How to SYNTH PAD without Boring Everyone
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Pads are awesome. Almost TOO awesome.... If you too lose countless hours to synth pad noodling, here are some ways to make your synth pads sound cooler. Oh and how to actually use them in your music.
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@bartholomeusclever
Ай бұрын
so nice to end up on your channel ... i am new to synthesis and videos like this are very informative and inspiring ... thank you
@cjay2
7 күн бұрын
Hey loser, learn how to play an instrument, and then record that, instead of 'noodling' with your 'synth pads'.
"noodling around with synthpads for hours without making music"
@elijahkems602
Ай бұрын
"It's therapeutic "😅😅
@shpongled587
22 күн бұрын
fun rules
@Ne1gh_
13 күн бұрын
SO TRUE
@6shotshooter
10 күн бұрын
Welcome to the club
@ianprescott7924
7 күн бұрын
Is creating sounds you enjoy not making music though?
boring is great. life is hectic.
@motoboy6666
Ай бұрын
Word
@OrgaNik_Music
Ай бұрын
Sure, but there's boring and then there's *boring*
@chinmeysway
Ай бұрын
it is, and i figure this is why young ppl like the super mellow thing. if lots of music all sounds like the same mellow mood tho then ok but seeing live is extra boring like not in a good way i must add! or. i just like to move or i’m old
@dasczwo
Ай бұрын
@@OrgaNik_Music yes, youre right. thats why i prefer boring.
@reviewerman9786
25 күн бұрын
All about that repetition
Waking up, turn on my OB-X and the Moog One .. press one low key on the Moog (bass), followed by a 4 tone chord on the OB-X (Pad) .. holding it for a couple of hours .. aahh life is good :)
@LaytonMechaley
10 күн бұрын
Sums up everyday for me 😂
@larswillsen
10 күн бұрын
@@LaytonMechaley Thats life! :)
As someone who has also studied formal composition (and has fallen in the synth rabbit hole and can't get out), I love how this channel is really trying to force composition into what can easily become a drone-y and loop-y art form in the beginning. It's much easier for me to think about composition when I'm in front of a score - you can see the range your instruments occupy, you can see the density and dynamics, you can see your theme being developed AND you can trust that great players are going to be able to add some magic. In sound design, it's easy to get lost in the sounds and how to play them expressively and like you said get lost for a few hours sound selecting and basically learning a brand new instrument you've invented. It's hard to switch gears into writing something a coherent track because that's not how you just experienced the music...AND while we have some guidelines for what makes formal composition work --- this kind of music is just more of a "feel it out" method. That is DAUNTING as a composer because when you get stuck writing you're usually looking for a writing tool to help you move forward. Anyway....thanks for blazing a trail here!
@tomaszmazurek64
Ай бұрын
This reminds me of when I was adding glitch effects to a piece. After doing it by trial and error for a few bars, I've noticed I find it harder and harder to go and eventually I got stuck in exactly the way you describe, with all my typical guidelines being useless. I remember my thought at the moment was "I don't have a music theory for glitches".
@StewartMcKee
Ай бұрын
@@tomaszmazurek64 haha! Great point. I do think that the principles that have worked for the last 700+ years still apply, but they're harder to pin down. This makes me think about early 20th century composers when trying to kind of control "happy accidents" while also learning to appreciate whatever happens when introducing chance elements in music. Having someone help composers navigate music making in a world with increasingly complicated music tech is definitely appreciated. Thankful for KZread and the people doing it.
@bricelory9534
Ай бұрын
One thing that helps me in this sort of thing is to have intentional sound design sessions where I'm not trying to compose but dedicate time to setting up patches or custom presets that I think are inspiring enough for me to write with. Then because I'm not trying to write anything then, I can set them down and come back to the sounds with a fresh, ready to compose/record mind.
@zachary963
Ай бұрын
I have the same thing with writing rock music. The roles are very defined and natural so things just kind of come together.
