How to Ambient Music without BORING everyone

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 6 ก.พ. 2024
  • Just take your favorite synth or field recording and drown it in reverb... Ambient music is easy, right?
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ความคิดเห็น • 228

  • @JamesonNathanJones
    @JamesonNathanJones  3 หลายเดือนก่อน +24

    Oh here's that composition eBook. It's free. bit.ly/FREEcompositionguide

    • @genericusername5909
      @genericusername5909 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Eno’s As ignorable as interesting… isn’t that harking back to Satie’s furniture music?

  • @MTG_Music
    @MTG_Music 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +162

    Ambient music reflects nature. Some people ignore it, others see it for its real beauty.

    • @peoplelikefrank
      @peoplelikefrank 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +17

      Most ambient music is uninspired and boring. The problem is that people, musicians think it’s easy to make. A lot of times it reminds me of fusion jazz, where you have rare gems and lot of junk, guys noodling around.

    • @Moodboard39
      @Moodboard39 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      is for thinkers

    • @unduloid
      @unduloid 3 วันที่ผ่านมา

      No, it doesn't. There's industrial ambient too.

  • @JeffHendricks
    @JeffHendricks 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +108

    The more I learn about ambient music, the more I realize how much there is to it that I don't know.

  • @chadb1176
    @chadb1176 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +65

    Brian Eno and Harold Budd. Their album The Pearl is a masterpiece.

    • @j3ffn4v4rr0
      @j3ffn4v4rr0 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      One of my all-time favorite albums...sometimes I just randomly think about it. Same with Evening Star, that he did with Robert Fripp.

    • @noahshighlightreel
      @noahshighlightreel 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Yes!!! Brian Eno is the king of ambient!!!

    • @brendzone
      @brendzone 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@frankyoualot brah did you watch the video lol

    • @noahshighlightreel
      @noahshighlightreel 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@frankyoualot he did. He had some high praises for Brian Eno.

    • @frankyoualot
      @frankyoualot 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@brendzone lol, must have missed it as i was so distracted by narrator's experience

  • @commodoor6549
    @commodoor6549 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +28

    What I often dislike about ambient music is what I like about your music. Many ambient artists create repetitive music with little melodic or harmonic interest. So whatever sonic quality their music has, it's lost on a boring drone that begins nowhere and lead to nowhere. Your music, on the other hand, is melodically and harmonically interesting. And sonically your music checks all the boxes. So it takes me on a journey

  • @j3ffn4v4rr0
    @j3ffn4v4rr0 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    Even though Brian Eno is ambient's father, it's grandfather is certainly Erik Satie, who called it "furniture music"...because it could sit in the room like a piece of beautiful furniture, in the background and attended to when necessary, yet always adding to the atmosphere...interesting, but ignorable! In his time, this was a brand new idea, and there's a funny story about the time he composed the intermission music for another's performance. The audience rose to mingle and stretch their legs at the break, but when they heard Satie's music start they misunderstood and began sheepishly returning to their seats, so he ran around yelling desperately at people to ignore the music and continue their mingling.

  • @user-nn9px9fw1l
    @user-nn9px9fw1l 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +17

    Personally, one of my greatest inspirations for ambient music is Kenji Yamamoto's Metroid Soundtracks. They combine a fantastic balance of purpose and environmental ambience.

  • @Fl4ppers
    @Fl4ppers 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    Distortion is good for ambient. Once you layer up, EQ, compress frequency bands in places then apply your panning and verb you get this greater sense of space.

  • @chrisleeramsden2077
    @chrisleeramsden2077 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +26

    Yes! This was absolutely spot on! Ambient music is not wallpaper... yes, it can create a vibe, but for those who want to get pulled into a whole universe of structured sound, it can deliver that too. The most satisfying experience is to compose for them... because we are one of them too.

    • @sub-jec-tiv
      @sub-jec-tiv 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Bingo

  • @actualkevin
    @actualkevin 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +26

    As someone who made a living editing audio tape with a razor blade back in the day; (I was cutting freaking Paul Harvey!) I have to say this business of introducing wow and flutter and speed deviance in the ranges that defined tape deck malfunction is a thoroughly modern appropriation of malfunction artifacts as a creative effect. It can be a very cool creative tool yes. Outside specific special effects projects, NOBODY who used tape professionally ever used maladjusted or malfunctioning gear - at least not any longer than a few seconds. We had a full time engineer on duty at all times with a full stock of replacement parts who would have the thing fixed back to factory spec in the time it took for a coffee break of a duration that would get you the hairy eyeball from behind The Desk in The Office.
    The analog/tape thing is cool. But it’s a modern reimagining. There was no time when tape sounded wobbly and woobly, at least not until less it was your Realistic Concertmate(tm) 8-track recorder deck that you had run into the ground with neglect ona a shelf in your garage where you worked on cars with exhaust issues on weekends lol. The analog/tape/woww-y stuff is cool, but it comes from today not yesterday.

