BTW guys the melody I made at the end is free to download! Please put some fire drums over that! hypeddit.com/hot-or-not/funk-rb Also my mom is reading all the comments so let's all CHILL TF OUT!
Great vid with you coproducer (mom) How do I download that melody you played at the end? Sorry I'm new to this. But I'm quarantined and always wanted to make a beat and I'm using your videos for my instructions
J Garcia I think he’s great and I love learning from him! Sometimes watching his videos though I just feel very amateurish in comparison, that’s all. Lol
@@v.i.d1085 The equation is simple : Music = dedication+passion+(patience-knowledge). And by knowledge, I mean music theory. As a composer (not my job though, but it didn't stop me from composing for videogames), sounds weird but I started learning music theory by myself by the age of 12. Why would you inflict yourself such thing ? Because music theory is fascinating. Notice how the mom part didn't imply any chords, any arrangement. And servida added all of those later. Don't get me wrong, i'm still quite astounished by what she's done, she nailed it ! But trust me, people who studied music theory and people who didn't are really, really easy to tell apart. Take a painter for example. That painter needs a canvas, colours, and a palette to hold them. Music theory is that palette. Surely a painter without it can still use colors, like they can put them on another surface, but they won't be comfortable with the setup. They won't mix the colors quite well. Likewise, people who studied music theory have a way, way more fluent workflow, and are much more comfortable making music and understanding the concepts behind it. which is why getting into theory as early as possible is paramount if you want to make music. There's nothing more obnoxious than going on a livestream of someone making music, looking at them hitting their heads on a wall because they can't even find the notes for a chord in a 4 chords progression, so you see them placing a note, listening to the thing, realizing it's not what they wanted, and redo until it's basically just a basic major chord. Like, if you are in C major , dude, it ain't hard, it's obviously a C major chord (C E G), so it's needless to put up that Eb (would be a minor chord on I) or a F (would be a sus4),please end the slaughter here ! It's rather sad to think that these guys hear something in their head, but struggle to express it because they don't know music theory. And you'll tell me "what if you didn't care of the rules" and sure ! you can. This is called non-functional harmony, a paradox because this is a rule everything you compose without rules follows. But it has to be used rarely otherwise (unless you know what you are doing) your music won't sound good. music theory doesn't "block" you from doing whatever you want. It enhances your line of sight, by providing you the palette to put your ideas on. If it was just about "using samples and sounds until it sounds good", then imagine if Da Vinci said "No fucking clue how I painted the mona lisa, I just did random stuff until it looked good" well then sorry but it would have sounded like the guy just got lucky and the piece wouldn't be that famous. Not knowing music theory is like restricting yourself for no reason. One day, a producer who never learnt music theory (thinking it was bs) just went at me like "dude, check this out, made this", "took me a month". I listened to his track for what, 5 minutes, and I sat back in front of my MIDI keyboard and just played his music live and even improved on it, telling him what he could add. He couldn't believe it, but really it was nothing spectacular, I just listened to the progression, paid attention to the context of the melody, and that was it. There's no prestige taking a month to come up with something you could finish in a few days. Like, you're not superhuman if you just made a music without knowing about music theory. Producers like Deadmau5 even own a grand piano and barely know about chords and scales. Which is why it's a pain to watch them live (atleast from my point of view), they play on keyboards but don't know how to play them so they rely on their computer instead of their hands. They struggle on things that should be a piece of cake to them. They miss something huge with music theory. And in the same way , there's no prestige claiming you have the high ground because you know about music theory. Which is why I actually started working on a discord server for anyone eager to learn about music theory (from most basics like chords and modes to most advanced stuff like modal interchange or chromatic mediants in film scoring) and sound design. Because if you're a jerk, but know about music theory and just want to flex, you're just a jerk. So my intention wasn't to sound pretentious at all, if I do then I'm sorry, it's not the aim of all this at all. I just wanted to enlighten you because I think your ideas about what music theory really is are biased :)
@@IsaacRuchalski i respect your opinion and its 100% true what u hav said.. But with that its also true that u dont need all the music theory at once..its the thing u learn with time.. I myself learned chords progression, adding bass, watching youtube tutorials.. A music listener knows what is missing on the music he made.. So he can learn that missing part from youtube.. You dont have to 1st learn music theory and then start.. Time will teach u everything.. But yeah your one point hit me hard.. I hear so many ideas in my head but cant express due to lack of knowledge..
