Steps in composing a song
Here's a roadmap that you can keep in the back of your mind as you journey through making your songs. Rest assured it's easier than it sounds and is actually a lot of fun.
First, decide the parameters of the song. What mood, genre, emotion do you want? Once your criteria are decided, come up with a melody and accompanying chords. Usually, the melody is experimented on with an instrument such as a keyboard or a guitar. You will likely go through a few iterations and drafts until you find a combination you like.
Now we have a melody and some accompanying chords. The melody notes are fed into a DAW as MIDI notes. From there, we select an instrument plugin to play the notes. This usually involves experimenting with different instrument plugins and possibly some sound design.
We add accompanying melodies and additional verses. We layer our instruments to thicken the sound. We add drums and percussion instruments to complement our melody. We add sound effects. This is a mix of single sound samples that could include percussion, rising and falling sounds, glitch effects, impacts, and drum fills.
If the song requires it, we record vocals. A vocalist is sought out and the song instrumental is sent to the singer to work on. Lyrics are written, and several vocal melody combinations are experimented with. The vocalist records the vocals. The singer and the music producer make adjustments to the song and go back and forth a few times, providing feedback to each other. The vocals are processed, usually separately from the instrumental at first before adding the finished vocals back into the mix. Effects are applied to enhance the vocals.
We have our melodies, instruments, percussion, sound effects, and vocals. Now it's time to begin mixing. Mixing is a process you take to polish your music and give it a professional feel. It requires understanding how instruments and sounds complement each other in a song and knowing how effects can enhance them. This part gets very technical. This book will give you lots of tips and tricks to help you with mixing.
Our song is exported and shared with all parties involved. We give and collect feedback from each other and make adjustments.
Now it's time for mastering. Mastering is what you do after you have a mixed song that has been mixed. The goal is to make the song sound consistent regardless what device you use to play the song. A song benefits from mastering in several aspects. It allows you to form a second opinion when listening to your song by forcing you to take a step back and re-evaluate your music from a distance. Instead of tweaking individual notes and instruments, you're now forced to think about how the song sounds as a whole package. What is the overall effect of the song on a listener? One way to think about mastering is that you're thinking from a sales perspective. What will make this song have the widest appeal to listeners? This book will give you mastering tips and techniques.
Congratulations, you have a production-ready song! You register your music with necessary organizations for your territory to prove your copyright ownership and that any rights and royalties belong to you.
You create music videos and cover art to give your audience something to look at while listening. Often, a song's success is made or broken by the choice of visuals used.
You upload your music to an online distributor to sell your music on online stores and streaming platforms such as Spotify, Amazon, and so on. You upload your music videos to YouTube.
You leverage your social media and the existing fanbase you've been curating ahead of time (hopefully). You self-promote your upcoming music release, tell everyone you know, and reach out to local outlets to play your music. Congratulations, you've published a song!
Composing a full song may seem like a lot of steps and quite technical, but rest assured, by the time you've finished this book, you'll have a solid grasp of how to execute each of these steps. Hopefully, after going through this process, you'll find it intuitive, fulfilling, and profitable.
So far, we've learned about music production from a high-level perspective. Now it's time to get our hands dirty and start making music with FL Studio.