<< id say drop it and start another... and another and another.. i found i learned the most when i didnt concentrate on making entire tracks and just wrote about 32 bars of the main portion, sometimes a bit of an intro, then went onto the next song >>
I don't really agree with that at all. I think its best to finish a track. Coming up with an idea (drums, bassline, samples) is hard, but laying out the whole track and keeping it fresh and making it have energy is just as important and something that needs to be accomplished too. Once I started actually completing every track I started, instead of just coming up with a few bars and moving on when I got stuck, is when I actually made some progress. But if I work on something for more than 3 days in a row is when it does get shelved. --- Drum&Bass Arena Producers Discussion List http://www.breakbeat.co.uk You are currently subscribed to dnb-prod as: [email protected] To unsubscribe send a blank email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
