Dubstep Is REALLY HARD To Make [feat. Mr. Bill]

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  • Опубликовано: 31 май 2024
  • The Flashbulb tried to make brostep and you'll never believe what happened next....
    💗 Support this channel and join an amazing community: / bennjordan
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    Additional Camera: Courtney Oliver
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    stamps
    0:00 - Intro
    1:26 - History
    2:51 - Benn Beato
    4:13 - The....science?!
    5:15 - Practice Drop
    6:24 - Actual Drop Session
    9:35 - Visiting Mr. Bill
    10:55 - THE DROP
    14:30 - The Rating
    16:06 - Wrap Up
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Комментарии • 1,3 тыс.

  • @BennJordan
    @BennJordan  10 месяцев назад +171

    Btw, Bill and I will be chatting and taking random questions on my stream this Thursday. Subscribe to my streaming channel to view it! RUclips.com/@alphabasic

    • @MrBillsTunes
      @MrBillsTunes 10 месяцев назад +10

      letsgooooo

    • @Roses_R_redeR
      @Roses_R_redeR 10 месяцев назад

      I truly want to gain knowledge all's I want is to learn...
      All I think about in my life is music...
      I'm a slow learner..
      So many blessings Benn.
      Tell Bill thank you...
      I look up to him greatly...
      🥀⛽️🎭
      R. C. G. M.
      🔥🙏🔥
      🪕🎻🎚🎛🎹

    • @rpocc
      @rpocc 10 месяцев назад +1

      I think the drop is interesting for a prepared listener, like a musician or producer because we can instantly dissolve the whole into elements and celebrate separate great parts whether it’s the rhythm or interesting sound or an original sequence, etc. I found your drop original, but it didn’t make me headbanging and I’m not sure if it simply does fit the rest of the song in it’s mood. The main part is very calm like a straightforward 4/4 phlegmatic don’t-give-a-fk-about-me music in a small hipster basement restaurant chill-out, filled with dark ultraviolet, tinned 25yo bare belly girls, bearded guys and alternatively pronounced persons on leather couches, but then suddenly comes close but unfocused, disorienting 6/8 part, full of changes every beat and even rhythm fairly overcomplicated with rudiments and fills. At the same time it’s not powerfull enough to brake a muscle car subwoofer or raise up a doped junkie into random convulsive dance and scratching their teeth, so probably it’s not a club sound, rather something analytic, but probably in this case I’d prefer some random modular piece by Richard Devine or something like that.

    • @boydw1
      @boydw1 10 месяцев назад +4

      The problem with dubstep is, no matter how well you make it, it's still dubstep.

    • @jtwee6590
      @jtwee6590 10 месяцев назад

      i'd like to take a general reproduction of your pre-drop vibe and give it a drop that might rate better than a 4...

  • @Emily_M81
    @Emily_M81 10 месяцев назад +433

    Skrillex: DROP THE BASS
    Benn: HOW?!

    • @CyPhaSaRin
      @CyPhaSaRin 10 месяцев назад +4

      Korn: STFU GET UP!
      you don't think you just groooove :P

  • @Eidraify
    @Eidraify 10 месяцев назад +503

    i thought mr bill would teach you and you'd make a second one

    • @FaithInTheGlitch
      @FaithInTheGlitch 10 месяцев назад +122

      Same. I felt like this was half a video. Make a drop, get mr bill to critique it then apply that to a second attempt.

    • @stellar_cartographer
      @stellar_cartographer 10 месяцев назад +54

      Yeah, I'd love to see a follow up or a collaborative video

    • @triplestandart7613
      @triplestandart7613 10 месяцев назад +11

      Thought the same thing and would love to see it

    • @Pho7on
      @Pho7on 10 месяцев назад +26

      Benn got kicked out after the video was over 🤣"How about these night notes motherfucker!"

    • @axisdev
      @axisdev 10 месяцев назад

      yes I thought this as well :)

  • @igmusicandflying
    @igmusicandflying 10 месяцев назад +246

    I laughed my butt off when you said the drop sounded like a Fisher Price toy because I've had the idea in my head for a few months to use "the cow says moo" as part of a funny drop.

    • @lunarthyme
      @lunarthyme 10 месяцев назад

      yes! been awhile since a benn video made me crack up so hard

    • @xpercipio
      @xpercipio 10 месяцев назад +4

      there used to be a youtube video of a guy with one of those toys, scratching it like a record over a beat. i cant find it but i wish i could. it was pretty sick

    • @H3xx1st
      @H3xx1st 10 месяцев назад +3

      DO IT! would love to dance to Fisher price farm.... bowowow the dog says bowowow

    • @ts4gv
      @ts4gv 10 месяцев назад

      @@H3xx1stlol

    • @SwishaMane420
      @SwishaMane420 10 месяцев назад +3

      Its gotta be wrong tho... "The cow goes bhaaahahahaha"

  • @Gregorovitch144
    @Gregorovitch144 10 месяцев назад +194

    Actually the origin of the drop, as understood today, is in the Jamaican reggae sound systems in late 60's early 70's. It was copied later in hip hop, techno, House etc. The sound systems used big (like very big for the time) home made amps that had internal filters/crossovers routing to three pairs of outputs connected to the treble horns, the mid-range cabinets (mix of 8" and 10" usually) and several 15" and/or 18" bass bins. Each output had a switch to mute it, especially the bass channel. The Selector (what a sound system DJ is called) would on occasion either begin a song with the bass channel off or sometimes switch it off mid track such as immediately after a chorus. Then after letting the track run for a time, usually until a suitable drum fill, they would switch the bass cabs back on. Boom! This was known as "dropping the bass". It's were the term "drop" comes from. So in this respect just as pretty much all of rock 'n roll can be traced back to the delta blues pretty much the whole of electronic dance music can be traced back to the Jamaican dance hall reggae styles.

    • @harrytuttle5810
      @harrytuttle5810 10 месяцев назад +21

      This is the truth ! Also where to me the whole brostep thing misses the point is , that in dub and proper dubstep (lol) the sub bass aint just a thing to give some weight to the ear piercing middy synths .It is melodic , driving and quite often the focal point of the song , just pure sub . If a tune works with just the sub and drums its proper.

    • @thundafellow
      @thundafellow 10 месяцев назад +17

      @@harrytuttle5810 brostep isn't "missing the point" tho, it's essentially an entirely different genre from dub and classic dubstep.

