Finally someone who don't use any theory and make it so easy to understand, thank you and you have a new subscriber here. If you have the time eventually it would be great if you can make a video on an orientalist piece like in Lawrence of Arabia or desert theme since almost no one is covering this.
I don't know if you meant too, but it seems like you have a minimalist approach, which I totally dig. You can't deny, it sounds great. Good job, you have a new fan.
Nice Video! :) I's a more modern but also very generic approach to film score. The arrangement and composition of looping (everything is expected) and simple chord structures remind me of a pop song rather than a movie score. I really like how you explained it but for me the 4 chords progression and choice of sounds and especially play styles of all single orchestra instruments is flat and without dynamic. You can add so much love and detail to a piece like this and start playing around with every single instrument rather than just hold notes to build 4 chords. Maybe it's too much to expect for a brief RUclips tutorial video. So good job :)!
just started out and making music scores has been one of goals to acheive and to think this was my first video to watch i truly appreciate it pls more videos💯
Hey man i just wanted to thank you for that great video which helped me alot. I wanted to make some music for my own video game and this is exactly what i needed to start. cheers
Thank you, the pace of this video is absolutely excellent and everything explained clearly. But the war drums sort of ruin the music experience, is it just me or for real? They feel out of place. But the violin/cello part is wonderful.
I'm a beginner and recommend you show me where everything is so I don't get lost,coz one thing you say will lose me,like Opus,coulda told me where it was to make it simpler for me but I had to look for it and I still haven't found it,you need to do better,great tutorial though
1 minute in, already two issues regarding what is said about the 'right' bpm and key. - regarding bpm: it all depends on what the scene needs. It could be a slow 50 bpm romantic piece, or a fast 180 bpm action piece, or anything in between. Depending whether you write in half time or double time, the same piece can also be written in 100 bpm or 360 bpm, it really doesn't matter. More importantly, the bpm of many film scores is flexible and ever changing depending on what is on the screen. Sometimes the vibe of the scene changes so that the music needs to be slower/faster. Sometimes you want to land on a hitpoint so you hold a moment for a bit longer (you can also achieve this with time signature changes). These are big differences with most electronic music, which is much more static BPM-wise. - regarding keys: most film scores are not in a rigid key like 'A minor', and if they are, they are generally not for long that long. There are tonal centers that the music gravitates towards, sure, but the harmonic language is usually a bit more complex than that, with modal harmony, chromatic mediants, and modulations to new keys to accompany significant moments in the film. In film music you could for example have a theme with a minor tonal center (i), with a hint of Dorian (IV) - perhaps to signify the character's heroism - and then ending on a bVI, bVII, and Vsus>V cadence, which then modulates down a minor third. Again, there are no hard rules and it really depends on the nature of what is on the screen. I think the advice here imposes a limiting framework on beginners which is ultimately counterproductive for people wanting to write film scores.
its just pratice ... in time you figure it out ... its not rocker science .. the only tricky part is to make something that sounds uniq and fresh at the same time...
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Fantastic tutorial. Cinematic in 12 mins who'd have thought.
Keeping it simple in this one 😉
I thought about it when I read the title
Thanks man, I can take some formulas to make song arrangements, or to start scoring my films lol.😂❤
Beautiful sounds and tutorial
Thank you!
Finally someone who don't use any theory and make it so easy to understand, thank you and you have a new subscriber here. If you have the time eventually it would be great if you can make a video on an orientalist piece like in Lawrence of Arabia or desert theme since almost no one is covering this.
Awesome, thank you!
This is my first video of learning about scores and I'm very excited 😂
That's great!
Dude that opening progression you have is basically "The day the whole world went away" Trent Reznor, great stuff.
Let me have a listen
After watching Oppenheimer I wanted to created this 🥹. Who also watched the movie Oppenheimer?
Did you went to college while you doing your music production career
Yes!@@jaideveremy4371
@@SeventhBeatsTV that's cool I can do college and doing my music production career at the same time
Wow! Amazing work.
nice tutorial and beautiful song, woodwinds arent strings btw theyre wind instruments like flutes and trumpets
Yes, you are right
Just sniped the Hollywood Fantasy Orchestra on sale. This video will be on repeat while i'm installing...and waiting :D
I don't know if you meant too, but it seems like you have a minimalist approach, which I totally dig. You can't deny, it sounds great. Good job, you have a new fan.
Hello from Chile, what software did you use? I use Studio One, but I liked your software, I would like to use it too
O NOMBRE É FL STUDIO, SAUDACIONES MI HERMANO
Great tutorial! Which plugins would you recommend for beginners who cant afford opus?
Hey, great video. But woodwind s are flutes, oboes etc.
Violins are strings.
I would love another tutorial like this but with more music theory involved. This is fantastic!
Great video! Which DAW do you use?
It's FL Studio
Thanks
im incredibly lost. Where do I find and get OPUS, and Forbidden Planet. think I've found Hollywood Orchestra, but looks like they've updated it to 2.
❤thank you dadi. We need more of this
Thank you very much for this my man. Greetings from Paraguay.
My pleasure!
Banger outcome my friend
Thanks!
