Here to say that the "Face Reveal" in the thumbnail wasn't just clickbait. It's real
@TransistorLSD
3 ай бұрын
Now the real question is... Phase reveal, when?
@StrayBoom
3 ай бұрын
It's a buildup to the Onlyfans page for sure
@AL-qj9yh
3 ай бұрын
@@TransistorLSDactually it was inverted phase reveal, since It was the young him and he is old now, if we had a pic of him old we could do a null test to see if it’s really him
@TransistorLSD
3 ай бұрын
@@AL-qj9yh Makes sense!
3 ай бұрын
@@AL-qj9yh I'm not sure a null test would help much. He's gone through filtering and EQ by this time, after all. Fundamental frequency and the more prominent harmonics would still be the same though, right?
@FASTFASTmusic
3 ай бұрын
Sitting here thinking "please say arrangement, please say arrangement"
@FASTFASTmusic
3 ай бұрын
Yess!
@narrator-timothymckean
3 ай бұрын
Yes, there's a reason we never have to hear about who mixed for Beethoven, or who Mahler's producer was. The musicians do the work and it comes out right.
@DanWorrall
3 ай бұрын
The 'producer / mixer / engineer' is the conductor, you do hear plenty about them.
@narrator-timothymckean
3 ай бұрын
@@DanWorrall Good point. Mixed live. :)
@FASTFASTmusic
3 ай бұрын
@@DanWorrall excellent point everybody thinks that conductors are just waving their stick about in time what they don't realize is the months of rehearsal and communication between every single musician the performance on the night is really just the party.
@cameron8619
3 ай бұрын
YOU'VE TAUGHT ME EVERYTHING I KNOW ABOUT ANYTHING. THANK YOU DAN. I WISH YOU TAUGHT ME HOW TO FIX KEYBOARDS THOUGH IM HAVING A TOUGH TIME RIGHT NOW.
@wiseoldfool
3 ай бұрын
Too much 1kHz!
@funky.ass.breakz4473
13 күн бұрын
"Everything about anything" Damn DW you're good!
@cryptomonique
11 күн бұрын
my life is the same
@bookymydoor
3 ай бұрын
I would, in a heartbeat, happily pay for an ear training course from you Dan. I think that many would, made aware and given access to it, profit enormously from such a thing as this.
@jimbojazz6879
3 ай бұрын
Heavily agree, and wanted to comment so it's extra visible.
@bluberrykush3912
3 ай бұрын
I would definetly be into that idea as well!
@Maradnus
3 ай бұрын
Count me in!
@MrJimmyFive
3 ай бұрын
Yes please
@kwhyland
3 ай бұрын
Absofuckinglutely.
@MrSRellz
3 ай бұрын
I can highly recommend going to see and hear an orchestra performance. I recently went to two free events at the Royal Festival Hall and was amazed when I walked in a realised there were no mics and no engineer. Just the musicians and their instruments and how I could hear each instrument clearly. Great experience.
@96elixx
3 ай бұрын
You could set up a patreon account which is pretty convenient from what i heard. but a Dan Worral OF sounds hilarious and would be my first and last account Id follow on the platform hahaha
@Gortmend
3 ай бұрын
I can imagine trying to explain this to my wife when she sees the bill...
@TheMixWizard
3 ай бұрын
Make it in KZitem membership please
@eliteextremophile8895
3 ай бұрын
exactly this!
@chrisuzdavinis4364
3 ай бұрын
I'd still have trouble explaining an OF entry on the credit card bill to my wife.
@DanWorrall
3 ай бұрын
So, I'd be doing you a favour by forcing you to address the trust issues in your relationship.
@ErreGamer
3 ай бұрын
I'd buy an OF from Dan no question asked!
@Timefullful
3 ай бұрын
Me as well!
@mohitrahaman
3 ай бұрын
☠💀☠
@JuveriSetila
3 ай бұрын
Agree!
@cryptomonique
3 ай бұрын
You are really the best recording expert there is on KZitem, no questions asked man. It's neither just your professional skills, the way you edit your videos or other aspects of your apparent personality. Your whole vibe is just incredible. You bring something relevant to any question we might ask ourselves or any problem we can encouter. A 1000 cheers for that.
