Best Production Youtube Channels

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For producing in Cubase https://www.youtube.com/c/MakePopMusic is killer.

For producing Hip Hop Style in Reason https://www.youtube.com/c/SefNitty is great.

I really like https://www.youtube.com/c/AudioTechTV for Waveform tutorials
Windows 10 PC. Reason. Cubase. Waveform. Reaper. Studio One Pro. Epiphone Les Paul Pro II. Nektar Panorama t4. Yamaha RBX Bass. Faderport 2. Eris E5 Monitors. SSL2 Interface. Audient Evo 4. AKG C214. Aston Origin. MXL 990.

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For Ableton Live - ELPHNT

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I agree with another user, as I've found Will from EDM tips to have some nice tips that I've used.

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Bound to Divide. Ableton, Diva, Serum, House Music Production.
https://www.youtube.com/c/BoundtoDivide/videos

Here one for Ableton And creating a track from scratch..
Excellent stuff. Same guy.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cdHmlehgKPs
MuLab of course :D

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I usually learn something from here.
https://youtu.be/crhxe4tZ8Nw

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I highly suggest Venus Theory. He does a mix of music soft- and hardware in-depth previews, tipps for improving creativity and production skills, etc. High quality, well thought-out content for sure!

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I highly suggest not watching Production Youtube Channels

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One more for Sol State. It's great to get those little nuggets of info from a variety of producers without having to check out entire streams.

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cantaloupe wrote: Sat Aug 13, 2022 5:19 pm I highly suggest not watching Production Youtube Channels
Why?
I wonder what happens if I press this button...

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cantaloupe wrote: Sat Aug 13, 2022 5:19 pm I highly suggest not watching Production Youtube Channels
Why is that? They can be very educating for begginers

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Big Z, Zen World, and You Suck at Producing.

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ramseysounds wrote: Fri Aug 19, 2022 4:02 pm
cantaloupe wrote: Sat Aug 13, 2022 5:19 pm I highly suggest not watching Production Youtube Channels
Why?
Too much misinformation or false knowledge.
Inherent incentives for sensationalist and misleading "that one weird trick"-style of knowledge and presentation.
Algorithm sending you down all kinds of irrelevant rabbit holes.
Channels shilling gear or processes you absolutely don't need.

I think it is much better to just read a couple (well rated) books about the fundamentals of audio/mixing/sound design/composition cover to cover and then apply that to the genre and style you like to work with, and go from there with your own experiments, analysis and intuition. Quicker, less misinformation, and much better basics.

Not saying there is nothing worth watching on youtube, there are a few channels that are very technical, educational and correct (Dan Worrall for example). I meant in general though.

It seems to me like a very time consuming and sketchy way to learn this craft. I see a lot of weird convictions and plain wrong information people have because they have seen too much 'production youtube' without really knowing why a certain thing is done and in what context, but their favorite youtuber really recommends it so they internalise it as gospel. Books usually contain way less of this.

To each their own though, just my opinion and experience.

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Well put. It's a good format for teaching tricks and case-studies, but most of these channels don't cover fundamentals. (Indeed, some of them seem to lack fundamental knowledge.)

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You Suck At Producing guy is at least entertaining to watch
Don't feed the gators,y'all
https://m.soundcloud.com/tonedeadj

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