A Mostly Thorough Guide to Learning Electronic Music Production

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  • čas přidán 21. 08. 2024

Komentáře • 402

  • @ToyKeeper
    @ToyKeeper Před 2 lety +308

    Instead of "learn music in 30 minutes", it's "learn the table of contents for how to learn music, in 30 minutes".
    Thanks for a welcome dose of realism.

    • @RedMeansRecording
      @RedMeansRecording  Před 2 lety +61

      Yeah for real. I want people to discover on their own terms. And find their own voice. :)

    • @MooncrafterUTAU
      @MooncrafterUTAU Před rokem +5

      @@RedMeansRecording it’s much appreciated! I have no training with an instrument, am entirely self taught outside of an AP music theory class I took over a decade ago. It’s so painful trying to learn how to write for the genre I love to listen to coming from that direction and just your genre chapter alone helped demystify that hurdle.
      Subscribing!

  • @ImprovingAbility
    @ImprovingAbility Před 2 lety +256

    As a long term follower I finally understand what you did. First you built your financial existence with the creation of music videos, and now you are finally free to focus on your true calling: teaching, which you do exceptionally well.

    • @domingoleija3436
      @domingoleija3436 Před rokem +6

      🎼music is the only universal/global language and it doesn't take as long as learning Octatrack 😁

    • @domingoleija3436
      @domingoleija3436 Před rokem

      Your guidance is excellent senor. Ableton is overwhelming but I'll try that course you suggested.

    • @domingoleija3436
      @domingoleija3436 Před rokem

      I've been sitting on Live 8 and updated for my son. That's bread and butter but I'm a percussionist. Senior,,61 young so thought AUM iPad pro since I normally play along with hardware to Play along.

  • @KamilKraz
    @KamilKraz Před 2 lety +55

    For all people that feel overwhelmed by amount of knowledge they need to get - “Slowly, is the fastest way to get you where you want to be”
    Thank you for this video!

  • @kegstandjesus
    @kegstandjesus Před 2 lety +11

    I think the best part of this video is that it doesn't even mention a single technical thing about music production. Makes every second of this video that much more evergreen

  • @argosfe7445
    @argosfe7445 Před 4 měsíci +3

    It's one of those times I don't know what I'm looking for exactly and then suddenly I magically stumble upon it.
    Really great video, thanks.

  • @synthmage00
    @synthmage00 Před 2 lety +14

    When I first started taking my own music production more seriously, someone (I unfortunately can't remember who) recommended "The Mixing Engineer's Handbook" to me, and it literally changed my life. It put words to things that I had already figured out on my own, explained tools I thought I understood but was using wrong, and taught me a ton about the tools I was scared to use early on because I thought they were "too advanced" for me.
    I haven't read "The Recording Engineer's Handbook" yet, but I know Bobby Owsinski's writing is super approachable from reading his Mixing book, even as someone who generally doesn't learn well by reading.

  • @ryokokofficial
    @ryokokofficial Před 2 lety +66

    Jeremy coming with the fire. I took a few months of lessons with him and even took Huang's class and came out a techno god. So I can attest to all of this. The Ishkur link is also a profound resource. Also Roland has their new Boutique series out of cheap hardware copies of their classic instruments like the 808 and 303. The genre approach is so important. You find the exact thing you want to make and then break down where all the components in it came from. Its illuminating. Really amazing resources he is providing here.

    • @RedMeansRecording
      @RedMeansRecording  Před 2 lety +5

      💜😸💜

    • @coachbio1705
      @coachbio1705 Před 2 lety +3

      Agreed on both points! Ishkur's guide is CRUCIAL to wrapping your head around the universe of genres and sub-genres and sub-sub-genres!

    • @ryokokofficial
      @ryokokofficial Před 2 lety +7

      @@coachbio1705 I wish more people used Ishkur's guide. I meet people sometimes when im out and since everyone is an "edm" dj now, they will show me their music, usually some form of Dubstep, and then ask me what I do. I simply say acid techno and they dont even know what techno is. They think its what they make. Ive even had people redefine what I just said, "You mean IDM," usually straight white men wth their sleeves rolled up so we all can see their newly inked arms.......People need to be educated.

