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Finished Tracks / Re: SH△GS - There's A
« on: June 27, 2016, 04:00:57 pm »Really really like this! Flume-y but there's definitely your own style in there.
Thanks so much dude! I really appreciate it

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Really really like this! Flume-y but there's definitely your own style in there.
Love the vibe! I'm with ledezma on this one too. I think if there was some brightness in there this tune would just "pop." Just my .02 though! Sounds good
Thats awesome advice, thanks SHAGS.
By the way, in England, if you shag someone, you have sex with them. Just a heads up
How long you been producing for?
dude this ones nice, i like the mixdown. id say the chords could use a lil more life, w/ an lfo or something. those drums kick hard n thats my favorite! nice job man
dope i love the vibe on this. If i had to suggest anything it would be to add another synth something bright and wobbly and maybe bring out the vocal cuts on the second part they are really cool
Cool tracks Shannon, digging your style. Keep up the good work
If you don't mind me asking, where did you get the vocal track for 'Get Free' from?
I've wanted to do some remixes for a while but always struggle to find decent vocal tracks.
Peaceeeee.
Refer to the frequency spectrum. If there is a space on your spectrum that is fairly empty, your track won't sound full. when using reference tracks as mentioned above, look at how that track looks on the frequency spectrum compared to yours. you can view the frequency spectrum with most EQs by enabling the analyzer. Metering plugins also usually have spectral analyzation modules.
Here's a Dada Life video on it.
The basic idea is this: Take a song that you know is absolutely slamming. A full on banger. The best track in your library. Put it in an audio track on your DAW and solo it. Listen to the drop. Then unsolo, mute the track, and listen to your own drop.
What does their track have that your track doesn't? The differences should SCREAM out at you. You can use this for a lot of different areas of your own production.
Here are some videos by SeamlessR that can help explain how to analyze that sort of stuff.