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Welcome to Daw Mag's Video Tutorials, your premier destination for in-depth music production tutorials. We provide everything you need to enhance your skills and create professional-quality music.

Explore Fl Studio Production

Dive into our extensive collection of FL Studio music production tutorials. Learn advanced techniques and insider tips to master your craft.

In-Depth Production Techniques

Designed for Producers

Our tutorials are perfect for producers looking to expand their knowledge and refine their skills. Each video is designed to provide practical, actionable insights that you can apply immediately to your projects.

How to make Vocal harmonies from scratch!

    Creating vocal harmonies adds depth, emotion, and richness to your tracks. Even with a single vocal take, FL Studio allows you to build realistic harmonies from scratch.

    Step 1 – Prepare Your Lead Vocal

    Import your vocal into the Playlist and route it to a Mixer insert. Clean it with EQ and light compression. Make sure it’s dry and free of heavy effects for better harmony processing.

    Step 2 – Duplicate the Vocal

    Duplicate your lead vocal track. Rename it “Harmony 1” and route it to a new Mixer insert. This track will become your first harmony layer.

    Step 3 – Use NewTone for Pitch Editing

     

    Open NewTone, drag the duplicated vocal in, and select all notes (Ctrl + A). Shift the notes to create harmonies: a third above for uplifting tones, or a third below for deeper harmonies. Export the result back to the Playlist.

    Step 4 – Layer Multiple Harmonies

     

    Duplicate and edit additional copies to make 2–3 harmony tracks. Experiment with stacking above and below the lead. Keep harmony volume lower than the lead to support it naturally.

    Step 5 – Pan and Mix

    Pan harmonies slightly left and right for width while keeping the lead centered. Add subtle reverb and EQ to help harmonies blend with the lead. Light compression can keep levels smooth.

    Step 6 – Humanize the Harmonies

    Slightly adjust timing or pitch on some harmony tracks to avoid robotic sounds. Automate volume or effects for dynamic expression.

    Pro Tip

    Always trust your ears. Subtle harmonies often work better than perfect stacking. Combine with creative effects to add emotion and texture to your track.

    Reverse Reverb Vocal Trick in FL Studio

    The reverse reverb effect creates a dramatic, swelling lead-in to vocals, perfect for intros, transitions, or emphasizing key phrases. This tutorial will show you how to do it from scratch in FL Studio.

     

    Step 1 – Prepare Your Vocal

    Import your vocal clip into the Playlist and route it to a Mixer track. Make sure it’s clean and lightly edited—remove noise and unwanted breaths. Solo the section you want to apply the reverse reverb to.

    Step 2 – Slice and Duplicate

    Duplicate the vocal clip. Cut the portion you want the effect on. For more control, keep it short—usually 1–2 bars works best. Drag the duplicate to a new Mixer insert.

    Step 3 – Add Reverb

    Load a reverb plugin (Fruity Reverb 2 works fine). Increase the Decay Time and Wet Level for a lush, long tail. Optional: add EQ to remove low frequencies so the effect stays clean.

    Step 4 – Render to Audio

    Right-click the reverb plugin’s mixer track and choose Render to Audio Clip. This creates a new audio clip containing only the reverb tail.

    Step 5 – Reverse the Audio

    Open the rendered clip in the Playlist or Edison. Click Reverse. The reverb now plays backward, creating a swelling effect that leads into the original vocal.

    Step 6 – Position and Blend

    Move the reversed reverb clip so it ends exactly where the original vocal starts. Adjust volume and fade-in/out if needed. Use panning subtly for stereo width.

    Step 7 – Layer and Automate

    You can layer multiple reversed reverb clips for complex textures. Automate the wet/dry levels or reverb size for dynamic effects during different song sections.

    Step 8 – Final Touches

    Check the effect in context with the full mix. Make small adjustments to timing, volume, or EQ to make sure the reversed reverb enhances the vocal without sounding overwhelming.

    Pro Tip

     

    For a more natural swell, lightly compress the reverb tail before reversing, and experiment with short delays to add movement. This trick is great for EDM drops, cinematic vocals, and hype sections in any genre.

    How to make Mixer Groups and Busses in FL Studio-

    Using mixer groups and busses in FL Studio lets you process multiple tracks together, keeping your mix clean, balanced, and professional. This tutorial will show you step-by-step how to set them up.

    Step 1 – Organize Your Mixer Tracks

    Open the Mixer (F9). Assign each instrument or vocal track to its own insert. Rename them for clarity—e.g., Kick, Snare, Lead Vocal, Pads. Color-code if needed.

    Step 2 – Create a Bus Track

    Select an empty insert to act as your bus (e.g., Insert 10). This will combine multiple tracks for group processing. Rename it to match the group, like Drums Bus or Vocals Bus.

    Step 3 – Route Tracks to the Bus

    Click each track you want in the group. On the Mixer, click the small arrow at the bottom of the insert and route it to your bus insert. Ensure “Route to this track only” is selected if you don’t want the signal going to the master yet.

    Step 4 – Apply Processing on the Bus

     

    Add EQ, compression, saturation, or other effects to the bus track. All routed tracks will be affected simultaneously, which saves CPU and keeps your mix cohesive.

    Step 5 – Create Sub-Groups (Optional)

     

    You can make multiple busses for complex mixes, like a Drums Sub-Bus feeding into a Drums Master Bus. Route the sub-bus to the master bus for final mix control.

    Step 6 – Adjust Levels and Panning

     

    Control the volume and pan of each individual track, and tweak the bus fader to adjust the overall group. This makes balancing easier while retaining track independence.

