Thank you for including my renoise tutorial :-) Also if others were interested, there is a few .xrns (project file) showcases on my channel, to see how some of my projects look when being played
It is kind of crazy how if you look into any genre of electronic music you will find more and more subgenres, micro genres and styles as you get deeper. With artists often taking elements from other genres both related and unrelated to make their own unique sound. This is why electronic music is the ultimate expression of creativity freedom and self expression. There is no need to limit yourself to playing piano, guitar or even to use the notes of a traditional scale. Any sound heard, imagined, or unimagined can be created, then filtered, compressed, distorted and more to fit what ever style you want to create. Genres are just a construction of our own minds as we attempt to identify a piece of audio by the patterns and elements it shares with what we have heard before. Putting it in a box with other things that seem similar enough, so that we have context to understand it.
Renoise is great. Not just for Breakcore, but also for other related genres like Jungle, Breakbeat Hardcore, 90s DnB, Jungle Tekno, and really anything else that makes heavy usage of samples. Not as versatile as more traditional DAWs though, so in my experience it's sometimes useful to have something like FL Studio in order to supplement some of Renoise's shortcomings.
He's not only learnt from his mistakes, but has used it to grow into a better creator and expanded their musical ideas. What a nice person. He's probably only a few years away from putting a picture of his favourite pet into his spectrograph. Well done, bro!
i heard that venetian snares and some artists on the DHR label have made breakcore on an Amiga 500 with OctaMED. An Amiga computer has only 4 channels of audio with 0.5MB of RAM for using 8 bit samples. Artists have been using trackers to sequence these samples into songs like you've said, trackers have also been used heavely in the demoscene in the late 80s and early 90s.
what a find, I just discovered your channel though making vst plugin and now I'm here, pretty cool you avatar and how you use it, keep it up man and thank you for taking your time to shared this
noice! trackers are also good for techno genres, i write hardcore techno/terror/speedcore/breakcore/jungle/dnb/trap on my tracker, i use polyend tracker tho, one day, might go renoise full time but the hardware tracker can do a lot and im still a beginner so its been working out pretty well for me, great video and expecting more stuff like this soon!
people who say renoise is better or superior to make breakcore than other daws just have been using trackers their entire life and havent tried anything else or not in depth enough. everything that renoise can do fl and ableton can do or more
all """industry standard""" daws are designed to do the same. the only slightly different thing is the workflow (which comes to personal preference.) if you learn your preferred daw in depth enough you will be able to do the same thing as you would have in other. no daw is easier than other. some people say ableton is the easiest and others say it's fl studio, but its all preference. there is no correct way to make music but the one you feel the most comfortable with.
Yes, and it'll sound the same, but will feel less authentic to the artist not doing it the "real" way. You're only right if you consider the perspective of the listener, who may not think as critically.
It's totally not necessary to use a tracker to get that stuff going. Back in the day we did because thats all we had - the cheap way to make music was Amiga, and Tracker and thats where a lot of this style came from. But you don't need the old tools to make breakcore ... actually this guy has no idea what he's talking about.
Thank you for including my renoise tutorial :-)
Also if others were interested, there is a few .xrns (project file) showcases on my channel, to see how some of my projects look when being played
It is kind of crazy how if you look into any genre of electronic music you will find more and more subgenres, micro genres and styles as you get deeper. With artists often taking elements from other genres both related and unrelated to make their own unique sound. This is why electronic music is the ultimate expression of creativity freedom and self expression. There is no need to limit yourself to playing piano, guitar or even to use the notes of a traditional scale. Any sound heard, imagined, or unimagined can be created, then filtered, compressed, distorted and more to fit what ever style you want to create. Genres are just a construction of our own minds as we attempt to identify a piece of audio by the patterns and elements it shares with what we have heard before. Putting it in a box with other things that seem similar enough, so that we have context to understand it.
FL studio go BRRRRRT
Trackers go
B
R
R
R
R
T
Renoise is great. Not just for Breakcore, but also for other related genres like Jungle, Breakbeat Hardcore, 90s DnB, Jungle Tekno, and really anything else that makes heavy usage of samples. Not as versatile as more traditional DAWs though, so in my experience it's sometimes useful to have something like FL Studio in order to supplement some of Renoise's shortcomings.
