10:15 - 7 semitones = a perfect fifth. this is used psychoacoustically as it is the same as the 2nd overtone and it pretends to the ear that there is a lower fundamental (the octave below the note played) that isn't actually there... this way you perceive more bass even on smaller speakers. A lot of the subbass plugins use this technique.
Wow i never thought of this as a video idea but this would have been crazy helpful way back in the day. It would speed up that trying to get idea out of your head process so much. Great video
"It's called 'this', it sounds like 'that' ". It's as straightforward as you can get it. Yet it's the first video I see that does it. Congrats , and thank you !!
Hey Austin, great video, love your channel. Just a quick note...: Xylophones are wooden, glockenspiels are metal. The difference between the two is not in their size but their material. For a long, long time I had the two confused, even the words; 'xylophone' sounds metallic to me while 'glockenspiel' sounds wooden but it is the other way around. A common confusion I think. Keep up the great work. Thanks x
Austin - thanks so much for this man. It's crazy but this is such an important video that is really gracious to those who have a different background of approaching production. If you were ever able to - i could see a video very similar to this but on drum sounds being so very helpful. Thanks for everything
Damn, finally. The title is exactly what I was having trouble with. Naming any sound really. I'm gonna save this vid and watch it every now and then to memorize all of this.
I'm only 50 seconds in, but based on the content this promises to cover and the production quality of the intro, I'm already subbed. Looking forward to it.
Thank you so much Austin! I've been trying to remake songs so that I can learn from them, but I was having a hard time finding those sounds. This will make it much easier for me :)
Great work Austin - as a full-time producer I can honestly say this was also an excellent refresher of how to approach sounds - I feel like it took me years and many sessions to learn all of this so you're doing a great service here!!
I feel like every beginner should incorporate these base sounds when they learn producing. I went in just trying things while also starting in synthesis and this kind of slowed my growth. Although once I got through this journey of understanding the different sounds and their unique harmonics (truly important for noobs), a lot of my sound selection became a lot more "fluid." Although the second challenge is combining different instruments or adding unique fx for more movements. For awhile, I thought the sounds I liked from my favorite producers was just "one" sound only to realize how well they stacked other sounds together. Especially synths and organic instruments. Thanks for the video, it definitely solidified some of the little holes I had in my thought process.
DX7 piano is sometimes called FM piano, since the Yamaha DX7 used FM synthesis, and not all FM keyboards were made by Yamaha. So look for that on your plugin if you can't find DX7.
That's why they're useless AF and sound so unusual. Outdated BS, at its worst. And producers should know that tonewheel organs do not rule all (and classical music, as the only genre to know).
Thanks Austin, really practical and informative information, love the way you presented it and referencing how these sounds have been deployed by different artists. There’s something for everyone to learn from in here 👏
What a really great simple video. I can identify all the sounds, but your knowledge of the different genres and styles they are in and your description of each was brilliant. I learnt a ton. Thanks! And if you want to make it 42, may I suggest an ARP Odyssey and an MS-20, they are pretty unique sounding synths. (And the DX7 came out in 1983. I have an original Mark IID and it’s so cool - a total pain to program, but good fun!)
Austin, this was great! I'm thinking back to when I was just starting our. TH-cam didn't exist then, but something like this, & all your other videos, would've been gamechangers for me. Thank you for all you do, man.
Basically, General Midi stuff - GM standart has quite a neat list of instruments' categories. The same stuff was being used in some ancient synths - think of Kawai synths and so on. Morphine VST synth from FL Studio has splendid categories nowadays - in bass and keys sections especially.
Exactly!!! I just saw someone say they think of “Unforgettable” when they think of a kalimba, but that song uses a steel drum. Common and simple mix up, but could mess up workflow and communication. If an artist requested that sound and I kept looking for Kalimbas, I’d never get the right sound. Knowing different sounds and instruments is CRUCIAL!
Thanks for the great video!! Good idea to have this palette in mind while producing. I think you could replace xylophone with vibraphone, cause marimba and xylophone are quite similar wooden instruments, while vibraphone is metallic and has a recognizable jazzy sound, softer than glockenspiel. Also, ukulele would be a great add to the stringed instruments.
