You reminded me of a pleasant memory. Here, we had a show called "The Electric Company", which in the first season ended each episode with a segment called "Love of Chair", a very short-form soap opera about a boy in a small, nondescript room, his chair, and whatever else might be going on with him at that moment. At the end of each segment, the announcer would ask, "...but what about Naomi?" I'm sharing this on the off chance something helpful might come out of it. Great video, and a very interesting process!
Try learning some more music theory and then try applying it to your songs. Chords especially. Get a hang of the 1-4-6-5 chord progression or other variations of it. Create chords that last a beat out of 4 beats (being in 4/4). Then spice it up rhytmically. Coursera and Udemy are your friends. I would also suggest checking out Andrew Huang's video "Learning music theory in 30 minutes" (or something like that. It's a really good one.
"Inspiration will come, if you watch this video" 💐
You reminded me of a pleasant memory. Here, we had a show called "The Electric Company", which in the first season ended each episode with a segment called "Love of Chair", a very short-form soap opera about a boy in a small, nondescript room, his chair, and whatever else might be going on with him at that moment. At the end of each segment, the announcer would ask, "...but what about Naomi?" I'm sharing this on the off chance something helpful might come out of it. Great video, and a very interesting process!
These videos are really interesting, and I'm not even into music making!
Keep up the good work!
What is the UA-cam video that is always playing? I like your videos so far :)
it's James Scholz "study with me"! very helpful when I need a focus buddy :) www.youtube.com/@JamesScholz/streams
Happy to have you here 💓
Try learning some more music theory and then try applying it to your songs. Chords especially. Get a hang of the 1-4-6-5 chord progression or other variations of it. Create chords that last a beat out of 4 beats (being in 4/4). Then spice it up rhytmically. Coursera and Udemy are your friends. I would also suggest checking out Andrew Huang's video "Learning music theory in 30 minutes" (or something like that. It's a really good one.
ua-cam.com/video/rgaTLrZGlk0/v-deo.htmlsi=2qMoFJ0mOwroZvF1
You kids quieten down out there