    • @coachbio1705
      @coachbio1705 Před 2 lety +2

      @@ryokokofficial totally! I think "EDM" was just a short-hand, bullshit label that was made to market pop dupstep and all its iterations to Gen Z and younger Millenials so that they can attend music festivals and talk about the shit music they listen to. Honestly I cringe when anyone I meet says "they love electronic music and go to music festivals" because I find they don't know the first thing about any sort of foundational genre.

    • @Cafeston
      @Cafeston Před 2 lety +5

      Ishkur's guide is a great resource. It's also disillusioned and painful to read.

  • @yhn280
    @yhn280 Před rokem +9

    I've been an avid electronic music fan for the last 24 years. Started DJing about the same time and lived through the golden era of house/trance. I've always dreamed of learning to produce and release a track on a label. I've always doubted myself, knowing I have zero musical background, and thought this was just a pipe dream.
    Thanks for all links and tips you've provided; I felt 10x more motivated and will finally give this a go! Looking forward to commenting again in a few years once I'm signed and tell you I've kicked this bucket list down the road :)

    • @jerm628
      @jerm628 Před 5 měsíci

      How's it going so far?

  • @katlegotladi2116
    @katlegotladi2116 Před 2 lety +31

    With regards to music theory I think another great resource is the plugin Scaler 2. It lets you learn chords and scales while you make music. Preeeety noice.

  • @therealfaintinggoat
    @therealfaintinggoat Před 2 lety +17

    Jeremy, you’re a human treasure. So much content to absorb. Thank you thank you

  • @danfozmusic3046
    @danfozmusic3046 Před 2 lety +6

    Red this video made my day. I've taken composition, theory, guitarist for 20+ years and gotten deeply into production since covid. Now getting into hardware, MPC, Digitone and Microcosm. Sometimes I feel like a total electro-poser. Like I'm wasting my time turning knobs and not shredding. But your breakdown of being genre-specific is super important to me, guides how and why I would want to make the music I want to make. Also the idea of learning vs application is super important. I can sometimes bury myself in tutorials to avoid the actual making of music, so thanks for that. Great video for a immensely complex subject.

    • @xyzyzx1253
      @xyzyzx1253 Před 2 lety +1

      To me, the genre specific stuff is like listening to a guitar player,
      You’ve got to really ponder and explore the sounds you like about their tone, their play style, what their fingers are doing on a technical level and what they’re doing on a theoretical level and then applying it to your own stuff.
      I think genre is definitely a really precise way of categorising your knowledge of a specific set of players / producers.
      I honestly need to spend more time organising the information that I know about theory and production.
      I guess it always helps to remember when it’s not your main source of income, life is long and you can make progress in one area and then create what you want from your current vantage / knowledge, point of view, and then move onto to studying something new and implementing that at a later date.
      Learn, practice what you learn, create and then repeat with something new!
      Happy travels out there :)

    • @xyzyzx1253
      @xyzyzx1253 Před 2 lety +2

      I’m thinking that organising folders with both tabs / sheet music for guitar players I like and Separately genre specific production techniques and ideas for playing would be awesome,

    • @danfozmusic3046
      @danfozmusic3046 Před 2 lety +1

      @@xyzyzx1253 Great advice!

    • @xyzyzx1253
      @xyzyzx1253 Před 2 lety

      @@danfozmusic3046 make sure you know that you already know enough to make kick ass music! And if in the future you’re older, wiser and know more, theory and production techniques, that’s cool, but it’s never too soon to start with the process of putting a few musical ideas together and mixing them outright!
      I got stuck in my head for years about needing to practice my scales more and learn more about theory, and my chord changes on guitar, and lots of practice with improvising and expressing myself on my instrument,
      But I was inherently afraid that anything I’d actually really try and produce as music would suck, because I didn’t know enough.
      So I was cutting myself off from really mastering a riff of my own, or building a caterlog of musical ideas that I could call my own, because I was way too in my own head about “needing to be better” before I tried to make anything and record anything or try to memorise a specific sequence of chords and melodies on my instrument!
      It’s taken me ages to finally feel like I’m good enough to start “making music of my own”
      When I could have absolutely have started earlier and recorded more ideas and worked on things before hand etc
      Lol sorry I’ve just had this stuff on my mind for ages lol

  • @glowingrectangles4596
    @glowingrectangles4596 Před 2 lety +12

    Dude, fuckin sweet!
    It's like magic.
    Take something awesome yet all too often overwhelming/ frustrating, unpack it, and look behind the curtian. A perfectly distilled, organized, birds eye view on the whole thing. Excellent resources and links to the sections of the video.
    This brings me much need relief and perspective. It's so easy to stay in the gratifying process of doing what I'm already familiar with at the same time being frustrated about not "getting anywhere" neglecting other crucial aspects. this helps me step back and think about whats uniquely important and what my blind spots may be.
    Thank you for being awesome and doing what you do. Your cat is hillarious btw.