    • @thundafellow
      @thundafellow 10 месяцев назад +13

      @@Neiltrama1 you are entitled to your (wrong) opinion :)

    • @swarthygiant1463
      @swarthygiant1463 10 месяцев назад +12

      @harrytuttle5810 I think something interesting is how many brostep guys came from the metal and core scenes, Skrillex being the most obvious example.
      Breakdowns in metal/core are pretty atonal due to extreme distortion and detuning, but they obviously use the extreme lows same as a bass drop. Biggest thing in a breakdown is a throbbing slow heavy rhythm.
      This absolutely contextualizes why mr Moore and some of the other guys would come at a bass drop with violent dissonant Atonalaity, and especially with screamy “CALL 911 NOW!!!” type vocalizations

    • @freashty
      @freashty 10 месяцев назад +8

      Great piece of music history! I don't personally think you can say the "whole of electronic dance music" can be traced back to dance hall reggae since there's plenty of EDM that is arguably more of a descendent of disco and funk, genres that in turn have their own origins in rock, swing, and jazz. The bass drop is just one facet of songwriting and did not become prevalent in house music until influences from techno and hip hop started to influence the scene. There is also a large body of African and Latin dance music and contributing to the development of the Chicago/Detroit club scenes as well as Reggae itself. Dubstep, however, including a large portion of UK electronic and dance music in general, is a direct result of Jamaican soundsystem culture in general - to the point where it's even baked into the name. Beyond just the bass drop, heavy use of tape delay effects and similar engineering techniques taken directly from Dub Reggae were applied heavily to 2-step Garage which is how dubstep was born. Even beyond the writing and engineering, the whole ethos of Dubstep at its point of origin could be said to be inspired primarily if not almost solely by Jamaican culture.
      Damian Marley collaborating with Skrillex is a full-circle moment for the genre

  • @BosseCory
    @BosseCory 10 месяцев назад +682

    Rate Your Drop? I'd say a 6/10. It was incredibly interesting, but it felt very disconnected from the rest of the song. I think there's a certain magic in making a drop that is both surprising and contains elements of the rest of the composition to keep it feeling cohesive.

    • @tapdaddy69
      @tapdaddy69 10 месяцев назад +31

      True. I gotta say, it made my cheap monitors sound about $1000 more than they actually are lol. The sound design on this alone is worth the listen. I liked how it was a lot more rhythmical than most dubstep stuff I hear, and it had really crazy textures. I think it might've been assisted a little more into and out of the track with stuff like a down lifter to bring us back out of it. Maybe a different approach on the pre-drop. But the drop is pretty nuts, I'm for it.

    • @mcgritty8842
      @mcgritty8842 10 месяцев назад +24

      Huh. I think Mr. Bill was being generous and didn’t want to give it a lower score on camera. Everything from the drum pattern to the bass rhythm was offputting and not something one could dance to. Dubstep is a very loose genre, but the kick and snare need to be tight and the bass has to flow.
      Much respect for trying and posing it on RUclips because making drops can be quite difficult, just like making any kind of music

    • @27klickslegend
      @27klickslegend 10 месяцев назад +13

      yea lol, more like 3/10, the rest of the song was solid tho. my favorite drops are the huge buildup psytrance ones by Infected Mushroom

    • @-RAV3N
      @-RAV3N 10 месяцев назад

      Yes! this was what it was! It felt off in a lot of parts. I looking for someone to point out what I was feeling in it.

    • @HealyHQ
      @HealyHQ 10 месяцев назад +3

      Exactly how I felt. It was too disjointed.

  • @TheInternetIsDeadToMe
    @TheInternetIsDeadToMe 10 месяцев назад +350

    That story about Mr. Bill painstakingly reconstructing one of Benn’s tracks for a uni assignment is hilarious. I bet he waited all this time to trash Benn’s drop. Great video guys. Funny stuff.

    • @andyto629
      @andyto629 10 месяцев назад +1

      Bill and Ben are saints

    • @cameronl2760
      @cameronl2760 10 месяцев назад

      did mr bill release it anywhere?

  • @projectnitefall8058
    @projectnitefall8058 10 месяцев назад +93

    Mr Bill is insane at music production. His samples and glitch effects and foley are so uniquely him that I can't help but appreciate him as an artist.

  • @EvoAuxilium
    @EvoAuxilium 10 месяцев назад +47

    The drop was really sick but to me felt a bit disjointed from the other portions of the track (which sounded utterly sublime). Huge respect for sharing this journey with us. Got me feeling very inspired. Thanks for what you do.

  • @mistersimeeec
    @mistersimeeec 10 месяцев назад +198

    I'd like to hear another attempt at making a drop, but with a focus on pulling ideas through into it. One of the problems with the one you showed in this video imo was how disconnected the drop was from the previous section. I'd like to hear some resampling from the first section dropped into the glitchy bit and bringing back aspects of the first beat / melody sooner and higher in the mix after the drop lands. To be fair I definitely enjoyed the start, the drop, and the ending in isolation, but it felt more like two separate songs being smushed together.

    • @coderaven1107
      @coderaven1107 10 месяцев назад +13

      This! Felt the same(would rate it 3/10), it was disconnected rythmically and melodically. But what it should do is elevate the established ideas. The drop itself had the vibe of an interesting piece of experimental music (felt very classic somehow :D), but it just violently erased everything, that was before it, like it never existed.
      The best surprise and goosebumps I got in a drop for a while was "Kneel before me" by Asking Alexandra, Slander, Crankdat. The first drop is "standard" but the second did some misleading, which made it punch ULTRA hard! Also the drops in Herbalist by Skan are heavenly imo (esp. the second one)
      @Benn Jordan Either way, I am really impressed that you put this video out. I will also do a drop and even though it will be bad, its about learning! Thanks for being an inspiration!

    • @mr-mizu
      @mr-mizu 10 месяцев назад

      I agree, it sort of sounds like Flashbulb made the verse, Mr. Bill made the chorus (drop)

    • @KonstantinZilberburg
      @KonstantinZilberburg 10 месяцев назад +7

      one of the reasons it’s so disconnected is that Benn just introduces entirely different rhythmic pattern without even teasing it earlier in the track

    • @PlugInGuruVideo
      @PlugInGuruVideo 10 месяцев назад +3

      EXACTLY! I picked up a bit of copy/paste vibe, make it all the same song, just taken somewhere new and you're at least in 7/10 territory! lol

    • @apoclypse
      @apoclypse 10 месяцев назад +2

      Yep. I agree here. One of the things Ben could have done is to bring in the vocal as a response to the bass part to pull people back to the 1st section every few bars. One of the staples of the drop is call and response. It's like putting the listener in a seesaw of emotion

  • @shinyPikachux
    @shinyPikachux 10 месяцев назад +51

    I liked your drop, but listening to it I really wanted a part of the previous section to carry through the drop, something to keep it slightly connected. It just felt like a hard cut to a completely different song almost. Ether using the cords or parts of the lyrics. Idk, I've just barely gotten into making music but that's the only thing that stood out to me.
    Loved your video and super glad you included your annecdote on how you do your drums. I saw you do them like that in past videos but couldn't figure it out, awesome to know.