@@MakePopMusic No. You said “this bass is called the M1, it comes from an old synthesiser.” Why don’t you just open the M1 plugin and show the actually sound ?
I'm starting on a new project tomorrow morning - in studio at 9am. The track is a ballad as in Bad Wolves ZOMBIES, Disturbeds, Sound of Silence. Male vocals - is there a tip you have to get that deep warm but still crisp vocal (besides a great vocalist :) ? The date on these sessions is week of Oct 24 - 30th 2024 in case you're reading this in July of 2025. Any suggestions or ideas for a new song like this to be current in 2024/2025.
Ty, very useful. I now have lots of Vital presents. If you could kindly let me know how to recreate Sleep Token - Chokehold synth that would've been amazing. Amazing Saw, but I'm yet to find how to recreate it, tho people do that.
The only one that I disagree with is 5:40. Unless you want a song sounding like (take your pick): Phantom Of The Opera, In My Merry Oldsmobile, Madame Butterfly, or O Sole Mio...don't ever choose what an opera (and classical music) lover came up with, nearly 100 years ago.
THIS IS CONTENT
This is food 🤤
For myself
8:29 Reese Bass
9:39 M1 Bass
28:59 Mellotron
31:16 Triton
It's insane to me how basic of a tutorial this is yet SO important! Thank you for this!
Yh I’m gonna be rewatching this so msny times
Thank you!!
Thought it was insane how a handful of plug-ins is responsible for over 30+ sounds.
making music 15+ years, still needed this.
10:15 - 7 semitones = a perfect fifth. this is used psychoacoustically as it is the same as the 2nd overtone and it pretends to the ear that there is a lower fundamental (the octave below the note played) that isn't actually there... this way you perceive more bass even on smaller speakers. A lot of the subbass plugins use this technique.
This is something that stumped me pretty hard in the beginning of my production journey and still does. Thank you so much.
Wow i never thought of this as a video idea but this would have been crazy helpful way back in the day. It would speed up that trying to get idea out of your head process so much. Great video
"It's called 'this', it sounds like 'that' ".
It's as straightforward as you can get it.
Yet it's the first video I see that does it.
Congrats , and thank you !!
Hey Austin, great video, love your channel. Just a quick note...: Xylophones are wooden, glockenspiels are metal. The difference between the two is not in their size but their material. For a long, long time I had the two confused, even the words; 'xylophone' sounds metallic to me while 'glockenspiel' sounds wooden but it is the other way around. A common confusion I think. Keep up the great work. Thanks x
„Glocke“ means „Bell“ in German - maybe that helps as a little memory aid.
Thank you for such informative video!
As a hobbiest I’ve found that getting an understanding of what types of effects have been used on a sound has been the biggest learning curve.
Austin - thanks so much for this man. It's crazy but this is such an important video that is really gracious to those who have a different background of approaching production.
If you were ever able to - i could see a video very similar to this but on drum sounds being so very helpful.
Thanks for everything
Damn, finally. The title is exactly what I was having trouble with. Naming any sound really. I'm gonna save this vid and watch it every now and then to memorize all of this.
I'm only 50 seconds in, but based on the content this promises to cover and the production quality of the intro, I'm already subbed. Looking forward to it.
exact same here!
MORE VIDEOS LIKE THIS!!! This is EXACTLY WHAT EVERY NEW PRODUCER NEEDS!!
Thank you so much Austin! I've been trying to remake songs so that I can learn from them, but I was having a hard time finding those sounds. This will make it much easier for me :)
To all of us beginners thank you Austin 👏🏿👏🏿👏🏿👏🏿
Great work Austin - as a full-time producer I can honestly say this was also an excellent refresher of how to approach sounds - I feel like it took me years and many sessions to learn all of this so you're doing a great service here!!
I feel like every beginner should incorporate these base sounds when they learn producing. I went in just trying things while also starting in synthesis and this kind of slowed my growth.
Although once I got through this journey of understanding the different sounds and their unique harmonics (truly important for noobs), a lot of my sound selection became a lot more "fluid."
