Here is a well-articulated workflow description that may be useful to others. I find the entire thread interesting. Note the reference to BiaB in his step # 11.
Workflow & Creativity I’m 56 years into my musical journey but only three years into digital music composition & production. In my recent experiments, I’m getting to a workflow (I mostly write jazz-inflected songs) that keeps me creative. But I’ve got questions, and I’m wondering how others do it. Here’s my workflow - questions follow:
1. In my DAW (Studio One Seven) I’ve got a template with 7 plug-in tracks: Scaler 3, EZ Keys II, a percussion track with ADSR Sample Manager, a vocals track with SynthV, and three tracks, each with a separate instance of Kontakt 8: one loaded with NI’s Upright Bass, a melody track loaded with NI’s The Grand piano, and a guitar track with an NI Strummed Acoustic.
2. I always start with Scaler 3 to experiment with chord progressions. Even if I know my basic harmonies in advance, I always use Scaler to find interesting chord subs. I’ll sometimes use Scaler to test out various motions, bass lines, and articulations, but the more I use it, the more I find myself using it mostly for harmonies.
3. EZ Keys II is usually my second stop, especially if I’m working on a jazz tune or a standard. I find its vast array of accompaniments very inspiring.
4. Bass is usually my third stop, because it helps establish or reinforce the groove. I had been using EZ Bass, but now I’m using NI’s basses. Their selection of patterns is a bit more limited, but I find them less cumbersome to use than EZ Bass.
5. Melody is my fourth stop. I’m a guitarist, not a keyboardist, but I like to use piano to write my melodies because of its clarity and neutrality. I almost always write my melodies in the piano roll.
6. I might at this point decide to switch my main accompaniment from piano to guitar, which is why I pre-load the guitar. (Sometimes I’ll start with the guitar, if I’m composing a rock song or folk tune or something else I hear that way.)
7. Synth V vocals are next. My process is to type the lyrics into my melody track in Studio One, export the melody and lyrics as a midi track, then import that track into SynthV. I’ll rewrite the lyrics and melody in SynthV as I go along, but I’ll always save and re-export the midi along the way so I’ll always have that midi-melody-vocals track.
8. Percussion is my last compositional stop. After experimenting with Impact and EZ Drummer 3, I now mostly deploy loops, because they’re more varied and diverse than anything I can conjure on my own. Managing loops remains a pain. Neither ADSR nor Kontakt 8 can index Presonus’s built-in loops; Studio One doesn’t do as good a job on Kontakt’s loops as Kontakt 8 does. I find myself switching back and forth among those three loop platforms.
9. After my basic composition is done, I’ll arrange it - with the proviso that at this stage things might change dramatically. I might decide that a chorus is better as a verse. I might replace the piano with a synth. A cabaret number might turn metal. I use Studio One’s chord track to mediate between Scaler 3 and my other plugins - that is, I’ll drop my Scaler progression into Studio One, and use that to drive other instruments. (I had been doing a lot of this “compositional arranging” using multiple tracks in Scaler 3, but I found it difficult to keep a clear view of a full composition in Scaler because of its layout limitations, so now I’ve reverted to using my DAW for the arrangements.) My go-to’s for instruments are NI and East West’s Composer Cloud, the latter especially for brass and background vocals.
10. When I’m mostly done, I’ll do vocal harmonies. I’m finding the new Studio One Harmony Wizard add-on a great tool for this, and a lot of fun to use.
11. I will occasionally use Band-in-a-Box to create a solo break. Sometimes, I’ll use loops and samples. On rare occasion I’ll cut my own samples. Sometimes I’ll solo myself on guitar.
12. Recently, I’ve begun using EZ Mix 3 to mix, and I’ll always go to e-mastered to master. Mixing is a weak spot for me.
Questions:
• For other Scaler users, to what degree do you use or not use its built-in motions, either for inspiration or for final production or both?
• Also for Scaler users, to what degree are you using it as a DAW-within-a-DAW - i.e., using multiple tracks in Scaler to compose and produce, vs doing that part in your DAW? If you are using Scaler for this, what’s your workaround to get a full view of your composition?
• How do you manage loops? Have you found a satisfactory way to index them all together, or are you using two or more separate systems?
• After two weeks of experimenting with Kontakt 8’s new tools - Chords, Patterns, and Phrases - I’m finding them less useful than what Scaler 3 already has built-in. In fact, I’m pretty much persuaded that they’re primarily built for live performance and beats-makers, not for songs or composition. Has anyone found broader uses for the new Kontakt 8 tools?
• I’m only beginning to experiment with macros and shortcuts in Studio One. I’d love to know which macros and shortcuts song composers (as opposed to orchestral composers or beats composers) find most useful.
• I don’t use melody tools - I use my ear. Are any of you using melody tools for inspiration, and if so, which ones?
I’m posting in three favorite forums (Scaler, VI, and StudioOneForum) so apologies if you stumble across this in multiple places.