Thank you very much. I was listening to a podcast and they mentioned bass. I have never really been in tunded with music and have only taken an intro music course in high school. I was lost trying to decipher what I should be looking for or rather listening to in the beginning as I have little to no experience with this, however at the end when you broke up the music into it's sections it was all tied up and I was able to understand. This was very informative and found the shiny disc a very cool bit of information to share which would probably go overlooked or taken for granted
Thanks much for the help! In the back of my head, I was already laying out tracks like such, I just hadn't thought of it the way you put it. Good stuff! You got my subscription.
@proballa01 When we count bars of music in order to keep the beat, if the song is in 4/4 time, we count 1234 2234 3234 4234. This is how the majority of school instrumental music programs teach counting. My band students count this way as well. It helps keep the beat and to subdivide so you know which beat of the measure you are on.
oh, so you have a beat, which is at the beginning, then followed by a bass line or a melody, and then they will join together to have a beat, base line and a melody together? COOL STUFF MAN
Its a form a counting that helps keep track of how many measures you have counted. Some count it like 1123 2123 3123 4123 and others count it like 1234 2234 3234 4234 (in both examples each measure is separated by a space). Either way of counting still results in 4 beats for every measure
one one two three... that gave me an anxiety attack.. lol
this guy is great...... how helpful and kind are you to do that.
Thank you very much. I was listening to a podcast and they mentioned bass. I have never really been in tunded with music and have only taken an intro music course in high school. I was lost trying to decipher what I should be looking for or rather listening to in the beginning as I have little to no experience with this, however at the end when you broke up the music into it's sections it was all tied up and I was able to understand. This was very informative and found the shiny disc a very cool bit of information to share which would probably go overlooked or taken for granted
Thanks much for the help!
In the back of my head, I was already laying out tracks like such, I just hadn't thought of it the way you put it. Good stuff! You got my subscription.
@ellaskins You know what? I love you, man. You can give a tutorial even in this basic subject. You are the best tutor on the whole youtube.
11 years ago
just watched this video! whatta personality you are!! thank you !!!
Thanks, that first track was great to show the differences between the 3
Ohh wow, thanks so much! I'm not a musical person at all, but I understood this fantastically.
@proballa01 When we count bars of music in order to keep the beat, if the song is in 4/4 time, we count 1234 2234 3234 4234. This is how the majority of school instrumental music programs teach counting. My band students count this way as well. It helps keep the beat and to subdivide so you know which beat of the measure you are on.
How ironic that I should see this vid on th day I get my music synthesizer...Keep it up, dude - nice tutorial!
The Track is "Under The Shower" by Prax Paris!
Woah this is ancient
First song is from:
Alan Braxe & Fred Falke - Running
Junor Jack " samba"
I agree and confused as well
oh, so you have a beat, which is at the beginning, then followed by a bass line or a melody, and then they will join together to have a beat, base line and a melody together? COOL STUFF MAN
Its a form a counting that helps keep track of how many measures you have counted. Some count it like 1123 2123 3123 4123 and others count it like 1234 2234 3234 4234 (in both examples each measure is separated by a space). Either way of counting still results in 4 beats for every measure
What song?
What's the first track called Johnathan?
Hez the Best!
Wow all the other comments are so old :O
@proballa01 he just counted that that way to remember which bar he is in.
Very nice tutorials!!! Thanks a lot
Whats the name of the last song?
O wow. 2006.
Ikr
Alan Braxe & Fred Falke - Intro
watch his other vids..
awesome :D Subscribe