  • @kinggnarles
    @kinggnarles Před měsícem

    Came to learn, got a bibliography. Dude saw me coming and knew exactly what I needed. Five stars, thanks man!

  • @Klintebjarnen
    @Klintebjarnen Před 2 lety +28

    This is with no doubt the most inspiring and informative video on music production i've ever seen. Thank you so much for doing this!

    • @joshualane1716
      @joshualane1716 Před 2 lety +3

      Andrew Huang’s 30 min video (mentioned here) and Taetro’s six episode series is also really good.

  • @QuantumKatmusic
    @QuantumKatmusic Před 2 lety +8

    Sometimes I forget you're not just hands 👐
    Nice walk-through, ive veen making music for 15 + years but I think there's always something to be learned even if i think i know it, and indeed I did learn some things, keep doin you 👍

  • @johncaccioppo1142
    @johncaccioppo1142 Před 2 lety +5

    I really appreciate the focus on genre here... it's not something I've seen universal agreement on, though. It seems like we don't need it to make or enjoy music but we definitely need it to be able to talk about it in it's evolution, to find it, to have a sense of what direction to go into and to develop the appreciation of music for the wider public.
    As a musician, I definitely care about what has and hasn't been done before and where my target audience might be lurking and as a civic-minded person I feel like it gives the public taxonomical skills that our current political climate has sanitized out of our heads. It's not easy to sell propaganda when people understand history and know how to talk about it.

  • @AvianBreak
    @AvianBreak Před 2 lety +5

    Your recommendation on Dan Worrall’s channel closed the loop on music production for me. I’m already applying his techniques, and it’s so nice to finally really understand sample rates and how plugins work under the hood.

  • @mare6912
    @mare6912 Před rokem +2

    I saw this video because I’m a fan of electronic music, however I realize that I knew little about genres and the more I feel more conected to certain type of music the more I want to go deep inside the basics of it. Im no producer and no dj, but god I enjoy this music.
    I just need to learn more about the things that makes my heart happy.
    Thank you for this! This is my very first lesson ever!
    Love from México

  • @thomasbaker6459
    @thomasbaker6459 Před 2 lety +12

    Damn. This has got me fired up about making music again. Love this so much.

    • @thomasbaker6459
      @thomasbaker6459 Před 2 lety +1

      Unrelated but as I was watching this my theory professor came in to tell me I can very feasibly double major in music technology and composition since I’m already taking a lot of the fellowship classes

  • @whackamole
    @whackamole Před 2 lety +3

    There is absolute gold in here. Thank you.

  • @markbelcher1777
    @markbelcher1777 Před 2 lety +4

    Great video and fantastic advice. For anyone beating themselves up about not learning/creating as fast as they would like, go to 26:21… I’ll be listening to that on loop! Many thanks 🙏

  • @chrispuhl6598
    @chrispuhl6598 Před 2 lety +6

    So today I was thinking “Red Means Recording” should be publishing another video soon. In parallel I had been looking for a resource (or resources as it turns out) to help me along learning music production (and particularly mixing and genre-based ideas). And then this video pops up. Funny old universe we live in.
    This, sir, was incredibly useful while also being entertaining.
    Thank you!

  • @rush2795
    @rush2795 Před 2 lety +6

    19:37 I'd suggest this to everyone who wants to learn theory, or learn to play music in general. If you can get your hands around a keyboard/piano, then you're literally getting your hands around music theory. Western music, and pretty much every song we think is beautiful or has a nice progression works out great on the piano. even songs written on guitar work almost better on piano, like "the wind cries mary" by Jimi Hendrix, or "Dream On" by Aerosmith. And this is the most fun way to learn theory, because when you hit a roadblock in your knowledge, and need to learn something new, your own desire ends up being the driving force to learn theory instead of a grade or some lesson you're dragging through. So you end up just learning better that way because you remember things that are in the songs you know and enjoy, instead of just learning the dry theory. Also practicing all major/minor scales as a warm up gets you to learn your scales while warming up your hands. Lastly, learning songs on piano is just satisfying AF because you can play 2+ parts at once.