@StephenJPilat
3 ай бұрын
I just graduated in Music Production and Engineering at Berklee College of Music. They teach us frequency ear training in the audio classes with boosting and cutting frequencies on white noise and having to figure out the frequency. It was laborious and I hated it while learning it but it truly opened up the EQ for me and all of a sudden I felt I could finally “use my ears” because I finally knew what to listen for
@UnKnown1631
3 ай бұрын
Dude the 500hz cut at 8:40 is genius 😂
@GizzyDillespee
3 ай бұрын
I ALWAYS cut 500Hz at 8:40. Everyone does that. Just kidding I could use the info he's talking about. I'm not as against frequency masking as most people seem to be... but I didn't know what "too much 500Hz in the drums" sounded like. Disclaimer: I don't mix music for other people, so that's not scandalous.
@rickyspanish4792
3 ай бұрын
Came here to say that hahaha
@MrPajmej
3 ай бұрын
Try Mighty Networks. I like it for this kind of paid learning. Nice platform.
@Quadr44t
3 ай бұрын
@@GizzyDillespee Regarding masking, there is a introductory lecture from a uni on psychoacoustics. The playlist: Psychoacoustics lessons from Audio Information Processing TUM. It really helped me improve my mixes. Particularly the masking around the 200-800 Hz range, and how it (like any masking) disproportionally affects the high-end. Way further up than you'd expect. Now I handle that range for the culprit, instead of boosting high-ends of the other tracks. Also, whomever your intended audience is (albeit just you), a shitty mix enshittifies even the best songs. The composition, arrangement, execution, might all be perfect. If the mix bad, the song bad.
@etna-iu4cx
29 күн бұрын
I've been on and off learning music production for two years as a hobby. Your pragmatic perspective, way of teaching and the knowledge itself is of the highest quality that I find anywhere online. Usually I'll try to search for a specific topic I'm interested in, but in reality it's not what I need. Just browsing through your clips I get to discover userful concepts and skills that bring me the most value. Having a fullly structured course from you on any topic is something i'd 100% buy because it's simply so effective for me
@katabatica
3 ай бұрын
Dan dropping low effort but high value wisdom. Love it.
@sebastianmirceabadiu856
3 ай бұрын
Soundgym is a great tool for training you ears...But, i would be interested in a course done by you
@redbigapplefloppa302
3 ай бұрын
It's too expensive for me to pay every month
@FlowfallYT
3 ай бұрын
One trick that helped me immensly over time with my EQs is as follows: every time before you want to make a move on an EQ predict what you are gonna do. for example you'll say you need to boost 3.5khz on the vocals for 3db. you then set this setting and then adjust the EQ till it sounds good. you'll see that you actually boosted 2khz for 4 db, so you have a clear difference between what you thought you needed to do and what you actually did. if you repeat this over time with every single EQ move your instincts on what needs boost/cuts on what frequency sky rockets i promise! (even better if you do everything without a RTA ;) )
@pyratellamarecordingstudio1062
2 ай бұрын
Yes this is a good idea. I’ve been doing it for quite a while, without really even thinking about it. Your mind subconsciously just gets better and better at guessing for you.
@LeChapeauMusic
3 ай бұрын
nah in my opinion KZitem members would be the best but if you really don't want that, Patreon is also an option. it's a great idea for a video series and definitely something people need.
@kieranmchugh172
3 ай бұрын
To be honest I was thinking Patreon as a platform as well.
@diegosur
3 ай бұрын
Ear training can indeed be very powerful. About a decade ago I did one that I believe was called "Perfect Pitch Ear Training Supercourse" (it was a series of mp3s and probably a couple of PDFs), and after a couple of months of daily training I was able to play groups of random 8 notes simultaneously and identify each by its "colour" - like people born with perfect pitch are able to do I reckon. I didn't stick to it afterwards but even today I can identify different notes sometimes, with some concentration. There was also a course for relative pitch.
@citizenworld8094
3 ай бұрын
I was five when my distinguished teacher told my dad I had PP. It meant nothing to me until my 50s and started working in music from semi pro to professional. During those years, I told friends and family the pitch of car horns, glasses, cat meows and even farts. I could always prove it by running to the piano which I kept at A-440 , a Bösendorfer tuned 4 times a year. I once failed a choir audition because the tester transposed my line down a 4th meaning I had to sing different notes from the score. I couldn't because it was a lie to my brain. My point? PP is not something you can learn and I'd have preferred to have been more successful at other things but in the end it was like a reverse disease as I was no good at anything else in my life. As Rachmaninov said, Music is enough for a lifetime but a lifetime is not enough for music.