Great thing to do with wavetable pad is to set the key/pitch tracking to modulate the scan speed. That way each note of the pad will be scanning through at slightly different rates and thus not playing the same harmonic/timbre snippet as the others. Helps the pad feel more evolving, less stale.
@RayyMusik
Ай бұрын
Nice tip. Thanks. :)
@JamesonNathanJones
Ай бұрын
Absolutely. Great tip.
@mdue72
Ай бұрын
And as well, don't ever sell your first instruments no matter the catagory 😂
@dreikycaprice
Ай бұрын
will try this on the blofeld. thank you.
Nice, to find your Channel ❤ greetings from Cologne ✌️ Synthies are great. Using only digital ones. Have fun with your stuff, man.
Hey man just wanted to send a positive message. I just finished my first ambient/cinematic album. After finishing it I've had a bit of a writers block. I found your channel after watching the entire interview you had with Tony Anderson (such an amazing composer) and I started checking your channel out as well. I just watched your video on how to create ambient music without boring anyone and you really helped bring back a bit of spark to create some more music. I've spent quite a bit of time trying to create music like Tony Anderson or Hans Zimmer and forgot to remember that I should find my own unique sound instead and when you mentioned limitations it sparked a new idea. I don't have much gear to begin with but I got so much plugins I don't even know what they are for or why I even have it. I think I will just limit myself to one vst like omnisphere and see what stories I can tell with only that vst. You are an amazing person and I can't wait to continue learning more about the genre from you!
Another great video. Really love your music and your sound-design is sublime. Thank-you :)
Love the photography of your really cool instruments.
I always love coming to the lunch pause to find one of your new videos. Thank you for all the effort you take to make them, and thank you for teaching and pushing us. Looking forward to the next lunch meet :)
such a good video right here. lots of great tips on not only pad design but implementing them within compositions!
Thanks, im enjoying your work more and more
I've always thought using only two notes of a chord wasn't "artistic" enough or wasn't "good music", but thank you for making me feel not alone. Lol
@bricelory9534
Ай бұрын
Using simple chords/intervals well can definitely be more artistic than stacking up notes until it becomes harmonic mud! If you are interested in classical music, check out Arvo Part's "Kyrie" from his "Missa Syllabica" - it is jaw droppingly beautiful and incredibly simple in its own way. Like an artist who has refined their piece to only a single exquisite line. Truly beautiful.
@wanderingfool7136
Ай бұрын
EDM artists do it all the time by playing just the root and seventh.. It's like an EDM power chord lol
@talaniel
Ай бұрын
Aren't two-note chords (root and fifth) called power chords? Staple in rock & metal and other styles?
@FlashStallone
Ай бұрын
@@talaniel Just me second guessing and doubting the music I make. Lol
@birdsofvyraj92
Ай бұрын
Most ambient guitarists use only intervals. :)
Thank you for the solid advice, Jameson!
Something similar to what you call subtractive arrangement I've come to call "scaffolding". I'll sketch out a chord progression on piano, for instance, with all kinds of Interesting chord extensions and melodies and so on then build accompaniment, and at some point take out the piano. Oftentimes, the negative space left by that just engages the imagination so much more than the part ever would!
@kaitlyn__L
18 күн бұрын
I love this idea
Another thoughtful and insight filled video. Nice work.
I love the Prophet 12 for pads and as you say it can do such wild things. Another of my absolute favourite synths for pads is the Roland V-Synth GT. It can do the most massive and evolving pads. It took over from where the JV-1080/2080 left off.
@PianoDanny
17 күн бұрын
Yes, I use V-synth pads all the time (they’re on the RD-2000 and can be layered with other ext insts). All one would need. Sometimes too much choice stifles creativity.
Another great video from a fantastic composer and creator
Absolutely fantastic video, very informative whilst also being inspiring. Itching to get to my synths and mess around with pad designs
Rad video man, inspiring yet educational - cheers
Lead instruments are the face of a track, pads are the soul
Thank you for your time. Most excellent!
Very true. More complex patches need to be played simple musically. I’m a total Pad-head.