  • @hexial
    @hexial 10 месяцев назад +46

    This video made me think a lot about how to take criticism 🤔 And Benn, you took it like champ. Or maybe more likely, like a professional. This was really eye opening. You allowed yourself to be quite vulnerable in public, and that was probably quite hard. Thank you 🖤 (and I love your music)

  • @chenzenzo
    @chenzenzo 10 месяцев назад +59

    As someone who's made dubstep since its inception and experimented with bass, sound and electronic music for decades, the challenge isn't making dubstep, it's making innovative dubstep. Respect and love!

    • @georgerosebush9754
      @georgerosebush9754 10 месяцев назад +9

      It reminds me of learning to play the saxophone, it's easy to play...badly.

    • @mainpage725
      @mainpage725 10 месяцев назад +1

      Facts

    • @HighlyRegardted
      @HighlyRegardted 10 месяцев назад

      True… I was just saying the other day to an old friend that used to be in the scene how I don’t listen to dubstep nearly at all anymore and it used to be one of the biggest genres in my digital library … it felt like there was a lot of innovation in the genre 10+ yrs ago and now it feels repetitive… I’ve basically just gone back to old school dnb / jungle type stuff and this new sub genre “barber beats” thing is okay imo… it’s not necessarily innovative but all the compositional elements I enjoy are there…

    • @nikodoyon7429
      @nikodoyon7429 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@HighlyRegardted thats funny, dnb sounds very repetitive to me, as if it havent evoled in the last 10years..

    • @dannaglia
      @dannaglia 9 месяцев назад

      And then, mixing and mastering it properly to boot.

  • @Kapsyz
    @Kapsyz 10 месяцев назад +105

    As a dubstep producer this is going to be really fun to watch. You have been one of my favorite music production channels for a while, so I can't wait to see you try and make dubstep. Especially with Mr. Bill.

  • @ClintMoody
    @ClintMoody 10 месяцев назад +167

    Can confirm: Harmor is nuts and is crazy.

    • @otzcz
      @otzcz 10 месяцев назад

      Is it from U-He or not? I see similar GUI.

    • @milhouse777
      @milhouse777 10 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@otzczimage-line

    • @AziDoesQuestionableThings
      @AziDoesQuestionableThings 10 месяцев назад +3

      @@otzcz it's a stock fl plugin

    • @laurenpinschannels
      @laurenpinschannels 10 месяцев назад +1

      one of the more expensive ones. it's really hard to get the soft warmth of analog out of it - it can be done, but you have to know where to put all the little wiggles and what shapes to use and such. there's a nice example in the presets. but if you toss it through a quick convolver and a very slight saturating waveshape and don't use its built in distortion, I really like how wacky you can get with microtonal sounds with it.

    • @pleasure1689
      @pleasure1689 10 месяцев назад

      Harmless is better for me. Hamor is too complicated imo and doesn't return the best sounds for the effort.

  • @welcomemcnall
    @welcomemcnall 10 месяцев назад +14

    I'm all about that Practice Drop. That thing has some really cool rhythm in it and feels more like a unique take, as opposed to the "bro-step impression" that is the main drop of the video. Make more stuff like that practice drop, haha

  • @bluepixeldoom
    @bluepixeldoom 10 месяцев назад +19

    Making this video without attending a dubstep show is what is missing. So much of dubstep is how it's enjoyed live.

    • @DexQ12
      @DexQ12 10 месяцев назад +3

      very true about edm as a whole, if i played you a techno song through my phone or in the car it’s gonna be weird, but to witness an entire night of it is life changing

    • @preventablesuffering6239
      @preventablesuffering6239 10 месяцев назад +2

      yeah bro u gotta experience psychologically stunted fratbros and girls who are there to dress slutty outside of halloween and be plastered standing stationary and doing a zombie like "epic headbangtm" & grabbing onto a rail....otherwise you simply wont get it *eyeroll*
      dubstep reinforces the idea that "dance music" enjoyers dont actually dance. the optics of how those crowds act is worse than ppl sitting on dancefloors at massives getting lightshows.
      isnt a staple of dubstepfestivals literally dragging a couch onto the dancefloor? disgusting wooks

  • @codexstudios
    @codexstudios 10 месяцев назад +33

    I love dubstep. Both the 140 underground UK stuff as well as the aggressive modern sound.

  • @LukeLendrum
    @LukeLendrum 10 месяцев назад +87

    I rate the video 10/10
    The drop though honestly 2/10
    It kinda felt like someone doing something they don’t love, like a forced school project, which in a feeling driven genre is the kiss of death. Felt a little rushed and a bit throwaway.
    All way better than I can make though, obviously.
    Mr Bill is an all time fave for me and his collab with Virtual Riot, Thwek!, which is only on Soundcloud is maybe my favourite piece of EDM ever.

  • @MiDnYTe25
    @MiDnYTe25 10 месяцев назад +31

    I really felt the same way about your drop as Mr. Bill, although to me it's closer to a 3/10. I can feel the insecurity in sound design and selection, which , with your IDM background, is really reasonable. Kinda reminded me of early RUclips dubstep "remixes" with lots of wubs just thrown together, haha. The effort you put in it, on the other hand, is definitely commendable.

  • @arkarmoethouk2445
    @arkarmoethouk2445 10 месяцев назад +187

    Benn is the most technical FL Studio user I've ever seen. Damn ...

    • @coderaven1107
      @coderaven1107 10 месяцев назад +45

      Seeing his approach vs eliminate is really funny. (Eliminate is also very technical with automations, but just in such a different way :D )

    • @xn4pl
      @xn4pl 10 месяцев назад +29

      @@coderaven1107 We got benn making dubstep, now we need eliminate making idm.

    • @arkarmoethouk2445
      @arkarmoethouk2445 10 месяцев назад +6

      @@coderaven1107 Benn was like 'Idk how others do it but I'mma do it my way' haha

    • @NifesTheCat
      @NifesTheCat 10 месяцев назад +24

      @@xn4pl Someone brought up IDM in a recent Eliminate stream and he was like "WTF is that, that can't really be what they call that genre"

    • @coderaven1107
      @coderaven1107 10 месяцев назад

      @@xn4pl This would be soo good :D

  • @superlynx98
    @superlynx98 10 месяцев назад +24

    Honestly, if I heard a drop like the ones you made at a festival, I would lose my mind. While they might not be the most innovative or current sounding, they're really fun to listen to listen to and definitely stick out from what's currently popular in a good way

  • @rivvelmusic
    @rivvelmusic 10 месяцев назад +17

    Dubstep and harder bass music has been figured out alot more nowadays than in 2010. It's all about sound design and flow. A good rythm to it all. Usually it's better to make just one sound and create small variations of it during the song with automation. Use other sounds only like small fills and for a little variation. Spamming different bass sounds everywhere just creates a chaotic mess that is also hard to mix.

