❖ Tutorials ❖ Chords/Harmony/Theory ❖ Keys ❖ Bass ❖ Beat Making ❖ Sound Design ❖ Guitar ❖ Composition ❖ ● Samples, MIDI, Presets, Project Files & More: jaronlopez.com/collection/featured ● Book me as a Co-Producer and/or Session Musician: jaronlopez.com/co-producer-session-musician ● Take a One on One Lesson: jaronlopez.com/lessons ❖ Jaron is a multi-instrumentalist applying guitar, keyboard, bass and drum skills to the production of various music styles.
I was dissecting coldplay - clocks the other day and noticed the only difference in the drums for the entire track is in the cymbals, their intensity and rhythm.
I really appreciate that you didn’t blindly commit to the polyrhythm just because it was different and because it was the thesis of the video. The exploration was interesting and worth the coverage even if it’s not the right sound on this one
This actually sounds not that sophisticated than you explain it. Mainly because of the 4/4 backbeat. But I really don't understand the 11 chord rhythm. Is it changing every three 16th notes?
this is GODLY man. really aprecciate putting the chord names in the secondary dominant and tritonal sub part. this is textbook. the fat bass layered with synth sounds SICK as well and that dry asf drum kit oh my god
So I guess Ableton or yourself need to develop an arpeggiator with programmable time divisions per 1st note , 2nd note etc …that could be great with velocity,poly-aftertouch /mpe 😅
in Reaper DAW i can just change my grid to all those and i have hotkeys for all my grid settings spread across the top numbers line on my keyboard. even got one that changes any timing into triplets. I tried to use Ableton at first, didn't enjoy the set up at all and it was hard on my laptop cpu even just sitting.
Does the "ALT + E" trick also work in Ableton Live Lite? When I do it I get the default Windows functionality of showing the top menu. --> SOLVED: Figured it out!. On Windows it's CTRL + E and drag ;-)