@DustinTylerMusic
Ай бұрын
David Lucas Burge! Highly recommend that course.
@jeremylarue4503
3 ай бұрын
I would pay for a course, depends on the price of course.
@Maradnus
3 ай бұрын
what's the coarse worth?
@19Stride
3 ай бұрын
That’s literally what Dan was asking
@Maradnus
3 ай бұрын
@@19Stride that’s literally what this commenter was confirming
@bananagoorob
3 ай бұрын
Hi Dan, thanks for all the videos. When I was in school for audio, we were trained on a program called "Golden Ears" that went over many of the techniques you discussed. For example, listening to pink noise and identifying where cuts or boosts were made in the EQ. It also had sections so you could learn what different attack and release times for compressors sounded like etc. I believe the course is still available online, but I would rather hear it from you!!
@ethancossett7318
3 ай бұрын
Just chiming in to vote yea on an ear training course! I've found your free videos frequently more educational than a lot of folks' paid videos, so I'd support any venture from your channel into the paid arena pretty much instantly.
@travismoore7578
3 ай бұрын
I had a full semester course like this in college for my audio engineering degree. The first half of the semester we trained on boosts/cuts of 12dB with a graphic EQ. The second half was 6dB boosts/cuts. Usually on music. We also assigned a lot of adjectives to these sounds. Now when I train newer engineers both live and in the studio, one of their main questions is “how do I know where that frequency is just by hearing it.” It’s from that training, the adjectives, and EQing thousands of times. So a course like you’re discussing is incredibly useful and helpful!
@IQM24
3 ай бұрын
Hey Dan and fellows. At academy we had a lesson called Aural Perception, the tutor Benjamin classically trained, helped us learn through his examples of short phrases of composition, the parts sounded absolutely clean in the right place. I asked him about the mix of course. This video resonates with that lesson Aural Perception with Benjamin
@LuciSheppy
3 ай бұрын
4:44 A personal hurdle to overcome for me and undoubtedly others too is/was the fact that once you start cutting frequencies something can feel off or weird, you'll think to yourself "this doesn't sound right with this amount of cutting", in reality you only notice this because you'll be hearing the change, anyone else hearing it in a mix might not be able to tell
@tpn4781
3 ай бұрын
The only time I go on to YT and press play on a vid about 'THE MAGIC TRICK ALL THE PROS USE' is when its from Dan Worrall.
@pureventrue2357
3 ай бұрын
As an aspiring engineer hungry for real ways I can keep honing my craft, I'd 100% pay for something like that from the man himself. Ear training is always something I did when I was learning music & now that you've said it, it seems crazy not to have an equivalent for audio. Sign me up!
@vladrileynavilys
3 ай бұрын
i still go with the ol' EQ boost or cut and then sweep around
@guitargas1894
3 ай бұрын
Me too, gives me a fast impression which frequencies enhance the part and which make it stand out in a bad way.
@BigBoysStudios
3 ай бұрын
The problem with that (I find) is that some frequencies just always sound nasty when pushed, regardless of whether there was too much, or too little in the actual mix. I try and hear what frequency is out of whack then find it ... sometimes I need to sweep to do that. Often I'll sweep a little either side just to double check. But, as Dan rightly points out, there is no better skill than being able to zero in on the right frequency without any mucking about.
@evilduck5691
3 ай бұрын
@@guitargas1894 the advice I've heard is you shouldn't do this unless you're looking for something specific. If there's a resonant frequency or a boxiness that you're trying to isolate, sweep away - but don't go looking for problems that you can't hear - plenty of good frequencies will sound bad when you boost them.
@wonkyrobot
3 ай бұрын
In my education here in Denmark, ear training was a big part of the education. The good old "Golden ears" training set was the material used. (Was studying Live Audio Engineering, 4 year education)
@mitchbellmusic
2 ай бұрын
I would gladly pay for an ear training course from you, Dan! EDIT: proof of my readiness to pay for a course from you was that I posted the above before I even finished listening to this. So to answer your final question: I recommend you create your own site and offer either a one time "lifetime" membership charge at several hundred dollars, or an annual membership fee at a cheaper price point. Two main reasons to make your own site: cut out the middlemen so we're only paying you, and "own" your customers. And by that I mean, you have the data of who wants what you're selling, and no platform is your overlord, at whose discretion you could be completely estranged from your audience at a moment's notice (as we've seen on KZitem, for instance, through the years.) My two cents! Thanks for your teaching Dan, and I look forward to taking your ear training course.