    • @rush2795
      @rush2795 Před 2 lety +1

      @@GizzyDillespee I agree, you can't to slide guitar on piano. But there's plenty of pianos out there that have pitchbends, like Yamaha's CP and YC line both have them, some nord piano models to be able to bend notes, def not for slide but you can get really good bends that way. Also plenty of stylistic ways to do "bends" on keys

  • @adamcrawford6060
    @adamcrawford6060 Před 2 lety +7

    This is grade A+ music tutorial content. Absolutely killer Jeremy

  • @MrJanHjohnson
    @MrJanHjohnson Před 2 lety +4

    I've started to make music ~2yrs ago and honestly, this is by far the most valuable video! This is literally so much great information! Awesome! Thank you ❤️

  • @mgband
    @mgband Před rokem +2

    This video, right here, is a priceless jumping off point for any budding music producer. Thank you for this.

  • @southernmainesonicexperime3438

    Great video! I've been making music for many years (mostly rock, but as my pedalboard grew I started getting pulled more and more to psych and ambient). Being pretty new to Eurorack and modular synthesis in general I've binged your videos over the past year. This one has given me some great tools to help explore that world and find ways to bridge the gap between the modular and my guitar. I think the advice to explore genres is a really good point. I myself enjoy making electronic/hybrid music, but rarely ever listen to it. This inspired me to go out and find genres and artists that have elements of the sound I'm going for and I believe that will help immensely while I continue to explore blending electronic elements with more guitar oriented progressions and arrangements. Thanks!

  • @jakeoleson
    @jakeoleson Před 2 lety +4

    What an absolute treasure trove of a video. I've been going HAM learning production the past 2 years but your focus on truly learning the genre you're interested in, along with Syntorial has helped me immensely in just the 24h since I've watched your video. Also didn't realize that so much of the music I love falls under the "Microhouse" genre, as broad of a camp as it seems to be.
    Thanks for taking the time to help save fellow musicians time. A few of my favorite artists on their reddit AMAs are always like - "there are no short-cuts" when asked about any aha moments along their journey or notable resources that have helped. Thanks for sharing all of these :)

  • @HendersonDesign
    @HendersonDesign Před 3 měsíci +1

    I found you because of the talking dog. You got my subscription from this video. This was exactly what I’ve been looking for. Thank you!

  • @nilc
    @nilc Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you for calling guitar and piano "input devices", that made me smile

  • @tcr781
    @tcr781 Před 2 lety +8

    Wow, this is mind boggling! I'm reinvigorated to up my chops in all four of the pillars that you mention. Dan Worrall might be a treasure, but you know who else is? Jeremy is who else is. Thank you so much for this video :)

  • @harmless3449
    @harmless3449 Před 2 lety +6

    Just made it back around to your channel for the first time in a few years, and wow man, you've come so far. Loving the guides, gear breakdowns, reviews and of course, the music. You've come a long way from being just a pair of hands, an OP-1, and some on-screen text. Gonna be coming back here for info on eurorack modules for sure.

  • @user-cc5bp6qi9r
    @user-cc5bp6qi9r Před 3 měsíci

    I start learning music production 1 month ago and didn't know where to start. I alredy saw tons of videos on yt and all yt "tutors" says something like "its super esy" "you can make a track in 1 hour" and off course that's not true. Good sound needs good practice. Your channel and your recommendations are treasure, i really happy i found it. Thank you very much!

  • @TheDoctorM0
    @TheDoctorM0 Před 2 lety +2

    You, sir, are a teacher in the true vein of knowledge transfer. Bravo.

  • @gabrielaroque-worcel1949

    This is the best beginners video I have ever seen. I'm not even half way through and I'm already sure this is going to be the catalyst for everything I wanted to learn. Thank you so much

  • @Nick-yq5uz
    @Nick-yq5uz Před 2 lety +2

    Before the pandemic I used to HATE EDM… I now have an OP-1 because of this guy

  • @pierrebertram5555
    @pierrebertram5555 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Maybe the best video on the internet to give somebody like a roadmap where to begin and what the challenges are. Thanks for your video.

