@cybereality said:
Nice. That one reminds me of en.abled, probably my favorite artist for a while. Don't have any of my music saved anymore. I used to DJ drum and bass and tried to produce tracks for a bit. I think I was using Reason at that time. There was only 1 track I made that I actually liked, I wasn't that good but I had fun messing with it.
I have a hard time finding a specific artist when I search for en.abled but, I'd really like to listen to them now XD. So when you where producing music, did you learn music theory? It's actually shockingly easily to learn; you don't have to learn how to read sheet music to grasp basic music theory concepts. The video that got me started learning music theory was still one from Piano in 21 days (he has an entire program that is free or at least it was free the last time I checked):
Here is another set of videos on basic music theory but, I'll admit that this video wasn't the one I discovered first and therefor it's hard for me to judge where good teaching is concerned:
If you can grasp the basic concepts in those videos, you can move to searching about other basic music theory concepts on Youtube. Now I wouldn't link you to videos on every music theory concept on Youtube but, I'll give you a list of useful music theory jargon to look up if you'd like:
Functional Harmony (most videos on this topic will deal with the major scale but, the same concept applies to the minor scale as well)
Minor Scale
Modes - The Youtube channel 8- minute theory has the only short video on this subject worth walking.
and that's all I can think of right now. All of the music theory concept for piano can easily be translated to guitar as they both share the same tuning system (standard tuning).