@avationmusic
3 ай бұрын
6:10 Can confirm I did do ear training during my studies. We did it once a week during our Mastering lectures. There’s also a noticeable improvement in my mixes before and after that period :)
@Wizardofvoz2
Ай бұрын
Design it, present it, and I will buy it. Don’t need it, but you and your content needs to be supported. I’m in.
@keywestjimmy
2 ай бұрын
Best thing I've heard, "recognize where the arrangement was trying to get to...." Now that's audio engineering at its best.
@ikut4888
3 ай бұрын
ooh that does sound interesting, and it's cool to see the idea reinforced of what I've been figuring out on my own - to give "space" to important instruments' main freq range by cutting other instruments in the same range. It sounds weird solo'd, but when everything is playing you don't hear that "missing" cut on those tracks. Forget if it was this channel or another which suggested to not hyperfixate on how each track sounds solo'd, because after all the final mix isn't listening in solo... And if the cut sounds weird solo'd, you can just automate disabling it when the "main" instrument doesn't play and the "cut" instrument becomes more prominent. Another mixing "trick" I've seen, is equating different ranges in the freq spectrum to different vowel sounds... It's very clear when it's band boosted over pink noise, but it can be a lot harder to learn how to listen for that in real use cases/on actual instruments. Maybe that'd be worth touching on in the courses?
@SALEENS7GTR5
3 ай бұрын
I've described music production to friends as "creating, writing, and performing a symphony all by yourself, just with sounds no one'e ever heard before" many times in the past. It feels good to have a thought about music making similar to Dan's 😅
@MrSkylightOffical
3 ай бұрын
The best help/info/training on the internet is always free. You’re a prime example of that, my friend.
@hardwaresecuritymodule
3 ай бұрын
I'd love an ear training course from you - please do it! In terms of platform, I don't see anything outside KZitem that's easy to use for both sides - it needs to be easy for you as well as us
@kylepetersen6520
3 ай бұрын
If I didn't have good ears that I've been training already but doing ok the job work, and also training in a musical context I would definitely consider buying a course from you that would help me train my ears. I don't know if i'd get it if it wasn't you making it, you are a superb educator especially on this platform.
@soulchorea
3 ай бұрын
Yes please I would happily buy that course (especially if you include your knack for pointing out common pitfalls and faulty "conventional wisdom" type of stuff)
@schallherz
25 күн бұрын
I totally would pay for your Tutorials! Thank you! Keep up the good work! You are fantastic 🎼🎹🎧🎤🔊🎩
@WetSoilStudioLymm
3 ай бұрын
Yes please Dan - make the course. I’m in.
@YourFavouriteColor
3 ай бұрын
yes the "shut up and take my money" meme is an older meme, but it checks out, especially in this case.
@CaptainChu
3 ай бұрын
posting it on 0F would be hilarious honestly I wouldn't mind using youtube membership for it, definitely would grab it asap the only issue with youtube is that it'd be subscription based, and for basically an access to videos... it doesn't bring the best feeling It also heavily depends on how you'd want to build the course.... single time payment obviously makes much more sense if you're just gonna create the most comprehensive course from the start, with less emphasis on updates or new content, more emphasis on the first release. And subscription makes more sense for if you're gonna keep adding more and more things to it, more emphasis on updates/new content.
@markchristopher4165
Ай бұрын
Would 100% pay for that course!
@DaftyBoi412
3 ай бұрын
Sound Gym is an AWESOME tool for learning things like the freqency spectrum by ear, and relative gain boosts and reduction numbers, again by ear, as well as panning positions by ear (all for free). Then if you sub to the paid model you get a ton of other exersizes (and they aren't limeted like the free ones) and can learn gain reduction of compressors by ear and all sorts of interesting ear training tit bits!
@Arcessitor
3 ай бұрын
When asked in Splice discord what the most important mixing technique was, I said 'to recognize when elements just don't work together - if you remove the offending element by going back to the production stage, the mix will fix itself' - you wouldn't believe the pushback I got for that simple comment. Complete pile on. Glad I'm not crazy and alone in this.
@DanWorrall
3 ай бұрын
That's not always an option if you're just the mix engineer. But yes, the mute button fixes clashing issues more effectively even than EQ ;)
@Thepinkflamingo91
3 ай бұрын
Would definitely pay for a course as you describe. Put it on whatever platform doesn't take a huge cut from you - you deserve it all.