    • @cobraofearth
      @cobraofearth 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

      Yes, but I think it’s less emulating anything that was done in the studio and more the sound we got from listening to old casette tapes and vhs movies

    • @nanocyde_artist
      @nanocyde_artist 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      The future is now, old man. Tape belongs to us.

    • @caydilemma3309
      @caydilemma3309 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      That’s what I was going to say. Even if the recording itself was pristine, I know for a fact all my cassettes and VHS growing up were cheap bootlegs or used from the thrift stores and they were absolutely warbly and lofi, even if not to the exaggerated effect level we see in plugins today.

    • @mattsadventureswithart5764
      @mattsadventureswithart5764 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@nanocyde_artistI'm an "old man".
      While I own a reel to reel tape recorder/player, it doesn't work, and I bought it with the intention of gutting it so I can put a bluetooth receiver in it, along with mp3 player.
      We're not all stuck in the past, despite our age and the vocal oldies who moan that things were better back then.

    • @nanocyde_artist
      @nanocyde_artist หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@mattsadventureswithart5764 thank you very cursed

  • @blindianajones
    @blindianajones 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +30

    Im a big fan of how Trent Reznor does ambient, soundtracks and how he is able to have a lot of layers and effects but the songs do not get washed out.

    • @JamesonNathanJones
      @JamesonNathanJones  3 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      Same here

    • @Byron101_
      @Byron101_ 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      NIN + Trent = ❤

    • @craigsurette3438
      @craigsurette3438 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      Trent Reznor is a textural sound design and layering master!. I have been watching "how to " reconstructions of his process, and I especially like how he recontextualizes found sound/movie samples, and or resamples and manipulates his own material, and uses all of these subtle layers like a cook uses seasonings, where you dont hear the thing, as much as you hear what it did, and the piece would not be the same at all without it.

    • @j3ffn4v4rr0
      @j3ffn4v4rr0 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      @@craigsurette3438 Can you point me to some of those "how to" reconstructions? I was a NIN fan in the early days, but don't know much about the stuff you mentioned, and it sounds really cool.

    • @craigsurette3438
      @craigsurette3438 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@j3ffn4v4rr0 There was an article with an interview with Tremt Reznor in an early 90s Keyboard magazine, where he talked about his process. A lot of it involved running things through lots of guitar pedals, especially early Zoom guitar multieffects, and resampling them, especially through an early audio editing program called Turbosynth. Sample layers would get processed and reprocessed again and again
      He also described watching A LOT of old movies on VCR, and staying up late at night, just hunting for random found sounds in those movies, and stealing them to mangle and recontextualize them using those same methods
      I just came across a video that went through where a bunch of the found sound samples in The Downward Spiral came from. Since TH-cam is often dumb about allowing shared links, i will put it in the next message below , and hopefully it will stay

  • @craigsurette3438
    @craigsurette3438 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

    I love that you bring up Eno!
    I have the schematic of Eno's studio he put inside the album cover of Discrete Music blown up as a poster on my wall, and have emulated it, as best as I can in my DAW. If you are interested in Ambient work and analog gear, that little bit of art and the blurbs involving his process are super inspirational and informative. All of those early albums were done with "just"a primitive monosynth an EQ, an ancient "tape echo" and a DIY tape based looper he built out of scrap bits he had. Later, he added a reverb. That is it.Everything else, is just Eno and his genius working with that simple set up
    He is right, in how the simplicity and limitations of your set up, force you to think creatively , and more so to think with your ears instead of your studio engineering technical chops.

    • @FotisandStuff
      @FotisandStuff 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Wow, that sounds great. Could you please tell me how exactly did you make the emulation in your DAW? I'm interested in how you interpreted the Discrete Music schematic (because I'm still trying to wrap my head around it...).