    • @ProjectHMF
      @ProjectHMF 10 месяцев назад +2

      Honestly melodic elements and harmony are also very important, otherwise it will sound like every brostep song ever xd

    • @rivvelmusic
      @rivvelmusic 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@ProjectHMF well here I'm thinking for harder dubstep songs. Big issue with old "brostep" songs us that they start as a happy typical dance, and then randomly swap to dubstep without a transition. Of course well thought out melodies harmonies, song writing and production is necessary for dubstep to sound good.

    • @jimmygonyea9752
      @jimmygonyea9752 9 месяцев назад +1

      Yeah just put the whole genre in a box lol. There’s no rules stop making them 😂

    • @rivvelmusic
      @rivvelmusic 9 месяцев назад

      @@jimmygonyea9752 ?
      What box?

    • @scary5455
      @scary5455 6 месяцев назад

      ​​@@rivvelmusicthey don't swap to dubstep. The happy parts are dubstep too. Evilwave makes deathstep with extremely horrific drops, but uses music theory to seamlessly blend different vibes. What you are talking about isn't a problem. It's appealing to people. NIMDA and Barely Alive literally play happy house tracks or pop songs, then switch to a brutal dubstep drop out of nowhere for impact at shows. Even lots of classical music doesn't get this right. The finale of Swan Lake tries to mix good vibes with the apocalyptic tone of the rest of the piece, which is honestly it's weakest point, in my view.

  • @Unit27
    @Unit27 10 месяцев назад +11

    I think a very easy trap (hehe) to fall into when making drops is that you focus so much in making the sickest, most intense drop, that you lose sight of its place in the song and its relationship to everything else. For yours, I think the intro of the track with the vocal melody is so strong that I just wanted a bigger, more intense version of it for the drop. When you get something completely unrelated after the build-up, the hype just dies down and you get confusion instead.

    • @nsjx
      @nsjx 10 месяцев назад +1

      good call 👍

    • @stephengibson848
      @stephengibson848 10 месяцев назад +2

      agreed, was not really a drop, not connected and never ended, then just randomly jumped back to the great tune you built. also, the rhythm should carry through so the dancing fools can keep moving, too much arhythmic beats (no matter how awesome they sound) are just sounds strung together. brilliant effort and as always really enjoy your humility and opening the doors to tour process 🐥

    • @FGCLovesYou
      @FGCLovesYou Месяц назад

      @@stephengibson848 Agreed - the switch back felt very abrupt, and the rhythm of the drop felt completely disconnected from the rhythm of the first part, such that I noticed myself pause and try to figure out what the new rhythm was. It felt to me like a rhythm that would be fun to dance to (it's probably relevant here that I am a practitioner of what some friends of mine years ago labeled Spastic White Boy Dancing), but difficult to catch when coming from the previous part, whereas I would think you'd want such a rhythm to flow more naturally out of the previous part (and vice-versa).

  • @t1merickson
    @t1merickson 10 месяцев назад +21

    the collab I never expected, but now need. AWESOME

  • @DafterHindi
    @DafterHindi 10 месяцев назад +26

    As someone who's learning to make dubstep atm, I can confirm that dubstep is indeed hard to make

    • @WhatWillYouFind
      @WhatWillYouFind 10 месяцев назад +1

      As an example:
      People don't give Sonny from Skrillex a lot of credit. He can sing, he is also a capable producer. The thing that made dubstep DROP into the mainstream was the refinement that some of the most popular bands brought to the scene. Bangarang has the guitar rift. The echo and chorus conflicts. Tempo'd and dirty bass reverb. There is a reoccurring motif that each riff or transition into another part of the piece includes duality. It has predictable and yet nasty drum and snare sections that are raw and overtuned but they work because of the mirroring of each part. The thing that also stands out too is that BENN had an amazing introduction section much like skrillex has in some of his songs. The problem occurred because it was disconnected, nothing mirrored or recalled back. There was no conflict or resolution when returning to prior parts. The essence of the drop is there, I actually feel like his DROP was good . . . a bit too clean but it gave me chills. Ironically everything BESIDES the drop needed to be changed? The thing that makes dubstep REAL MUSIC is that it fundamentally in some cases understands the science behind expectations, musical melody and dissonance, and creating an experience as opposed to a product which is why Dubstep became so popular in my opinion . . . it was a refreshing new thing that did a LOT of things right, even if it did assault your ears a bit. :D

    • @DafterHindi
      @DafterHindi 10 месяцев назад

      @@WhatWillYouFind well, his never music has been better than ever, and his newer dubs (like tears) do have a consistent vibe. agree with what you said tho.

    • @big_womp7764
      @big_womp7764 10 месяцев назад

      Been making dubstep since 2016 and I’ll say now it doesn’t get much easier bahaha

  • @stellar_cartographer
    @stellar_cartographer 10 месяцев назад +1

    Awesome video Benn! I honestly like how the track came out. But most of all, this video inspired and reminded me that I really need to get back to stepping out of my comfort zone. My favorite aspect about your drop is it sounds like nothing else out there, with your blending of influences and genres. It honestly leans more innovative and uniquely creative vs an imitation; and for that I really enjoy it

  • @stevenswall
    @stevenswall 10 месяцев назад +1

    10:37 Love seeing the Kii Three monitors. Those and the Dutch & Dutch 8c are oncredible for gettign accurate bass and mid ass in a room with their room correcrion and cardioid dispersion.
    Or for a crazy system Genelec has some massive woofer systems that turn their monitors into incredibly capable towers.

  • @tim3line
    @tim3line 10 месяцев назад +29

    Mr. Bill is easily my favorite artist atm and I've been binging your stuff lately too. This is GREAT

  • @xSaintxSmithx
    @xSaintxSmithx 10 месяцев назад +7

    Harmor was the first synth I ever learned! Love that you can load an image as a waveform. Making sounds out of memes is a video I should totally make.

    • @Kallyn
      @Kallyn 10 месяцев назад +1

      How did you learn harmor? It seems so overwhelming there's just so many buttons

  • @somatoastmusic
    @somatoastmusic 10 месяцев назад +7

    i find it helpful to start the project making the peak of the song, then take bits and pieces from that to write everything else around it. The additional sections remain simpler and maintain relevance to the focus of the song. The song almost puts itself together at that point. It is also much easier to bring the song down and create builds for the "hype" that is already there, rather than attempting to feel fulfilled by a large build you made without knowing what would follow.

  • @olivejun6641
    @olivejun6641 10 месяцев назад +1

    This is such a highlight of your channel! Really appreciate your vulnerability and stories

  • @jecoeur
    @jecoeur 10 месяцев назад +5

    Drops r interesting because i think its less often about the drop itself and more about how you set it up beforehand, and also about how you keep the interest rolling. Thats probably why the idea of a "semi drop" before the actual drop is such a powerful idea, cuz u can introduce some simple concepts that get you excited, strip it back a bit, then absolutely slam you with a dramatic reimagination of those simple ideas with the "real" drop. The semi drop also acts as a tool for the dj for mixing purposes, so theres a lot of intent that goes on behind the seemingly straightforward idea of buildup and release, and theres lots of ways of going about it thats not just 8 bar riser into bass

    • @jecoeur
      @jecoeur 10 месяцев назад +2

      I feel like the drop in the video is rly cool and could maybe have worked better if there were elements from it worked into the previous sections, or if there was a 8/16 bar space to indicate a big switch up was gonna happen

  • @bipedal_earth_roamer
    @bipedal_earth_roamer 10 месяцев назад +14

    I was feeling the 4/10. You’ve really shined some light on the art of the drop. In my very limited non-drop making experience, a filter sweep right before the drop goes a long way for the build up. There was something lacking in the drop though. Not enough sub-bass? Idk.

