BRO WHATTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT THIS IS CRAZY ALSO DOING THIS IN A TRACKER WITH THESE CRAZY PITCH SHIFTS, YOU EVEN DID THIS WITH THE 909 SHIT BROOOOOOOOOOOO IMPRESSIVE
@@goddanmith2237 long reply here I would say listening to other breakcore artists and trying out their techniques/styles of making breakcore that they use and you try to adapt to that. An example is that in this video and in a video that I just uploaded right now, you can hear that I use weird samples, hardcore techno kicks, and fast tempos. I listened to artists like Kid606, Alec Empire, Doormouse, Venetian Snares and tried to kind of ''''''''''''''''copy'''''''''''''''' their stuff while mixing in some of my own experimentation as well. How and what you use to make breakcore affects your workflow too. I use FL Studio 21 and tracker software (PT2, OctaMED, and FT2). FL is good because you have a playlist with 500 tracks, a timeline, a piano roll, a mixer with like 100 or something channels, and as much instruments as you'd like to have. You could get your ideas and put it in the piano roll with ease. I use trackers because of the limitations, aesthetic, sample use + commands, and the interesting stuff you can make, as well as other people can make with trackers. I can get my ideas flowing and quickly type away at my kewboard putting together patterns on tracks. At the end of the day it all comes down to preferences n experimentation, but a DAW and tracker are both good for breakcore, IDM, Jungle, whatever.
Its alright but just because its breakcore it doesnt mean it needs to sound like a car crash, you can keep some repitition for over a single measure. When the music is constantly changing every second it makes it difficult to actually enjoy it, chaotic can be good, but theres not much of a point in chaotic music when its so all over the place its hard to pinpoint any rhythm at all.
maybe keep it in the oven for a couple extra minutes, but not a bad meal so far
BRO WHATTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT THIS IS CRAZY ALSO DOING THIS IN A TRACKER WITH THESE CRAZY PITCH SHIFTS, YOU EVEN DID THIS WITH THE 909 SHIT BROOOOOOOOOOOO IMPRESSIVE
do you think you could make something like this in a tracker as well lol
@@Newtined with some learning yeah ahaha
@@vafiiiiwell you can always analyze the video and study what does what
up until the last part i thought: "I can def hear the cooking but i can't see the food". Otherwise it was great!!
BRO COOKED AND SERVED‼️‼️‼️🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🗣🗣🗣🗣
You cooked the onion rings to perfection
hell yeah
also me when I cook at burger world
bubble bass been real quiet since this dropped 🥶
WE ARE REVIVING DIGITAL HARDCORE WITH THIS ONE🗣🗣🗣🔥🔥🔥
YES U DID. U COOKED. U DELIVERED
Paula’s cooked now
tickles my brain
Slaps, I envy you.
COOKED
no 😔(yes you did. Keep going.)
ONION RING !!!!!!??!!??!
hell yeah chief that was tasty af
Amazing 🔥🔥
whens it coming out on spotify🔥🔥🔥🔥
never
yes you did :D
yes
venetian snares
gay
@@Newtined apesex twin
this some emma essex (halley labs) type shit 🔥🔥🔥
whats bro rambling about🔥🔥🔥
Man, you're suxh flexible artist, how long have you been making breakcore?
4-6 months
not that long kek
@@Newtined any tip for beginner at breakcore?
@@goddanmith2237 long reply here
I would say listening to other breakcore artists and trying out their techniques/styles of making breakcore that they use and you try to adapt to that.
An example is that in this video and in a video that I just uploaded right now, you can hear that I use weird samples, hardcore techno kicks, and fast tempos. I listened to artists like Kid606, Alec Empire, Doormouse, Venetian Snares and tried to kind of ''''''''''''''''copy'''''''''''''''' their stuff while mixing in some of my own experimentation as well.
How and what you use to make breakcore affects your workflow too. I use FL Studio 21 and tracker software (PT2, OctaMED, and FT2). FL is good because you have a playlist with 500 tracks, a timeline, a piano roll, a mixer with like 100 or something channels, and as much instruments as you'd like to have. You could get your ideas and put it in the piano roll with ease. I use trackers because of the limitations, aesthetic, sample use + commands, and the interesting stuff you can make, as well as other people can make with trackers. I can get my ideas flowing and quickly type away at my kewboard putting together patterns on tracks.
At the end of the day it all comes down to preferences n experimentation, but a DAW and tracker are both good for breakcore, IDM, Jungle, whatever.
She's ahh music 💀
Did i hear onion ring at the start
yes
@@Newtined lol
(Gordon Ramsay voice) Delicious, finally some real fucking breakcore. None of that ambient atmospheric jungle or whatever, *real* breakcore.
Make an actual cooking video then edit with these sounds instead.
Its alright but just because its breakcore it doesnt mean it needs to sound like a car crash, you can keep some repitition for over a single measure. When the music is constantly changing every second it makes it difficult to actually enjoy it, chaotic can be good, but theres not much of a point in chaotic music when its so all over the place its hard to pinpoint any rhythm at all.
yeah im working on it
this isnt supposed to be good bruh
no 3/10
ok