"Anyone who gets rid of their first synth is also a murderer on the side" - My first synth was a Roland JX-3P. I sold it in 1995 because I needed to eat more than I needed a synth. 29 years and a few hobby murders later, I picked up 2 JX-3P's for the price of one, had them both worked bumper to bumper by a synth tech, and now I have my first synth back and could even afford a PG-200 and a PG-2K. I'm looking forward to giving up my murderous ways and learning and appreciating these synths deeper than I did as a teenager.
@WolfxxBite
Ай бұрын
My first "synth" was the Yamaha DJX 2 rompler groovebox/keyboard and I sadly sold it during a period of unemployment. That thing brought me great joy when I was a preteen!
@JeffHendricks
Ай бұрын
This is the way.
@sandeepsugunan7570
25 күн бұрын
This is the way.. 🫡
@Flagrazi
23 күн бұрын
I sold my Juno 106 to buy a motorcycle, a week later someone stole it, I had no insurance. Ended up without both my Juno and the bike. My first synth was a Korg Poly 800
@BrentBlueAllen
22 күн бұрын
I sold my Alesis Micron to buy a MicroKorg XL. Was it even an upgrade? I'm not sure to this day.
Great tips. Thanks for sharing! 🥰
Absolute 'golden advice!' Thank you so much.
Great video, great sounds, great music. Thanks! Oh, and great video inside the video 👍
Thank you so much for these very valuable insight on PADs. As I begin my journey of exploration of synths and ambient music, I feel that you put words on what bothers me sometimes in some ambient pieces, that feel "bloated" and going nowhere. I believe each piece should tell a story as complex or as simple as the artist's wants it to be and your "linear" approach to composition is nudging me the right way as to how to achieve it! You earned my sub !
Love you channel brother! I got my start in classical music like you from an early age, and studied classical music performance in music school, only years later finding out that I was unfulfilled with the professional orchestra lifestyle after 15 years. 7 years later in 2023 I started experimenting with music production and discovered that I have never been more passionate with anything in my life than the way music production and sound design makes me feel. I want to do this the rest of my life.
Awesome video. Pigments is definitely one of my favorites!
It’s so nice of Timothy Olephant to let you borrow his voice.
@GeoffBosco
23 күн бұрын
😂 Something clicked in my brain about his voice as soon as he started talking...then I forgot all about. But, that is what it was.
thank you so much this is so inspiring, looking forward to the video on subtractive arrangement, less is almost always better than more.
They are definitely the most complicated traditional synthesiser patch to make. I say traditional because as soon as you start getting into modular/generative and sequenced based patches it goes deeper.
Great insights and explanations on the interplay between sound design complexity versus composition.
Your setup @ 4:47 is soooo cool & inspiring. Thank you for being a) genuine, and 3) clear and simple. I purchased Pigments and utterly didn't know the vast capabilities of it - you've taught me so much. My favorite, among many, is what you teach about Subtractive = taking stuff out, vs cramming more in. So powerful... :) Subscribed w joy
Another great video Jameson. Thx
@JamesonNathanJones
Ай бұрын
Thanks Gary
omg the description of pad loving nerdness is so much me too :D
thanks for sharing, this was great.
Wow, what a wonderful video. From beginning to end, very interesting :)
I appreciate this content. Many music production channels focus too much on technique, turn this knob to here, automate this, etc. it's good to hear from a trained musician who can talk about the musicality aspect of music production. The inverse relationship between patch complexity and arrangement complexity is so intuitive but I wouldn't have thought of it without it being spelled out
Ah, this is such a nice video with so much valuable info and tips! I love ambient music and what you showcase here. I dabbled a bit in it but still find it tough to make a nice coherent track. I'm sticking around!
I love pads also. You can drift away and be self hypnotized by the sound, my Korg, MS 2000 does that nicely. I have owned synthesizers since 1976, huge fan. Love your videos. Love your knowledge, thank you.
Nice advices. Agree with all of it 100%.