@@v.i.d1085 In fact, you're right. You don't need to learn ALL of music theory. I , by myself, didn't. Because music theory isn't fixed, it's constantly evolving with new principles (I, for my part, prefer staying to the ol' classical principles, but I still made musics with "new" concepts like serialism and stuff like that), and most of the time, it depends on your background : are you more of a classical, or a jazz player ? Guitar, or keyboard ? It all varies. And this is also an issue. For my part I'm more of a classical kinda guy, but for videogames, you gotta compose jazzy stuff sometimes, so I intentionally (and with pleasure) learnt some "jazz theory" and it's been so useful ! My little brother is 14, and plays the guitar. I coded a short webpage for him so he can find any chord he wants (may upload it on some GitLab for public access), because he has no trouble playing the few chords he knows on his guitar, but he fails to glue them together and make a coherent ensemble. He has the practice, he can play in all sorts of ways, from the easiest to the hardest (he beats me at it by far ahah, I'm more of a piano guy anyways) but he heavily lacks theory, and I convinced him to learn more about it, and even though he may not like it, he sees that it clearly is a bargain. Now we can play together and I often let him play whatever he wants, with no restriction, and sometimes add some spice like "hey, what if we played a perfect cadence there" so he learns what it is, what it is used for, and in a amusing way. Music theory doesn't have to be the first thing to learn, music is before all a tactile and creative subject. The more you put your hands (literally) on it, the better. But this can be counter-argued because, composers can make sheet musics for instruments they have never played. For my part, I never played the violin but once, and yet it doesn't stop me from composing for strings. That's where theory is useful, it's versatile and universal. The best mix is 50% practice / 50% theory in my opinion, where both media just help each other. Learnt that cool thing ? Let's analyze why it works. Studied something ? Let's put that into practice. So, it naturally comes with time. I have not randomly said, one day : "Alright, time to learn some chromatic mediants progressions". I didn't even know it existed. Simply, I listened to a lot of film scores, and I went deeper and analyzed the progressions, and realized they were often using chords whose root was a minor/major third or third apart from the root of the previous chord. I thought "Yeah, it's a recurring pattern", so I named it myself "chromatic mediants", as it is not a diatonic process (it is out of diatonic scales), and it's about mediants and submediants. I searched it up and found books on the topic, labelling that thing "chromatic mediants", exactly as I had previously named the technic for myself. It all makes sense. I mean, every knowledge comes with time. You never "know" something to the fullest in my opinion until years and years of perfection. Even the most basics things aren't always mastered. But there are basics that, to me , shouldn't be learnt with time but rather directly studied. Intervals, chords, scales, these are all elements that are absolutely crucial because they're at the core of music. I mean , it's really life saving. It avoids having a specific tune in mind, but being unable to write it down. Maybe it's because I've gathered more experience and these topics seem quite "distant" , so I consider them too "vital" to be learnt along the way, I don't know. I often take the example of a painter lol, but for instance the painter first learns how to place a canvas, how to use their tools , etc. Same here ! If you want to make a music that sounds like the one you have in mind, you need to learn some basics to put in context what you really want. Also, youtube is honestly one of the worst places to learn music, only a few (but huge) RUclipsrs out there really explain the concept "theoretically" and not "according to their way of seeing the concept". Plus, learning on youtube can lead to bad habits like having a bad way to pick notes or whatever. But It's cool that you learnt about chords and bass ! Keep it up champ ! I have a very Cartesian spirit, as soon as something is the way it is, I need to ask myself "why" or "how". Which is why, to me , (for instance) looking at a video of a guy doing THAT precise sound on a synthetizer is pointless. Because you don't learn, you just reproduce. If you had taken the time to tweak the knobs on that synthetizer yourself, you could have come up with that sound without doing it the easy way, and you could have learnt the process behind it. I don't know about you, but there's nothing better than making your own sound and just making a banger with that. Then of course, it can seem confusing at first glance, when you open such interfaces : prnt.sc/t97rtg But if you try stuff with it, experiment, you'll learn in no time, especially if you learnt about FM before. And with much more benefits than "cheating" by watching youtube videos ! So yeah , I agree, an untrained listener surely knows what's lacking from their own music, but will they be able to find how to correct the issue ? Sometimes, yes, when it's not too hard. But when it's too advanced, it can be impossible for them to modelize what they had in mind. I like to think of music theory as a "palette" or toolbox. I know what I want, where I'm going, I just need the right tool. If you give a repairman no toolbox, they will not really learn how to repair, but how to get a proper toolbox first in some way, and then how to repair stuff. And that toolbox can get bigger with time as the repairs are getting more and more varied. IDK, maybe it's an IT coder way of thinking XD As soon as you need to know the documentation of X thing, then you search for it and it adds to the ton of documentations you've read before Atleast, this is how I see it, as soon as people I know want to play my MIDI keyboards, I teach them some very, very basic and easy stuff when they're playing, like "Just play all the white keys , it will always sound good because the notes are in the same scale" (Not really, but as they represent the C major or A minor scale, and all its modes , it's enough) , because I don't want people to feel discouraged , or think "this is some wizard shit xD". It's just small guidelines of theory that pushes them to make practice more pleasing and more appealing. I'm really part of the guys who think that music theory is amazing, powerful, and broadens the horizon rather than narrowing it. Which is why I'm always glad to teach it as soon as I can. To me some of its fundamentals should be learnt before everything else, so people won't be frustrated to not come up with something worth their idea if you see what I mean. Imagine having a killer song in mind, but not being able to put in on paper despite your efforts, it's quite unfortunate, if you aren't afraid to get into music theory, this won't be a problem at all !
