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Strumming Ideas – Song Writing Tips – Making Music – Acoustic Guitar Lesson – EASY

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Strumming Ideas – Song Writing Tips – Making Music – Acoustic Guitar Lesson – EASY Brett Papa papastachepop papastache102 papastache
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For those of you love songwriting and need some tips, I made this video for you guys. Enjoy(:

1) Write what you feel.
– Don’t just write out random lyrics. Write about something that’s important to you, something you care about, or maybe even something funny you saw on the way to school or work.

2) Set a mood for the song.
– If it’s a sad song, set a melancholy mood for the song, but make sure to not go too sad. Try to have a common mood or tone throughout the song.

3) Take your time.
– It’s not the end of the world. Take your time to craft the work of art in which you imagine. Unless you’re on a big deadline or something like that, just slow down and take your time.

4) Keep the words simple.
– A song isn’t a college english essay. There is no need to use big words in songs and I wouldn’t recommend it in general because using too much of these can lose the listener if he or she doesn’t know what the words mean.

5) Don’t be discouraged if your first song isn’t well done.
– Many songwriters, including myself, struggle when it first comes to creating a song. If your song just doesn’t seem good on the first draft or in general, do not be discouraged. This is only your first song and you will get better. I promise this to you.

6) Practice, Practice, Practice!
– Like anything else, songwriting is a skill that requires practice. By practicing even once a day you can and will improve your songwriting skills. Just like singing everyday helps improve your singing and playing piano helps improve your piano playing skills, practicing your songwriting skills will improve your songwriting skills.

7) Relate to the listener.
– It may not seem like it, but there are definitely people out there who can relate to your break up story or the love you have for summer vacation. People love it when they can relate to something and songs are one of those things. So, be sure to try and relate to the listener.

8) Understand the structure of a song.
– Most songs have a structure of Intro, Verse 1, Chorus, Verse 2, Chorus, Bridge, and then the Chorus and Outro. As you know, the choruses have repeating lyrics so all you have to do is write one chorus and you have 3 parts of the song done. Most of the writing comes from the verses because most of the time the verses have different lyrics, but sometimes artists repeat the same lyrics in both verses. The bridge doesn’t always have lyrics because sometimes artists choose to put in an instrumental break there.

9) Explore the world for inspiration, even if your “world” is only your backyard.
– Most of the time, sitting at home and just staring at a wall won’t help with writing a song. So, take your notebook, sheet, phone, or whatever you use and go explore your world. This could be anything from your own backyard to Times Square. Go out and explore and you will get inspiration. The best exploration would be places that you love. If you love the beach, go to the beach and try to get inspiration from there.

10) Write because you love it, not because you want money.
– This may be the most obvious but it’s true. Some writers write because they care about making millions and having a luxurious life. Do NOT do that. Write because you love to. Write because it is the world you escape to when you’re feeling sad or lonely. Write because it makes you happy. I believe that the best art comes when you put your heart into it. If you’re just writing random stuff to get a number 1 hit and make millions, it takes the fun away from songwriting and it takes away your skilled gift. So, write because you love to, not because you want money.

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How to Mix Acoustic Music — Part 1: Acoustic Guitar

How to Mix Acoustic Music — Part 1: Acoustic Guitar

Mixing Acoustic Pop: http://mixingchosen.com
The Mix Academy: http://bit.ly/mixacademy
Learn compression: http://learncompression.com
Learn to mix hip-hop: http://mixinghiphop.com
Ear training: http://quiztones.com
Mixing tips: http://theproaudiofiles.com

The first in a four-part series about mixing acoustic singer-songwriter music. In the first video, we’ll take a look at how to mix an acoustic guitar.

Song is ‘Chosen’ by Jeris Haulbrook

Software/Plugins:
– Avid Pro Tools
– FabFilter Pro-Q
– Waves CLA Guitars
– Blue Cat’s PatchWork
– UAD LA-2A
– UAD UA 610 Tube Preamp & EQ Plug-In Collection
– UAD Studer A800 Multichannel Tape Recorder

Transcript:

Hey guys, David Glenn of davidglennrecording.com and theproaudiofiles.com. Today we’re going to kick off a brand new four part series on how to mix an acoustic, singer-songwriter track.