Although the second challenge is combining different instruments or adding unique fx for more movements. For awhile, I thought the sounds I liked from my favorite producers was just "one" sound only to realize how well they stacked other sounds together. Especially synths and organic instruments.
Thanks for the video, it definitely solidified some of the little holes I had in my thought process.
Well done Austin... watch this twice people... so much to learn from this joint
And Austin I have hits ready...we should connect...
What I spent about a year sorting out all boiled down into one badass video.
You are simply amazing. These are priceless lessons! No words, just delight.
DX7 piano is sometimes called FM piano, since the Yamaha DX7 used FM synthesis, and not all FM keyboards were made by Yamaha. So look for that on your plugin if you can't find DX7.
Yeah! Great addition!!
Crucially important video. Absolutely essential. Nice job, Austin.
this is so great to have, thank you. would LOVE a follow-up of additional instruments/sounds (drums, horns, instruments from other countries)
one of the best videos on TH-cam. thanks man!
This should be required viewing for anybody starting out in music production
I would like to point out that organs, especially of the Hammond variety are very percussive in nature. Otherwise, well done!
That's why they're useless AF and sound so unusual. Outdated BS, at its worst. And producers should know that tonewheel organs do not rule all (and classical music, as the only genre to know).
This was mad helpful, especially for someone wanting to do multiple genres!!
Great video I didn’t know I needed ;) well done mate
Yo, amazing content as always… very informative! You could do one focused on drum sounds! Like typical pop/hip hop/ EDM drum sounds.. keep it up man
If an alien comes down to earth tomorrow and asks me what a piano sounds like, I'll be sure to point him to this video
Hahahaha holy shit
This is your best tutorial. So much value 🙏🏻
Thank you so much! You’re making amazing work. For me it’s super huge information
Thanks Austin, really practical and informative information, love the way you presented it and referencing how these sounds have been deployed by different artists. There’s something for everyone to learn from in here 👏
Awesome video. Much needed! Thank you! 🤘😎
AustinPowered now!!…Thanks bro.. you’re a Gemstar!!!
I found the synth shapes super helpful! Thank you MPM!
Amazing as always. Love your new cut btw
Very cool man - never really heard a breakdown of kinds of synths, thanks!
Wonderfully entertaining presentation as well. Very educational too of course.
This is BRILLIANT and such a great tool and reference. Thank you for this.
Great video Austin!
This is a fantastic video! And I'm off right now to get Synergy, I've purchased other libraries from MPM and they've all packed a ton of value.
this was a helpful one Austin.i like you give examples from genres and tie the sounds to the genres.
What a really great simple video. I can identify all the sounds, but your knowledge of the different genres and styles they are in and your description of each was brilliant. I learnt a ton. Thanks! And if you want to make it 42, may I suggest an ARP Odyssey and an MS-20, they are pretty unique sounding synths.
(And the DX7 came out in 1983. I have an original Mark IID and it’s so cool - a total pain to program, but good fun!)
This will definitely help those who want to spend less time furrowing through presets to get common sounds! :D
Absolute gem of a video. Thank you so much! 💛🙏🏽
Could you make a similar video for effects and drums? Would be super helpful!
this was super helpful. Wish I had seen this video when I was more of a beginner!
I roc wit u ⚡been looking for a video like this for a while ⚡Thank You
Austin, this was great! I'm thinking back to when I was just starting our. TH-cam didn't exist then, but something like this, & all your other videos, would've been gamechangers for me. Thank you for all you do, man.
Great video idea! Nowadays i know all of this but a few years back this would have been really helpful. Thank you for your content!
may you please do Drum sounds too
Great coverage of sounds! Thanks! Subscribed.
Basically, General Midi stuff - GM standart has quite a neat list of instruments' categories. The same stuff was being used in some ancient synths - think of Kawai synths and so on. Morphine VST synth from FL Studio has splendid categories nowadays - in bass and keys sections especially.
DID NOT SEE THIS COMING... THE SOUND THAT MAKES THE SOUND..... 😂
i'm gonna fire miranda if she keeps up these antics....
