Originally Posted by
phen245
Youtube tutorials are great place to start, but you need to understand that they won't make you amazing. [if you're watching a tutorial, you're not actually making music.]
At first, give yourself some time to just screw around, play with stuff. Remember that this should be fun (or at least extremely gratifying).
once you start understanding the basic functions of your DAW, it's actually time to start reading the manual. (more often than not, in life outside of the computer, i find that reading the instructions to something puts me miles ahead of everybody who's too cool to do such a thing)
once you can operate the daw, it's time to learn mixing techniques, and (basic) MUSIC THEORY... i know, learning... but still.
as far as videos go, tutorials are awesome and functional, but song structure and workflow tend to be the hardest thing for many people. i'd also watch some talks/seminars. public talks/seminars/presentations by producers have been extremely helpful and inspiring to me.
common mistakes:
-"if i get ****vst then i can produce hella hard." <- this is a rabbit hole. Ill Gates said something like "all you need is a pencil, paper and an eraser".
-"being pedantic" <- this is something i struggle with most. i will get so zoned in on something being perfect, that i lose scope, and it fucks with my workflow.
-"realistic expectations/goals" <- nobody will ever make "the best electronic song of all time". but there will always be something fantastic coming out of a bedroom somewhere.
sorry, long post, but of the people i know that went to audio engineering college, i'd say about 15% of them actually landed a career. Most of them just fucked off and dropped out.
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