I’m in a place a lot of people get trapped in: lost in 4 or 8 bar loop hell.

Whether I’m sampling or arranging chords and melodies purely with synths, I’m generally able to come up with really catchy loops but I nearly always hit a wall face first when it comes to expanding on what I’ve created.

The laziest approach to this (and one I kind of default to) is to just keep adding elements to the original loop (add some hats after a while, add another synth playing an arpeggio off to the right with the gain low, etc) , but this just leaves me with a really heavily dressed up version of the loop by the end - at its core, it’s just the same exact melody for 32 or 64 bars or whatever with a bunch of crap that’s been slowly tacked on over time.

Alternately, I’ll remove elements or remove the drums for a few bars… these things can be nice and are certainly very useful techniques for general variation, but they don’t tackle the core problem: creating actual melodic variation in what I’m working on.

Interested in hearing your tips and tricks for switching up melodies.

  • basskitten@programming.dev
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    1 year ago

    One of my favorite tricks is to use the transpose track in Logic to shift everything. I’ll just do the 4 bar loop like you say, keep it going for a few minutes, and noodle some melody over the top, staying in the same key. But then you add some transpose events every 2 or 4 bars and boom, you sound like a genius. You can hear this technique in action on this track I did:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w7bhQVhycAQ

    (Around 2 minutes once the bass line kicks in.)

    • _bug0ut@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 year ago

      Thanks for the tip I’ll start tooling around with transposing a bit and see if it leads me anywhere good - really fun track, btw!