    • @craigsurette3438
      @craigsurette3438 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      @@FotisandStuff I use Reaper as my DAW, so you will have to translate how I do this to whatever DAW you use.
      I only use free or stock plug ins, because I am poor AF
      Basically I am emulating a technique from oldschool 60s early electronic music, popularized by Brian Eno, and often called "Frippertronics" as it was popularized also by guitarist Robert Fripp
      I create an instrument track with an analog modeling VST of my choice I then put a stock EQ on the same channel, to be Eno's graphic EQ, and a Tape Echo simulator, like Quilcom's 4DS or Bionic Supadelay, or TAL Dub or ArcDev's DubBox. You want a characterful delay here ideally, which matches/works with your synth tones. The EQ acts like another set of "sculpting" filters on the synth created synth sound, to shape it to what you want, and the delay is there to create initial space and ambience, and to blur the sound texturally
      I then create an Aux Send track with another REAAAAAAALLLY LONG delay, to send the synth track to This should be at least 6 seconds long or so, to act as a virtual tape loop, i use 4DS again for this, with a large amount of feedback . This then becomes your tape loop . Every bit of sound you make with the synth goes through the Aux to the long delay/tapeloop track and gets recorded there, and if the delay model is good enough and you set it up with enough wow and flutter , it will warble and degrade and get darker and weirder over time, like a real tape loop. Sometimes ill put another EQ after the tape loop to act as tone controls . I have gotten interested in using and abusing tape sims like CHOW to reaaaaly accentuate this degrading, and or put it on my Master channel, to emulate that this whole process was done on tape, but my computer is 15 years old and has 8gigs of RAM, so it's an"expensive" vst to run CPU wise.
      I will often also create another send track, with an enormous all wet reverb, like Valhalla Supermassive, or Orilriver .Eno would use a Shimmer reverb here I will then put some reverby goodness, on everything, or just run my synth sounds through the all wet reverb with no dry signal to blur things into oblivion, before sending them onto the virtual tape loop.
      Sometimes, in Eno fashion, I will enable feedback between the tapeloop delay channel and the reverb as well,and add a tiny bit but that gets a little hairy to control
      I will lastly either create another few tracks to play over the textures i create with this technique, to work out a song structure or I will, like Eno, record the results, and then use those results as raw materials for even more further processing via similar techniques until i get what i want, and then work with layers of that super processed audio to make a track
      I hope this helps! If you have any more questions , feel free to ask.

    • @craigsurette3438
      @craigsurette3438 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@FotisandStuff Also, Like I said, Eno is just doing "Frippertronics" ie Live Looping with the gear he had at the time. If you look up tutorials on using your DAW as a live looper, the techniques will be similar. The main difference is that much of Eno's tonal quality comes from the way that tapeloop feedback audio, especially with his DIY system gets darker and "blurrier" and hisses and saturates and warbles and otherwise degrades over time The use of dedicated tape emulations like CHOW to add those tape colorations can go a long way towards emulating this, even with more vanilla plug ins

    • @FotisandStuff
      @FotisandStuff 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@craigsurette3438 thank you SO MUCH for this detailed description. And yes, fellow Reaper user here :D

  • @nolyspe
    @nolyspe 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    I don't disagree, but I want to push back on something that I felt was implied by your video, which is the idea that music (and here specifically ambient music) has to be beautiful or somewhat pull in the listener. It's certainly true that this is how most people view music. But it is not the sole possibility of music. My view on this is that music has to be _interesting_, it has to say something. Sometimes it is challenging, sometimes it is unpleasant, sometimes it can be boring (in an interesting way). When the listener is challenged, they feel something, whether it's an emotion, a strain, a sensation, and that is certainly a valuable thing. I personally find a lot of otherwise well produced "melodic ambient" music to be uninteresting, just because it does not challenge the listening experience in any way. Sometimes, I want to be the one who pulls the music, instead of the music pulling me. Obviously there, it is a matter of taste, as usual.

  • @Desolate0000
    @Desolate0000 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    after 5 years of producing I finally find out that ambient is one of the best genre to work with.
    thx for the tips, I find it so helpfull as a beginner of ambient

  • @WarmVoice
    @WarmVoice 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    One of the most deceptively simple, and beautiful tracks I've heard recently was Rainy Nights by Azaleh.

  • @wendelynmusic
    @wendelynmusic 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

    Sometimes I wish I could stick to one genre. With my flute playing I just played Free Improv and Jazz for years. But I grew up on Charles Ives, /Karlheinz Stockhausen, Fripp and Eno, Tangerine Dream and Morton Subotnik all at once. I love thick muddy textures with a lot going on, pulling you in multiple ways at once. I do rather enjoy much of your music. It's right to bring all your tools to the table. I enjoy your stories. Music is stories, ultimately. Even instrumental music. Love it all.

    • @bricelory9534
      @bricelory9534 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      I don't think anyone sticks to one genre really, even the staunchest defenders of their genre. It's all about conversation and inspiration, and genres are perpetually evolving anyway. They can be handy labels, but really, love what you love when it comes to music.

    • @aotmr1604
      @aotmr1604 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      recently been growing into throwing every trick at/into my tracks; it's not quantity vs quality -- you bring the quantity and let the quality happen

  • @guitman675
    @guitman675 8 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Also a huge Yes fan interested in ambient synth stuff! Great video!

  • @Farold_Haltermeyer
    @Farold_Haltermeyer 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    I can count the truly inspired and inspiring ambient creators on two hands for the very reasons you cover: so few seem to have grasped the additional layers of consideration and intentional, not generative, left turns that raise their sonic escapades above the totally forgettable. For those few gems who do, I’m eternally thankful

    • @novakattila
      @novakattila 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Who do you recommend?

    • @Farold_Haltermeyer
      @Farold_Haltermeyer 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@novakattilaooof, umm...the evergreens recently seem to be Aphex's chill stuff, Vince Clarke's recent solo album, Burzum's ambient gubbins scattered across his albums and Alex Crispin's double Resubmergency (standing in for some Vangelis soundtracks I guess).