He's not only learnt from his mistakes, but has used it to grow into a better creator and expanded their musical ideas. What a nice person. He's probably only a few years away from putting a picture of his favourite pet into his spectrograph. Well done, bro!
i heard that venetian snares and some artists on the DHR label have made breakcore on an Amiga 500 with OctaMED. An Amiga computer has only 4 channels of audio with 0.5MB of RAM for using 8 bit samples. Artists have been using trackers to sequence these samples into songs like you've said, trackers have also been used heavely in the demoscene in the late 80s and early 90s.
Amazing Video!
Finally a video that actually explains everything really well, thank you ^^
what a find, I just discovered your channel though making vst plugin and now I'm here, pretty cool you avatar and how you use it, keep it up man and thank you for taking your time to shared this
noice! trackers are also good for techno genres, i write hardcore techno/terror/speedcore/breakcore/jungle/dnb/trap on my tracker, i use polyend tracker tho, one day, might go renoise full time but the hardware tracker can do a lot and im still a beginner so its been working out pretty well for me, great video and expecting more stuff like this soon!
You're a real one Glueue. I basically think in arrangement - if a trackerhead could explain the appeal I'm curious
6:55 - you too can now speak to aliens lol. anyway loved the breakcore videos thanks dude :)
нифига себе, аж 3 часть, не то что бы я против не все равно необычно как то
I need a 4th video, I'm glad i found this channel. Good stuff bro
your channel is a goldmine
i've been messing around with Renoise and i'm loving it so far.
Renoise is also pretty cheap, too.
I'll add another album to the must listen list:
Data Fata Morgana by Airlock (can only be found on bandcamp)
It's a breakcore masterclass imo
Respect to you for correcting yoursrlf and learning. Subbed.
renoise is so fun to use
Where do you find such perfect video covers for the music you make, the annoying orange one was just masterfully choose
i love amen
milkytracker rise up
So an entire genre is gatekept by using software? The internet is a magical place
first also i love breakcore
hey what app do you use to make music?
In this video it's renoise and ableton
people who say renoise is better or superior to make breakcore than other daws just have been using trackers their entire life and havent tried anything else or not in depth enough. everything that renoise can do fl and ableton can do or more
all """industry standard""" daws are designed to do the same. the only slightly different thing is the workflow (which comes to personal preference.) if you learn your preferred daw in depth enough you will be able to do the same thing as you would have in other. no daw is easier than other. some people say ableton is the easiest and others say it's fl studio, but its all preference. there is no correct way to make music but the one you feel the most comfortable with.
Are you sure about that? because fl/ableton breakcore and renoise breakcore are different things
@@bbtund81No tf they are not. Pull your head out of your rear.
@@personnelproton How the fuck do you know? You haven't seen it yet
stamza? excuse me??? it;'s stazma!!!
5:56 omfg is that a motherfucking doom tijoe last fm spotify 808 drums reference?!
masunya_jak.jpg
lol stamza
You can do 90% of that with something with SliceX in FL
Yes, and it'll sound the same, but will feel less authentic to the artist not doing it the "real" way. You're only right if you consider the perspective of the listener, who may not think as critically.
And it'll be considerably less fun and engaging.
@@NeuKatalYst >implying there is a correct way to do it
@@junglistloli Yes, which was also my point: "authentic" and "correct" aren't mutually exclusive if- and when the end-result sounds good.
no
is stazma, not stamza XD
Idk who told you that real breakcore is only made on a tracker, because that's blatantly just not true, even if I do prefer using trackers.
Seriously whoever said that should go tell that to Doormouse and see what happens 😂
It's totally not necessary to use a tracker to get that stuff going. Back in the day we did because thats all we had - the cheap way to make music was Amiga, and Tracker and thats where a lot of this style came from. But you don't need the old tools to make breakcore ... actually this guy has no idea what he's talking about.
@VoviBen That makes no sense at all.
lups andr nis, hu ... чел, твой акцент тя выдает как бы ты ни старался