    • @Pho7on
      @Pho7on 10 месяцев назад

      He did a filter sweep but it was like 2 seconds long, followed by a weird kind of drum stutter, then the drop. It was a terrace instead of a cliff of a drop.

    • @marmolejomartinezjoseemili9043
      @marmolejomartinezjoseemili9043 10 месяцев назад +1

      there wasnt enough silence before the drop as well

  • @masonminetti
    @masonminetti 10 месяцев назад

    Thank you for making this video. For one, I really enjoyed watching your process from someone who doesn't make this genre but knows how to sound design really really well. I also appreciate it because as a dubstep producer myself, people often like to put the genre down for being something just generated by a computer. However it clearly is much more than that lol and is definitely a thought out and very intentional style of production. Especially, considering how everyone is constantly trying to out do each other in sound design etc. I'd love for you to do another video showcasing something maybe Bill has taught u and applying it!

  • @intranexine8901
    @intranexine8901 10 месяцев назад +2

    As someone who makes "aggro dubstep" (lol) as a hobby, I think I have some insight on what went wrong with yours, cuz I literally laughed out loud at it, it's like all the things I have stuggled with myself in the last years knocked you over the head at once, and you have no idea how to deal with this stuff. Here's some thoughts form me, take them with a grain of salt:
    1. Do the drop before the buildup. The buldup isn't just a way to build tension, it is a transition, if you have a more melodic part before the drop, you need to transition toward the more agressive atonal stuff that you'll have in the drop during the buildup, without spoiling the energy. At 13:30 Mr. Bill correctly assessed that your buildup wasn't really transitioning to new ideas, but just building up tension toward a bigger/heavier version of the ideas before the drop. You essentially wrote in a circle and that's why the drop ended up disapointing.
    2. there is theory behind the madness, most of us just do it on instinct, having heard a lot of Dubstep and knowing what sounds good, but if you want some names to the concepts at play, look into "Hocketing" (Adam Needly has a video on it) and the concept of "Tonecolour Melody" (or "Klangfarbenfmelodie" in the original german).
    3. At 16:35 you say that it would make your music more methodical, as a proof to the contrary I would raise you: Camellia, a japanese electronic producer that is most certainly not predictable, but uses builds and drops in insanely creative ways. If you bind yourself to the classic "intro - buildup - drop - bridge - buildup - drop" structure it's of course going to be formulaic, but dorps can do more then that standart procedure. Concepts like fakeouts and double drops come to mind, it's a tool like any other and can be used more or less creatively based on the user.
    4. The calm pad under the drop weakens it a lot, if you want a crazy energetic drop, you need a crazy energetic backdrop, hocketing comes to mind again, fast arps, alarm sirens, screechy sustains or highpassed riddim chuggs, crowd noise, chants, whatever it takes. Those pads would work for Melodub, but not for brostep, they kinda undermine the mood. Otherwhise you could also try and make a more chill drop, those exist (but let's be fair, they're boring :P)
    5. you seem to like more melodic/harmonic music, look into Colourbass sounddesign for a kind of Dubstep drop, that might be more to your taste and fit your style better.
    6. Make yourself a fatrack, a kind of default processing chain consisting of mostly Compression and Saturation (for starters just use a default OTT followed by a CamelCrusher on the "british clean" preset), and make a habit of putting it on the channel before you even start sound design in the synth. This is the secret to Dubstep's agressive sound, if in doubt , just add more OTTs, and if the sub gets muddy, highpass and layer with a separate sub synth. Virtual Riot and Au5 make great tutorials on all things sounddesign, when in doubt, they know.
    I would highly recommend you try and really experiment with this concept a bit more, because there's a world of music out there to be explored with drops, it's just a range of emotions that are hard to express any other way, and it limits your palette to not use them at all.
    Here are some personal listening recommendations so you see kind of the different directions that modern Dubstep and Drops can take:
    "The Living Proof - Control" a prime example of modern Brostep that incorporates both heavie and melodic chops interspersed.
    "Virtual Riot - In My Head ft. PRXZM (Panda Eyes Remix)" Melodic but Heavie, I've cried to this track 10/10. Also it's got an interesting drop structure that is fairly uncommon.
    "Convexity - Displacement" this one's jazzy as hell, Dubstep has quite the range and this one features some surprisingly harmonic dubstep noises, not any less crazy though.
    "MARAUDA - AVOIDABLE CAUSE" here's the opposite extreme, just heavieness no harmony, pure tonecolour melody, Tearout Dubstep at it's best 🔥
    "かめりあ feat. かめりあ - 灰の羽搏" not that much dubstep in this one but Camellia sure knows how to drop it in a million different ways, this guy is painting with ALL the colours at once.
    hope I could convince you of giving Drops another chance, good luck with your musical explorations, have fun ✨

  • @defusedhero6561
    @defusedhero6561 10 месяцев назад +14

    I’m glad to see my two favorite RUclips music creators working on this video together.

    • @defusedhero6561
      @defusedhero6561 10 месяцев назад

      Definitely hope to see more collaboration between the two of you.

  • @apparenthorizon935
    @apparenthorizon935 10 месяцев назад +4

    man that practice drop kinda gives off old uk dubstep vibes but with modern sound design, i kinda like it

  • @jonasharp3
    @jonasharp3 4 месяца назад

    I hadn’t heard of Mr, Bill till around 2016 when I saw him at a small, now defunct, Colorado Springs venue, opening for Infected Mushroom. His whole set, my jaw was on the floor. Then afterwards I saw him on the patio smoking, so I walked up and told him how happy his set made me, he just gave me a big hug and we talked about music for a while. He’s a really nice dude, and even more talented.

  • @BustyCatbot
    @BustyCatbot 10 месяцев назад +1

    I'd describe dubstep drops with a variety of sounds in sequence as a electronic *buffet* of sounds... but I guess "baby music" works too, the visceral reaction to intense bass does feel pretty primal, so I'm gonna take that as a compliment, and say I was born with a need for bass.

  • @McIntosh.R
    @McIntosh.R 10 месяцев назад +3

    That audio visualiser looks amazing, what is it? And can us mere mortals obtain it

  • @DecibelMasher
    @DecibelMasher 10 месяцев назад +7

    It was one of the drops of all time. The video was fantastic and a pleasant surprise considering previous promises to never make dubstep.