@@IsaacRuchalski yes i agree with everything you said right now. Also have i understood the importance of music theory. But i disagree to u saying that youtube is worst place to learn... Because u might know or not *Nucleya* is one of the biggest DJ and EDM producer in india who always claims that he never learned music from classes or courses.. Its all youtube..he always suggests to go on youtube because youtube teaches everything.. But if u get way more music knowledge from music theory then u will be surrounded by limits.. U will never get out of the thing u learned and experiment to make something new and creative.. U will always feel that this is out of theory it wont work... So for me till now learning from youtube has been very efficient and usefull. Also iam making decent music and getting good response from everyone i sent the song.. I will learn with time...also i will learn some music theory parallely too..
@@ServidaMusic Lol...that's why she's your mom... And she's so proud of you and she wanted your subscribers to know that♥️ And now we respect you even more
his mom: servida: This one? his mom: ooohh that one! servida: want it octave up? his mom: oooh yes servida: octave down? his mom: Definitely! Damn 100+ likes, first time
I can see you get your awesomeness from your momma... You should do a colab with her every week that was awesome . Thank you for all you do, keep it up Simon! Also hi mama Servida.
Your mom is adorable man haha she made a beast beat! You definitely should do more videos with her! Maybe try different types of beats like an angry vibe or sad vibe? But I love your videos! Keep the good vibes rolling :)
@Mark Donald That's not the issue. Its data collection is wayyy more intrusive than anything made by Facebook or Google, and the data goes straight to the Chinese government to potentially be used for blackmailing future Western leaders.
Wen I heard the melody you made from the beat all I could imagine is that song playing in her funeral. In the begining is sad but then is like a light is slowly growing to love and happiness 😭❤️❤️
BTW guys the melody I made at the end is free to download! Please put some fire drums over that!
hypeddit.com/hot-or-not/funk-rb
Also my mom is reading all the comments so let's all CHILL TF OUT!
Servida Music mama servida popped offf🔥🥶
Great vid with you coproducer (mom) How do I download that melody you played at the end? Sorry I'm new to this. But I'm quarantined and always wanted to make a beat and I'm using your videos for my instructions
Servida Music Simon I’m sorry, I failed you... I ended up flipping the entire sample
FREE TA... UGH Simon .. give this man ice cream and a hug... from 6 feet away
Yo Simon what vst and preset did you use for the sub bass when you flipped it?
The first part is such a "mom" melody.
Literally sounds like the new Animal Crossing theme.
Lmaoooo
Pretty sure it's also the first vocal line from Filthy Frank's "STFU"
Lol reminds me of something my mom might have listen to in her childhood
@@skalkin9656 lmao
“I’m really.. zero musical thing.” Me every time I watch a Simon Servida video
Same man
🤣🤣🤣 oh dear
same
J Garcia I think he’s great and I love learning from him! Sometimes watching his videos though I just feel very amateurish in comparison, that’s all. Lol
ruclips.net/video/LPSCdLn--ME/видео.html
check this out-mia khalifa remix
when she said "im really zero musical thing" i felt that
felt that hard
@@cityscum2548 lol that sounded wrong
@Zark Hussain felt that hard
@@iAmMadness101 felt that hard
Felt that hard
Alternative title: Young boy enslaves his mother to produce melodies for him that he can sell later
WHAT!!!!!!!!!!
JAJAJJAJA I'm dying literally JAJAJAJAJAJAJA 😂😂😂😂😂🤣🤣🤣
The SCANDAL
That went from 1 to 100 real quick
Isn't there a movie like that?
He has such a good relationship with his mom, its so wholesome.
Wholesome = shit
@@sebastiandavila9122 we got an antimom here
@@sebastiandavila9122 You cannot be a human.
@@sebastiandavila9122 WTF Is Wrong Wit You
@@sebastiandavila9122 Then you = wholesome
Simon: Do you want to repeat it or make something different?