Just found your channel- awesome stuff. Really enjoy that you speak on synthesis generalities while talking about specifics.
@JamesonNathanJones
Ай бұрын
Thanks!
Great video, very approachable which I really appreciated.
I really enjoyed this video, and James made me genuinely laugh, which was nice :) This is charming
Huge pad fan, here. Thanks for this inspiring video.
We have EVERYTHING!!!! Cannot complain.
Pads are the shit. Why they aren’t louder in most mixes is beyond me
@JamesonNathanJones
Ай бұрын
I too enjoy loud pads #normalizepadloudness
@bricelory9534
Ай бұрын
@@JamesonNathanJones what? I can't hear you over this massive pad! 🔊
Shout out for Pigments. Definitely my favorite VST.
Great video! Your compositions sound great
@winstonsmith8289
17 күн бұрын
Subscribed ✅
You aced it coach! 😀👍
Subscribed. Loved this video, all of it.
Aight. I’m subscribed! 💪🏾
An enlightening and enthusiasm inspiring video
instant sub when I heard your soundscapes
You are the person I have been waiting for. All of your videos are meeting my creative process at a time where I've improv'd myself sick, and I'm ready for something more meaningful and rich. I love the piano patch on your iridium so much. Would you be willing to share that single piano patch for download? Finding a good synth piano is tricky. I love my iridium, but it is also a huge headache to dial in sometimes.
Great video, thank you. Will shurely checkout your book and courses.
Super video thx
This is one of the most valuable channels for producers I’ve gotten so much inspiration, ideas, knowledge from these videos, especially compared to a lot of the other big cringe synthfluencer channels like rmr, benn, oora Keep up the great work
great insight thanks
Growing up ‘on the beach’, walking on the beach nearly every day the first 25 years of my life AND listening to a lot of ambient music (has the Echos radio show been on that long?!?) I understand the beauty of these ‘pads’ though I have never heard the term before today. Thank you for the explanation. This has helped me understand: I like these ambient background pads to start from or resolve to something familiar and natural but in the meantime moving into a strange world that somehow feels comfortable and familiar.
Love this video
Best video i have watched on ambient music. Subd. And thank you.
Addicted to pad sound here 😊😊 thanks for video
Here are some other factors to consider when using pads. Some pads work well with certain registers. If you are someone who likes to use a lot of pads, you can use one that works well for the lower register and another that uses the higher register. Then using the two or three note approach in the playing, you get anywhere from four to six notes in your chord whilst still having space to breathe. And along those notes (see what I did there?), be careful that your low sounds don't get too muddy and your high sounds don't get too shrill. Another factor that can play a role in the pad are effects, either inside the synth itself or using external effects (hardware or software). You can take a simple "vanilla" pad and add an effect to give it character. And yes, there are pad sounds that will already have effects as part of it ... or you can add, subtract and/or replace with your own. And on that note (I swear I'm not trying to be punny), you can always let the effect do one thing while you are playing it in a different way. For instance, you can have an ostinato pattern (like a rhythmic bass line) on a sound that uses a swell that occurs in its own way that has nothing to do with what you are playing. In this way, you create these parallels where what is being played and what is being heard at given time is out of phase/sync with each other and that can create interest. If you are like me and like pads the same way some like their pumpkin pie slices - completely drenched in whipped cream - then you can get overboard with layering. There is the subtractive approach alluded to earlier. But another way to arrange it is to think about complements. So if you find a pad sound that is airy yet "frentic" (i.e. has some dynamic motion to it), then if you were to add another one, it should probably be one that doesn't have those qualities but rather something else, in this case maybe dense yet steady-state. In this way, you create a kind of super-pad, which also helps in giving something some grandeur to it, but it doesn't turn into a confusing mess. At any rate, that's all for now =D
@FGCLovesYou
27 күн бұрын
Have you played around much with EQing pads, so that they're staying out of each others' ways, but you're also just creating a giant Dagwood-sandwich's-worth of pads? I could imagine that being a lot for the listener to process, so on the one hand I could see that falling under "a confusing mess", but at the same time the individual elements could still all be individually identifiable. That said, since as Mr. Jones noted, pads can take up a lot of space, maybe the individual pads *would* lose quite a bit in that sandwiching process. (I'd imagine it would depend on the individual pads how much this would be true, but I don't know if that would be more or less common.)
