#fl studio tutorial
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#pluggnb#music#plugg#pluggnb type beat#rnb#summrs type beat#summrs#autumn type beat#lil shine type beat#type beat#30nickk type beat#remix#fl studio tutorial#fl studio#new jazz#cadenkala#pluggnb remix#lil shine type beat free#jace type beat#goyxrd#new jazz type beat#iayze type beat#iayze type beat free for profit#pluggnb type beat free for profit#how to make pluggnb melodies#how to make pluggnb#benjicold#benjicold type beat#pluggnb tutorial#tiktok
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for this past while I thought it was Vocaloid that initially sparked my dream of making music
but I just remembered
it was Hermitcraft remixes that did it
as a kid listening to those remixes made me go "huh, what if I made music too..?"
so yeah ig shout out to folks like Elybeatmaker, Gideon, Zonie, imBlueee with 'The Forgotten' (absolutely insane RemixMyRemix entry btw), Jono Smithers, etc. (the ones mentioned were my faves) :]
running a bit late by 5 years but I'm finally trying to get on it 👍
#got the free trial of FL Studio and I have no idea what the fuck I'm doing#and a lot of the tutorials are going through my head#this might be rough :'D#but I'm trying 👍#tbh I haven't been keeping up with hermitcraft music#I should probably listen to the stuff I've missed#hermitcraft#hermitblr#music#harbor's rambles
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how I create music for my animated videos in FL studio 🎵🔮✨🕯️
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Oh I didn't realise it had to be a question question, sorry!
I do have a question then: you're a music creator right? And you did some work for SiIvaGunner? There's some ideas I have often for doing some instrumentation swapping in music I hear, making one song have the instruments/sound font from another. However, I'm really not experienced at all in music production and it can feel a bit daunting trying to understand it, I'm not sure where to start.
What are some resources you'd recommend to someone trying to start music work like that? Both the editing software itself (is GarageBand still a thing? Does it cost money?) and also how to go through songs and figure out stuff like what instruments they're using to repurpose them?
No worries! I just prefer actual questions over random meme pictures, i have no idea what i can add to those or how i could respond besides "ok" Yes, i'm part of SiIva, but i was more active in the earlier years I'm mostly busy with original compositions for games nowadays If you want to make melody/soundfont/MIDIswaps, the first thing you will need is a DAW, Garageband will work fine (i think?), but i can't say for sure, i use FL Studio myself, so i'll answer with my knowledge based on using FL Studio primarily For the sake of this tutorial, we will focus on games that used sequenced music, which usually means MIDI files and soundbanks/soundfonts (for more advanced non-sequenced/MIDI recreations, you will usually have to recreate songs from scratch, or invest in expensive hardware in the case of Touhou music for example) There is an FL Studio demo available, it's pretty good, but personally i just reccomend obtaining it legally since it's pretty cheap (and if that is not an option, then, well, yarr harr, you know (note to cover my ass from a legal perspective: i am a professional and i do not use pirated software)) Download VGMTrans (and the ROM of the game you wanna fuck around with, legally of course (wink wink)), it's software that can extract MIDI (the notes) and .dls (the instruments) files (you can also extract .sf2 files, which are the more traditional "soundfont" format, but .dls is easier for editing existing songs from games since the MIDI data and the .dls can get imported together to be more accurate, more on that later (basically, export .dls for accuracy, export .sf2 for fucking around if you just want 1 instrument from a game)) Okay, so now you have a DAW (we use FL Studio in this example), the MIDI file, and the .dls file So, now, open FL Studio, drag the MIDI file in a new project, and then it will ask you what you want to import it as (do not use FLEX, use MIDI OUT with LSD) (fuck FLEX all my buddies hate FLEX) Then you will see this thing
Okay so click the little folder icon on the top left, and then select the correct .dls file you exported for that MIDI file with VGMTrans Then, if you did everything correctly, you will hear the MIDI file WITH the correct instruments from the game, and it will sound (mostly) like how the original game sounds From there, you can start, then, you can edit the little bits, change the instruments easily, change the notes, and add funny fleentstones if you want So, tl;dr quick version: 1. Download FL Studio 2. Download VGMTrans 3. Throw ROM file in VGMtrans 4. Export the MIDI and .dls data from a song from the ROM 5. Throw MIDI in FL Studio, choose "MIDI OUT with DLS" 6. Choose .dls soundbank file with the little folder icon 7. The song will now sound like how it is in the game (or at least, close enough), so now you can go crazy and replace instruments and/or melodies and have fun
#ask#tutorial#music#vgmtrans#fl studio#melodyswaps#midiswaps#midi#dls#sf2#soundfont#siiva#siivagunner
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finished working on the first track for the album im making and I'm very proud of myself!!!! havent made music that i liked since forever and lowkey been listening to the song on loop, its not perfect but hey its my first time trying to make a song in a genre i love!!!!! and today im gonna brainstorm some ideas for the next songs oujgg
#also for anyone wondering i made the song using lmms#its also a speedcore song...sorta. i will be real its very hard to find tutorials to make speedcore on lmms i only ever found one video#that's like an hour long and it helped me way more than the other tutorials i saw#and they were all for fl studio anyways lol#i meaaaaan#i do have fl studio. but i dont feel ready enough to use it yet?? i wanna play in the mud in lmms first#then ill tinker in fl studio and perchance in other DAWs#like ableton... i also heard abt renoise???#and openmpt.... bwuh!!!! thinking#i also have cakewalk and im ought to try it out#kevin's random rambling moment
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Find Projects Fast - Fl Studio Organization
#flstudio#how to#organize#lostproject#producer#workflow#studio tips#tutorial#fl studio help#music tricks#tricks and tips
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happy new year to all! on the very first day of 2025, i am already a changed person. i discovered you can transcribe chords and notes from using FL Studio's Wave Candy plugin with its spectrogram and im going fucking crazy (positive)
so if you have FL Studio, wanna cover a song, and have a lot of time to kill just placing notes in your piano roll, check it out!
