@guam111 I don't want the dude to make shit for me ... I just want a more detailed to what, why, and how the chord progression works ... not just click til it sounds good
@checkoutthewindow3938 exactly lmaooo ... Harmony is what sets these beats apart, but no one explains how to compose it or the music theory behind it ...
@@MafiaPyro One of the chords he made, the B-F-A#-D# is a chord I personally don't see often. It's a Maj7b5. Kinda has a dominant sound to it and feels like it's the "tension" chord. He made it by, making a BMaj7, and then moving the 5th, (the F#) down a half-step and moving the D# up to give it a more open sound. But none of that is what really matters in the grand scheme. Your not gonna typically think, "oh I need a Maj7b5" when making music. But I agree, it was and still is annoying with how little you can learn from producers at a certain point. Half of them can't explain it anyway, because they don't know why it works. They just use their ears. At the end of the day it really is just "Use your ears". The theory will train your ears, internalize what you learn, help you navigate, breakdown other peoples music. Build good habits. But it's not a replacement for practice and an experienced ear. Look at this genre th-cam.com/video/HDy4khFK6BI/w-d-xo.html All of this is done mostly by ear. Just jamming around on a piano or piano roll until you get good is a must, with or without theory. Theory helps you identify what other people are doing, like I did here. But it's hard to make music creatively from scratch if you start with theory constantly in mind. My best stuff is made from improv on the piano, and from experimentation and grinding the piano roll. But my best breakthroughs getting there are through learning and experimenting. I've been making beats for 8 years and I'm at a level that I like for the most part, but I want to make more than just beats now. The inspiration moved for sure. Mike Dean was like, my idol. Now I'm inspired by people like Yoko Kanno, Kevin Penkins etc. Never stop learning. Never stop experimenting. But remember, at some point you gotta earn your skill and grind. It's rare that you get someone who has done enough of both. Also, if you got any questions then ask away.
🔥Grab 3.6GB+ of unreleased, 100% royalty free melodies, samples, drums & 808s for FREE here: prodgrnd.com/3WMIQtf
Pluggnb on Producer grind? What a time to be alive
bro got a real human girl in his room but still cranking some beats
mad respect
Must be wild to u huh🤣
@@joemomma6317 😆
bro said real human girl
how you know thats not his sister
@@ProdGhosty-2z why would his sister be sleeping in his room
Super simple and easy to follow along. Thanks man
Big props to DoTheDash for sharing the sauce! Great presentation fr
@TeamProducergrind is this available to download?
Always in clutch, finally pluggnb. Yall dont disappoint
bro you just refreshed my theory training in two minutes flat your a genius
I come back and watch this video every couple months. This bounce is perfect 🔥🙏🏾💎
Insane!!!
🔥🔥🔥 W video! You killed this bro 💯
fye
Bruh ts is soo good, I cried.
ts is HARD😭😭
Love to see Do the dash on here
This shi fire
really good tutorial
🔥🔥
loop🔥✨
🔥🎶
Shorty girl in the background goat😂
😂 for real
Super Mario the producer vibes 🔥🔥🔥
Do u realize how good u are?
Bro I thought this lucent for a second 😂
Person in the back getting all the advice unedited but not listening
🎉
💎💎💎
howd u mix the pw for president
Cut low end, fruity reverb. That’s abt it
What bpm?
Summrs would go stupid on this, *wink wink*
I used this loop but instead of pluggnb drums I put jersey club on it
can somone tell me all the sounds he used in purity?
im trying to find out to
he literally showed you all the sounds in the vid
What the hell is PluggNB? Someone fill me in please. Those chords actually sound like R. Kelly’s Honey Love.
subgenre of Plugg, Plugg+Rnb=Pluggnb. Rnb type melodies with Plugg drums
hard beat trash tag bruh 😭
MEH
Lol, I hate these videos ... y'all don't explain anything really
I agree, showing off is the point of this video. Does someone here really understand how to make pluggnb chords? 🤣
what u want more? dude wont make the beat for you 😂
@guam111 I don't want the dude to make shit for me ... I just want a more detailed to what, why, and how the chord progression works ... not just click til it sounds good
@checkoutthewindow3938 exactly lmaooo ... Harmony is what sets these beats apart, but no one explains how to compose it or the music theory behind it ...
@@MafiaPyro One of the chords he made, the B-F-A#-D# is a chord I personally don't see often. It's a Maj7b5. Kinda has a dominant sound to it and feels like it's the "tension" chord.
He made it by, making a BMaj7, and then moving the 5th, (the F#) down a half-step and moving the D# up to give it a more open sound. But none of that is what really matters in the grand scheme. Your not gonna typically think, "oh I need a Maj7b5" when making music. But I agree, it was and still is annoying with how little you can learn from producers at a certain point. Half of them can't explain it anyway, because they don't know why it works. They just use their ears.
At the end of the day it really is just "Use your ears". The theory will train your ears, internalize what you learn, help you navigate, breakdown other peoples music. Build good habits. But it's not a replacement for practice and an experienced ear.
Look at this genre th-cam.com/video/HDy4khFK6BI/w-d-xo.html
All of this is done mostly by ear.
Just jamming around on a piano or piano roll until you get good is a must, with or without theory. Theory helps you identify what other people are doing, like I did here. But it's hard to make music creatively from scratch if you start with theory constantly in mind. My best stuff is made from improv on the piano, and from experimentation and grinding the piano roll. But my best breakthroughs getting there are through learning and experimenting.
I've been making beats for 8 years and I'm at a level that I like for the most part, but I want to make more than just beats now. The inspiration moved for sure. Mike Dean was like, my idol. Now I'm inspired by people like Yoko Kanno, Kevin Penkins etc.
Never stop learning. Never stop experimenting. But remember, at some point you gotta earn your skill and grind. It's rare that you get someone who has done enough of both. Also, if you got any questions then ask away.
nah i could make a better pluggnb tutorial. Sign me
listen bro you gotta teach me cuz I didnt learn shit from the tutorial 😭😭
🔥🔥🔥