  • @paulmakl6282
    @paulmakl6282 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Glad to see you are still making videos. Love your vids

  • @shannonia81
    @shannonia81 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    It's so interesting how there's so much choice in gear, both software and hardware, but our inspiration so often comes from artists from the past who made incredible music with what we would see as incredible limitations.

  • @slimyelow
    @slimyelow 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I went down the gear whabitt hole 25 years ago. Now I'm down the same hole, but with plugins, since they are much cheaper. However, creating the actual music, regardless of style always remains elusive for many years. And when it finally clicks, all the gear and software qualms are forgotten and they become awash amongst waves of pure joy and bliss.

  • @orangerooster73
    @orangerooster73 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    you talk about putting your classical background together with ambient music, Ambient 2: the plateaux of mirror comes to mind which is a collaboration of Brian Eno and Harold Budd. A lot of Budds beautiful piano over Enos soundscape pads

  • @petercarrington948
    @petercarrington948 25 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Ooh at 6.23 it really sounds like the intro to Tears for Fears 'The tipping point '.Great video on ambient music.Thank you.

  • @petervandewoestijne9371
    @petervandewoestijne9371 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    i am stunned, it exactly the same route i followed to ambient music, same history. From playing organ in my younger years, always fascinated by the ambient passages of Yes/Genesis, stumbled into ambient music with Brian Eno/Hammock , went to concerts of Olafur Arnalds and Nils Frahm, recently got into hardware with the Cosmos/Big sky and ableton next to using Cubase. I joined your channel straight away susprised by the resembling story. Thank you for sharing yours.

  • @jondellar
    @jondellar 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Fascinating topic. I also picked up a couple of handy tips from your general discussion so thank you for those.

  • @jeedmodorn5494
    @jeedmodorn5494 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Yes! Legendary indeed. Brilliant analysis. Ambient producers should challenge themselves and disable their reverb plugins for a week see what happens. Gonna try it myself.

  • @wiseoldfool
    @wiseoldfool 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Very inspiring, Jameson!

  • @istvantoth7431
    @istvantoth7431 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I really dig you channel pal, well done!

  • @sub-jec-tiv
    @sub-jec-tiv 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I always find that the best ambient music uses less layers more effectively. If you think about the actual word ‘ambient,’ ambience is something that exists within a space. And if you aren’t leaving space for ‘ambience,’ it’s not going to be as effective, as a piece of ambient music. With less layers, you really have to focus on each texture. And tbh the actual engineering is very important, as the quality and texture of the sound itself comes to the fore as an aspect of the music itself. Because ambient is ‘sonic’ music. Once you stop leaning so hard on traditional melodic and harmonic structure, the sonics become more important.
    Not every texture has to be subtle or slight, especially if space is left in the composition. But i hear a lot of overcrowded ‘ambient’ music.

  • @roymitchell5894
    @roymitchell5894 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Thank you. I really needed this insight and inspiration today!

  • @HoboeJoboe
    @HoboeJoboe 5 วันที่ผ่านมา

    this is such a great video thankyou !

  • @imagiste58
    @imagiste58 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    The whole hands-on idea is central to my venture, and your exposé was a breath of fresh air in the way it put into words an ongoing quest which made me feel my music was, at times, "unfashionable". And although Eno and Fripp have been mentors in the early years, Frahm was a serendipitous discorery five years ago which launched me anew. Keep bringing in those interesting articles, many thanks!

  • @svenbeyers
    @svenbeyers 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    thanks for the advice. you always help me getting inspired to sit behind my gear and compose.

  • @Beargtatt_YT
    @Beargtatt_YT 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Excellent analysis. I'll definitely be using your insights as I work on my next project. Subscribed.

  • @BradRossMacLeod
    @BradRossMacLeod 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    SEEDS has so many wonderfully inspiring abilities.

  • @amariingram5709
    @amariingram5709 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Thank you for all of your inspirational work. I like to make experimental music that sometimes dips into the ambient realm. I’ve done a few experiments where I had very very little going on. But the few parts that were there were very gripping. I love the idea of haunting beauty. I feel like being able to make unsettling sounds can be another way to boost creativity. A lot of the music I make sounds like you are floating in a different dimension.

  • @TheToneWork
    @TheToneWork 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    This sounds great! I'm just learning, so this was super helpful.

  • @jonathanparham
    @jonathanparham 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Thanks as always

  • @malvinusmusic
    @malvinusmusic 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Great content, thank you!

  • @dylanscott3279
    @dylanscott3279 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Really appreciated this video as I'm venturing into creating more minimal ambient dub techno inspired tracks. Cheers!

  • @REMcVey
    @REMcVey 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I feel like ambient creation is a liberating process as the rules of composition do not always apply. As I have explored through various means, media, techniques and approaches it can very easily turn to chaos, but is the process of learning. Ambient can be thematic, dark, noir, light, melodic, industrial, atmospheric… ultimately it is what you explore. I have learned through my creations to accept the outcome for each piece as they are because they take up their space in time and learn from them.
    Great video. Up until you mentioned them I have never really considered YES for their ambient aspect. I will be going back into my YES collection. 😊

  • @Patryk_Karwat
    @Patryk_Karwat 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Amazing video, thank you for your thoughts.