  • @Ikiddkriss
    @Ikiddkriss Před 2 lety +6

    hahaha i love this. its a list of all the things I had to learn on my own, and constantly need to be reminded of.

  • @CatFish107
    @CatFish107 Před 2 lety +3

    Very helpful vid. Thanks very much. It was Andrew's and your vids that I found when I started trying to learn about electronic music. Couple years later, and I'm a total rookie at making sounds(just exploration for now). I've been having a blast exploring how to make different sounds, but lacked direction for all the other aspects you cover. Thanks for laying out such a clear array of resources.

    • @CatFish107
      @CatFish107 Před 2 lety +1

      As far as personal genre goals, I'm satisfied with "wonder what happens when I do this. " However, learning about genre is valuable on its own merits.

  • @trailrunningphil
    @trailrunningphil Před rokem +3

    Wow. Well, congratulations Jeremy, this video has been awarded the "most helpful video award on youtube today" award. (I just made that up but it would win it) This is an incredible resource and I really appreciate all the effort and time you put into making this video with all the suggestions. Yes, it all does feel a little daunting when you lay it out like this but yeah, the older I get, the more I realise that its just about enjoying yourself.. and if your not enjoying it because your not putting the time in to learn it properly, that's on you!! Keep doing what your doing my man.

  • @BorkBork94
    @BorkBork94 Před rokem +2

    Thank you for these tips and guidelines! I started messing about with synths a couple of months ago and also stumbled into the production world. I’ve been feeling a bit stuck and uncertain on where to go and now I feel like there’s a path to follow. Thanks a ton!

  • @alyamandra4323
    @alyamandra4323 Před rokem +1

    i am grateful to the god of algorithms that brought me here
    thank you for information, it's amazing

  • @benhall2235
    @benhall2235 Před rokem +2

    My biggest blockage is certainly not misunderstanding what genre I want to write. In fact I’m sure I must speak for many who find themselves forever frustrated by genre and it’s stifling effect on creativity. The best music defies genre classification in my opinion. I don’t want to sound generic, so much effort is spent trying to escape genre when I know really by now I have the ability to turn out endless generic bangers be they dnb, dubstep, house or techno or any of the sub genres. Perhaps I should just finish tracks and not worry how they fit into electronic music as a whole. I tell myself this but it’s still very difficult to actually finish any music.

  • @larryboy1975
    @larryboy1975 Před rokem +2

    so now I know why RMR productions are so good!

  • @FRUlTsaIad
    @FRUlTsaIad Před rokem +1

    I used to watch your OP-1 videos YEARS ago, and recently just stumbled upon these tutorials you're making. I fell off the production wagon a while back, but I'm getting the itch again watching these!

  • @jbird976
    @jbird976 Před rokem +2

    Thanks Jeremy! I’ve been doing MP on and off for around 10 years and I still found this video really helpful and I wanted to say thanks for making it!

  • @Luis-il5nb
    @Luis-il5nb Před 2 lety +5

    Thank you Jeremy, this is so useful. In your last Q&A (if I remember correctly) you mentioned that teaching via VCV has been really useful. Perhaps you can consider making a video series to teach modular and put it on your patreon or charge a fee to have access to it. I would love to learn modular this way and you are very skilled in teaching and promoting creativity. I am sure I am not alone and with the release of VCV2 there might be a increase in demand.
    Thanks for inspiring us

    • @prosaschleuder
      @prosaschleuder Před 2 lety

      During the synthesis part I waited for him to recommend VCV... No one asks me for my opinion about a beginner's software synth (and rightfully so) but I'd say: Get VCV, stick to the fundamental modules for as long as you can and put everything into the scope to support the groking visually.

  • @MauricioJaguan
    @MauricioJaguan Před rokem +1

    Thenk you Jeremy! I don't think I'll ever own an OP1 but I am thankful to have found your through your OP1 videos! Love you! I love everything you do!

  • @sodiumsovereign
    @sodiumsovereign Před 2 lety +2

    Betrayal at the last second! You're a treasure

  • @eva10eva
    @eva10eva Před 2 lety +2

    You just became my music-guru. This video was so helpfull to me, just what i needed to understand how to start. This subject can be so overwellming..Thanks and greetings from Barcelona!❤

  • @laraorsoy3287
    @laraorsoy3287 Před 8 měsíci +2

    Thanks for helping people to overcome learning curve steep with valuable information

  • @toddkitta
    @toddkitta Před rokem +2

    I have topics I can teach/explain about this well so I recognize not only your incredible knowledge but your talent for engaging and teaching. This video is a fucking treasure. Well done sir!