@GloveBunniesVideos
3 ай бұрын
I've always wondered how, when frequencies resonate in our skulls and jaws, how the proximity to our inner ear effects our ability to determine good tuning or perfect pitch. Great video!
@Atifkhan-pm2ud
3 ай бұрын
I would happily pay for a course by you Dan. I am also a fan of some kind of an interactive class.
@christopherharv
3 ай бұрын
Toughest parts of my mixes are when there is simultaneously overdriven rhythm guitar, overdriven lead guitar, and choir. Those 3 things are so broadband, its impossible to avoid frequency masking if you want each part to maintain it's whole sound and not have any super-filtered effect kinda sound on any of the tracks.
@dico9542
3 ай бұрын
Yes! This is so important. We do it a lot in audio related educations here in Denmark, but not as much as we probably should. It'd be nice if maybe one of the videos from this course were to be made free so that we could see how in depth you go.
@stepans2167
3 ай бұрын
Well, that's a mandatory purchase if I even seen one 😄
@InFiNiGhTe
3 ай бұрын
An ear training course sounds like a great idea, according to my ears!
@tc2290
3 ай бұрын
Of interest to you might be the Golden Ears ear training course. It used to be distributed on cd, now they have an online version. That being mentioned, I still love the idea of paying for Dan’s Freq’ing Audio Course distributed via OF lol.
@mashzmash
3 ай бұрын
Also classically trained with enormous amount of ear musical training at the university level, and yet struggle to date with all the "self taught" frequency-based ear training I've done without proper methodology. As you say, hearing is complex and it's more than frequencies, it's psychoacoustics too. Like any course worth its weight, I'd pay a fair amount. I think the learning platform needs to be interactive and have drills associated with it-- not just videos we can watch/hear. It should be an e-learning platform where we can try things, test what we hear and reinforce things. I'm not an expert in this but I presume there are many such platforms available. p.s. that bow is REALLY tight and it looks like more like a viola
@kisaragi-hiu
3 ай бұрын
This is like when I was reading Cedric Chin's change of mind on note taking, then experimenting with his "Case Library", then finally having the case library be a flagship product of his entire blog. He writes really high quality articles on acquiring skills ("tacit knowledge"), also bringing a bunch of research into more accessible forms of reading. I think his work on burnout, extracting knowledge from experts, and the "vocab point" (how experts end up coining their own terms) can be particularly interesting in this case.
@mickebroman
3 ай бұрын
I’ve had a hobby home studio for 20 years. I’m no professional, but not a beginner either. If you created a straightforward, basic mixing course, I’d buy that in a heartbeat. You’ve shared a ton of knowledge on KZitem, but having a full, no-nonsense course with your teaching skills would be invaluable. A lot of bits of info would fall into place, and it would add things that the super interesting deep dives into plugins and stuff can’t (and don’t try to). It would add an overall perspective and a more complete picture of mixing as a craft, in your view. It would be a gift to humanity. I’d definitely pay for an ear training course as well, though!
@LouisInglis
3 ай бұрын
I would pay around $50 for such a course without even blinking an eyelid. I would likely pay more but there might be a couple of eyelid blinks involved.
@bobrv8
3 ай бұрын
That was the figure I had in mind.
@Zoot-flash8
3 ай бұрын
Hi Dan, i strictly only operate on OF these days so would be nice to have the vids there… Looking forward to it
@mansosound
3 ай бұрын
I totally agree with you man. when I did the SAE back in '99 i asked where the frequency module was . . . ? I felt like a ghost. I did lose you when you mentioned 'SFW' 😅 Great idea btw, I keep training miself, but its never enough for the brain.
@tomwinterstone
3 ай бұрын
It used to be so simple to just go to a shop and buy the content you wanted on some storage device. Then streaming platforms made that more comforable and now it's like you need an account with all your personal data in yet an other database and a subscription for every single thing you'll ever wanna watch. Point is: I'd be happiest to pay directly to you to just get the videos, excluding subscriptions and accounts and memberships.
