30 Day EP Workshop
Shake up your workflow, generate new ideas, and create a three-track electronic EP in under a month. Our workshop is here to show you how
Creativity is hard sometimes. For music makers there are no shortage of potential roadblocks on the way to finishing a new project. For some people that might come at the start, as a paralysis of choice sets in when confronted with an empty DAW and a wealth of potential tools and influences. For others, the hardest part comes later, when it’s time t turn those initial ideas into a fully realised arrangement. Whether you can relate to either of these situations or not, it’s a rare thing to find a producer or musician who has never encountered some kind of creative stumbling block – and that’s why our 30 day workshop is here to help.
What we’re not going to do this issue is tell you exactly how to write or produce your tracks. You can find plenty of specific genre, instrument and mixing tutorials in previous issues of FM, or online at our sister site MusicRadar.com. But no two readers’ aims and influences are going to be identical, so there’s no point in us trying to tell you exactly what type of beat to sequence or what key your bassline should be in. What we are aiming to do is provide a structured workflow, ideas for overcoming common creative roadblocks and a guide to writing, recording and releasing electronic music. Whether you’re starting a new project and want to work on your first release, or an established music maker looking for a way to shake up your process, we hope you’ll find some fresh ideas and approaches over the next few pages.
Why a three-track EP? We wanted to aim for something achievable but still substantial in our 30 day window. We’ve tried to offer a few different approaches at each stage, and working on three tracks at once allows you to try a few different ideas. That said though, there’s nothing here that can’t be scaled up or down. If you’re short on time, aim for a single track. Want to challenge yourself more? Why not try a full album? Whatever feels right for you.
DAYS 1 TO 7 Inspiration
Aims:
> Find inspiration
> Plan our tracks
> Gather sounds and creative ideas
Avoid the blank canvas
There are a lot of producers and music makers who are happy to sit down in front of an empty DAW, or start a studio session with no preparation, and see where inspiration takes them. That’s great, but it’s not an approach that works for everyone every time.
Moreover, while starting a new project can often feel easy and exciting, developing those initial ideas is often much harder. Electronic musicians from beginner to pro can likely identify with the ‘16-bar loop’ problem; the peril of creating a great initial idea but then getting stuck after listening to it on loop, unsure how to take it further, and eventually losing enthusiasm for it altogether.
Planning and preparation aren’t essential, but it can help you defeat these hurdles when you come to them. It might seem like a waste of time to spend the first seven of our 30 days on things that don’t involve making any actual music, but knowing exactly what we’re aiming for will go a long way towards speeding up the creative process later on.
Of course, if you really don’t think it’s worth it, feel free to skip ahead, but even if you’re someone who regularly turns out fresh finished tracks without hitting any creative roadblocks, a little brainstorming could help foster a few fresh ideas.
Taking inspiration
Music does not exist in a vacuum; however revolutionary a track might sound, it can always be related to something that’s come before.
There’s nothing disingenuous about using an existing track as a jumping off point for your own creative ideas. That’s exactly what we’re going to do here.
Before getting to work on your own tracks, start by making a ‘mood board’ playlist of music you enjoy that exists in a similar genre space to what you want to create. Add a decent number of tracks with a fair amount of variety. Listen to the tracks together and make notes on common characteristics, such as mood, BPM, track elements. Try to establish what it is that appeals to you about all of those tracks, and what you’d like to capture in your own music.
The next step is to establish what exactly we want each of our three tracks to ‘do’. Aiming to make the your three tracks can complement one another. Perhaps you want one hook-centric ‘A-side’ followed by two more spacious or leftfield tracks? Maybe choose to switch tempos or even genres – following a techno track with something at drum & bass tempo, then finishing off with something beatless and ambient? Maybe one track will focus on melody, another more on rhythm and percussion?
For each track, write down a rough bullet point list of qualities and ideas you hope to capture.
Once we’ve established a rough idea for each track, let’s make a ‘placeholder’ EP. We’ll do this by selecting three songs from our ‘mood board’ playlist that most closely match what we want our tracks to sound like. These don’t have to be too similar to your intended result – the aim here isn’t to rip off an existing song – but rather to provide a broad jumpingoff point for the exercises on this page. We can also use these as reference tracks when it comes to mixing and mastering later on.
“THERE’S NOTHING DISINGENUOUS ABOUT USING AN EXISTING TRACK AS A JUMP-OFF POINT FOR YOUR OWN CREATIVE IDEAS”
Building a template
A great way to overcome the ‘16-bar loop problem’ is to create a rough song template before you even begin creating any sounds. Do this by creating empty MIDI clips across your DAW’s arranger for each major track element, sketching out a map of how you expect your song to progress. This doesn’t have to be a final arrangement you end up sticking to rigidly, but it will be much easier to ‘remix’ this rough idea than start with a totally empty timeline.
An easy method for creating these kinds of templates is to base them around a reference track. Drag one of your ‘placeholder’ reference tracks onto your DAW’s timeline, and follow the steps below to create – and reshape –a template from it.
> Play through your reference track one 16-bar section at a time. Whenever a new element is introduced, create a new MIDI track and add an empty MIDI clip to represent this new part. Duplicate parts as you listen to the track, but remove any part that cuts/fades out.
Listen through to the reference track a couple of times to make sure you haven’t missed anything.
> Label each element. No need to be too specific – we’re not trying to replicate our reference track – simply tagging elements as percussive or melodic would do. Or use rough labels such as ‘kick’, ‘bassline’, ‘pads’, ‘chords’. Try using colour coding to show how a part progresses throughout the track – eg make a synth’s clips a light colour as the filter opens.
> Now we can start ‘remixing’ our reference track, even before creating any elements of our own. Try extending sections, or moving the breakdown. Does your reference track start with just drums? Try swapping it out for a melodic element. Again, we don’t have to stick to this, but it will provide a starting sketch to work around later on in the process.