@DerekPower
27 күн бұрын
@@FGCLovesYou If you choose your sounds correctly - including what registers are used - you can have multiple pads going on where they are work together and there is some distinction between each of them to be noticeable. From personal experience, I find that you can “get away” with up to eight of these layers. Most of the time, I probably have two. But no matter the number, I pick them because there’s a quality in each one I like to have present and if I can hear that quality, that’s enough. I employ EQ on that level really to deal with things like harshness or unwanted frequencies and maybe if I think something needs to be cut or boosted. I really don’t like hearing the word “separation” when talking about mixing as it is a gross contradiction. Mixing is about making sure everything works together to make a bigger cohesive whole. Now making sure distinct elements across different types are clear is one thing (i.e. vocals from guitars or drums from bass, etc.). But making like elements within a type distinct from each other is the equivalent of saying “I want to make sure I hear every single cellist in an orchestra”. Also doing too much “EQ carving” will probably end up sounding like aural Swiss cheese. In my own work, A Night of Ephemeral Transcendence has several multiple pad moments. The second track in particular is a dense amorphous “drone” of sorts done to illustrate a particular situation and experience that beyond our notion of time and space.
I do the old brian eno method (before there were polyphonic synths), in that I layer one note at a time via my modular to build up soundscapes/chords. Gives variability to tone and timing. Esp great mixing 5U (higher fidelity) and eurorack.
Great video! Very helpful. I find myself in a budding love affair with pads, yet my execution often feels clumsy. This video has provided new perspectives. I will experiment upon your words. New subscriber. Keep it real.
Great content. Thanks
Wow your music is sooo inspiring!!!
@JamesonNathanJones
Ай бұрын
Thank you!
Alessandro cortini &Your vid with tony Anderson made me buy the prophet 12 🙏🏼 Thank you 😃 Had been eyeing up the iridium but glad i went with Dave!
If i hear without looking, feels like Matt Walsh is giving me the most epic class on pad synthesis.
As someone who has made hundreds of the synth pads found in Korg's plethora of workstations, this is a great video with lots of food for thought for all to munch on. Keep on sharing. :D
@JamesonNathanJones
19 күн бұрын
Thanks so much!
That slide in with the chair in the beginning is such a great gag 😄
Sounds with some hair on them bloody brill🤓👌
the complex/simple rule is golden
I'm here for the Dance Ambient 👍🏻
Good stuff
Lost Art of Surrender 🔥
15:33 so good
wow, you have an actual gift, blessing, or super strict skillset of educating sound design. The ebook is great, thank you. Actually- I only posted to see if you photographed the synth pics found under MY SAMPLES page. They look incredible, and more should be filmed
Awesome, awesome songs!
@JamesonNathanJones
Ай бұрын
Thanks so much!
Great Channel
Now that I am completely working in a software studio environment anno 2024 (where I used to be a hardware synth player and composer in the past)... I am getting slightly jealous at your awesome collection of hardware synths. I suppose the grass is always greener on the other side....
nice, I like your videos! v informative
Comment for algorithm. + This is twice your videos have made me entirely rethink my approach. As a noodler and nothing more, it at least brings joy to try something new.