Simons Mum: REPEAT
Simon: disappointed....
Lol...this is really hilarious 😂
I noticed that too, but he just let it slide
Very disappointed
@@ServidaMusic oof😂 I'm sorry for you simon❤️
@@ServidaMusic it turned out nice though
Simon's Mom is Composerily in disguise
Mama Servida: **Makes a beat*
Servida: Okay now let's flip the beat!
The disrespect!!!
lol
"Mama servida" xD
😂
I’m Thinking: “So I See You’ve Chosen Death.” Lol.
This just proves that while knowing music theory helps a lot, music is all about having fun and what sounds good to you.
U dont need to know music theory until u have patience and passion to play with all samples and sounds untill it sounds good. 😊
@@v.i.d1085 The equation is simple : Music = dedication+passion+(patience-knowledge). And by knowledge, I mean music theory. As a composer (not my job though, but it didn't stop me from composing for videogames), sounds weird but I started learning music theory by myself by the age of 12. Why would you inflict yourself such thing ? Because music theory is fascinating.
Notice how the mom part didn't imply any chords, any arrangement. And servida added all of those later. Don't get me wrong, i'm still quite astounished by what she's done, she nailed it ! But trust me, people who studied music theory and people who didn't are really, really easy to tell apart.
Take a painter for example. That painter needs a canvas, colours, and a palette to hold them. Music theory is that palette. Surely a painter without it can still use colors, like they can put them on another surface, but they won't be comfortable with the setup. They won't mix the colors quite well. Likewise, people who studied music theory have a way, way more fluent workflow, and are much more comfortable making music and understanding the concepts behind it. which is why getting into theory as early as possible is paramount if you want to make music.
There's nothing more obnoxious than going on a livestream of someone making music, looking at them hitting their heads on a wall because they can't even find the notes for a chord in a 4 chords progression, so you see them placing a note, listening to the thing, realizing it's not what they wanted, and redo until it's basically just a basic major chord. Like, if you are in C major , dude, it ain't hard, it's obviously a C major chord (C E G), so it's needless to put up that Eb (would be a minor chord on I) or a F (would be a sus4),please end the slaughter here ! It's rather sad to think that these guys hear something in their head, but struggle to express it because they don't know music theory.
And you'll tell me "what if you didn't care of the rules" and sure ! you can. This is called non-functional harmony, a paradox because this is a rule everything you compose without rules follows. But it has to be used rarely otherwise (unless you know what you are doing) your music won't sound good.
music theory doesn't "block" you from doing whatever you want. It enhances your line of sight, by providing you the palette to put your ideas on. If it was just about "using samples and sounds until it sounds good", then imagine if Da Vinci said "No fucking clue how I painted the mona lisa, I just did random stuff until it looked good" well then sorry but it would have sounded like the guy just got lucky and the piece wouldn't be that famous. Not knowing music theory is like restricting yourself for no reason. One day, a producer who never learnt music theory (thinking it was bs) just went at me like "dude, check this out, made this", "took me a month". I listened to his track for what, 5 minutes, and I sat back in front of my MIDI keyboard and just played his music live and even improved on it, telling him what he could add. He couldn't believe it, but really it was nothing spectacular, I just listened to the progression, paid attention to the context of the melody, and that was it.
There's no prestige taking a month to come up with something you could finish in a few days. Like, you're not superhuman if you just made a music without knowing about music theory. Producers like Deadmau5 even own a grand piano and barely know about chords and scales. Which is why it's a pain to watch them live (atleast from my point of view), they play on keyboards but don't know how to play them so they rely on their computer instead of their hands. They struggle on things that should be a piece of cake to them. They miss something huge with music theory.
And in the same way , there's no prestige claiming you have the high ground because you know about music theory. Which is why I actually started working on a discord server for anyone eager to learn about music theory (from most basics like chords and modes to most advanced stuff like modal interchange or chromatic mediants in film scoring) and sound design. Because if you're a jerk, but know about music theory and just want to flex, you're just a jerk.
So my intention wasn't to sound pretentious at all, if I do then I'm sorry, it's not the aim of all this at all. I just wanted to enlighten you because I think your ideas about what music theory really is are biased :)
@@IsaacRuchalski i respect your opinion and its 100% true what u hav said.. But with that its also true that u dont need all the music theory at once..its the thing u learn with time.. I myself learned chords progression, adding bass, watching youtube tutorials.. A music listener knows what is missing on the music he made.. So he can learn that missing part from youtube.. You dont have to 1st learn music theory and then start.. Time will teach u everything..
But yeah your one point hit me hard..