@TheYeqy
3 ай бұрын
I wanna write "Shut up and take my money!" but it feels so inpolite to say that to you! 🤣
@ryandavis3408
3 ай бұрын
I would absolutely pay for an ear training course from you
@jimimaze
Ай бұрын
Sometimes as a customer. I just want to give someone money because they’ve given me so much good content for free. Beato, for example. I bought the ear training course, and then paid $75 more for everything else. I don’t ever look at it. I made myself some feedback tones in the exact frequencies of a 31-band eq. I burnt them onto a CD and played said CD at random. Then I’d guess the frequency before it was revealed by Stephen Hawkins voice about 8 seconds later. Ai did the same by boosting frequencies in Pink Noise. The also added chords and modes to the mic eventually. Burning longer CDs, and eventually creating mp3 playlists to be played at random, 25 years later, I’m pretty ok at guessing right most of the time. Anyways, I’ll buy your course Dan, just to pay for all the value you’ve already given me. Btw, feedback is so much easier to catch now that RTAs are standard. I use my phone’s RTA and gently say to the sound guy “I need you to take out some 320hz”.
@currentcontentco
3 ай бұрын
Been waiting for the OF, it's about time!
@jttech44
3 ай бұрын
Easy way is to boost the problem frequencies, and if it gets worse, cut it until it sounds better. If you run out of available cut, increase the bandwidth (q) and try the cut again. You do have to know where to begin though, and for that ear training is 100% critical.
@MellowXBrew
3 ай бұрын
Had this course for my masters. Changed my life forever
@chris_share
3 ай бұрын
Great idea for a course and Patreon would probably be the best for me - not sure I could explain an OF account to my partner, lol! I'm classically-trained and although all that ear-training I did is helpful, audio engineering is slightly different in that you're dealing with concepts like "depth", "imaging", "separation", etc. which are a bit different to musical concepts like "pitches", "parts", etc. So I think a course would be really helpful. Cheers!
@leosteeds3481
3 ай бұрын
I would be interested. As a follow up, though, listening to different compression types and distortion types would make a great course. I find those things aren’t covered well, especially distortion - I haven’t found a really systematic tutorial on identifying and using different distortion types.
@nihilisticalbino
3 ай бұрын
I would really really suggest a Patreon account. I would totally sign up for it and we can continue to support the channel even after we've already seen the course. You could upload some outcuts or whatever suits your fancy there as well, since all the members will already be fans of your cool work. Great content, thank you! (About 5 to 10 dollars would be an optimal tier price btw!)
@srgzbltch2249
3 ай бұрын
Hello Dan! Thank you for all the valuable tutorials you've been making. I don't have any platform suggestions but will be buying the course once it's available.
@daddydanny5588
3 ай бұрын
👍... Wasn't I adorable,? 😂😂😂 OFCOURSE
@colinmorgan6733
3 ай бұрын
Very good. I was classically trained and played the Trumpet from11 and played in the Kent Youth Orchestra at 14.
@patrickfouhy9102
3 ай бұрын
When I entered college as a Music Composition major, I was essentially tone deaf. Over years of practice, I've developed a pretty solid ear when it comes to identifying intervals, chords and scales. Took a lot of work, but I believe you're right, anyone can learn the ear training required.
@wightwulf
3 ай бұрын
A youtube membership would be most convenient for me because I already have the app on my phone and I'd always see the notification for your latest uploads. I don't currently have a patreon (or OF) account and don't know if it can send mobile notifications. I'd also hate to have to sign up to a website that I'd have to frequently check and my email is packed with spam that if a notification came there I'd probably miss it. So my vote is on youtube memberships
@skcrecords
3 ай бұрын
I would absolutely pay for ear training from you, you’ve been instrumental to my development as an audio engineer. Go for it, Dan!
@karlboman
3 ай бұрын
Sounds amazing, and I would absolutely not be able to give it the time and attention it deserves :D I hope it gets off the ground and adds to better sound in the world and better finances for Dan :)
@palmal3542
3 ай бұрын
I'm relatively new to your channel, but I love your down to earth approach. And I love your musical examples. Im also classicaly trained Double Bass player! Which also means I played a lot of jazz etc...but really my heart and soul is in dub and electronic music (Of course I also play bass guitar...its the same as double bass). Love to do a tutorial with you. Ive been doing audio/music writing and production for 20 years, but no formal training, and I think maybe I need some?
@LuciSheppy
3 ай бұрын
6:45 Yes. We want it.
@person2200
3 ай бұрын
I'd 100% pay for an ear training course from you!
@MrAlFuture
3 ай бұрын
Yes and yes, please! I'd be happy with either youtube channel membership paywalled or patreon with unlisted youtube videos as a delivery mechanism.
@Herfinnur
3 ай бұрын
I really hope you create that course!