  • @SkuppyVincenzo
    @SkuppyVincenzo 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Thanks man, some bloody useful tips and information

  • @WildernessMusic_GentleSerene
    @WildernessMusic_GentleSerene 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Yes, I come from an organ and piano background too, and I need more than a one measure step sequencer slammed to a grid and filter sweeps to be interested. Genre labels can be confusing, all the EDM labels don't make sense to me, add a tied note to the beginning of a measure and now it's another genre??? In the beginning there was space music for synths, we may have called it ambient too, back in the early 90s; just slow-moving textures of interesting evolving sounds. IF you sound design from scratch and have a sound in your head, not too difficult to design, and extremely easy on a traditional subtractive hardware synth. Build a gigantic stereo field from a layer or two, add a slow melody and poof, you have a song. Will it stand out in the crowd....no.
    Have you ever noticed the TH-cam videos with massive success is always the one teaching you or making music that sounds like all the popular bands. Just advertise a video as song from the band Queen played on a harpsichord, and you will get 10,000 views. How to solo like Pink Floyd and get 100,000 views. Most the non-musician world wants to place original compositions immediately in a category of what band you are imitating. And if its band they adore how much they like your music. Nothing more disappointing (or insulting) as composing for original thought and then be compared to someone else.
    I used to listen to space music a lot back in the 90s, I would use it for meditation and relaxation. And as a synthesist, would try to identify the source and build of the song. But after attempting to compose symphonies on sampled synths in the 90s, I turned back to creative sound design for original music and that is where I am today. Still trying to find a place of distinction in this synthesizer sound design world. Composing without 1-4 measure repeats of blips and bleeps all 1/16 notes on a grid; EDM style composing does not sound good as sit down and listen music.
    Only a rare few composers get to begin a new genre in this world, the rest of us are in a melting pot of others where we all hope to have enough creativity to separate ourselves enough that we get noticed and appreciated. I haven't listened to pop music in decades, don't know what is new and hip for all those years, never turn on a radio, don't own a TV. So, influence only comes from the unknown composers I listen to on YT. Today, I write for myself, what makes me happy, publish it on YT and hope it makes someone else happy.

  • @EchoKraft
    @EchoKraft 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Wow !
    Great video ❤
    Always appreciate your knowledge, man and your wisdom.

  • @SpaceAmbientMusic
    @SpaceAmbientMusic 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    So many true words, thanks for that, I felt I really needed that.

  • @CapriciousBlackBox
    @CapriciousBlackBox 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I've said it before....but you're a gem. I really appreciate how much of yourself you give here. Thank you JNJ.

  • @BoatsInSpace
    @BoatsInSpace 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I'm also a big Yes fan and interestingly their music took me the exact opposite direction: making it the most complicated possible. Probably only a decade later did I learn to appreciate the minimalism that ambient music provides. It was so refreshing to experience music a completely different way.

  • @bricelory9534
    @bricelory9534 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    In my own ambient journey, an important lesson I am learning and will, I'm sure, continue to learn, is how delicate the balance is between too much and too little - and it varies very much depending on each piece. This is true for things beyond just # of voices, or amount of bass, etc - it can be too much or too little control over probabilistic patches, too much or too little variety/randomness, etc. It all can be totally different on each piece.
    It's also interesting, connecting with your video, that I have found that I enjoy ambient music much more when it utilizes more simple voices, or traditional instruments/samples (ie: piano, cello, etc.) alongside more simple synth voices. Then the interest comes in their interaction rather than in patches that have all the fanciest of gadgets thrown at them to see what sticks. For me, your example of the piano and clock divided synth was so beautiful because it was a conversation between that piano and a really simple sine-like sound. The layering of simple sounds leads to really unique, compelling, and - if done tastefully - ambient pieces. It's one of those things where the concept is simple, and even the end product seems simple, but it has so many layers working intricately together.

    • @JamesonNathanJones
      @JamesonNathanJones  3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I love the way you put that, Brice. The conversational element in any musical style is really important I think.

  • @ANTheWhizkid
    @ANTheWhizkid 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    For myself: I only have a few pieces of selected but awesome hardware. One of the reasons is that it gives me a handful of ways to approach a new track. Sometimes I prefer having my pc off for the first quarter mile, or just wanna enjoy the workflow even if it takes slightly longer. None the less I need to agree to the message of your video. Cheers!

    • @sub-jec-tiv
      @sub-jec-tiv 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      After decades of work, I must agree. This is honestly the best way. Fewer tools that you know better. The selection part of that becomes crucial. It may take a few years to figure out exactly which tools work for your own creative process. There are no ‘correct’ answers like "everyone should use an Iridium" or whatever (though lots of people will claim their favorites are the ‘best’). It’s all down to cases, and everyone needs to do the work. Which pisses off lots of people. Unfortunately there are no shortcuts.