#i feel so god damn powerful#i got this info from TMASA's youtube video 'How to find Chords/Notes to any song in FL STUDIO (under 3 min)'#so if u need a tutorial u can watch that!
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youtube
New video out now about mixing vocals for the homie Jae Breeze
Check it out now
#musicians on tumblr#artists on tumblr#subscribe to my youtube channel#youtube#indie music#hiphop#rap#new music#hiphop rap#indie rapper#podcast#fl studio#musician#r&b#underground rapper#tutorial#youtube channel
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any tips for a total novice interested in music production? electronic is definitely a genre im most interested in. sorry if youve been asked this a bajillion times xx
this is great question! i'm 100% self taught, so idk if i've done everything the "right way" but i'll do my best
fall in love with it. fall deeply in love with a genre and learn everything you can about it. this will be your gateway, your reason to learn how to make music. for me it was chiptune, then synthwave, then breakcore. keep that love alive
get a DAW and learn it inside and out. ableton has a generous trial period, or i'd recommend pirating FL studio
every major DAW comes with a suite of stock plugins, both synths and effects. find tutorials for all of them. for most purposes, thess are all the tools you'll ever need. get used to programming them yourself, but also don't be ashamed of using presets!
find out how to make the sounds that are specific to your genre. the sound design, the tempos, chords, structures, common samples, everything
every major DAW also comes with a library of samples. loops, drum hits, etc. these probably suck, but they're enough to get you started. start building your own sample library, and keep it organized. you'll be collecting samples for as long as you stick with this hobby
make things! small things, big things, different styles, different plugins. see what works. i'd encourage you to finish a couple small projects first. like 30-60 seconds. they can be just loops, or a piece with an A section and a B section
learn and ask questions as you go. it will only get easier
be proud of what you make. don't put too much pressure on yourself to make something "professional." making music is fun! improving your skills is fun! make art for the sake of making art! i believe in you <3
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#pluggnb#music#plugg#pluggnb type beat#rnb#summrs#summrs type beat#pluggnb tutorial#remix#cadenkala#type beat#fl studio tutorial#new jazz#autumn type beat#goyxrd#mexikodro#benjicold type beat#summrs pluggnb type beat#pluggnb type beat free for profit#benjicold#fl studio#xangang#new jazz type beat#lil shine type beat#30nickk type beat#rnb type beat#jssr type beat#lil shine type beat free for profit#iayze type beat#tana type beat
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Toby Fox once wrote a tutorial for FL Studio all the way back in 2011! Even if you don’t intend to use FL, it’s still a pretty great read. https://web.archive.org/web/20111108213156/http://tobyfox.net/Tutorials/FLBasicTutorial.html
"You can get the Mega Man X soundfont for free here! It is by Dave Harris.
oops wrong picture.." - Toby Fox

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how did you get started making music, tools-wise?
I've talked about this a bit before and I don't necessarily recommend doing this, so skip the following two paragraphs and go right to the one under the break if you actually want the method I recommend
I lied to a girl I liked from my school and told her that, because I could play guitar I could also play piano, so I could teach her to play piano. both of these statements were lies.