@@MakePopMusic wait… Miranda is replying this? ( coz she handles the Mail and Replies…)
Amazing, this takes the guesswork out for most of us. Great video!
Definitely bookmarking this.
Thanks!
really cool video, thank you for sharing, some of those I just didn't put together where they come from (like the Kalimba)
Would love to see a full synthesis video. Nice video 🤙
Great topic, thanks Austin! Even if you know how to recreate these or find them, for communication purposes knowing the actual name helps a lot haha.
Exactly!!! I just saw someone say they think of “Unforgettable” when they think of a kalimba, but that song uses a steel drum. Common and simple mix up, but could mess up workflow and communication.
If an artist requested that sound and I kept looking for Kalimbas, I’d never get the right sound. Knowing different sounds and instruments is CRUCIAL!
Great tutorial! Wish I came across it five years ago
The exact important thing to start 💗💯🔥⚡🌊
Yo this is IT! Thanks so much, incredibly useful!
Hey Austin! Would you be able to do a tutorial on new jack swing? (Bruno Mars, Michael Jackson, Bobby Brown, Teddy Riley, EXO, SHINee, etc.)
Thanks for the great video!! Good idea to have this palette in mind while producing. I think you could replace xylophone with vibraphone, cause marimba and xylophone are quite similar wooden instruments, while vibraphone is metallic and has a recognizable jazzy sound, softer than glockenspiel. Also, ukulele would be a great add to the stringed instruments.
The Korg M1 is the synth. Perc Organ is the preset inside the Korg M1.
Yep! I was just referring the the synth the patch is from
@@MakePopMusic No. You said “this bass is called the M1, it comes from an old synthesiser.” Why don’t you just open the M1 plugin and show the actually sound ?
Im always playing those chords i use them to find things i like
An easy trick for a trap vibe is to make it in the Dorian mode, where you play on the white keys but pretend the D note is the root.
Yep! Dorian and Harmonic Minor are EVERYWHERE in trap
I'm starting on a new project tomorrow morning - in studio at 9am. The track is a ballad as in Bad Wolves ZOMBIES, Disturbeds, Sound of Silence. Male vocals - is there a tip you have to get that deep warm but still crisp vocal (besides a great vocalist :) ? The date on these sessions is week of Oct 24 - 30th 2024 in case you're reading this in July of 2025. Any suggestions or ideas for a new song like this to be current in 2024/2025.
Thank you for this!!!
Maybe something like this about drums? 😊
The eyes give it away.
15:10 peak of the human knowledge
Great video, thanks so much.
17:41 hitting F1 opening in Nintendo Style
Great stuff man
Great video! However, my dog hated all the synth sounds - at synth leads he just got up and left the room...🤣
The video i didn't know i needed, but i did🙈
Great work Austin
We call this GM - general midi banks :
Cheers 🥂
at 15:48 i almost started singing sza’s verse on telekinesis lmao great video
The TR 808 is actually a synth-engine based drum machine, not a sampler or rompler.
Great video! thanks :)
Thanks a ton! Its soo useful❤
tnx for teaching
you rock bro thanks!
Looks like a CPU heavy project to me, haha. Great tutorial!
Nah. This barely touched my CPU 😂 they don’t have any midi info being processed so all the plugins are decently inactive.
Great review even for people who usally have them heard already. Greetings from germany and another Cubase-Head! :D
Uprights are often warmer
Much epic'ness as always, "the sound that makes the sound" perfect lol :-)
Ty, very useful.
I now have lots of Vital presents.
If you could kindly let me know how to recreate Sleep Token - Chokehold synth that would've been amazing. Amazing Saw, but I'm yet to find how to recreate it, tho people do that.
this help me a lot, thy very much
Do another video but with percs
Small detail, xylophone is wooden, not metal :) Glockenspiel is metal.
Great video.
The only one that I disagree with is 5:40. Unless you want a song sounding like (take your pick): Phantom Of The Opera, In My Merry Oldsmobile, Madame Butterfly, or O Sole Mio...don't ever choose what an opera (and classical music) lover came up with, nearly 100 years ago.
you are a king
Wow Amazing!
16:22 is dope
amazing! thanks