This song as got an acoustic guitar that’s picked, an acoustic guitar that’s strummed and a lead vocal.

The song is called “Chosen”. It’s by one of my best friends, Jaris Cole. We’re in the process of recording his debut EP right now. And I kind of pulled these in from the radio version we’re working on so we can have some acoustics and a vocal.

We’re going to cover the acoustic. Video 2 I’m covering the lead vocal. Video 3, I’m showing you the EQ technique. Mid-side technique for sweetening up the acoustic. And then in the 4th video we’ll go over the stereo bus, and how I’m treating that with multiple plug-ins.

You’ll notice I’ve got the lead vocal just kind of sitting at the forefront. And then I just wanted the acoustics to support the lead vocal. To give some music, and to be foundational.

This acoustic is pulled this from a Pro Tools session for the radio version, but I’ve got multiple acoustic parts. These are all the picked parts, and we did it in sections for a reason, but those are going to an Oxford ACS pick. And that goes to my all music.

All these acoustics parts are routed through here. And the strumming part I handled differently. I treated it with different EQ and compression and that kind of stuff. So, let’s hear the picked acoustic. Let’s actually bypass everything.

We track this with a 414 on an older Martin. I can’t remember the model, but stuck that in the, in the booth and tracked it. Let’s see through the UAD Apollo, and no plug-ins to tape. So, this is dry.

It’s dry. Just the mic. Maybe 5 or 6 inches off the guitar. I like to aim for that sweet spot just above the sound hole where you don’t get so much of the boomyness. If this were an acoustic guitar it would be the section right up in here. Kind of aim the mic right there.

Maybe show you guys a picture of that, but the sound, one more time so we can A/B it.

First step was to remove some of the low mid, some of the mud, and to make sure I didn’t get any of the rumble or anything. You can see right there I’m pulling out a little bit, actually quite a bit. 9 dB at 163, 400. And what I did is I would just sweep through. If you guys aren’t familiar with the FabFilter Pro-Q EQ let me show you what this can do.

I can zone in on the frequencies that I want to remove. I’ve done that with low mids. Then let’s play quickly the Studer, love the UAD stuff. And the Studer is beautiful. We’ve got the acoustic preset. Looks like I just turned off the noise, and dialed in the input.

It’s more of a character thing. And it just feels good to run it through tape. So moving on to the Chris Lord Alge acoustic. The CLA acoustic plug-in.

This is going to be quite a bit of a volume difference here, but this brightens it up and gives it some clarity.

You can already tell it’s much clearer. I lost a little bit of the bottom end in that so I used LA-2 to kind of add some oomph back it. Let’s before and after that.I’m liking the vibe on the picked acoustic guitar. Uh, you’ll see I’ve run that through the UAD EMT plate. Just puts that in a space. Then I put the vocal in the same exact space.

It just gives it a sense of space. That’s the picked acoustic guitar. I’ll show you real quick the strummed acoustic guitar. I wanted to mix that differently.

Nice and clear. And for those of you guys using too many plug-ins let me show you a quick little tip. I’ll sometimes take the aux tracks or the tracks themselves and scoop them up like this. If you click and drag to try and limit my view of all the inserts.

We’ve got the the low mids coming down. The Studer once again with the acoustic guitar. Looks like we did not go with an LA-2.

I used the new Universal Audio 610B. Love the tone of that. In the track with the vocal I liked what that was doing. I actually added that on the back end. And then you can see similarly we’re routing this strummed acoustic to the EMT vocal plate again. Let’s here that without it.

I didn’t want to overdo the room sound on this for demo sake. Just to keep it somewhat dry, but still give it a feel and that’s video one. There’s the acoustic guitar.

Mixing Music Tips

Tips for mixing your music professionally .
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Jessie J – Sweet Talker (Acoustic)

Get “Sweet Talker” on the new album from Jessie J “Sweet Talker”: http://smarturl.it/JSJSweetTalkerdlxDA Music video by Jessie J performing Sweet Talker. (C) 2014 Republic Records…
Video Rating: 4 / 5