Let's face it . Sometimes we make a track and come back to it to find its just not what we thought and we end up just deleting it or moving onto another project. But before you do that . Listen to each loop independently and see if you can take something from it. Maybe you can EQ the kick a little and make your self a nice kick sample... Maybe the hat groove is actually really tight and you never noticed how it actually could be of use later on. You could have a clean sounding lead or one shot pattern .trying adding a bit of delay or something to it.....just go thru each track and find something you can make into a sample. I'll do this and then bounce that loop down into 123 bpm , 125 bpm, 127bpm samples . Those for me are the bpm I usually work in ... just find what you usually work in. In a few months you'll have a library of your own samples that you can cycle thru. We're not going to finish everything we start so at least take the best parts from it and move forward. If you're making samples just remember to write what keys it's in cause that will go along way when you're looking at 250 samples .... example of one of mine ( TH - A# kick - no sub 125bpm) the TH is short for tech-house and I'll make lots of kicks with the low end rolled off and some with it still there. Anyway . Thought I'd share a little tip for the dudes starting out .
Submitted September 28, 2016 at 03:39PM by L8nightDJ https://www.reddit.com/r/edmproduction/comments/54xvia/beginners_before_you_delete_a_project/?utm_source=ifttt
Javier Rodriguez
Wednesday, September 28, 2016