  • @dspmusik81
    @dspmusik81 Před 2 lety +4

    Thanks for this J, you have a wonderful channel with a great mix of quality music, humor and teaching.
    I appreciate what you do.

  • @dzx37
    @dzx37 Před 6 měsíci

    I'm sitting here watching your video as I'm nearing the final layers of a 3D printed box for an electric Kalimba project. I don't even know how to hook it up to my computer yet! I just know that I love watching and listening to a wide variety of electronic music videos and finally ready to learn and do by diving right in. I'm 33 years old, a machinist and CAD designer, I have no musical background, I hated the forced Recorder class or other music classes as a young kid but I found your OP-1 videos from a few years back and enjoyed them, among many other artists since. Thank you for putting this video together, and in this 30 minutes of content you have provided hours and hours worth of resources to begin building my musical brain!

  • @pawerss1282
    @pawerss1282 Před rokem +1

    This is one of the most insightful videos Ive seen and I wish I had seen it when I first started with music production. It would have kicked my skills way faster instead of having to figure out everything and reach this conclusions all by myself. Im just talking about deciphering what is it that you need to learn and how, not even talking about learning it hahah. I guess this is what great teaching is all about. Thanks heaps

  • @danielimhof3603
    @danielimhof3603 Před 2 lety +2

    well, i just disvovered your channel and it‘s pure fun to watch and so incredibly informative. after doing things only in the box for years, i found my greatest joy in modular a few months ago, stumbled upon that by accident (and since then losing a bit of money not so much by accident). so i‘m watching all your videos and they‘re so inspiring, Thank you so much for your precious work!

  • @martintaylor9205
    @martintaylor9205 Před 2 lety +2

    I’m 68 yrs young, just got in to Eurorack and don’t want to be negative but this Illusion of making Music Albums by thousands of Artistes which no one is purchasing because most of it sounds all the same, nothing new, I’m in🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧uk so may be different in USA but I be seen amazing music in my lifetime, many Genres , loved Hendrix who has never been surpassed, hope I’m wrong
    Love your shows, so keep on keeping on👍🆒🎶🎶🎶🎶😎😇

  • @neila458
    @neila458 Před 2 lety +3

    Brilliant video, thanks for all your guidance. After watching your Deluge posts I bought one and started making ambient tracks (no previous experience in music making!). 12 months later I'm loving it ! Now I'm considering syntorial to get a better understanding of the fundamentals :-)

  • @F1reb1ad3
    @F1reb1ad3 Před 2 lety +2

    Thank you so much for taking the time to put this together. This is exactly what I need to help me start my journey in to music production.

  • @thejoshuathomas
    @thejoshuathomas Před 2 lety +1

    Your tips on genre could not be more spot on. I try to encourage that on music subreddits regularly, study study study. Same with synthesis. I took the approach of learning individual types of synthesis that peaked my interest and dedicated time to each in both study and application. Theory is definitely still in progress for me, beyond exploring triads and 4-chord progressions. Mixing and mastering came gradually to me from a mix of reading articles, watching videos and notetaking. This is a wonderful reference video, Jeremy. I'll be sharing it with others when I come across the curious minded. Thanks for all that you do.

  • @marcthenarc868
    @marcthenarc868 Před 2 lety

    Ishkur's guide is the perfect rabbit hole. Help me! I've been browsing it for 4 hours.

  • @andys6592
    @andys6592 Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks for all your videos and time. I also grew up with a classical piano background and playing saxophone in HS band etc. Slowly trying to wrap my head around synthesizers, daws, mixing etc. It's like a whole other language to me. For all the piano sheet music etc that I've learned it's been like a blessing and a curse trying to learn electronic music and sequencers etc. Anyways, thanks for your time and energy you put into these videos.