I hear so many ideas in my head but cant express due to lack of knowledge..
@@v.i.d1085 In fact, you're right. You don't need to learn ALL of music theory. I , by myself, didn't. Because music theory isn't fixed, it's constantly evolving with new principles (I, for my part, prefer staying to the ol' classical principles, but I still made musics with "new" concepts like serialism and stuff like that), and most of the time, it depends on your background : are you more of a classical, or a jazz player ? Guitar, or keyboard ? It all varies. And this is also an issue. For my part I'm more of a classical kinda guy, but for videogames, you gotta compose jazzy stuff sometimes, so I intentionally (and with pleasure) learnt some "jazz theory" and it's been so useful !
My little brother is 14, and plays the guitar. I coded a short webpage for him so he can find any chord he wants (may upload it on some GitLab for public access), because he has no trouble playing the few chords he knows on his guitar, but he fails to glue them together and make a coherent ensemble. He has the practice, he can play in all sorts of ways, from the easiest to the hardest (he beats me at it by far ahah, I'm more of a piano guy anyways) but he heavily lacks theory, and I convinced him to learn more about it, and even though he may not like it, he sees that it clearly is a bargain. Now we can play together and I often let him play whatever he wants, with no restriction, and sometimes add some spice like "hey, what if we played a perfect cadence there" so he learns what it is, what it is used for, and in a amusing way.
Music theory doesn't have to be the first thing to learn, music is before all a tactile and creative subject. The more you put your hands (literally) on it, the better. But this can be counter-argued because, composers can make sheet musics for instruments they have never played. For my part, I never played the violin but once, and yet it doesn't stop me from composing for strings. That's where theory is useful, it's versatile and universal. The best mix is 50% practice / 50% theory in my opinion, where both media just help each other. Learnt that cool thing ? Let's analyze why it works. Studied something ? Let's put that into practice.
So, it naturally comes with time. I have not randomly said, one day : "Alright, time to learn some chromatic mediants progressions". I didn't even know it existed. Simply, I listened to a lot of film scores, and I went deeper and analyzed the progressions, and realized they were often using chords whose root was a minor/major third or third apart from the root of the previous chord. I thought "Yeah, it's a recurring pattern", so I named it myself "chromatic mediants", as it is not a diatonic process (it is out of diatonic scales), and it's about mediants and submediants. I searched it up and found books on the topic, labelling that thing "chromatic mediants", exactly as I had previously named the technic for myself. It all makes sense.
I mean, every knowledge comes with time. You never "know" something to the fullest in my opinion until years and years of perfection. Even the most basics things aren't always mastered.
But there are basics that, to me , shouldn't be learnt with time but rather directly studied. Intervals, chords, scales, these are all elements that are absolutely crucial because they're at the core of music. I mean , it's really life saving. It avoids having a specific tune in mind, but being unable to write it down. Maybe it's because I've gathered more experience and these topics seem quite "distant" , so I consider them too "vital" to be learnt along the way, I don't know. I often take the example of a painter lol, but for instance the painter first learns how to place a canvas, how to use their tools , etc. Same here ! If you want to make a music that sounds like the one you have in mind, you need to learn some basics to put in context what you really want.
Also, youtube is honestly one of the worst places to learn music, only a few (but huge) RUclipsrs out there really explain the concept "theoretically" and not "according to their way of seeing the concept". Plus, learning on youtube can lead to bad habits like having a bad way to pick notes or whatever. But It's cool that you learnt about chords and bass ! Keep it up champ !
I have a very Cartesian spirit, as soon as something is the way it is, I need to ask myself "why" or "how". Which is why, to me , (for instance) looking at a video of a guy doing THAT precise sound on a synthetizer is pointless. Because you don't learn, you just reproduce. If you had taken the time to tweak the knobs on that synthetizer yourself, you could have come up with that sound without doing it the easy way, and you could have learnt the process behind it. I don't know about you, but there's nothing better than making your own sound and just making a banger with that. Then of course, it can seem confusing at first glance, when you open such interfaces : prnt.sc/t97rtg But if you try stuff with it, experiment, you'll learn in no time, especially if you learnt about FM before. And with much more benefits than "cheating" by watching youtube videos !
