
I think you should start by just playing around with the FX and synth so you can familiarize yourself with the different controls or EQing and such. I started with GarageBand, and even though it offered a variety of basses and dubstep synths to choose from, they're very poor and need some serious mastering and editing. Does anyone else know an alternative?I believe that good dubstep on GarageBand may be possible, but quite difficult in my opinion.

I need to find a way to make a good dubstep drop in GarageBand, but all the tutorials I've seen either recommend a removed instrument or to use the stock loops. I mentioned it already, but here:Īt 4/7/17 10:49 PM, AssassinOnTheHill wrote: At 4/7/17 09:25 PM, GearWax wrote: Then there's always Parallels and after a few trips to a torrenting site, you could be running the trusty ol' FL Studio instead.so, lots of options :-PĪlso, Audacity is free and works with OSX and should be able to run VST's or whatever the Mac equivalent is. Pro Tools is a great DAW for what you wanna do, works with Mac, it's competitively priced at $600 bucks.but you can cover that with a $25/mo subscription which doesn't seem too terrible IMO: You can probably squeak by with an intro license to Ableton at $100, but tbh you're going to want most of what the Suite license offers.so if I were you, I'd end up on the $450 option because I'm a tight-ass. Logic Pro X seems like the most obvious choice, and it's quite modestly priced compared to the rest of the market: Any software company worth it's salt produces ports to MacOSX if not Linux as well. Find it right here and rise above the crowd with "Dance Music Styles 102: Dubstep" by Adam (Multiplier) Pollard.I don't have a PC, so it's not like I have a ton of options anyay. So don't fumble around trying to get that Dubstep sound. This is invaluable information that electronic musicians everywhere wish they had known when they were starting out.

Wrapping up this course, Adam shows you the 3 most common mistakes that Dubstep producers make.

Once you've got the raw materials, he reveals industry standard processing techniques as well as more unconventional methods to ensure that your Dubstep tracks turn heads. He then gets right into the sound design, where each element of your beat is carefully sculpted, one piece at a time. You learn how to create both the composition and extreme audio signal processing to get your tracks the attention they need to be heard.Īdam (Multiplier) first shows you the ropes of Dubstep songwriting. This collection of tutorials by Dance music producer, Multiplier, is designed to give you a deep understanding of what, exactly, Dubstep is all about.