  • @ParisDemers
    @ParisDemers Před 7 měsíci +1

    This video is AMAZING! Thank you so much for putting this together ❤️

  • @forisfive5309
    @forisfive5309 Před 2 lety +1

    Jeremy, I subbed you when I got back into music recently. Kinda did the mass subscribe thing obviously most of those CCs kinda got lost in the mix. Came across the AH: 4 producers 1 synth video and I gotta say I've watched that video so many times just for your commentary ("my room..just stinks right now, thanks rachel") and your song! banger, dude. Now I'm on to you, sir. You are so freakin talented! I'm so late to this party and I'm not even mad about it. holy hell man. You get me effin amped. But it's so refreshing to see music affecting others the way it does me. I just go nuts. Keep doing what you're doing. We need you. This was epic and wholly inspiring. and one of these days...I'm going to melt your face off. Cheers!

  • @ethanbennis
    @ethanbennis Před 2 lety +1

    Jeremy, this is a fantastic video.
    I’ve been creating music on and off for many years now, but I’ve never been thrilled with my creative output. Your words on the significance of genre and studying the music you want to create really hit home.
    Thank you for sharing these resources!

  • @Matteo92Matteo
    @Matteo92Matteo Před 4 měsíci

    Thumps up for your work. You gave truly awesome guide to go through production music and do not get lost on the way. Perfect reference for my studies ❤

  • @LeonardWild
    @LeonardWild Před rokem +1

    This video is truly gold. Thank you for your work and the passion you put in it (as always).
    You are one of the first two people involved in music making I started following on YT a few years ago, and still one of my favourite! Wish you the best.

  • @ac1dfl3sh
    @ac1dfl3sh Před 2 lety +1

    Those drinks behind you are stressing me out. I would have definitely knocked that glass right onto my keyboard, if I was in your position.

  • @krysmar1
    @krysmar1 Před 2 lety +1

    What a great 30 mins. Picked up an OP-1 and burned through your other videos. Now feeling inspired to make mistakes and maybe unlock some talent.

  • @smashedapples
    @smashedapples Před 3 měsíci

    Thank you for finally singing the song at the end. It was stuck in my head right out of the gate.

  • @nickygrillet786
    @nickygrillet786 Před rokem +1

    I just stumbled here and it turns out it's what i've been trying to find somewhere for years

  • @MikeFilemaker
    @MikeFilemaker Před 2 lety +2

    This is a ton of fabulous and informative content garnished with a tiny amount of _extremely_ high quality cat content

  • @emanuilspasov3678
    @emanuilspasov3678 Před 2 lety +1

    The best music theory resource I ever found was Toby Rush's free series 'Music Theory for Musicians and Normal People'. Highly recommended.

  • @becomebetterbish4981
    @becomebetterbish4981 Před 6 měsíci

    ive literally never thought about genre before, but now I will thanks

  • @RubyOnyxx
    @RubyOnyxx Před rokem +1

    I got into music production for fun but started a uni course about it and now I really need to know my stuff so thanks for the vid it helped a lot

  • @Differentunic
    @Differentunic Před 8 měsíci +1

    This is the best video for rescources I've ever come across. thank you so much for this compilation!

  • @SvintMvrcus
    @SvintMvrcus Před 2 lety

    Been releasing music for a few years now and have a couple hundred thousand streams but I still come to CZcams to binge the fundamental tutorials everything from Theory to sound design to mixing and mastering. Your channel is one of my favorites man I’ve learned a lot from you so thank you for that.

  • @supremeuppercut
    @supremeuppercut Před 2 lety +2

    This video is brilliant. Perfectly crafted and perfectly delivered. Boom! (Thank you!)

  • @viridianloom
    @viridianloom Před rokem +1

    Wow, I wish I had this years ago when I started dipping into electronic music. So many fantastic resources here that I didn't even know about.

  • @wolfgang4468
    @wolfgang4468 Před rokem +1

    Terrific value of information that could save you a LOT of time by picking only stuff sources that are worth your while. CZcams would be a better place if only one out of 500 CZcamsrs made their videos in a similar quality. Thank you very much!

  • @yokeshhsekoy
    @yokeshhsekoy Před 2 lety

    Man, I am pinning this as my home page. So much stuff to come back to. You're a treasure too Jeremy!
    It truly is fun as heck!

  • @pterocardio
    @pterocardio Před 2 lety

    for the past 4-5 yrs ive felt like my voice is my only instrument and tried so hard to work on it but every time i record something i feel like i really need to get better at learning music theory and production and have considered retaking piano classes but remembered hating classical piano so i really appreciate this. thank you so much!

  • @riechner
    @riechner Před 2 lety +1

    Dan the man who brought an end to the loudness Wars!!!

