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10 Tips for Succesful Production of Dance Music
By Jaroslaw Golowacz
1. Get the right monitoring.
For dance, bigger monitors = better monitors. Bigger recording room = better room. Remember that dj in club will play your track on big loudspeakers. If you mix your track on a small monitors or headphones, it may happen that your track won't be good for club and dj will not play it.
2. Make adaptation of your recording room.
Your producing/listening room has to be well damped, otherwise you will hear a lot of reverberation and sound coloration when mixing. It is very important. If you don't have a lot of funds (expecially for large room), don't worry. It doesn't have to look great, more important is to do the job.
3. Do not use noisy sound cards.
Try to avoid using cheap soundcards below $100. They have very poor quality and they are good for games rather not for producing music. If you have enough funds, consider buying card staring from $300 with low latency. Some cards offer also internal crossing which also might be useful.
4. Use good sound synth sources.
There are already some plugins that sound great, however if you can afford, invest in a best synth hardware. Hardware in 90% of cases sounds better than software. There are also many different samples on the internet. A lot of samples like sf2, wav, reason refills, midi, vocal samples and acapellas, you may find on Vipzone Samples website - also a lot of free samples.
5. Use good reverbs.
For your instruments and vocals try to use good reverb units / plugins. Good sounding reverb placed on some instruments in the mix can bring your track to life. If you can't afford top outboard units, you may use one of impulse-based plugins available on the market. They should work well for your DAW.
6. Use rhythmic delays on your instruments in the mix.
Remember that dance, trance, and techno music is based on rhythm. Don't forget to use rhythmic delays on leads, vocals, arpeggios or trance basslines and other synths. This will help a lot. Don't forget also to quantize your midi tracks (if you use midi).
7. Sometimes less bass = more bass.
Don't overdo with bass on a bass drum or bass line. Kick drum should have a short click at the start and be enough "pumpy" for dance. You can easy find a lot of free good sounding kicks on the internet. Remember, bass should also have some mid-frequencies audible near the 1-3 kHz - not only the lowest bass. Compare your bass to the bass used in a good sounding tracks.
8. Less instruments = cleaner mix.
Instead of making many sound layers, try to use not much instruments. Make sure to choose punchy and selective sounding instruments with not too wide spectrum. Work on each instrument with equalizers, effects - like delays, reverbs, phasers etc. depending on the sound type. Use eq, to make each instrument staying in its frequency, not overlay with other instruments frequencies.
9. Set kick and drum section louder than other instruments.
It will significantly helps during the mastering. If you will set them louder, you (or mastering engineer) will be easy able to make good, pumping master on a good compressor. With drums sounding quiet in dance track, proper mastering can't be done and noone will play your track in the club.
10. Send your track to the mastering engineer.
Try to not master your track by yourself and use good mastering engineer instead. He has fresh ear since you worked on your track probably a lot of time already. Mastering engineer will tells you the truth about your track, and what you should fix in the mix. You may find a lot of online mastering studios / houses.
Bio
I was interested in music practicaly since I was born. When I was 4 years old, I was very excited with my father's old Abba-tapes. I listened to Abba all through my childhood. My next fascination was Italo Disco and later Depeche Mode. When I was 16 years old I started to play the guitar. This was the beginning of my next musical fascination - I started to listen to the rock music and groups like Deep Purple, Dire Straits or even later The Cure. My first tracks was recorded on a 4-track tape machine and these was rather some rock-guitar tracks, not dance. Me and my friends founded some rock groups, one of them called Muzyka Wiatru (The Music of the Wind) released album on MC. Unfortunately there was a "time for pop" in Poland and nobody was really interested in promoting new rock band. After 6 years I left guitar...more on http://www.janardana.net.
Interesting samples for producers you can find on my website http://www.vipzone-samples.com
More useful mixing and mastering tips on http://www.master-your-track.com.
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Jaroslaw_Golowacz
http://EzineArticles.com/?10-Tips-for-Succesful-Production-of-Dance-Music&id=245740. Reprinted at CYBERMIDI.com by permission.
Hi
All these ten tips are really amazing one
Thanks
Peter
Great webpage! I dont imagine Ive seen every one of the angles of this theme the way in which youve pointed them out.
Rhythmic delays are very helpful to me when it comes to trance but there are some tips here I don't know yet like the less bass more bass because personally I love to add more bass on my mix but this one was tricky and I realize you should just set it enough but not too much.