"Its never about the kick - It`s everything more around the kick" I really appreciate that kind of mindset which alot of people around me dont share. I actually can recall people sitting an entire night around a kickdrum before even creating a track which is quite tedious and boring imho.
I paid for this on your channel and it was a waste of money. Luke Slater is a great producer but this was not a good explanation of his process. It would have been so much more useful for him to work on a finished track rather than something that he made in 10 minutes, then explain his process from start to finish. In this tutorial he states that he creates an effects layer for each clean channel but then doesn't really show any of his processing. Additionally, when you are showing his screen, there is no need to show the video of the room over the top of it. It blocks off the important part of his screen where we might see his effects and settings.
ok, maybe depends on stage where one is at. in short, he only said, that he is limiting himself, to avoid getting lost in the endless possibilities. thats creativity 101
"Its never about the kick - It`s everything more around the kick"
I really appreciate that kind of mindset which alot of people around me dont share.
I actually can recall people sitting an entire night around a kickdrum before even creating a track which is quite tedious and boring imho.
In my opinion this class was very deep and interesting, not your average yt tutorial
Philosophie de composition, je prends, merci à Echio et à Luke
cannot wait to get into this
Give a man a lapel mic and he can teach for the day ..
HYPED 👁️👅👁️
I paid for this on your channel and it was a waste of money. Luke Slater is a great producer but this was not a good explanation of his process. It would have been so much more useful for him to work on a finished track rather than something that he made in 10 minutes, then explain his process from start to finish. In this tutorial he states that he creates an effects layer for each clean channel but then doesn't really show any of his processing.
Additionally, when you are showing his screen, there is no need to show the video of the room over the top of it. It blocks off the important part of his screen where we might see his effects and settings.
Thanks for letting us know!
Well, that was utterly useless.
i think so too
How? I thought it was great advice
ok, maybe depends on stage where one is at. in short, he only said, that he is limiting himself, to avoid getting lost in the endless possibilities. thats creativity 101
you can also try limiting yourself to 8 simultaneous tracks to emulate a retro tape deck/mixer style. @@kw1ksh0t
I thought very useful to know ow his thought process here