it yourself but you dont have to
Depends on how many people are in on the project and how much you’re getting paid haha. But seriously though, mixing as you go along is like doing the dishes as you dirty them instead of waiting til the sink is full and you’re searching for a clean fork lol
What’s the DAW you’re using?
FL STUDIO
@ Thank you.
Can you do please blaxt type beat 🙏🏾
BwB💓Ever
yesssiir
🙏
7:09
🎼🎹🎵🎞️🎬
Tries to explain arrangement can't help but make a beat 😂 it's cool though because I learned a lot
👍🏾
👍
its kinda funny and sad how you're constantly like "we dont do that anymore" to basically everything that requires even a bit of extra effort. great vid tho thanks
Wagwan
Nothing says "quality music" quite like a formula eh ;)
Bruh, this is a beginner's tutorial. In other words it's about learning the fundamentals of song structure, i.e. what's most common, and you can therefore reliably use as a format to finish your first or first few beats and not be immediate recognized as amateur. (Well not for your arrangement anyway. The rest could still give it away, lol.)
Only after you've gotten the framework down can you make effective variations that still fit the genre. This is true if you're making beats to sell rather than use especially, because you're going to want to make something an artist can actually use.
I mean, you could go totally avant garde, follow no pattern at all, and see what shakes out. Especially if you're making beats for yourself. Music is art afterall so there are no actual rules and there's always room for experimental stuff in any genre.
Like, I've seen hip hop written in 3/4 (waltz time, no back beat), I've seen people sample everything from classical music to the weather channel, I've even heard rappers trying on silly voices in their work. Artists do be experimenting in hip hop, no question.
That's not what this video set out to cover, though.
Plus, arrangement is rarely where the artistry comes in anyway. This format probably applies to some of the best hip hop ever made as much as the shittiest, because it really doesn't have much impact of the quality of a song. Well, on improving one I mean. You could certainly wreck a song with bad pacing.
Hey tupac !! Who shot ya ?
So basically, use other people's loops they created and stack them, then pretend you're a musician.
He’s showing arrangement not how to make a beat dumbahh lil boy
I’m pretty sure
That’s his loops off his website 😂
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
@@Jezzbo But are they original? And, buying loops off of him would suggest no musical skill needed if you purchase them. You buy his loops and stack them, then pretend you're a musician. My overall point still holds up.
Edit: Laugh emoji normally shows a lack of intelligence since you obviously believe that laughing at people is productive in conversation.
I agree, I don’t want anyone to have me listen to “their” beat if they used other peoples loops, you are basically a dj, just selecting what you think sounds good, and what’s funny is it’s just gonna get worse, now we are gonna have to hear people tell us “look what The beat i made” when really they just typed a prompt and told ai to make them something, I’d rather listen to a bedroom rapper than the best ai rap song ever made.
Negas