  • @stuey95
    @stuey95 10 месяцев назад +1

    @BennJordan Big fan of the fish out of water concept dude. Forced play within a genre you find formulaic seems a fun excercise to pull out your unique take, interpretations and influences.

  • @CardfightVanja
    @CardfightVanja 9 месяцев назад

    "Harmor is nuts.... Harmor is crazy" - I've used it on nearly everything I've made for like a decade and I still sit back and have those moments constantly. Fun video!

  • @harrytuttle5810
    @harrytuttle5810 10 месяцев назад +8

    A drop can be as simple as just sub bass coming in with no bells and whistles and over the top build ups , just sub giving the movement and energy. Thats the best kind of drop imo like in lots of dub music.

  • @rowlz2507
    @rowlz2507 10 месяцев назад +9

    Dope video, nice to see someone who doesn’t think modern dubstep is the worst thing that’s ever happened to the world. It’s not like zomboy took burial out back and shot him, both styles can coexist fine

  • @lankythedanky
    @lankythedanky 10 месяцев назад +1

    hearing the amen break at the start of that drop is like hearing a jazz musician play the lick lmfao

  • @philipmorison7769
    @philipmorison7769 10 месяцев назад

    Yesssss Benn!! Perfect description of bro step ! Make me so happy when I hear these comments in fact so happy I had to rewind and hear it again .

  • @kallissaa
    @kallissaa 10 месяцев назад +3

    Im gonna be honest. I dont spend a lot of time on YT other than for vocal warmups and maybe a few clips. I also dont often revisit things I sub to as much either so Im always behind.
    But I do have like 2 channels I keep up with now, and yours is one. Great content really.

  • @nickonfaith_music129
    @nickonfaith_music129 10 месяцев назад +3

    I actually loved the practice drop, all that glitchy, resonancey and rhythmically interesting feedback sounded very cool. Would love to hear a more polished version of that type of sound. Real drop was cool as well but same sentiments as everyone else, a bit disconnected from the prior music. Am not a dubstep producer,/ much of a dubstep listener, but definitely appreciate Mr Bill's artistry, his sound design absolutley blows my mind!

  • @DerekRobertsteig
    @DerekRobertsteig 10 месяцев назад

    When I saw this video pop out, I knew it'd be a good one. Always cool to see you branching out and doing the new things! :) Cheers, it was a fun watch!
    The drop was alright too, I guess. I'm gonna "Fantano" it at a "Decent 5"

  • @ZipSnipe
    @ZipSnipe Месяц назад +1

    Every musician needs a friend like Bill to put you back into reality
    Benn as far as the drop go I agree with Bill the energy was not there but the sound creation was spot on, loved it !!!!

  • @SquareWaveHeaven
    @SquareWaveHeaven 10 месяцев назад +4

    I've always preferred the drops in more jungle/d+b style music. Often a long pre-drop amble to let the baseline groove set in (not the bass line lol), sometimes even a bit of teasing with multiple stages of drop (deceptive drops) where a new beat might enter, only to fade away and come back twice as mean, then hit with the heavy sub-bass when extectations are stretched. Funnily enough the people I knew in the 90s called that "when the tune kicks off" because the term drop came a little later... Then there'd often be a second drop, more syncopated and with a different accent on the rhythms. That said I'm sure I'll learn something valuable in this video!

  • @MutleeIsTheAntiGod
    @MutleeIsTheAntiGod 10 месяцев назад +3

    I'd love to see a "how to" mini video on your automation process in FL studio. The video was great and the Mr.Bill story was amazing, worth the build up itself.

  • @VenetinOfficial
    @VenetinOfficial 10 месяцев назад +1

    Okay, so like, I think your practice drop was REALLY smooth, which to that alone I'd give it a 8.5/10. This very alien and DAW-nerdy approach is something I think you should pursue especially in the modern landscape of heavy bass music is a breath of fresh air, especially when the super heavy side of Dubstep is stagnating due to exhausting almost every option to make "heavy" also palatable to a large crowd. This isn't to say you can't do heavy, but you have to do something completely beyond the scope of mainstream heavy bass music to make it hit, which leads to genres like Deathstep, or even Minatory, both older subgenres that utilize much harsher distortion and sound design techniques borrowing from Noise Music and Black Metal.
    So now I should rate your actual drop since you asked nicely, but I'm going to give it two ratings; the first rating is with the context of the rest of the song. For this, I agree with Mr. Bill and say it's a 4/10. The smooth and chill IDM atmosphere was set up perfectly and you could've easily lead into a drop that utilized the logic of the previous section as your strength for a more Dubstep-y drop while still keeping that IDM feel, but like the other comments have suggested, you failed to pull the idea through the drop and it feels very isolated from the rest of the track. That being said, though, I want to judge the drop PURELY on its own and with that I say, in complete isolation it's closer to a 7/10, because the approach was, again, that very alien, very DAW-nerdy approach that is your biggest strength, and it sounded incredibly original and shows that even if you never did Dubstep before, you can easily bring new ideas to the table without much issue. With a little bit of studio time to practice making buildups and having whatever ideas you constructed in the buildup carry through the drop, you could very easily become a new Dubstep artist alongside your IDM work.
    This video reminds me that there's quite a lot of people that come from outside of Dubstep to work within the genre as a test of their skills as a producer. Most notably are Drum n Bass producers, who especially utilize their precise and tight sound design and ear for musical arrangement to make something a lot more complex in their approach to Dubstep. Killsonik's "Never Dream Of Dying" is my favorite example, because it still very much has that DnB edge (dark atmosphere, smooth flows, dynamic bass expression in both pitch and modulation), but utilizes the foundations of Dubstep to facilitate that feeling (big half-time drums, aggressive basses, stops for effect). I've seen Eurobeat artists show their hand when it comes to Dubstep, too, most notably to me is Odyssey Eurobeat, especially when she blends the more 2015 Brostep style into her normal production to accentuate the upbeat, driving nature of Eurobeat itself, to which I say "Terminal" or "Crow Attack" work as good examples of that. I mention this, because I am excited to see you continue your journey in learning how to transform IDM into Dubstep without sacrificing that particular bleeding-edge tone.
    TL;DR, IDM Dubstep hybrid had enormous potential, and sticking to that will bump a 4/10 drop possibly all the way to a 10/10 drop. Don't sacrifice what you're best at when creating music in unfamiliar territories. Also, Dubstep from non-Dubstep artists is actually really interesting and a field people should explore more.
    I want to see a follow-up down the road where you take Mr. Bill's advice as well as the other comments here for a second attempt.