So yeah , I agree, an untrained listener surely knows what's lacking from their own music, but will they be able to find how to correct the issue ? Sometimes, yes, when it's not too hard. But when it's too advanced, it can be impossible for them to modelize what they had in mind. I like to think of music theory as a "palette" or toolbox. I know what I want, where I'm going, I just need the right tool. If you give a repairman no toolbox, they will not really learn how to repair, but how to get a proper toolbox first in some way, and then how to repair stuff. And that toolbox can get bigger with time as the repairs are getting more and more varied. IDK, maybe it's an IT coder way of thinking XD As soon as you need to know the documentation of X thing, then you search for it
and it adds to the ton of documentations you've read before
Atleast, this is how I see it, as soon as people I know want to play my MIDI keyboards, I teach them some very, very basic and easy stuff when they're playing, like "Just play all the white keys , it will always sound good because the notes are in the same scale" (Not really, but as they represent the C major or A minor scale, and all its modes , it's enough) , because I don't want people to feel discouraged , or think "this is some wizard shit xD". It's just small guidelines of theory that pushes them to make practice more pleasing and more appealing.
I'm really part of the guys who think that music theory is amazing, powerful, and broadens the horizon rather than narrowing it. Which is why I'm always glad to teach it as soon as I can. To me some of its fundamentals should be learnt before everything else, so people won't be frustrated to not come up with something worth their idea if you see what I mean. Imagine having a killer song in mind, but not being able to put in on paper despite your efforts, it's quite unfortunate, if you aren't afraid to get into music theory, this won't be a problem at all !
@@IsaacRuchalski yes i agree with everything you said right now. Also have i understood the importance of music theory. But i disagree to u saying that youtube is worst place to learn... Because u might know or not *Nucleya* is one of the biggest DJ and EDM producer in india who always claims that he never learned music from classes or courses.. Its all youtube..he always suggests to go on youtube because youtube teaches everything.. But if u get way more music knowledge from music theory then u will be surrounded by limits.. U will never get out of the thing u learned and experiment to make something new and creative.. U will always feel that this is out of theory it wont work... So for me till now learning from youtube has been very efficient and usefull. Also iam making decent music and getting good response from everyone i sent the song.. I will learn with time...also i will learn some music theory parallely too..
Some Rapper: "This beat is fire. Imma use that. How many green would that be?"
Servida Mom: "Not much. I'll just take everything you make from it."
*R* *O* *Y* *A* *L* *T* *I* *E* *S*
She's a smart business woman I bet lol Metallica would be proud
@@Incognito-gh5qi 😂
bro, this moved me so much. i lost my mom in february and watching this fills my heart with a warm feeling. thanks for this
@Wuzzo im sorry for your loss bro my condolenses to you and your family
Damn bro that sucks 😂
@@daddyd7306 I think you used the wrong emoji
skill issue.
@@prod.lunarpicasso bro thinks he's funny
simon blushing whenever his momma says smthg nice to him is S O W H O L E S O M E
I'm just here tryna make music then she keeps throwing all this wholesome at me
Servida Music Soak it up! These moments are more precious than you might know.
@@ServidaMusic Lol...that's why she's your mom...
And she's so proud of you and she wanted your subscribers to know that♥️
And now we respect you even more
People say that music always reflects the personality of the person who made it
And your mums personality really suits the music she made
The melody sounded like ‘STFU’ 😂😂
@@user-ii2kv9yg2k tbh I think I was high when I written that comment
@@FormerAaron must be
🎃
True 😁
"Stay safe and be kind to everyone" such heart felt words. Your mom has a beautiful spirit, Mr. Servida.
She appreciates it!
Facts
@@infectiouslife1529 you're not funny
@@infectiouslife1529 cringe
Bro stop making fun of me just cause I have up syndrome
5:36 this sounds like an official animal crossing track lol
thats exactly what I thought about when I heard it lol
or dragon ball
Or Nintendo land
7:20 when you feel what you've done for first time. Best feeling ever, that reminds us why we are making music.
they way she said "hey" is so adorable!
😊😊😊
You sicko
@@agbeats1687 tf u mean
Stop trying to flirt with his mom, we dont do this under bros😂
the.*
i see where simon gets his wholesomeness from now
Pretty much
Hans Zimmer: "You can't beat me!"
Simon: "I know someone who can"
*Mama Servida has entered the chat*
his mom:
servida: This one?
his mom: ooohh that one!
servida: want it octave up?
his mom: oooh yes
servida: octave down?
his mom: Definitely!
Damn 100+ likes, first time
Right
Congrats on 400 my friend
Lol 654 likes Congo bro
😂
damn 808. leave it right there my friend
I love the beat that your mother made, it sounds very calm and has similarities to Chinese melodies❤
Coachella 2020 Headliner: Simon’s Mum
can’t wait
raise up your hands 🎵🎵🎵
@@ServidaMusic right after you wash them
WestDog with soap😂🤣🤣
666 likes
Other Producers :Making beats with my girlfriend, my brother
Simon :Making beats with my mom..