  • @tastedup
    @tastedup หลายเดือนก่อน

    I'm subscribed to about 100 music channels, and yours is hands-down one of the most interesting and insightful. Keep on doing what you're doing

  • @spenzakwsx4430
    @spenzakwsx4430 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I absolutely love your channel and your music. I discovered ambient quite 'late' as well. My musical journey began in the 90s with basic keyboard skills, and all I wanted to do was to create techno/electro tracks. Over the years, my music evolved multiple times, and people often told me it sounded like a soundtrack for a movie. I didn't quite understand it and dismissed it as something I didn't want to pursue, but it seemed to come naturally. Now, my perspective on ambient music has completely changed. You can merge it with all kinds of other styles, and the only 'rule' I've set for myself is that the beat should aid in delivering the general mood rather than being the main focus, as it often is in a lot of dance music (which I also enjoy). Without beats, you have much more space for other elements, and you can turn everything on its head. everything is possible ;-)

  • @leobottaro
    @leobottaro 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Solar Fields is by far my favorite artist in this genre

  • @MrKrisstain
    @MrKrisstain 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Thx James!

  • @mohitrahaman
    @mohitrahaman 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    The names you called out are all my favorites and now you are too

  • @worthmoremusic
    @worthmoremusic 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Oh how lovely it is to drown in the etherial, ambient affects of reverb and delay !

  • @tapeexperiments
    @tapeexperiments 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Good Stuff!

  • @sebastiannetta9224
    @sebastiannetta9224 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I am totally with you! Let's work on the approach. I come from a jazz background and classical upbringing.

  • @jasongravely7217
    @jasongravely7217 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I just got here and subscribed. Jon Hopkins’ ambient tunes are my fav and I hope you already know him. Music for Psychedelic Therapy specifically. Thanks for making videos I’m thankful to be here.
    @6:40 - LOVE that progression and tone, I’m going to look up some originals you’ve put out. And if you haven’t put them out, as a listener I’d loved to hear them.

  • @juliusmiliusJM
    @juliusmiliusJM 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Thank you

  • @Aoudhubillahi
    @Aoudhubillahi 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I used to really like "Yes" in High School. It was Positive Energy Rock. I liked their vocal harmonizing. Huge fan of Roundabout. And I was an R&B and Jazz guy at my core in Chicago. But would listen to some good Classic Rock and a few other Rock genres from time to time.

  • @xilix
    @xilix 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    You're the only person that reliably inspires me to dig out my axiom 49 and start messing around with arturia again. Nobody else can do this. They've tried, lol. Just brilliant work, Jameson. Thank you for this.

  • @michaelkonomos
    @michaelkonomos 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Great video. One practical takeaway for me was when you mentioned the band pass idea, for placing a sound in a mix. It’s not like i have never heard of doing that, but something clicked for my brain just then - I think I often fall in love with a particular sound or texture across the whole spectrum, and you have to let go of a piece of what you love about it in order to have it serve the greater whole. I like how you do that and I need to get better at this too! I know that’s a ridiculous journey I just went on there, but I guess my point is that your videos are gold mines and that was the nugget I found.

  • @derbjornmachtdiemusik23
    @derbjornmachtdiemusik23 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    YES! ❣️🙏

  • @pmumble76
    @pmumble76 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Great video, thank you. I’m not into ambient, but these principles are universal.

  • @acdnrg
    @acdnrg หลายเดือนก่อน

    Have you considered the option that boredom is not induced by external factors, like: ambient music being produced this or that way, but instead boredom is a state of mind representing your inner condition? That could explain why things that are exiting to some are boring to others, and also why one might feel different about a tune at times. Don´t know if this is true, but to me it´s worth thinking about it.

  • @lazykid9167
    @lazykid9167 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Thanks

  • @ErwinSchrodinger64
    @ErwinSchrodinger64 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Now that I've gotten into production, after DJing after so many years... I will say DJing/mixing ambient is also incredibly hard. It's not as easy as moving channel faders and messing with the 4-band EQ. Forget about mixing in key, it's just all over the place. Hence, you may start searching for a starting looping on the incoming track, adding effects to the incoming track and different effects to the outgoing. Making sure everything sounds in place. Sometimes adding compression. Luckily I have a 6-channel mixer that I can add a bridging track (3rd track) that adds drone. Usually, when I mix ambient I use 4 external effect processors (consisting of any of the following: Eventide H90, Eventide H9Max, Boss GT-1000 Core, Strymon Volante Magnetic Echo, Strymon Night Sky, Strymon Big Sky, and a Microcosm). Lastly, I can easily incorporate synthesizers in my DJ setting. The Tasty Ships GR-1 and Waldorf Iridium are perfect for this.
    My views on ambient have changed as well. It' far more difficult than most people realize.

