dase wrote:ridingeternity wrote:First and only step to good drone: Feel it.
this x1,000. WAY too many bands at the moment get caught up on acquiring the right gear or working on the right concept or whatever. I've seen Aidan Baker destroy most people with a delay, a flanger and a PA. Work within the limits of what you've got first, then worry about acquiring more stuff.
Like heaps of bong rattling amps are awesome and everything but yeah...the best way to do this music is to keep it really, really simple and really get inside every piece of equipment you have and work with what it can give you. Try getting something you like, then stripping away half the effects or layers and slowing it down even more, see where that takes you.
As someone who's played a decent amount of noise/drone/doom shows, including one on Devil's night wearing a grim robe.... Let me second this idea. IMO, the
wrong way to play drone/doom is to copy SunnO))). My Friend and I wore the robes because a:devil's night! b:it's the day before Halloween, c: the most important factor, we had ritualistic elements to our show, including an Enochian chant. I like what Dase is saying because if you look at people who are doing something mind blowing, they're usually doing it from the perspective of "how can I make my idea come to life?" instead of "what gear and props do I need?" Thus, Aidan Baker makes really awesome, massive-sounding music using gear that most people on this forum probably don't think highly of. Even Sunn O))) talk about how when they started using those amps, it was
because they were cheap. They're good amps, too, but the craze happened after the fact, I think.
My advice would be to record a few tracks and then wait a day or two and listen to them with headphones or just really loud. If you don't "drone out" to it, then you're probably going to bore people with it. In my opinion, when you repeat a phrase too long, no matter how cool, it will bore the audience. Even listening to SunnO))) you can tell that they're changing things in the songs; there are still dynamics. The trick is to slowly change what you're doing to take the listener and yourself somewhere else. Listen to the latest Swans record. It's not drone-doom by any means, but having seen them play twice in the last year, I can say it was the most mystical experience I've had in the last decade.
So: ehh, food for thought. Just what
you love and hope that you're not straight-up ripping off 1000 other drone bands. OR just do it because you love it and not give a fuck about what anyone has to say.
For a little reference, here's a track of mine (this a thread about drone, so no apologies here about the length of the track. It's about half of set length):
[soundcloud]https://soundcloud.com/hyle/frozen-flame-i[/soundcloud]