AI has finally democratized the music industry, the people who made music cuz the had the equipment to do it,now that everyone has access to this through AI , now they are crying, music was once live, then it was recorded, to DAW to prompt, imagine those who played Music in real time, before all the tech, don't you think they also felt the same way?
When I do music theory, I try to make it an activity that promotes creative exploration (as opposed to the "corpse forensics" method). I think you’ll dig what I do, and you can see some examples over on my channel.
Just in time for drone day, I see. I just did an especial about drones and did a couple... one of them with a guitar, an ebow clone and a looper pedal.
I’m trying to practice my realisations and now don’t watch your videos unless I’m also practicing scales or something. So, naturally, as soon as you pointed out organ drones often are sitting on the dominant I just did that and then noodled something in dorian. Yay! 🥳 I often droned on the root or a third or a fourth, but never droned with a fifth until just there. So that was nice. Finished it off with an old descending 2-5-2-1; and actually felt Done with a practice for once instead of just running out of steam on transcribing some piece! 😊
Looking over your sample pack website and that 8 pack bundle for $55 looks interesting… but I’m curious how big each pack is and how many sounds each one comes with. The 2 most important factors of a sample pack imo, are size and number of sounds.
Hey, this video popped up on my feed - I loved it, especially the way you explain drones and elated techniques. I like the way you speak - very down to earth, like Venus Theory and David Hilowitz. I just subscribed, signed up and looking forward to hearing some of your discography on bc.
Good stuff! Drones are absolutely fundamental to how humans interact with music - most, if not all, musical heritages have drones as prominent elements in their history. They add a frame for us to process the sounds we're hearing and put them in a specific context. Honestly, in many ways, keys are just implied drones. Everything is meant to relate back to that "invisible" drone root note. Simple or complex, they can be absolutely intriguing!
I've always loved the outer limits of what a drone based track can be, ever since listening to Zerthis Was A Shivering Human Image by Eluvium. I'm going to try some of these ideas on my next drone tapes...
I like your drones, Jameson. Those interested in this kind of thing might want to give @synkrotron channel a listen too. He's quite good at keeping a drone fresh. My drones? Not so much. 😀
Even the electric guitar isn't gonna blow people away like in the 50s. It happens to everything. Synths. Sound design. That said, I don't find your drones boring at all.
That made me go listen my own track named .... Drone 😆 Now I know science behind it, I used it as bass, rhythmic, texture, melody, moves, rubs, and sweet spots. Never thought fancy organ leg work is for drone notes and not gas/brake! 🤪 Drone feticists are happy, next video bass rehab, please! ❤
I am sorry, I am so sorry, I'm a linguistics guy, I love thinking about the sounds we make in language, I mean this question entirely innocently but I must know! You say "drone" every time, in this video, in a way that surprises me, with (roughly speaking) a short, unmoving 'o' sound rather than what I've always heard before in every native English dialect, a longer 'o' sound that closes up as it is pronounced. So I am asking--do you by chance have a faint trace of an accent from some other language poking through there? (I.e. do you have a second native language or were raised around one?) Or is this just an American regional accent I wasn't aware of? (I've been assuming yuo're from Arkansas or nearby from what I've heard so far.)
I just noticed one time where there’s a diphthong between the short O and the long open O, around 7:30. FWIW I have noticed some American accents just have more-clipped “roll” vowels. A lot like in Southern England it’s a lot more clipped than in the North or in Scotland.
Mississippi. I don't consider my accent to be very thick, but it does poke through on certain words. I actually appreciate your explanation as most people just call me Billy Bob Thornton and move on haha
I love you’re content I love seeing all your toys and the way you use them but if possible in the future you can teach this ideas in the box with plugins so I can see it in that perspective. Thanks !!