  • @markbuckler4793
    @markbuckler4793 10 месяцев назад +1

    I'm a brostep aficionado who loves your work, so thank you! In terms of review I would say that the drop you made is exactly what you described you considered a drop to be in the intro lol. I might suggest introducing additional tension and release within the drop itself, so that it isn't just "lots of sounds all at once" and instead has the sounds play off of each other in a call/response fashion. Seems like Mr. Bill also suggested just doing less.
    This is awesome, thanks :)

  • @X-101
    @X-101 10 месяцев назад +5

    nonononono the drop comes from Reggae dub versions the producer would drop the beat and while pushing up the feedback knob on a echo let it tail off and then bring the beat in AND it was big in Jungle/DnB before UK Garage(which was basically people who outgrew jungle and started making house produced like a jungle track...) it had nothing to do with any US style of music

    • @yeshello2528
      @yeshello2528 10 месяцев назад

      true, true

    • @yeshello2528
      @yeshello2528 10 месяцев назад

      there was a lot of missing from this vid, which is... well, typical for US.

  • @SquareWaveHeaven
    @SquareWaveHeaven 10 месяцев назад +4

    I liked your drop by the way. I can see what Bill is saying, it's definitely an IDM drop. That's probably why I like it : )) I did find the transition back to the regular beat could have been stretched out over 16 bars or so, it felt a bit sudden, but I liked how jarring going into the drop was. It also needed more subs I guess.

  • @OperculumAudio
    @OperculumAudio 10 месяцев назад

    Dope! Vid collab with Mr. Bill and his insights and explanations. Awesome video Benn!

  • @minusED
    @minusED 10 месяцев назад

    Great video! IMDB part finished me:) Cat is also a plus. Insightful conclusions. Thank you!

  • @SinfulCreature
    @SinfulCreature 10 месяцев назад +4

    Awesome video, Benn.
    I rate your drop a 6/10! It wasn't bad by any means and was enjoyable to listen to, but it felt less like a bass drop and almost like a drum solo? When I think of a drop I think of a portion of a song that changes tone on a dime but can be faded, transitioned or otherwise blend harmonically back to what the song was prior to the drop occurring for a more cohesive listening experience.
    As someone who is horrible at making music but slowly learning themselves it was very cool to see the process, thanks for sharing!

  • @Dan-ms4oq
    @Dan-ms4oq 10 месяцев назад +8

    I'd love to hear your take on the modern UK garage sounds, there's been a huge wave of very technical drum patterns combined with the familiar rhythms that defines the genre.

    • @sentinusdeus
      @sentinusdeus 10 месяцев назад +1

      Do you have any recommendations for modern UK garage producers? I love all the old stuff, but I would love some pointers on who currently produces the good stuff

    • @jasonmacfarlund2703
      @jasonmacfarlund2703 10 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@sentinusdeusI think conducta's recent BBC Radio 1 essential mix is a good place to start, but idk what OP is specifically referring to.

    • @voynich7825
      @voynich7825 10 месяцев назад

      @@sentinusdeus Conducta, Sammy Virji, Interplanetary Criminal, Main Phase, the previous two together as "ATW", Bailey Ibbs, Ell Murphy, Cortese, Chavinski (aka Coco Bryce), Bakey, Breaka. These are my current UKG favs

  • @JoshuaDb_The_Witness
    @JoshuaDb_The_Witness 10 месяцев назад

    Ben - I SOOOO respect your authenticity man. I been making music - badly since the mid 90s - I wasnt a fan of drops - but I get that they are worthy of exploration - thank you..

  • @ettoremariotti4280
    @ettoremariotti4280 10 месяцев назад +1

    The drop felt 4.5, but the buildup is crazy good, at least an 8! I think that if there was a "leading bass" with a simple groove in forerfront with the other crazy sound in the background could have lead to a great piece. Feels like an unpolished diamond

  • @MrShay2077
    @MrShay2077 10 месяцев назад +3

    Mr. Bill was pretty accurate in his score imo. I also gave it a 4/10. Musically, I think your style is closer to someone like Kaskade or more chill step artists. Maybe looking into those types of artists for drop inspirations would give you a better direction to include drops into your style of music going forward if you so choose.

  • @kevinlasher2812
    @kevinlasher2812 10 месяцев назад +3

    2:55 As a self-proclaimed "dubstep hipster" who "liked it before it got mainstream" in the US, it's alright and you're not wrong. It seems that once a major industry corporate player gets ahold of something new, it goes through a sort of "junk food-ification" and that's absolutely what a lot of it sounded like - baby music for big lost boys. I'm excited to see how y'all blend your EDM signature style with my guilty pleasure, obnoxious dubstep and industrial bass.
    edit: okay you know i love you but that first drop needs work but I'm so happy you tried

  • @notflanders4967
    @notflanders4967 8 месяцев назад

    I've been listening to electronic music for over 20 years and dub-step for over 15 years. I've been producing music for about 10 years. On the surface, or the outside, it seems so simple.. There's been countless times that I've heared a song and thought "I could do that, easy!" Then to sit down and try to emulate it while doing your own thing is a whole different story. I feel you on this one. It's oddly difficult to make everything jive. I find I get the best results when I stop striving for something, and just push through til I have something. BUT, like you did, I always end up with something that isn't quite the style I thought I was shooting for. Although typically I'm still impressed with what I was able to create, even though, once again, it wasn't dubstep lol. Thanks for sharing! Id give it a 6/10!

  • @H3ath
    @H3ath 10 месяцев назад

    Great work, thanks. I'm really interested in the psychological effects of different music styles and parts within those styles.

  • @stephenrodgers9698
    @stephenrodgers9698 10 месяцев назад +3

    Maybe I'm just a huge IDM fan but that drop gave me more dopamine than any EDM ive ever heard

  • @sdHansy
    @sdHansy 10 месяцев назад +2

    You're threading in deep waters if this is Brostep and not Dubstep 🙃

  • @julianingle6856
    @julianingle6856 10 месяцев назад +2

    I'd love to hear a song length version of the practice drop! The reverby sfx chord into the drop sounded so clean and other worldly

  • @MisterMajister
    @MisterMajister 10 месяцев назад +1

    Off topic, but just wanted to say that after watching your videos for a while (they're great!) I recently started listening to The Flashbulb and I absolutely love it... You are so god damn talented. I work with software development and tend to only listen to instrumental music (often game OSTs since it's kind of designed to make you focus on what you do) and your albums are basically the only thing I listen to atm. Keep up the brilliant work you're doing!

  • @mili42069
    @mili42069 10 месяцев назад +1

    I LOVE your drop, its very fresh. Would love to listen to more.

  • @jon_gee
    @jon_gee 10 месяцев назад

    Love it Benn!! Your drop was really fun and super complex. Remember that amazing Kristuit Salu vs Morris Nightingale track? Conceptual something. That was ‘02, so it was called “glitch hop”.

  • @zendobrendo0001
    @zendobrendo0001 10 месяцев назад

    Great video. I don't think I could define a "drop" before but now I think I understand what it is at least, and I really like the idea of finding them in other genres of music. In genres I am familiar with I think we focus on harmony or lyrics for tension and release and it is fun to explore the idea that dynamics, timbre, instrumentation, and rhythm changes could be used to play with this as well, so bravo!

