Activity
Mon
Wed
Fri
Sun
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Jan
Feb
Mar
What is this?
Less
More

Memberships

REDLUX ACADEMY

135 members • Free

The Melodic Rap Collective

5 members • Free

Mastering.com Members Club

33.5k members • Free

TRE: Foundations

608 members • Free

The Reverse Engineer

1.8k members • Free

Intro to Music Production

2.9k members • Free

24 contributions to Mastering.com Members Club
AI...
AI.... SOooooo.... thought I might throw out a 'controversial' topic.... what do peeps think of using AI generated parts in their music? Are you having success? Inspiration? I know I have been very pleasantly surprised in a variety of ways and would love to hear your experiences. :D
0 likes • 7d
Somewhat more in line with what @Steve Cox said, I’ve used AI to create a Reaper script that organizes any number of tracks into my mixing template. It works with preexisting scripts to automatically place them in the right groups and colour them the way I like. If it doesn’t recognize the name it goes in “unknown” and I can add that name to the script for the next time. On a 60-track mix from the new curriculum it saved me at least 30 minutes compared to the first time I imported the tracks over a year ago. My last release has a line I wanted to write (I still use pencil and paper a lot at that stage, and/or Notes on my iPhone): “each culture has its Golden Rule.” I used AI to research that assertion—kept the line— and I used its answer as a framework and draft for a blog post I finished in my own words. I tried it out for some artwork on short notice, but the results were meh and as much as possible I intend to think and plan ahead, and work with several artists I know in the future. I asked it some questions about notes I still have from my arranging courses in the 90s—mechanical voicings and Gordon Delamont’s contrapuntal techniques for writing horn lines. It created exercises for me, which I still have to complete, and offered to assess them and guide me through the coursework! That’s cool, and I sure can use the review! I’m not resistant to change. The best money I ever made touring was as half of a MIDI-driven “hi-tech duo” in the 80s (and we did all our own programming). I agree AI is an emerging, evolving tool, and I don’t judge anyone for the ways they may use it—I’m quite interested in the other answers here, in fact. Personally—I won’t use it to make music or lyrics for my own songs and compositions. I have no lack of ideas and I’m not in a hurry. For me it’s mainly a research facilitator.
Producer’s Chair
My back is killing me. Recommended chairs for my studio?
0 likes • 29d
@Brian M @Alison McGlamry this is even better than my would-be suggestion: I recently upgraded to a low-priced “gamer’s” chair from Staples, which I made sure is silent with arms that lift for playing guitar — but I had nothing more than a (squeaky) folding chair for years (with a higher end foam cushion) and it forced me to sit properly, or feel the pain. Other than my feet on the floor it’s the same position as meditating. Or balancing on a yoga ball! 🤣 👍🏼
Help please...
So without going into developer tools via Facebook messenger, I am trying to pay tribute to a mutual friend by completing our unfinished song. The problem is, the audio he sent via messenger and he has thus passed so if anyone has any idea I would greatly appreciate it! Thanks in advance.
3 likes • Jul '25
@Alain Hebert or use Reaper as your DAW, and set it to Loopback 🙂. Don’t forget to turn off channel monitoring before you press record 🫨
1 like • Jul '25
@Alain Hebert The option in Reaper is called “WASAPI (Windows Audio Session API) Shared Loopback mode.” WASAPI is Windows built in audio driver, so it bypasses the interface. In fact Reaper takes exclusive control of ASIO audio and nothing else plays through my interface when it’s engaged. If you enable channel monitoring during recording you very quickly get intolerable, speaker threatening feedback, so it warns you, “use with caution.” I haven’t used many other DAWs since I found Reaper. If there’s a list of outputs in your DAW settings where you chose FocusRite as the default, there might be an option to use Windows system sound, whatever they label it. I confess to having recorded some references this way, but paying a dollar or so probably gets more consistent results, in addition to likely being the more honourable route 🙂. Between Windows, Spotify and other sources and the DAW itself it can be hard to get it the same twice, and who knows what that means to the reference quality? 🤷🏼‍♂️
1 like • Nov '24
@Klaus Baedorf I love the “waltz” in 5/4 and the string lines at the end can make me cry.
2 likes • Dec '24
Sonic and lyrical. I was admittedly very privileged. Pianos, guitars, mandolins, ukuleles, horns with keys, valves or slides, percussion instruments of all types have been part of my consciousness since before I could speak in sentences. My dad’s side exposed me to opera and the Western classics, my mother’s to pop, folk, world and even electronic music. My grandfather on one side was a writer and a poet before he was a banker; I heard Burns, Tennyson and Coleridge, Frost, cummings Poe, Emerson, Thoreau before I went to grade school … my aunts brought in Adrienne Rich, Erica Jong, and other feminists. I listened to Yes, Tull and Gentle Giant, jazz-rock fusion and pestered Larry Coryell at shows across North America until he gave me a lesson in San Francisco. I still prefer less repetitive music with complexities, improvisation and deep, original lyrics exploring topics less travelled, aspiring to social, historical and political significance. Good one, Berlin! I think I just revealed the roots of my self-defeating perfectionism. Maybe one of these days I’ll try to write some simple, silly love songs. Yup, imma do that. As soon as I grow up!
UNUSUAL LYRIC WORDS?
What is the most unusual, uncommon or rarely spoken (vocabulary) word you have ever written into one of your songs? OR What are some unusual, uncommon or rarely spoken (vocabulary) words you may have heard in songs by other artists—well known or not? P.S.— This post is inspired by the word “concur” on a separate post. Thanks @Monroe Neese and @Phillip Patterson …WE CONCUR!
UNUSUAL LYRIC WORDS?
2 likes • Dec '24
I have a song with the word “wavicle” in the title, it’s from physics, suggesting the nature of light is both wave and particle. I like to do double meanings, so “feet a-kicking inside the womb,” alliteration, and metaphors that I don’t hear regularly in other lyrics. There’s a line in my song currently in progress that I’m especially proud of because it came from real life. “Seize the day” is as cliche as it gets, but my stepdaughter, 9 at the time, signed herself up for a baking class where she was half the age of the next youngest person. She nailed it and when I went to pick her up they’d given her the keys to the kitchen. “Like the kid with the keys to the kitchen at the cake shop, we seize each day in hand.” (c) ;-) And I’ve said this before: I know not what course others may take; but as for me, give me humanity or kill me now: AI has no role in my songwriting. I don’t care how long it takes me to get it right. When it’s right, I write it down and never doubt it’s mine.
2 likes • Dec '24
@Monroe Neese thanks, and I should add that I don’t rule out using AI in other roles. If I know what I want and ask AI to do it for me I feel differently than using something that seems more randomly generated. The more I think about this I see how, for me, getting the “right,” cohesive lines together for the thing we call a song is like solving a puzzle, and the satisfaction I personally get from solving the puzzles I set for myself is a big part of what compels me to keep doing it. Full disclosure: I’m still very much wrestling with whether “my” songs are different from jingles, library pieces I might do simply to attract clients, or collaborations with others who might have different opinions about AI. So far I think they are! But… have I placed “my songs” on a pedestal? Do we start keeping separate stage names for our “art” and pen names for work? I don’t have answers but these questions seem to be floating around in an ever increasing number of conversations I’m having, not just my own ruminations! Cheers!
1-10 of 24
Richard Fouchaux
4
89points to level up
@richard-fouchaux-2111
Educator and musician, once and future songwriter. Guitars: steel or nylon, fingers or pick.

Active 14h ago
Joined Sep 23, 2022
Toronto
Powered by