RE: Humbly Asking for Feedback
March 24, 2017 at 11:48 am
(This post was last modified: March 24, 2017 at 11:53 am by Faith No More.)
Thanks guys.
So I looked at the old file and the riff starts halfway between the first and second beat. I can't remember exactly why but I vaguely remember the first note getting drowned out when I let it start on the beet. There was probably a better way to deal with it, and I'm sure if I were taking a music theory class or something the teacher would have docked my score for that.
Oh, well. I fully admit that I am in the learning process and am not going to be churning out masterpieces any time soon.
If anyone is interested in hearing some more of my songs, you can visit my Burrito909 Soundcloud account.
(March 20, 2017 at 1:18 am)bennyboy Wrote: Attack on a piano really can't be wrong-- it's more strings sounds that will end up peaking late I think. Unless you are playing midi live with Asio4All, which usually gives about a 1/10 second delay. But that wouldn't matter if you were filling in notes by hand.
You know, it's very possible that you are just more jazzy than I am, or in a more relaxed groove. Listening from about 2:40 on, I can really hear that the piano note is falling in between small beats. If you hear my music, you'll hear that when I sequence, it's very strongly metronomic.
So I looked at the old file and the riff starts halfway between the first and second beat. I can't remember exactly why but I vaguely remember the first note getting drowned out when I let it start on the beet. There was probably a better way to deal with it, and I'm sure if I were taking a music theory class or something the teacher would have docked my score for that.
Oh, well. I fully admit that I am in the learning process and am not going to be churning out masterpieces any time soon.
If anyone is interested in hearing some more of my songs, you can visit my Burrito909 Soundcloud account.
Even if the open windows of science at first make us shiver after the cozy indoor warmth of traditional humanizing myths, in the end the fresh air brings vigor, and the great spaces have a splendor of their own - Bertrand Russell