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Nerd42
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Joined: June 26 2010
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Points: 36
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Topic: Arranging prog rock songs Posted: July 13 2011 at 17:09 |
I play piano, don't own a guitar. Am looking into getting one and trying to learn it. I was wondering if anybody has any suggestions on arranging or maybe a tutorial. I have songs I've "written" in the sense that I can sing them all, (I'd say they're lyric driven I guess cause the other parts aren't written yet LOL) I know where the melody goes all the time and now am trying to work out how to arrange all the different instruments. I'm using FL Studio, and found that I was fiddling with the plugins so much that I was tweaking the fake guitar sound more than putting notes down, so finally last night I went and turned everything to straight 8-bit synth sounds, like from a Nintendo. That was so I can focus strictly on the notes and chords, and can replace the instruments again later, or perhaps export a MIDI. Is that the sort of thing people usually do when they're first trying to get songs down? My goal at this point is to get these songs down as computer-generated demos, which I can then take to people and say, "hey listen I've got these songs. wanna form a band and help me play them?" Any advice for people at this stage?
Edited by Nerd42 - July 13 2011 at 17:09
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Proletariat
Forum Senior Member
Joined: March 30 2007
Location: United States
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Points: 1882
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Posted: July 13 2011 at 17:39 |
Its going to be hard to find musitians who want to play music as written by someone else with no say in it. Also if you arn't familiar with how to play an insturment there is a good possibility that what you are writing for the insturment will be impossible or near impossible. Not all chords scales and melodies are eually simple on all insturments...
Writing in this style is great if you are planning to record it all yourself but if its a band you want, go find the personalities first and then worry about the song.
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who hiccuped endlessly trying to giggle but wound up with a sob
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Nerd42
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Joined: June 26 2010
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Posted: July 13 2011 at 19:15 |
Its going to be hard to find musitians who want to play music as written by someone else with no say in it. |
Oh yeah, the demos I'm making are a starting point. If I get a band together the other members will probably have songs too or want to change things which I am totally open to
Also if you arn't familiar with how to play an insturment there is a good possibility that what you are writing for the insturment will be impossible or near impossible. Not all chords scales and melodies are eually simple on all insturments... |
Yeah that's a problem. Dunno how to get around it exactly
Writing in this style is great if you are planning to record it all yourself but if its a band you want, go find the personalities first and then worry about the song. |
I may end up recording it all myself, I don't know.
Edited by Nerd42 - July 13 2011 at 19:15
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Proletariat
Forum Senior Member
Joined: March 30 2007
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 1882
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Posted: July 13 2011 at 19:42 |
Nerd42 wrote:
Its going to be hard to find musitians who want to play music as written by someone else with no say in it. | Oh yeah, the demos I'm making are a starting point. If I get a band together the other members will probably have songs too or want to change things which I am totally open to
Also if you arn't familiar with how to play an insturment there is a good possibility that what you are writing for the insturment will be impossible or near impossible. Not all chords scales and melodies are eually simple on all insturments... | Yeah that's a problem. Dunno how to get around it exactly
Writing in this style is great if you are planning to record it all yourself but if its a band you want, go find the personalities first and then worry about the song. | I may end up recording it all myself, I don't know. |
I would suggest focusing on creating great songs on keyboard and possibly vocals, whatever you are good at that alone should be enough to interest other musitians, i wouldn't worry about writing fully formed epics
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who hiccuped endlessly trying to giggle but wound up with a sob
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EchidnasArf
Forum Senior Member
Joined: July 04 2011
Location: Austin, TX
Status: Offline
Points: 376
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Posted: July 14 2011 at 13:31 |
Nerd42 wrote:
I play piano, don't own a guitar. Am looking into getting one and trying to learn it. I was wondering if anybody has any suggestions on arranging or maybe a tutorial. I have songs I've "written" in the sense that I can sing them all, (I'd say they're lyric driven I guess cause the other parts aren't written yet LOL) I know where the melody goes all the time and now am trying to work out how to arrange all the different instruments. I'm using FL Studio, and found that I was fiddling with the plugins so much that I was tweaking the fake guitar sound more than putting notes down, so finally last night I went and turned everything to straight 8-bit synth sounds, like from a Nintendo. That was so I can focus strictly on the notes and chords, and can replace the instruments again later, or perhaps export a MIDI. Is that the sort of thing people usually do when they're first trying to get songs down? My goal at this point is to get these songs down as computer-generated demos, which I can then take to people and say, "hey listen I've got these songs. wanna form a band and help me play them?" Any advice for people at this stage? |
I've been playing guitar and composing songs for almost 10 years now. I started out on FL and that is a very good starting point, but I highly recommend investing in a program called Reason. It's somewhat of a more advanced version of Fruity Loops or Garage Band, and has some exceptionally high quality sounds (especially drums). If you're looking to make song models to show to members of your band, this is the way to go, as Reason has the most realistic sounding patches (or "instruments") out there. My current band has been together for almost 2 years now, and this is the best way I've found in getting my ideas across to them and coming up with a finished product that we can all play. When you create a song model that's utilizing simple 8-bit synth sounds (which I used to do too!), it's not doing your ideas justice and your concept will more often than not go by the wayside with your bandmates. If you'd like to listen to some of my work on Reason, check out the link to my SoundCloud below in my sig. The bottom 3 songs on there are pure Reason creations (though written on guitar), meaning everything you hear on these tracks was created note for note on a piano roll (like you have on FL). It's also worth noting that I've been in bands before where we would write all of our songs together at rehearsal. It really depends on what kind of band you and your bandmates want to be in. In my experience with several bands through the years, some people want and need direction and others will want to have their input. Hope this is of some help to you. Keep on writing!
Edited by EchidnasArf - July 14 2011 at 16:37
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awaken77
Forum Senior Member
Joined: December 25 2008
Status: Offline
Points: 374
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Posted: September 06 2011 at 09:20 |
I have the same problem I have written song (sort of), but have no idea how to record this, as I do not very familiar with all that computer software
I think to invest into workstation/arranger synthesizer to do demo tracks in easier way
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Philamelian
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Joined: May 01 2009
Location: London
Status: Offline
Points: 67
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Posted: September 08 2011 at 11:08 |
I think trying to immitate other instruments is always a big risk. I am a keyboardist. When I am composing I am aiming a guitar based music usually but my starting point is very synth based. I am trying to reach an end product which gives the impression of almos finished song that will give the guitarist the idea to take over the song and continue.
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awaken77
Forum Senior Member
Joined: December 25 2008
Status: Offline
Points: 374
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Posted: September 12 2011 at 04:49 |
some keyboard parts cannot be easily played on guitar or other instrument (and vise versa) , so you can give him only sketch of a melody or solo, for further development
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broseidon
Forum Groupie
Joined: November 14 2010
Location: Seattle
Status: Offline
Points: 46
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Posted: January 22 2012 at 20:12 |
Philamelian wrote:
I think trying to immitate other instruments is always a big risk. I am a keyboardist. When I am composing I am aiming a guitar based music usually but my starting point is very synth based. I am trying to reach an end product which gives the impression of almos finished song that will give the guitarist the idea to take over the song and continue.
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As a guitarist trying to write based on synths toward a guitar driven style of music, I find that building a song's foundation is really unnatural and hard to expand on when I become the guitarist/bassist/drummer again. Absorbing the knowledge is one aspect but utilizing it is the challenge.
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Less can't mean more that doesn't make sense, more is more - Yngwie Malmsteen
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