  • @oldunclemick
    @oldunclemick 9 месяцев назад

    Kudos at having a try! Most art forms turn out to be not so easy when one actually makes an attempt. I've seen many people attempt Jackson Pollock paintings but there's always something essential missing.

  • @MG-jn6vl
    @MG-jn6vl 10 месяцев назад

    Nice to see another fellow N. Georgian. I really enjoy your channel. Just found it recently.

  • @azido
    @azido 10 месяцев назад

    love your stuff Ben! had no idea Slicex had it's own p-roll like FPC.

  • @bartekglinski2665
    @bartekglinski2665 10 месяцев назад +1

    I was pretty surprised that you didn't mention about classical music in context of drops and tention. Great video 🎉

  • @VacancyOfDisco
    @VacancyOfDisco 10 месяцев назад +1

    i dig the exploration into the uncomfortable when it comes to learning new production skills. You may not be cramming a drop into every singel song going forward, but you might end up using some of those ideas within other contexts in your music. that why i like remixing. because i get to dissect somebody else's production style and work around choices they have made.

  • @lightweissdnb
    @lightweissdnb 10 месяцев назад +1

    I kinda agree with the less note in dubstep/bass music concept, and I think the reason for that mainly bc the bass music producer tend to design their bass with amount of overtones harmonically, and also I would like to point out that for bass music producers, it normally requires a lot of music theory as well(for good producers), and the reason behind that is they have to make sure the sound that they create did actually fit with the content, and that’s really difficult to get. Other than that, really good vids, I truly enjoy the track you made, big up mate!

  • @tylerlannan5935
    @tylerlannan5935 10 месяцев назад

    This was super interesting to watch! It was cool to see such a talented producer step outside of their comfort zone to try something different. It was also cool that even though it wasn't for you, you still gave props to those who do it well. See you at Knobcon again this year? I'll trade you sound design drop tips for your tricks on the glitchy IDM stuff.
    P.S. I'm glad to see my Twitter rec for Endless Smile made it into the fx chain 😁

  • @maxjohn6012
    @maxjohn6012 10 месяцев назад

    I absolutely loved this video - it was *soooo* interesting to see you working in FL :D
    As far as the drops go, honestly I didn't care for the "real" one but I thought the first one was absolutely awesome (although to be fair I wasn't scoring it in terms of how good a drop it was, rather in terms of how cool it was musically).

  • @stephenharvey3400
    @stephenharvey3400 День назад +1

    I thought Bill was generous. I have never heard two disparate sections of music bolted together so poorly - I guess it was in time though... the fact that you had a countdown so we didn't miss it was extremely funny.

  • @Whally
    @Whally 10 месяцев назад

    I have loved a big amount of your tracks. I think you are bad trying to do what other do. Your IDM, piano wibe, incredible sound design are excellent.
    Anyway, great video. 👌

  • @yfactorx1082
    @yfactorx1082 6 месяцев назад

    I feel it was sick, a Ben Jordan twist. That song was amazing . First time I heard your music, the intro was very beautiful
    And the drop had surprise, like no vocal chop to introduce the drop, I could totally tell that was by design, how the drop came in , as far as timing was all surprising and by design. Stay inspired bro you got skills

  • @nicktefft6225
    @nicktefft6225 10 месяцев назад

    I really love seeing you actually using FL and doing weird stuff in the DAW, I learned more from that FL21 video than in most tutorials

  • @rivalo5
    @rivalo5 10 месяцев назад

    I know this might come off a bit rude. But I consider you to be an excellent musician, like on a level I could never reach. I've started as a 12yo Trance hobby producer on an illegal copy of FL Studio, like getting to that point of almost two decades ago, with loads of build ups, cheesy melodies, the whole predefined song structures, supersaws, sidechain compression and all that stuff. After my music taste shifted more into "difficult music", It was really hard to make other music that I wanted to make and not fall back on those ideas. To see you also struggling with something that is out of your comfort zone, and the end result (sorry to say) not being good, is a bit of a confidence boost to me. I'm still a hobby producer because I found something im better at, but it's fine to make things that aren't good.
    Keep going with the great videos. Its really fun to see one of the artists l've listened a lot too when my music taste formed, is now popping up with great vids in my RUclips subscriptions.

  • @ITGAlex
    @ITGAlex 10 месяцев назад +1

    you say you've never made a beat drop before but one of my earliest musical memories was getting chills when the chaotic drum section in kirlian shores hit

  • @walkernotte3019
    @walkernotte3019 10 месяцев назад

    Not sure about the little jungle amen at the drop 😂 but i respect the idea and admire your sound design/musicianship. Ive been a fan of this youtube channel for a long time now and its awesome to see you and Mr. Bill's workin on stuff togethrr. His tutorials helped me in my early production in 2010-11

  • @aaronnorris4774
    @aaronnorris4774 10 месяцев назад

    thank you for making this benn

  • @rorymartin4910
    @rorymartin4910 10 месяцев назад

    As a dialogue sound editor and post production mixer, may I congratulate you on the cut away to the rain outside to "justify" the sound of rain on the roof! The number of times I've wished editors would do that so that I didn't have to try and denoise the sync dialogue is ridiculous! By having that one cutaway shot allows the viewer to "accept" that background "noise"

  • @MitchLantzX
    @MitchLantzX 10 месяцев назад

    Love to see this style of content, and Bill on your channel.
    I'm into the 2007 Drop. Its the whole bassline from Wildfire by SBTRKT. Also can confirm Bill is brutally honest.

  • @shongbrl
    @shongbrl 10 месяцев назад

    ngl I LOVE THIS VIDEO other than people in their mid 20s like me, working on basses and sound design- its soothing to watch someone like Benn working on dubsteppppp!

  • @rfmusic804
    @rfmusic804 29 дней назад

    Very grateful for your channel bro

  • @FabricioPodesta
    @FabricioPodesta 10 месяцев назад

    id love a part 2 learning and practicing more!

  • @SrReal1st
    @SrReal1st 10 месяцев назад

    i have not even started this video and i cant begin to express how exciting this collision of worlds is to me. my favorite producer/personalities ever

  • @matheusrocha5596
    @matheusrocha5596 10 месяцев назад +1

    I always thought the track "The Bridgeport Run" from the Hardscrabble album by Benn had some amazing drops, though one could argue it lacks the very predictable buildups. Watching this video felt like seeing a Benn that forgot something he could do really well.

  • @Akira71
    @Akira71 10 месяцев назад

    Love watching Mr. Bill and Benn talking when the real Legend jumps on Benn's lap!

  • @MilesAwayOfficial
    @MilesAwayOfficial 10 месяцев назад

    Awesome to see you get out of your comfort zone! Great video as always Benn.