Very kind of you💙
Eureka! kyle beats and ocean😉
Eureka! I mean, sharpe made a beat with his mom lol.
@@Anass-nn3rw wow😐 im not talking about them
Yeah I dont got those other ones....
eureka! oh im sorry didnt knew have a wonderful day bro
Everyone: cOLLaB wItH Me BrO
Simon: Collabin with my mother!!
Simeone would to hear my beat on my channel?
Sorry if i spam could you pls listen to this beat you can write you thoughts in the comments also
ruclips.net/video/OA9-eyz_rEg/видео.html
BUT THIS SECOND UNCLE TWICE REMOVED COLLAB THO
This sounds like a walk in the park. Literally. It feels like I'm walking in the park in an old disney movie.
“If I would’ve had this when I was 20 I would be a billionaire right now “
I get it all the time.
why does everybody get this ad??!?!
@@Rubikz624 cause the dude who pays for it is a billionaire cause he got it when he was 20
The warmness of your Mother's heart spilled out onto the screen.
This should have been released today as a mother's day special. It would have been so dope.
thats what I was thinking too!
If you had to sell this to a rapper how much would you sell it for
Mom: “Jusssst . . The royalty?!” 😂😂
Yeah she wild
Servida Music why? I also don't get it lol
@@UltraBebo maybe the royalties of the song? like a percentage of each sale
Royalty free music
This was so wholesome 🤧 thank you for being so patient and supportive with your mom
The quote,"He a little confused, but he got the spirt" explains this whole video
Petition to make this minecraft’s next main screen soundtrack.
But for real!!😂
Fingerboard Fanatic I’d start playing minecraft just for this soundtrack!
she sang in the tune of "stfu" by pink guy
at 1:35
LMAOOOOO
Daaaamn now I can't unhear that
I was thinking that the whole time lmfaoo
I was gonna comment that but you've already beat me to it, that's the first thing I heard too lmao :D
"I'm really zero musical thing"
BOYS..WE MUST PROTECT MAMA SERVIDA AT ALL COST!!
"Stay safe and be kind to everyone" she's soo wholesome, MY HEARTTT 🥺🥺🥺
Alternate title: I FLIPPED MY MOM
Goont ooof
I flipped off my mom
@@ServidaMusic Go apologize to her right now, you don't want to be put in timeout!
@@tijnv.d.w8007 inderdaad
Legendary
This is the most wholesome thing on the internet right now.
Touched my heart.
1:35
Simon: You hear this, what do you hear next?
Me: *ANIMAL CROSSING*
simon's lil 'hehe' after 'cute! like you' was so wholesome
"I'm really zero musical thing."
- Momma Servida
I tried this with my Uncle once, didn't end well
0.0
we didn't make a beat but he beat something else
krbysxmmr i had edison recording while it happened, perfect 1/2 step clap pattern
hahaha
@@Lucasvesch clap what lmao XD
0:14 SO MOMMA SERVIDA IS IN GREEN GANG HUH? LMAOOO
With the gang signs too lmao 0:26
Im gonna join the green gang in gta 5 wanna play?
Here we go again
On god purple gang
whyyy did he not make that sample into a full beat at the end, that was fireee
YOU PUT THE DRUMS
@@ServidaMusic I WILL AND SEND IT TO YOU TOO DON'T TEST ME
@@ServidaMusic lol
@@joharigardner9921 HAHAHAHA it's on
I love it when she turns around dancing, goes on to prove your own vibe is the best vibe there is.
YOUVE CAPTURED YOUR MOM'S SOUL , MOST BEAUTIFUL VIDEO EVER!! LONG LIVE YOUR MOM!! LOVE N RESPECT FROM ETHIOPIA!
when she said "stay safe and be kind to everyone" that's made me feel like a kid for a sec
Aww Simon yall look so alike. Your moms so cute
Haha thanks
racist
@@maxhussar5665 im sure he didnt mean it like that
@@RainBow-we5hv I'm sure he's joking too
Simon: How much would you sell this for?
Simons mom: Just the Royalties
Also Simon: 👁👄👁
bro honestly that's smart, she gets most of the revenue lmfao
Now i understand where your excitement comes from... Your mum is sweet and a happy woman....Much love❤
This was the cutest thing I've ever watched
am i the only one who was disappointed when she said "repeat" for the sax melody.
still a bop tho.
3:32 "Cute like u" aww :3
Simon's face when his mom said cute like you,,, it just shows you how nostalgic being loved makes you feel
She’s so sweet “stay safe and be kind to everyone”
The beginning process of it sounds like the theme song for a detergent commercial. Or a wii sports intro possibly. I’m low key loving it.
