I was tripping that you were using fl studio 😲 give me a couple more weeks so i can get better with my music production and im 100% joining the bootcamp 🖤🖤🖤
there are more modes than that. Rock is Mixolydian and dorian. Some old school rock breaks all the rules use modulation all these craze music theory stuff.
@@FertassiFarah Yes and no, a mode comes from changing the root note of the scale you are working in. So for example if you are in the A Major scale and you switch your root note to B (2nd note of the A major scale) you will be in the Dorian mode. The minor scale is actually just the major scale but with your root on the 6th note (also called the Aeolian mode). Hope that helps! Learning the different modes is tough at first but gets easy very quickly and adds a ton of flavor to your playing.
I've watched tons of videos and you're one of the most informative. Get a clean cut, shave and change the wardrobe and watch the views go thru the roof. Keep up the good work
This was so inspiring ! I have always wanted to start music production and your tutorials are by far the best I have seen in many years of RU-vid teaching!
I’ve really learned a lot from you RU-vid vids. You’re my go to guy 9 times outta 10. So just wanted to say thanks for taking the time to make all these. The help a lot and you speak slow and clearly and have a nice and simple way to get topic or lesson across.
thanks a lot my brother now I have learnt what I have always wanted to know for so many years but you,in just a 8minutes of your video i see a big difference with my chord building.
heyy Alex , thanx for that.. We re always waiting ur videos and tips.. may be one day you make or teach whole edm/house song for us , synths drums bass lines strings etc. with ur beautiful vocal samples.. 💯💯👋
(Always) keep in mind branching off to other daws gives better and different sauce working in one daw will be harder then others depending on your music knowledge
This 3465 pattern might be okay for a transition, or in an uncommercial track, but it sounds unresolved as a loop, since our ears want to go to the 1 after the 5. The simple 1465 is more common/clichéd, but at least it contains the root chord, so that our brains are reminded which key the song is in, and where the pattern begins and ends. Without the C major (1) we're a bit lost.