Nice Video! :)
I's a more modern but also very generic approach to film score. The arrangement and composition of looping (everything is expected) and simple chord structures remind me of a pop song rather than a movie score. I really like how you explained it but for me the 4 chords progression and choice of sounds and especially play styles of all single orchestra instruments is flat and without dynamic. You can add so much love and detail to a piece like this and start playing around with every single instrument rather than just hold notes to build 4 chords. Maybe it's too much to expect for a brief RUclips tutorial video. So good job :)!
Nice tutorial. I'd really like you to create more of this💯💯💯💯💯
Thank you! I will ;)
Thanks Seventh'
just started out and making music scores has been one of goals to acheive and to think this was my first video to watch i truly appreciate it pls more videos💯
Thanks for watching!
What music software do you use? I’m looking at making my own music scores for some short films I want to make. Thanks
FL Studio
Download this free project: drive.google.com/file/d/1w5kGB_wVyApHBslRuwsXZuRGVjIpQKLT/view
cool but you need to automate the dynamic of each instruments not only the velocity
You can do both! But for my videos I don't like to add 50 automations tweaking dynamics etc
Bro its just simple tutor
Hey man i just wanted to thank you for that great video which helped me alot. I wanted to make some music for my own video game and this is exactly what i needed to start. cheers
Glad I could help!
Thank you for this great Tutorial you helped me a lot 👊💪
Glad to hear that!
Best of the best surely that's a great talent
Thank you😊
is Opus free? Thank you
It isn't
Do you know why my fl video player is laggy glitchy? What are your audio settings??
Increase your sample rate in audio settings
where can we get the packs ?
Thank you, the pace of this video is absolutely excellent and everything explained clearly.
But the war drums sort of ruin the music experience, is it just me or for real?
They feel out of place.
But the violin/cello part is wonderful.
I got EastWest Composer Cloud but when I try to compose in my DAW the sounds from Opus drop out 😢
Nice Tutorial - Thanks for sharing :)
You're welcome 😊
What platform did use to make these scores
Want more tutorials on this topic man 🙌🏻🔥
More to come!
man you should do more like these🔥🔥
Can I use this soundtrack for my trailer🙏🥺
This is the "Prisoners" Denis Villeneuve score
FIREEEE 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
Amazing video!
Thanks!
Hey 7th long time no see
Glad you're back!
How long must a score be ?
Please please please make more scoring tutorial videos🥲🙃🫠❤️
I will 💯💯
@@SeventhBeatsTVwe are still waiting... =)))))
Awesome!!!
nice beat but flp dont work. says invalid data
I'm a beginner and recommend you show me where everything is so I don't get lost,coz one thing you say will lose me,like Opus,coulda told me where it was to make it simpler for me but I had to look for it and I still haven't found it,you need to do better,great tutorial though
Mate opus is a vst sold by eastwest that houses there sample libraries.
1 minute in, already two issues regarding what is said about the 'right' bpm and key.
- regarding bpm: it all depends on what the scene needs. It could be a slow 50 bpm romantic piece, or a fast 180 bpm action piece, or anything in between. Depending whether you write in half time or double time, the same piece can also be written in 100 bpm or 360 bpm, it really doesn't matter. More importantly, the bpm of many film scores is flexible and ever changing depending on what is on the screen. Sometimes the vibe of the scene changes so that the music needs to be slower/faster. Sometimes you want to land on a hitpoint so you hold a moment for a bit longer (you can also achieve this with time signature changes). These are big differences with most electronic music, which is much more static BPM-wise.
- regarding keys: most film scores are not in a rigid key like 'A minor', and if they are, they are generally not for long that long. There are tonal centers that the music gravitates towards, sure, but the harmonic language is usually a bit more complex than that, with modal harmony, chromatic mediants, and modulations to new keys to accompany significant moments in the film. In film music you could for example have a theme with a minor tonal center (i), with a hint of Dorian (IV) - perhaps to signify the character's heroism - and then ending on a bVI, bVII, and Vsus>V cadence, which then modulates down a minor third. Again, there are no hard rules and it really depends on the nature of what is on the screen.
I think the advice here imposes a limiting framework on beginners which is ultimately counterproductive for people wanting to write film scores.
This is just a beginner tutorial for people who want to start making film scores. Making it too difficult from the beginning would scare people 😉
Also watch my latest Film Scoring tutorial: ruclips.net/video/PkA2Wh-hdh8/видео.html
❤❤Love from Botswana King
CHELLO not SELLO but yeah great tutorial :)
Plugging name??
It's plugin! probably why your question never got answered bro..!!
Damn!
I wish I can be this good
its just pratice ... in time you figure it out ... its not rocker science .. the only tricky part is to make something that sounds uniq and fresh at the same time...
💯💯
DUDE MAKE MORE LIKE LUDOVIC GÖRANSON
Sure!
EXCELLENT
Many thanks!
Fire
yah more
Super. Hi from Azerbaijan Sheki.
🙏🏼🙏🏼
FL Crashes when i try to make scores ugh i hate it
🥲
exp means expressive, i think.
Expression
Are you a Frenchman?
Awful sounding
Brilliant video!
Glad you liked it!
Great video. What DAW are you using?
FL studio
@@SeventhBeatsTV Thank u