  • @bpsychoz
    @bpsychoz 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Love hearing the digitakt magic

  • @weaponofvoice
    @weaponofvoice 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Inspirational. Thank you. I was contracted to produce a lot of ambient but got burnt out. Creating for someone else is definitely an oxymoron.
    I’m now driving my production not from briefs but from my own inspirations from sounds in the natural world. Aristotle:
    “The aim of art is to represent not the outward appearance of things, but their inward significance. “

  • @erndog64
    @erndog64 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Bro...I'm just getting back into music now and bought a launch key 49..and got FL Studio. Newbie getting hands on....feels good. Best of luck to you.

  • @future62
    @future62 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Your point about combining you classical training with ambient music is salient. A lot of great music comes out of combining two seemingly unrelated worlds.

  • @gesslr
    @gesslr 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Well done sir!

  • @nanocyde_artist
    @nanocyde_artist 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Haha that pipe organ livestream was great. Do more

  • @DeadzoneMusic
    @DeadzoneMusic 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I'd love a video on music theory as it relates to ambient music

  • @thejontao
    @thejontao 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    My personal approach to ambient has always been to make “electronic” music without electronic instruments… that has always been my favorite limitation.
    I started out doing it with a 4-track recorder. Doing it on tape certainly gave me a direction I wouldn’t have had if DAWs had been available in the 90s. But 4 tracks is a pretty harsh limitation for ambient music. One of TASCAM’s 8-track units would have very much appreciated back then.
    Now that DAWs (and the required hardware) are ubiquitous, my approach is still largely informed by my younger days playing with tape. I still do reverse reverb the same way. I still bounce tracks, when it makes sense.
    In regards to the title of your video, though… how to make ambient music that doesn’t bore people… I’ve spent a lot of time thinking about that personally, not that I have an answer. But it is a problem. It’s easy for ambient music to become a navel gaze which is only interesting to the person making the music. I often tell people that there are more people who make ambient music than there are who listen to it.

    • @dasczwo
      @dasczwo 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      well , youd be amazed how much ambient music is under those headphones people shield themselves using public transport… pandemic forced us guitarist under headphones, suddendly ambient guitarist is a job title. the issue is that both the ambient musician as well as the listener are invisible. sharing a time seperated navel gazing space. no ford mustangs with windows down blaring an ambient playlist across the streets… lets go to a club to xtremeley zone out to ambient music… berlin galleries, there youll find some. did a gig myselfs, headphones only. did a little street gig by the river in the evening, offering headphones to interested persons. this was nice. still looking for a cheap multichannel bluetoot transmitter… then ambient musicians will storm the sub headphone busking …

    • @thejontao
      @thejontao 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@dasczwo the visitors got optional headphones? Wow! That's a crazy and great idea.
      I'll say, though... one year while I was in university, I was delivering pizza over the summer break, at night until after the bars closed. And there was a late night radio show in Canada called Brave New Waves... midnight to 4am, or something crazy like that.... it played a big part in my introduction to ambient music... now my radio wasn't blaring, but I was driving a 78 Mustang held together with shoe laces while listening to ambient music with my windows wide open... that was a good summer.

  • @parlefeuproject3115
    @parlefeuproject3115 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    merci

  • @bandatratata
    @bandatratata 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Yo! What a masterpiece with Rhodes!!

  • @PanopticMotion
    @PanopticMotion 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Your videos inspired me to start making ambient music too! I agree that you don't necessarily need hardware. I use Ableton and Pigments, combining Pigments with Ableton synths like Analog, Drift, Operator, and Wavetable. All controlled by a 61-key controller. With the effects in Ableton Suite and some great free effects, my setup is more than enough for my creative projects. Having a great time with it! Thank you for sharing.

  • @chambre466
    @chambre466 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    yes

  • @doyoubinoame8483
    @doyoubinoame8483 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Finaly a video for me

  • @NeonShores
    @NeonShores 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I'm choosing to take this video personally 😜
    But yes i struggle the most with layering sounds, I'm very bad at it. The first time i heard Hammock i was blown away by how everything sounded so good together.

  • @pn078
    @pn078 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    you get it.

  • @jmachatch6696
    @jmachatch6696 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    From 7:50 on is a master class in music!!! 😀

  • @faruambient
    @faruambient 21 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา

    your forgot to mention after drowning it in reverb, you have to add overdrive after the reverb 😀thats where the magic happens

    • @JamesonNathanJones
      @JamesonNathanJones  17 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา

      I do love a good crunchy reverb tail

  • @TheOligoclonalBand
    @TheOligoclonalBand 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Very interesting. I started with a lot of reverb as well and with time the reverb got less.

  • @DamianLopez-deJesus-jn9ik
    @DamianLopez-deJesus-jn9ik 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Hey, nice to hear you’re (or were?) a prog fan, especially of Yes. Guess I shouldn’t be surprised, given your music history. 😜
    Anyway, great vid, and I appreciate hearing your perspective about ambient music and how to best approach writing it.