1:30 Seems your mom has been playing animal crossing
Every time I see a 'Simon Servida' notification pop up, I stop everything I'm doing, no matter how important it is, and instantly click :)
What if you were at your grandfathers funeral
Loooool thanks man
Arrow Beats I bet he would have done the same 😖
@@ServidaMusic :)
Simon's mom: Just Free royalty
Simon: what?
This is definitely the cutest thing I've seen😩💕
"Is there any rain!?" ...i had to put my phone down... this is cute and gangsta all at the same time.
The wholesomeness that this video emanates is unreal
Chillest Mom PERIOD
Your mom is adorable this is family love, you're very grounded and down to earth
This just goes to show that everyone has music in them. With practice, one can express him/herself better : )
So that's where your sense of humor comes from. 😆 Yes, Momma Servida's tune is 😎
Yup pretty much
Asian people are lit
Your relationship is amazing, and I can see where you got your talent from ahahaha! Simon’s channel is an instant click whenever I get a notification
🙏🙏🙏
SO CUTE and dope beat at the end of everything
I love moms who love their kids
LOVED LOVED THE TRACK lil bro.. ur mom is a super sweetheart. Much love. Blessings
YOU GUYS ARE FILIPINOOOOO DAYUMMM IM SO PROUD DUUUUDDD
WHEN SHE SAID "AYUN" I WAS LIKE WHOAAAAAA
stay lit Simon < 3
LMAO same bro i got so suprised when she said "AYUN". I never knew he was filipino.
I had a feeling he was Filipino because of his nose (trust me, I have that nose too) but his mom pretty much confirmed it
@@Rye-like-the-bread Hahaha i know what ur talking about man. But im surprised her accent isnt that strong.
@@JP-sc5qo depends on where she learned English
I got my answer 😂
looool your mom played you with that single clap. Big brain moves. Love the vid bro
Edit: easily the best collab vid on youtube
Shes the og troll
Simon that sample is.... something else dude.... youre insane. Also i can see where you get your musicality from! 🤗
This is so wholesome and adorable in 2021. Please have your mum on more, it made the world much better.🥰🥰🥰
BEST COLLAB EVER
It's so wholesome
watched this video with a big smile on my face made me miss my mom
Simon's mom: * Leaves *
Simon: a little slide here ouh, there too
I can see you get your awesomeness from your momma... You should do a colab with her every week that was awesome . Thank you for all you do, keep it up Simon! Also hi mama Servida.
The second part is so chill and dreamy... could make the dopest chill out remix!
You and your mom must be protected at all times !! Would love to hear more beats from her!
Lmao! Like I really enjoyed this! And mom better get her royalties lol. This was too nice had a stupid smile on my face throughout the damn vid.
Dude your mom is so adorable
Stay Safe and be Kind 2 everyone!!!! the best part of the video!!! 8:11
Servida Music ft. Mom. A Mother's Day smash hit! Love it
"sax-a-Pone" I can tell that's a Filipino accent right off the bat. Btw I'm also Filipino so that's how I can easily tell
This is the most funny and cute video I've ever seen.
3:50 "I like the bones" -Servida's mom 2020
Why was the resample part so beautiful? It felt like I was hearing the joyness of life... Wow good work man, an awesome producer and youtuber!
This is wholesome the mom is like the child getting excited
Servida brings good vibes during tough times love your videos. I got experimental beats yal shud try !!
All about the vibes
Your mom is adorable man haha she made a beast beat! You definitely should do more videos with her! Maybe try different types of beats like an angry vibe or sad vibe? But I love your videos! Keep the good vibes rolling :)
Oh my! Your mom is the sweetest ✨🤩
You need to make a “Mom” plugin. Sounds even better than “Drip”! 😝
1:11 'I don't know what your talking about" Why is that me with my mom lmao
you can see that simon was resisting the urge to add 808 slides
Sounds like something that could go viral on Tik Tok
Mark Donald wdym
@Mark Donald and you have pigskin
@Mark Donald That's not the issue. Its data collection is wayyy more intrusive than anything made by Facebook or Google, and the data goes straight to the Chinese government to potentially be used for blackmailing future Western leaders.
No . . . Please no
I love this, your mom is so sweet
😊
You're trully amazing & blessed for having a very supportive mom...more power!
Wen I heard the melody you made from the beat all I could imagine is that song playing in her funeral. In the begining is sad but then is like a light is slowly growing to love and happiness 😭❤️❤️
6:02 made me want to buy delay eternity just to make a beat with "broken tape player" that actually sounded insane
Susan is making me pay child support and I am now considering fleeing the country
@@cookqie8822 oh no
Youre mom is just vibing 😂😂