0:55 Noodling is making music! It's my main source of new ideas. Done right it can be truly improvisational. Remember, there are no wrong notes on a standard keyboard. Just bad arrangements. Fire up a sound that you find inspirational. Hit record and noodle 'til you start repeating yourself or get bored. Save and let simmer for a day or two. Listen to it and massage the parts you like to taste. Now you might just have something worth pursuing. 6:30 FM basics are not that hard. If you’ve ever tuned a guitar by ear or set the beating between two synth oscillators, you’ve used the pitch difference between two waveforms (interference), creating a third, slower pulse (the difference frequency) and a fourth, higher pitched (the sum frequency). That is basic FM. My theory is that the use of "operator" doesn’t label the oscillators, because they can be audio or modulator or both depending on context (algorithm). If you want to deep dive into FM, I highly recommend Howard Masseys excellent The Complete DX7. 14:16 Is a statue of a deaf person necessarily deaf, what about artistic freedom. 16:03 You could take it a step further by automating an EQ on the pad track. Set a rather narrow notch and sweep it. You’ll notice individual instruments(groups) “spring into life” because the auditory masking disappears. Right on the money about keeping it simple. Leave space using space 😉 Please do more great stuff.
got me subscribing
Great tips. I find it really easy to make pads, and struggle with just about every other part of a track! One technique I don't think you mentioned is sampling, as in making your own sampled pads instead of using libraries. I make a lot of modular patches for this with VCV, record bits, then edit and loop 15-20 seconds into Pigments. Sometimes I make pads from reverb tails, or guitar into tons of granular delays. It's fairly easy and you end up with your own library of unique pad sounds that nobody else has. My other thing at the moment is polyphonic modulation. For example if you're applying vibrato, instead of using a single global LFO, you have a different LFO on each note, or poly channel. It's subtle, but more like playing a chord on 3 or 4 different monosynths rather than one polysynth. I use VCV mainly, but Pigments can do this to an extent, and I think Bitwig can too. Once you start modulating filters and synth parameters like wavetable position etc per voice, you can get really complex evolving sounds.
“I absolutely love them” 😂😂
I wish i had you knowledge and skills
Hey 15:16 Moderat, is that you? Great video!
Thanks for your comments. I totally agree with the subtraction (muting regions or dropping some frequency ranges) to make other elements more audible especially if there are textures that get buried under wide frequency range pads. I don't know what your thoughts are about evolving concepts that can be automated in DAW? I am thinking of gradual changes to reach different zones of the musical story, for instance a granularized delayed guitar arpeggio that doesn't sound anything like guitar but more like a pad with texture that evolves to where it is just a guitar arpeggio accompanied by bass, etc. very subtly so it creates breathing rooms for more acoustic minimalistic ambience and then evolves again to more expansions with layering orchestral, synth, rhythms, etc. I found those journey kind of reaching points and then moving to other lands in the journey gives me a sense of being very dynamic in the imagination level, so if it has that sort of behavior I don't get bored, but if there are lots of variations of textures put beside each other but don't relate together in a continuum of a story, it doesn't take me in a wholesome way to become a profound experience. What do you think?
I'm still playing with Microwave XT wavetables and never "made" music. Your Iridium sounds amazing! Thanks! 👍
I think the best way to learn how to handle FM without just making noise (unless you _want_ to make just noise, which is fine if that's you want) is to learn how to create square-ish and sawtooth-is waves using sine operators. This quickly teaches the limits between what sound "harmonious" and "noisy", and show how much feedback can help shape the sound. It's my favorite type of synthesis because it's very easy to create evolving sounds without having to keep testing limits and modulating tons of stuff in a wavetable, although wavetable is _also_ my favorite type of synthesis precisely because of that. Another cool way to make pads that can fit a composition (without using synthesis) is to run plucks through a convolver reverb fed with some kind of noise (white or pink work pretty great), then turn up the wet dial and turn down the dry. Or you can keep both up, if you want both sounds together. It's also possible to route the signal to a FX channel equipped with a pitch shifter before the convolver, helping create a "shimmer" and pushing the pad out of the way of the melody. ... I really like pads, I guess.
Pads are never boring!
A very simple trick I use with a smooth sine wave pad is to support the sustained chords of a Rhodes piano track. Doubling selected chords of the Rhodes track with the sine pad gives one the illusion that the Rhodes has much longer sustain than it really does.
Honestly the best sounds I’ve made come from stacking a modwave and Opsix Patches
Subscribed!