I had to panic and learn both guitar and piano one week ahead of the lessons I was giving her as an excuse to hang out. so I self-taught in a haze of panic and "maybe she'll like me" (she did not) (but she kind of did) (but she was bicurious) (but she was wishy-washy on if she wanted to get together and her parents didn't like me) (and her parents were homophobic) (I think she might have texted me at one point years down the line to tell me she had a girlfriend but it was after I deleted our text history and I'm chronically unable to remember to put people's names into my contacts so who knows)
but that's all an aside. that's a bad method.
anyway if you want to start making music in earnest, doing what I did when I got serious about making songs instead of trying to impress girls whose parents wanted to destroy me with their minds here's a better answer
go acquire FL Studio. it's apparently really easy to do this because people have been acquiring it for years, or so I've heard. FL is good for learning because you've got 20 years worth of free tutorials available to you on youtube to dig through and plenty of stock vsts to play with out of the box
FL Studio is, realistically, the only tool you actually need to start making music. you could get away with less, but it's what I used, and as long as you don't pick up Specific Bad Habits, your experience with it will transfer to other DAWs if you decide to switch it later
that's all, really
if you go this route, the golden rule I'm going to impart on you right now is that you need to have a limiter on your songs. the default FL studio song templates have one, so you should keep it until you know enough to know why you might adjust something like that
it doesn't matter if it sounds fine in the editor without a limiter. everyone thinks it's not a big deal at the time, but as you get more experienced, there's literally nothing short of getting in legal trouble that you'll regret more than realising that your old work is almost entirely unsalvageable because you didn't put a limiter on it and now half of the audio is just lost data to clipping
I'm gonna put a few more recommendations for things I've used, just so you can consider them if you need something else to chew on. everything past this point is entirely optional and you'll do just fine with FL Studio alone. in fact, probably don't worry about everything below the line
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items marked with [F] are free.
DIGITAL AUDIO WORKSTATIONS THAT AREN'T FL
for tracker-based editing and chiptunes, use Renoise. you'll either love or hate trackers, and while they have a steeper learning curve than piano roll DAWs, they might come more naturally to you. I personally think that Renoise is a lot of fun to use. it kinda has an "addictive" quality to it, as funny as that is to say
for quickly sketching songs, use [F]Jummbox. it's an html workstation (multiplatform!) that writes your sketches to a url, meaning it's pretty easy to collaborate on musical sketches. Jummbox is good for making chiptune style instrumentals, but what makes it especially accessible is the fact that it works on a piano roll system, which will be familiar to you if you're working in FL
for writing sheet music, I recommend starting with [F]Musescore. I'll warn you right now that there aren't really any good notation editors and you're making lesser-of-evils decisions when you pick any of them, but it's probably the best compromise out there right now. it's the one I use when I need to hand something to a physical musician. you can also export pieces as midi, although there's better ways to do that lol
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VSTs
if you can acquire Pianoteq, do that. if you feel uncomfortable with acquiring it, [F]Keyzone Classic is free and can sound pretty nice with a bit of work, but you really have to learn to work with it
if your workstation can handle it performance-wise, go pick up [F]Vital - Spectral Warping Wavetable Synth. there's tons of free presets for this out there and it sounds good. cool synth. Serum: Advanced Wavetable Synthesizer is also good and has plenty of presets, but it's on the pricy side, so consider how comfortable you are with [finding a friend to buy it for you]
[F]Decent Sampler doesn't do much out of the box, because it's just a tool for playing sample banks, but if you go to [F]Pianobook, you can find tons of weird and fun sample packs of just about everything you can imagine. sounds derived from folk instruments, industrial equipment, lego sets, stylophones, choirs, whatever. incredibly useful.
Valhalla VintageVerb. this is the reverb plugin. you want this one. [F]Valhalla Super Massive is also good but it's more focused on alien-sounding reverb effects and enormous spaces, so it's kind of got a niche use case and you should be a little careful with it
if you've heard a lo-fi hip hop song on youtube, it probably used [F]iZotope Vinyl. this one can save you a lot of time if you're going for that sound because it comes with all the little vinyl flourishes outside of compression (like dust crackling) that you'd otherwise have to add yourself
[F]Genny VST is advertised as giving a genesis/megadrive sound, but what actually makes it shine is that it's an actual synth emulating the YM2612 and SN76489 sound chips. this means you can create your own sounds that work within those specs, which is a lot of fun! definitely beats just using samples, if you ask me
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HARSH VSTS THAT I PERSONALLY LIKE BUT WHICH ALSO MIGHT !!HURT!! YOU. SO BE VERY CAREFUL USING THESE.
