www.sonicacademy.com/Training+... Sonic Academy Bite Sized Video... How to sound like The Prodigy. This is a preview Video For the full course go to www.sonicacademy.com
I bought this course about 7 years ago. The amount of info I learned for the style of music I wanted to make *The Prodigy, Lunatic Calm, Crystal Method, ect.* was enormous. Many thanks to Sonic Academy for making this course. I always like to come back to this video to remind myself where it started for me. I still make acid pinged breaks to this day. Cheers.
I can realy imagine The Prodigy doin something like this. It realy sound like them. good work man. This is kinda ''take me to the hospital''. Some sort of a new track in a old school style....
A friend of mine showed me the full length tutorial and i can assure u it's all DAW. Great track. Sounds kinda Take Me To The Hospital. Similar beat and reef. Obviously a pro behind the whole set. congradzzzz
@louisbaert ye ive just found out!!! but how can they release it as their own?? do you think they've done all the copyright things? but when liam was starting out i doubt he had the money or influence to go thru all that.
@sonicness haven't tried that but donno think so... you don't have to use ableton instruments and effects.there are plenty of vst's out the.just begin with sylenth for synth and studio devil for effect.they work on fl studio
I use ableton and reason and yeah you're right, reason does look pretty and is a capable bit of software but it's biggest letdown is that it can't use 3rd party plugins (new instruments, effects etc) so for sound design I tend to use ableton a lot more. for me ableton has the edge (even tho it looks kinda crappy) if you can afford both reason and ableton go that route as you can re-wire reason through ableton as a slave and use ableton to control it. (best of both worlds)
@sydneyboi4fun You're missing the entire point of this video (and series) it's not about making music that sounds just like the Prodigy, it's about learning how to use this piece of software to produce sounds and styles you're interested in. Learning how your favourite artists do things, trying to replicate them and then adapting them and building upon them is the way creativity works.