Hey man, unrelated to the song, but if you have the time I could use some help.. I started using fl studio about a month ago, I can perfectly remake songs in the sense that I can make out all the drums, pads, melodies, etc... but I can never get the sound right. I use plugins for synths like vital, and I understand it somewhat, but I still cannot get it to sound "deep" or basically have good sound like how it'd be in the original song. I guess it has something to do with mixing as well, but I'm not sure (don't understand the mixer really). I'd be happy if you could just give one tip or something, thanks. I like your music, I watch your videos frequently but this is the first time I commented.
it's normal you won't get the hang of it after a month, you know.. there's a lot of aspects required to get right in order to recreate a song and it's most likely due to your ear simply not being trained enough yet. the more you make and recreate, the more your ear builds an "intuition" as to how you should go about recreating certain sounds. also, when i was remaking songs, i had that problem of my recreations not sounding as "deep" as the original, but often times it's because you're so used to the original, anything else just sounds weird. my advice is to just keep going and have fun with it honestly!
@nightigerxo Yeah, I kind of get that I'm still very unexperienced. But from my point of view it seems like at least to me that my progress has been huge, since I can do everything besides mixing and yeah getting the song to actually sound like the original. It might be what you said about it sounding weird, but other remakes of more experienced people sound good to me. I think I just don't yet understand how to add depth and flavor to the songs, I have the barebones like chords and melodies but not the main point which attracts me most. That's also why I commented under this video, this is an ambient style song (interesting with the breakcore addition lol), which I mainly do and recreate in order to learn myself how to do them. I can make cool sounds with the plugin but that depth you can always hear, idk how to explain it, I can't recreate it. But I'll take your advice and have fun with it! I still am having fun, after all. Thanks for the reply, by the way.
@@technoslaviaalright so, the "thin" of "empty" elements you hear in your songs are indeed part of not being properly mixed, so things like relative volume, eq, panning and compression play a large part on giving every instrument it's own place in the mix, for example, a bass and kick drum are very close in the eq band, and a way to avoid them fighting each other for space in your mix is using sidechain compression, but I suposse you already now this, anyway try aplying that logic to all the elements on your mix and you'll see what I mean, cheers
some experimental stuff
I love it make more
experiment success i would say
Big fan of the pads
ahhhh that ambience
I love your beats brooo
i'm glad😊
i love this, you should add a super heavy drop with kick and snare
ANOTHER ONE DAMN DUDE U JUST PUSHING THESE OUT DAILY
not like i got much else to do😅
@nightigerxo makes sense vro im jealous
insane
начал смотреть твои туториалы и теперь биты твои слушаю ты лучший! С НОВЫМ ГОДОМ!
happy new year!:)
@nightigerxo 🌹
Sounds like something come out from Stranger Things
love this one
holy
God Damn
красавчик брат!
bardzo ladne stary pchaj to gowno dalejh bedziesz wielki:))
😄👋
I want to hear the pluggnb beat you make🙇♀
I FW TS❤🔥
Spotify🙏
Hey man, unrelated to the song, but if you have the time I could use some help.. I started using fl studio about a month ago, I can perfectly remake songs in the sense that I can make out all the drums, pads, melodies, etc... but I can never get the sound right. I use plugins for synths like vital, and I understand it somewhat, but I still cannot get it to sound "deep" or basically have good sound like how it'd be in the original song. I guess it has something to do with mixing as well, but I'm not sure (don't understand the mixer really). I'd be happy if you could just give one tip or something, thanks. I like your music, I watch your videos frequently but this is the first time I commented.
it's normal you won't get the hang of it after a month, you know.. there's a lot of aspects required to get right in order to recreate a song and it's most likely due to your ear simply not being trained enough yet. the more you make and recreate, the more your ear builds an "intuition" as to how you should go about recreating certain sounds. also, when i was remaking songs, i had that problem of my recreations not sounding as "deep" as the original, but often times it's because you're so used to the original, anything else just sounds weird. my advice is to just keep going and have fun with it honestly!
@nightigerxo Yeah, I kind of get that I'm still very unexperienced. But from my point of view it seems like at least to me that my progress has been huge, since I can do everything besides mixing and yeah getting the song to actually sound like the original. It might be what you said about it sounding weird, but other remakes of more experienced people sound good to me. I think I just don't yet understand how to add depth and flavor to the songs, I have the barebones like chords and melodies but not the main point which attracts me most. That's also why I commented under this video, this is an ambient style song (interesting with the breakcore addition lol), which I mainly do and recreate in order to learn myself how to do them. I can make cool sounds with the plugin but that depth you can always hear, idk how to explain it, I can't recreate it. But I'll take your advice and have fun with it! I still am having fun, after all. Thanks for the reply, by the way.
@@technoslaviaalright so, the "thin" of "empty" elements you hear in your songs are indeed part of not being properly mixed, so things like relative volume, eq, panning and compression play a large part on giving every instrument it's own place in the mix, for example, a bass and kick drum are very close in the eq band, and a way to avoid them fighting each other for space in your mix is using sidechain compression, but I suposse you already now this, anyway try aplying that logic to all the elements on your mix and you'll see what I mean, cheers
First