  • @harrypetropoulos5342
    @harrypetropoulos5342 Před 2 lety

    The MOST informative music video ever. Thank you so much. I have been lost for a long time as a Music College Grad and I know this stuff, but it always felt jumbled at times and not clear enough. Thank you so much. I have been a long time follower and honestly I wish you all the best.
    This was amazing and really inspired me to keep going for it with music. Thank you so much.

  • @turtlemouth
    @turtlemouth Před 2 lety +3

    I'm learning music theory on Udemy. The lectures are easy to understand and it's all finally beginning to stick. Well worth the ten bucks.
    Lots of great info here. Thanks.

  • @rrrobart9
    @rrrobart9 Před 2 lety +1

    Just delightful. Thanks for making feel bad about my chops Jeremy. Just kidding, you actually made me feel ok about my mediocrity. We are all lucky to have you pushing us in the right direction. I think I’ll go chop up a cucumber. 🥒

  • @truthbydesign5146
    @truthbydesign5146 Před 2 lety +2

    I’ve subscribed to Yousician before. It’s decent for learning to play instruments - I was definitely improving at guitar in the months I subbed (as a 40 year old whose never touched a stringed instrument before) .. Seems to be along the same line as something like Melodics does for finger drumming lessons. Sub gets you unlimited lessons and access to a larger catalog of songs to play.

  • @earl3736
    @earl3736 Před 2 lety +1

    I recommend Dance Music Manual by Rick Snoman. It's a really comprehensive and thorough book on electronic music production. From setting up your DAW, audio interface, monitors to music theory, sound design, audio effects, and mixing. Also has an in depth study of genres like house, techno, ambient/chillout, etc. Really recommended. It's a one stop shop for all things dance music.

  • @CrunchyMusic
    @CrunchyMusic Před 2 lety +1

    Ishkur's guide is just fantastic. And hilarious. Thanks.

  • @grimelandmusic
    @grimelandmusic Před 2 lety +1

    This video really is so, so, so, so, so good. Thank you Jeremy! I'm here watching for like the 3rd or 4th time, major source of inspiration on multiple levels.

  • @TimChernikoffMusic
    @TimChernikoffMusic Před 2 měsíci

    omg that picture of the guy leaning back and the pickles is 👌👌👌👌

  • @jaguarvssnake
    @jaguarvssnake Před 2 lety +1

    Jeremy, you are just a wonderful human being.

  • @klktrnx
    @klktrnx Před 2 lety

    Wow! Thank you for making this like a one-stop shop for music fans, synth nerds, sound designers and even sound engineers! We greatly appreciate your effort, paying it forward! 👍👏👌

  • @troyouttram
    @troyouttram Před 2 lety +4

    I wish you made this video 2 years ago haha 😂. Seriously awesome content and I’m going to look into all of it even though I have knowledge in a lot of the areas already I often think getting reminded and shown different approaches always helps to make you more well rounded…. As Ricky says Knowledge is POWER!!!

  • @michaelkonomos
    @michaelkonomos Před rokem

    Man, this video is SO valuable. I do NOT have a music theory background. But it was actually really great to hear you talk about this aspect of things. As I am about 6 years into electronic music now, it's the thing I sense that I lack the most, the thing that separates the "jams" from actual moving, emotional music. Not that there is a thing wrong with jams, but I got into this to make myself and others feel something, and I think this is why your music is such a cut above some of the jammy stuff I see on CZcams. Even when you demo a new synth, you bring a musicality to it. But you still came across in a humble way about this, urging people to find ways to develop this skills, which is a very nice, non-asshole approach that I really dig. Well played!

  • @FernandoDCDuarte
    @FernandoDCDuarte Před 2 lety +1

    This is a gold mine of information and resources right here.
    A hugeongous Thank You is in order!

  • @MenekiNekoMusic
    @MenekiNekoMusic Před rokem +1

    effin love ya man.. your a special dude! appreciate all you do

  • @silofuse
    @silofuse Před 2 lety +1

    So cool that you took the time to do this video. Thanks so much.

  • @LazyCloud9
    @LazyCloud9 Před 2 lety +1

    Aha! Glad we at least had something in common. I also had to buy the audio engineer handbook few years ago for my course. Great video!

  • @user-vh4bn4zs8c
    @user-vh4bn4zs8c Před 2 lety +1

    The sweetest part is at the end😃