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When Subtraction Is Addition

Metadata

title
When Subtraction Is Addition
description
Energy lacking? Vibes off? Chorus not "big" enough? Start by subtracting. Even for a bar. The little things you don't say are their own kind of tension. Breathe for a moment.
status
complete
date
2025-12-16
kind
solo
guestSlugs
listenUrl
https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/lovemusicmore/episodes/When-Subtraction-Is-Addition-e3cc30n
appleUrl
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/when-subtraction-is-addition/id1567355195?i=1000741495142&uo=4
spotifyUrl
https://open.spotify.com/episode/5OR5VaGqduIwSpS0VDfYNF
topicsDiscussed
  • Mixing
  • Music production
  • Addition through Subtraction
  • Arrangement Strategies
  • Creating Space in Music
  • Low End Dynamics
  • Subdivisions and Energy
  • Emotional Impact in Transitions
  • Role of Instruments
  • Producer Mindset
  • Importance of Contrast
hostNote
Sometimes the best songs just don't need a guitar, and if you're the guitarist, you have to find the emotional capacity to be okay with that. That's the hardest part of arrangement: not adding the thing, not filling the space, sitting with the absence and trusting it. I get into why overcrowded arrangements are so common, overdoing it is actually good practice, you just have to then throw things out, and how contrast is the mechanism that makes a chorus feel big. The section before it has to be smaller. Low end, subdivisions, harmonic density: all of it shapes how large or small a moment feels, and you're not really mixing until you're listening to those relationships. The episode closes on a cleaner frame for the whole thing: understanding your role and when your "paint color" is needed makes mixing easier, because then you're rounding off edges rather than carving out frequencies after the fact.
selectedMoments
  • label
    Subtraction in Arrangement
    startSec
    65
    note
    I discuss how subtracting elements can create better arrangements.
  • label
    The Impact of Low End
    startSec
    138
    note
    I explore how low end information influences the size of a recording.
  • label
    Contrast and Dynamics
    startSec
    184
    note
    How making sections smaller can make choruses feel bigger.
  • label
    Subdivisions for Energy
    startSec
    275
    note
    I elaborat on how subdivisions can affect the energetic feel of a song.
  • label
    Harmonic Series and Frequencies
    startSec
    541
    note
    Understanding harmonic series and how it impacts bass line choices.
  • label
    Emotional Transitions in Music
    startSec
    586
    note
    The importance of emotional transitions between music sections.
excerptQuotes
  • text
    One of the best things to do in arrangement is to overdo it a little bit...But then you need to find the space inside your heart and your soul to throw out ideas.
    startSec
    90
    reviewed
    true
  • text
    If you want a section to sound bigger and make the section before it sound smaller, you got to really listen not just to the notes that are being played...
    startSec
    723
    reviewed
    true
  • text
    Sometimes the best songs just don't need a guitar, you know, and you're the guitarist. If you can have the emotional capacity to be okay with that, the song's going to be better.
    startSec
    917
    reviewed
    true
  • text
    Subdivisions add energy. And so changing the subdivisions or changing the ways that you're deciding how many notes you're kind of playing, all of those things really matter.
    startSec
    276
    reviewed
    true
  • text
    Understanding your role and when your paint color is needed in the arrangement makes the mix so much easier because then you're just rounding off edges rather than carving out frequencies.
    startSec
    946
    reviewed
    true
faq
  • question
    What is addition through subtraction in music production?
    answer
    Addition through subtraction refers to the idea that removing certain elements from a mix can enhance the overall sound and emotional impact of a song.
  • question
    How does low end information affect a recording's size?
    answer
    Low end information can give a recording its size feel; more low end typically makes a recording sound larger and more powerful.
  • question
    Why is contrast important in music?
    answer
    Contrast helps define sections of a song, making moments like a chorus feel bigger and more impactful by juxtaposing smaller sounds before and after.
transcriptPublished
false
draft
false

Content

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