walk away..
go find new music, discover new sounds.. get away from techno for a week.. its amazing what it can do for you.
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walk away..
go find new music, discover new sounds.. get away from techno for a week.. its amazing what it can do for you.
Absolutely true.
Even longer if needs be.
Try making a different style, and like the others said, spend a week listening to a comlpetely different type of music.
My preferred one is classical music because of the tonality. i get remix ideas from pop and rock, but tonal ideas from classical, bartok, britten etc etc
very good advice.
i have a live pa coming up in a couple of weeks and i find when im preparing for gigs, i always come up with my best work in the last two weeks or so leading up to it, i guess there is a hint of inspiration if not, a certain drive to get it done right and have it worthy to be played to people.
what also works for me is to go to a tekno party and spend the night completley straight, no beer no weed, nothing and see what people react to looking from the "outside"..2c
All of the above is sound advice.
Also - would recommend being quick as you can with ideas.
Just get them down as quickly as possible and move on. The longer you hear the same loop, the more nothingy it sounds and eventually its just noise
I've abandoned plenty of tracks because I've spent ages noodling about with the same patterns and loops, getting more and more distracted with fiddling with a filter or an envelope - and eventually you have no idea what you are working on anymore.
Try and split your time between being creative (coming up with new things) and constructive (sequencing, mixdowns, mastering) etc and take lots of breaks so that you come back with fresh ideas and a more objective perspective.
If you try doing everything at once you burn out.
Give yourself different tasks which require different skills and mindsets and you will exercise different parts of your brain.
I quite like using randomisers for inspiration. Sometimes you can hear patterns in randomised stuff, and you can pull them out. Its like your brain latches on to what the pattern should be doing, then its just a matter of altering it and "correcting" it. Its can be a great way of coming up with ideas.
Best of luck mate
all very good advice, thanks guys, and actually just realizing the fact that I need to change the way I was lookin at things was a big help in itself, after posting, I spent half the night constructing a great loop out of the ashes of pure chod, sod's law I know.
Maybe I just hit a dry spot, but I tried some stuff I hadn't tried in ages, and got a whole new direction. It's like I've been dismissing the ways of workin I used to have when I first started as amaturish, without realising that I can now take those old ideas and ways, and add far more to them than I could ever have done previously.
I'm more charged up to get this pa sorted than I have been in a while, so just shows, it's good to talk:)
i usually take breaks when that happens, watch some tv, get some beer, then try to get back at it. sometimes i can do days without any inspiration, which sucks sometimes :S
try organise some samples.. ie: freestyle with some synth and break it up into individual samples to work on...
or make some nice loops, concentrating on each sound intricately....
than when you come back... the palette is there ready to go!!
Does your sequencer have a randomise function? Try hitting that a few times, see if it comes up with something that gives you a lead.
Half of the battle is getting over the "blank canvas" bit for me; once you've got something filling the void, there's something to build upon.