[F]Tritik Krush is a bitcrushing plugin. it does a good job of bitcrushing and downsampling. I use it a lot in my songs, but you've really gotta know how to keep this one under control, because it's fully capable of making painful sounds on accident and can completely devour your mix
[F]FSA Latcher is a gorgeous noisebox. it screams in horrible ways and makes dying machine noises in various colours. this is the musical equivalent of working with radioactive material, so be extremely careful using this in anything you don't want to hurt the listener's ears
girlfriend just told me I have to recommend [F]Noise Engineering Ruina to you if I'm making a category with this heading. I don't personally use it, but she likes it (she's better at music than I am) and it's free, so you should go pick it up. "it annihilates sounds very deliciously" (maybe I should use it)
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hope that helps a bit!
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cool homestuck links
mspa forums that you should go be active on
whole shitton of resources and fanstuff
sheetmusic page that's still up but no longer linked on homestuck.net
ms paint fan adventures. need i say any more
file hosting site for mspfa
flaringk's github, has a lot of useful tools
homestuck resources artwise
andrew and byron's first comic site
msparp thats still up
the mspabooru
toby radiation fox's fl studio tutorial
pesterlogger
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Mixing Stuff Masterpost for Vocal Synth Users
i'll say a few things here and there on how i approach mixing based on a set of guidelines i've been giving thru learning. i won't go 100% and i encourage you research further on your own as everyone has a different perspective of certain concepts. whats important is that you understand the concept so that you are able to interpolate on it with your own liberties. yeah. please read the links before looking at my commentary or you won't understand what im saying.
Some DAWs, Their Guides, & Some Freebies: One of the first things you should do is pick a DAW and learn how to use it and its functions to streamline your mixing process.
Free DAWs: The Best Available in 2023 by Produce Like A Pro
Audacity / DarkAudacity (i like darkaudacity): has a section of the site dedicated to tutorials on using Audacity!
Reaper: has a 3 hour course FREE course on mixing!
FL Studio: has a demo version you can pretty much use forever with a few.........exceptions. I won't be linking any cracked versions though. Here's a manual for this program since many people use it!
Free VST Plugins by Bedroom Producers Blog
37 Best Free Mixing VST Plugins by hiphopmakers
ORDER IN THE COURT!: The order of plugins is more important than you think. These links should also introduce some terms we use in the audio production world (like "gain staging" or "EQing")
WHAT'S THE BEST EFFECTS CHAIN ORDER FOR MIXING? by Icon Collective:
The Order Of Things: Audio Plug-ins by AskAudio
Plugin order is viewed from "top to bottom". BASICALLY... most like to gain stage -> EQ -> compress -> saturate -> MORE EQing -> whatever else at this point, but i do my process a bit differently. don't be afraid to bend the rules a little bit. but the guidelines are there for a reason.....based on what they do
Basics: I'll link to some tutorials to elaborate on what was listed by Icon Collective's list.
Gain Staging: Gain Staging Like a Pro by Sweetwater
Saturation: Saturation in Mixing – Instant Warmth, Glue and Fullness with One Plugin by Tough Tones (soundgoodizer fans make some fucking noise i guess)
EQ: SUBTRACTIVE VS ADDITIVE EQ (WHEN TO USE EACH & WHY) by Producer Hive
Compression: THE COMPLETE GUIDE TO AUDIO COMPRESSION by Icon Collective + Audio Compression Basics by Universal Audio
Modulation: Modulation Effects: Flanging, Phase Shifting, and More by Universal Audio
Time Based Effects: Reverb Vs. Delay: Complete Guide To 3D Mixing by Mastering.com
Audio Busing/Routing/Sending Tracks: Your guide to busing and routing audio tracks like a pro by Splice
Limiters: 10 BEST LIMITER PLUGINS FOR MIXING AND MASTERING by Icon Collective
Sidechaining: Sidechain compression demystified: what it is and how to use it by Native Instruments (i dont know anything about this lol)
Automation: Mix Automation 101: How to Automate Your Sound For a Better Mix by Landr (p.s learn how to write automation in your respective programs)
Last note: great. these are the main things you should focus on understanding in mixing. now you are FREE my friend!
youtube
Bonus: Tempo Mapping in Reaper (if you want to learn how to midi songs with bpm changes!!!)
#vocal synth#tutorial#masterpost#mixing#utau#vocaloid#synth v#synthesizer v#cevio#voisona#neutrino#mixing tips#audio production
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youtube
Afro Music Instruments | Fl Studio Tutorial #nusretgümüşboğa
#nusret gümüşboğa#youtube#nusret#istanbul#malatya#spotify#deezer#music#london#composer#afro#FL studio#music producer
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you started learning how to make music for the purpose of soulsov right? how long did it take you to learn dealing with music-making programs?
i didn't, actually. i started learning with no real goal in mind except that i wanted to make music. fl studio is actually very approachable, at least for music making at a basic level like i've been doing. just watch a few tutorials on youtube
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