The Technology of Music Production

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Below are the top discussions from Reddit that mention this online Coursera course from Berklee College of Music.

Offered by Berklee College of Music. Learn about the music production process—including recording, editing, and mixing—and the tools ... Enroll for free.

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Taught by
Loudon Stearns
Assistant Professor
and 11 more instructors

Offered by
Berklee College of Music

Reddit Posts and Comments

0 posts • 40 mentions • top 11 shown below

r/musicproduction • comment
1 points • Deprecated_Mind

I would recommend you to take some online courses on the topic (sites like coursera... etc)

https://www.coursera.org/learn/technology-of-music-production

for example should give you a basic understanding on the general way of how things in audio work.

r/edmproduction • comment
1 points • Hypno-Priest

I always recommend this course:

https://www.coursera.org/learn/technology-of-music-production

I sped through it in about a week and it taught me everything I needed to know about compressors and effects like reverb, delay, flangers, etc.

r/Logic_Studio • comment
1 points • Homosapien-2

The Art of Mixing with David something - YT

(Free) https://www.coursera.org/learn/technology-of-music-production

Mixing with Mike - YT

r/makinghiphop • comment
1 points • thought_first

https://www.coursera.org/learn/technology-of-music-production#syllabus

This will give you the foundation. Genre will be whatever your creative self decides.

r/musicproduction • comment
1 points • elmo_fudd

Coursera has some berklee classes available for cheap. I think it's $40/month and you can cancel anytime. I took this class when i was getting started and it walks through the basics of music production in a really clear, concise manner:

https://www.coursera.org/learn/technology-of-music-production

It doesn't matter which DAW you use, as this will cover the basics you need to know for most programs. Save yourself weeks of watching mediocre youtube tutorials and take this class.

r/StudioOne • comment
1 points • djdementia

You probably just need more practice and maybe to take classes on recording and working with a DAW. At this point you can't really communicate well with us what the problem is let alone what mic you have, or what interface you are using.

This free course was incredibly helpful to me and will get you to the point where you can more effectively communicate your problems, just choose to "Audit" the course to get it for free: https://www.coursera.org/learn/technology-of-music-production

r/ITCareerQuestions • comment
1 points • Jeffbx

At a high level, every industry needs the same general IT support: networking, systems administration, helpdesk, desktop support, etc. You can have almost any IT specialty, and then all you have to do is land a job at a music production company.

If you're thinking more about being involved in the technical aspect of music production, you might find something like this more interesting: https://www.coursera.org/learn/technology-of-music-production

r/FL_Studio • comment
2 points • elandyp

Coursera has a few good courses about audio in general. This is one I did and I learned a lot

https://www.coursera.org/learn/technology-of-music-production/

r/synthesizers • comment
3 points • gimpeyjoe

It is free, you just need to select the individual courses and choose "Audit" when you click the enroll link:

https://www.coursera.org/learn/technology-of-music-production

https://www.coursera.org/learn/producing-music

https://www.coursera.org/learn/protools

r/joplinmo • comment
1 points • Gigizulini

I do not, but it looks like there is a free course from Berklee on Coursera:

https://www.coursera.org/learn/technology-of-music-production?=

I've taken similar courses and found them very helpful.

r/mixingmastering • comment
1 points • BenSasso

I’ve been on the hunt too and here’s what’s been helpful for me in the past few months (all free):

First mixing class I took. A really great primer/overview type of course that runs through the whole process from recording - mixing: https://www.coursera.org/learn/technology-of-music-production

The next one I took that was less helpful tecnically, but a bit helpful in the theory: https://www.coursera.org/learn/producing-music

What I'm working through now. A serios of 60 videos breaking down the whole process, with lots of technical and theory mixed in. It would be best to go through the first course I took first because this one is a little more advanced and I would be lost in some parts without having taken the basic class first. https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL60vHoJexe-GT01yAl6ddeGeY2MLoDsAJ

Great. Informative. Wild. A good high watch: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TEjOdqZFvhY

Blogs full of info. A lot of the little "quick tips and cool tricks" mixed in with some more in depth stuff: https://theproaudiofiles.com/ https://www.waves.com/blog