  • @andycordy5190
    @andycordy5190 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Perhaps what Eno means by music that can partly be ignored stems from a realization that, just as in visual information gathering, it is necessary for the brain to create a hierarchy of the incoming information, influenced by our experience and preferences in order to rationalize the experience. So called "Relaxation" to music is not possible when the ear is drawn to outstanding articles of interest and this is mis interpreted by composers of ambient music as just the kind of drowned swampy soup of sound you vividly describe.
    The Steve Howe quote from the gates of delirium is the recurring "hook" of that track, a rarity in Yes music but the album as a whole is, from the listener point of view, on a scale that it is necessary to "ignore" elements in the texture thus generating the rich rewards of discovery through repeated listening. From a composer perspective, and group composition has a different dynamic, those boys, as you say, each a great virtuoso, took great pride in their contribution, as would the fastidious and ever tinkering Anton Brückner, wanting every tiny droplet to be appreciated.
    I think that the difference between active listening and passive hearing is not as bi-polar as one might think and that in focussing on one thread of a sound we necessarily de sensitise towards others. Some music is designed for a linear experience such as simple pop songs, a Howlin' Wolf blues, Prog rock or Jazz where contributors fit together their own improvised lines does not. Those with a training in counterpoint will see that an exquisitely balanced JS Bach fugue will present all it's parts with one or possibly several lines of dominance, the light and shade or perhaps sunlight and shadow of the Brandenburg Concerti cannot IMHO be experienced in their full beauty by the first time listener.
    For me, some music is so full of complexity that there is just no way to focus, nowhere to look that isn't stuff with attention grabbing elements. Boulez and Ferneyhough for example.
    Generally, if I want music, I want to listen not just hear it. A Phillip Glass piano work with its minimal modulations could just burble away in the background but once I had learned to appreciate those drifting changes I have to listen out for them.

  • @mass-1128
    @mass-1128 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I would higly recommend you listening to Solar Fields and Carbon Based Lifeforms! 😊

  • @Mtaalas
    @Mtaalas 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    If you are not familiar with "Serial Experiments Lain, Bootleg album" or soundtrack of EVE online, you're missing out on wonderful examples of amazing ambient music that's not boring at all or the basic drone random modular synth stuff. Songs have structure, themes even... and they're still ambient. Especially Serial Experiments Lain has wonderful soundtrack for very atmospheric ambient music.

  • @AUTOSAD777
    @AUTOSAD777 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I first heard "Says" by Nils Frahm off of a recommendation from Steven Wilson. I was hooked instantly. And shortly after, I discovered Olafur Arnalds. "Only The Winds" is a masterpiece.

  • @frfx4eva
    @frfx4eva 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

    subscribed

  • @ImplosiveCatt
    @ImplosiveCatt 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    You are really good, James Jones. It is not the same when talent gives his opinion so , do you even accept suggestions?

  • @ion7701
    @ion7701 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

  • @g3cd
    @g3cd 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Haha, you became an organist because Rick Wakeman is plain AWESOME? Now it all makes sense! 😂

    • @JamesonNathanJones
      @JamesonNathanJones  3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      There's more truth to this than you know... haha

  • @AshberryMusic
    @AshberryMusic 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Hi , Interesting content , can you please tell me how you are using your Rhodes as a Trigger? I have the exact same model ... Thnx

  • @iwanttocomplain
    @iwanttocomplain 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    As a genre, it is sort of one foot in the art world and another foot in new age philosophy and tantric meditation, making it a genre which is somewhat not music in some sense, but rather, a mood enhancer or meditational aid. I think it is an interesting device for creating a specific visual landscape that describes texture and emotion as well as place and a sense of drama as well as a disconnected sense of the surreal and threatening. Basically a film score. Like Eno's Prophecy Theme from Dune. It really feels like being in a sandstorm from all the white noise. The themes of magisterial elemental forces.
    Edit: On second listen, Prophecy theme is pretty simple - just one note at a time. It's no Music For Airports in terms of sophistication and maturity.

  • @oscaroscar7904
    @oscaroscar7904 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    To be honest when i make that sort of music it is to create a relaxing and posetive thing, i dont see it as my main musical intrest though, i usually keep alot of my other songs to myself but these ambient things can help a bit with a calm vibe, so its sort of my way of trying to give something optemistic back without demanding something in return and doing what i can ( even if there were no intrest then at least i tryed)

  • @DorisDay-lw4xs
    @DorisDay-lw4xs 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I need to explore more ambience. The little Ive got I love and I know there’s a huge array of artists and albums out there waiting to be discovered.
    Like a lot of people I came to ambient music slowly and via side 2 of David Bowie’s Low album, then from that it was a short hop to Eno, then Cluster, some Fripp, David Sylvian to John Foxx and Harold Budd. Stars Of The Lid too. I can get lost in that.
    Any recommendations would be gratefully received.

  • @slimyelow
    @slimyelow 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    6:30 that is really nice.