@mirceastaicu4131
3 ай бұрын
I would buy any commercial course you would put out in a heart beat, regardless of price. You did mention that you've already posted your best stuff for free, but there's a difference between us putting those pieces together, and being hand held by someone who knows what they're doing. I guess what I'm trying to say is that KZitem is a great vendor for knowledge, but experience is what connects the dots, and a course would be just that, an infusion of experience.
@CEGryphon
3 ай бұрын
At my school we did ear training. Had a whole semester on hearing and identifying boosts and cuts. But what helped the most was live sound training, both with feedback and with cutting mud and honkiness with vocals.
@JonGUK
3 ай бұрын
Absolutely yes, I would most definitely pay for such a course.
@lennyphoenixc
3 ай бұрын
I would absolutely pay for an ear training course!
@victorgoemans8644
Ай бұрын
I would happily pay for a course like that!
@davebullard
2 ай бұрын
Yes! I would buy an ear training course from you.
@TobiasRobertson
3 ай бұрын
I would definitely pay for a course, I feel like EQ is actually the biggest thing I want to improve. I’m doing well and can recognise frequency “areas” but I’m not that accurate yet so anything to speed that up would be great
@Lolwutdesu9000
3 ай бұрын
Fabfilter Q3 and a lot of other modern VST plugins allow you to see the overlap of frequencies between different tracks, making it easier to deal with frequency masking.
@DanWorrall
3 ай бұрын
In theory. In practise I've yet to find one that agrees with what my ears tell me.
@eynsai
3 ай бұрын
I'd pay hundreds for an ear training curriculum prepared by Dan. Patreon seems to be a convenient option as far as platforms go, and there's also a lot of people selling these video courses as one-time-purchases.
@schz01
3 ай бұрын
You create a course I immediately buy it. period.
@GrandmasterKnox
3 ай бұрын
Here's the thing, whatever you wanna do, I'll be there. Unless it's an actual crime, in which I'll have to check how long is the prison time before committing to it. Jokes aside, I would be happy to see more content from you. Though, I'm not sure if I can commit to it immediately since the exchange rates might be a little too pricey. I like keeping it in a membership tier because KZitem scales it well for people around the world, though that accessibility means that you would need several people from weaker currencies to cover the price of a single membership in your currency. It's a tricky balance, but I'm sure you'll figure out what works best based on how much you expect to make from it. Either way, I hope to see it happen even if I get to see it a bit later than other people.
@alphaentitysound
3 ай бұрын
I’m positive you would make hugely beneficial and top quality ear training course.
@evanbelcher
3 ай бұрын
I would definitely be interested in paying for that course. I got very valuable ear training / aural skills classes in college, but they were focused on stuff live musicians need, like identifying intervals, rhythms, chords, solfege, etc. It daunts me a bit that ear training for mixing is essentially like learning a crude approximation of perfect pitch, but it's clearly possible and I'd like to learn.
@deReisgenoot
3 ай бұрын
I would certainly be interested in that. I'm a songwriter, but I think I could greatly benifit from some basics in mixing, to be able to provide better demo's. As for the price, that's up to you of course. If it would be a series of video's that go one way, meant for lots of people and without the students being able to ask questions and stuff like that, I think that I personally would pay around 100 dollars/euros for it.
@Ontoue1
3 ай бұрын
I would absolutely pay for a course by you
@s0alaih
3 ай бұрын
yes I would absolutely pay for this
@sonomaquina
3 ай бұрын
Your videos on KZitem are perfect for HIspanic America, automatic captions and translations are important to us.
@iknowyoucodfish
3 ай бұрын
I would pay gladly!
@grafzhl
3 ай бұрын
I had technical ear training as part of my bachelors (Audio Design), but the course could have been more thorough, I'd say. Excited to see what you can come up with!
@kimjunkmoon2298
3 ай бұрын
I think that you would have to think about your target demographic for your courses and how you would shape your course around that. Most people who watch your channel probably have a decent amount of experience mixing/producing (the "dj" kind of producing), but there's likely a broad range of experience. You usually do a good job of breaking down a topic in various ways so that both sides of the experience curve can learn something from it, so I would be interested to see if that translates to doing a course. I can say I would consider paying for a course like that, but I wouldn't be chomping at the bit for it. I guess it depends how much value I feel it can give me by honing my skills at mixing.
@antrave
3 ай бұрын
I think you should a VHS mailing scheme and air commercials for it between the hours of 1 AM and 4 AM
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