     

    Step 7 – Automate Bus Effects

     

    Use automation clips on the bus for dynamic changes, like boosting drums during a chorus or adding reverb to vocals only on specific sections.

    Pro Tip

     

    Keep your bus processing subtle—avoid over-compressing or EQing too aggressively. Use busses mainly for glue, cohesion, and efficient workflow.

    FL Studio AI Chord Generator-

    How to Use the AI Chord Generator in FL Studio

    The AI Chord Generator in FL Studio helps you quickly create chord progressions, inspiring melodies and harmonies without needing deep music theory knowledge. This tutorial will guide you through using it effectively.

    Step 1 – Open the AI Chord Generator

    Load FL Studio and open a project. Go to the Piano Roll of any instrument (e.g., a synth or piano). Click on Tools → AI Chords → Chord Generator.

    Step 2 – Set Your Key and Scale

    In the generator, choose the key of your song (e.g., C Major) and the desired scale. This ensures the chords you generate fit your track harmonically.

    Step 3 – Choose Chord Style and Complexity

    Select the style of chords (basic triads, seventh chords, or extended chords). You can adjust complexity to match your track—simpler chords for pop, more complex for jazz or cinematic music.

    Step 4 – Generate Chords

    Click Generate. The plugin will fill the Piano Roll with a chord progression. Play it with your instrument to hear how it sounds.

    Step 5 – Edit Chords Manually

    Even though the generator gives a solid base, tweak notes to suit your melody or vibe. Move, add, or remove notes for custom harmonies.

    Step 6 – Save and Reuse

    Once satisfied, save the progression as a pattern or playlist clip. You can copy it to other instruments or tracks for layering, creating richer harmonies.

    Step 7 – Layer and Harmonize

    Combine your AI-generated chords with basslines, pads, or leads. Experiment with inversions and voicings to add movement and depth.

    Pro Tip

    Use the AI Chord Generator as a creative starting point—not a replacement for your ears. Always tweak to fit the emotion and groove of your track.

     

    How to Route Drum Samples to ANY MIDI Controller in FL Studio

    Routing drum samples to a MIDI controller lets you play beats in real time and makes your workflow faster and more expressive. Here’s how to do it in FL Studio.

    Step 1 – Load Your Drum Samples

    Open Channel Rack in FL Studio. Add your drum samples via Add → Audio Clip or Add → Sampler. Organize your kick, snare, hi-hat, and other percussion for easy access.

    Step 2 – Open MIDI Settings

    Go to Options → MIDI Settings. Make sure your controller is listed and enabled under Input, then select Enable. Set the Controller Type if your device is recognized.

    Step 3 – Assign Channels to Controller

    Select a drum channel in the Channel Rack. Click the Channel Settings → MIDI → Link to Controller button. Press the desired pad or key on your MIDI controller to link it. Repeat for each drum sample.

    Step 4 – Map Multiple Pads Quickly

    For pad controllers (e.g., Akai MPD, Novation Launchpad), use Layer Mode or Controller Presets in the Channel Rack to map multiple samples efficiently.

    Step 5 – Test and Adjust

     

    Press the pads on your MIDI controller to confirm that each drum triggers correctly. Adjust volume, panning, and pitch in the Channel Rack for each sample.

    Step 6 – Record Your Performance

     

    Enable Record → Score or Pattern and play your MIDI controller. Your beats will be recorded in the Piano Roll or Playlist. Edit timing if necessary for tight grooves.

    Step 7 – Add Effects and Mix

    Route your drum channels to a Drum Bus in the Mixer for group processing. Apply EQ, compression, or reverb to glue your drums together.

    Pro Tip

    If you have velocity-sensitive pads, use the velocity curves in FL Studio to make your drums respond more dynamically for a natural, human feel.

    Tuning Vocals with Newtone in FL Studio

    NewTone is FL Studio’s pitch correction and vocal editing tool, perfect for fixing off-key notes, creating harmonies, or designing unique vocal effects. This tutorial shows you how to tune vocals from start to finish.

    Step 1 – Import Your Vocal

    Drag your recorded vocal into NewTone. Make sure it’s clean and dry—minimal effects or compression before editing works best.

    Step 2 – Analyze Pitch

    Click Analyze in NewTone. The plugin will detect all the notes in your recording and display them as editable blocks in the Piano Roll view.

    Step 3 – Correct Off-Key Notes

    Select any note that’s sharp or flat. Drag it vertically to the correct pitch or snap it to the nearest scale note. Use Quantize Pitch for automatic corrections across the track.

    Step 4 – Adjust Timing

     

    Drag notes horizontally to correct timing issues. This is great for tightening vocal phrasing or aligning multiple takes.

    Step 5 – Create Harmonies

    Duplicate the vocal track, import into NewTone, and shift notes to create harmonies. Adjust pitch and timing to make harmonies sound natural.

    Step 6 – Apply Pitch Modulation

     

    For a natural feel, slightly adjust pitch drift and pitch modulation. Avoid making everything perfectly static—it can sound robotic.

    Step 7 – Export Back to Playlist

     

    Once satisfied, export the corrected vocal from NewTone and place it back in the Playlist for further mixing and effects.

    Pro Tip

    Use subtle edits for small corrections and save heavy processing for creative effects. Combining NewTone with vocal layering, reverb, and automation can make vocals sound polished and professional.

     

    How to Record Automation Like a Pro in FL Studio-

    Automation lets you dynamically control volume, effects, panning, and other parameters, adding movement and life to your tracks. This tutorial shows you how to record automation efficiently in FL Studio.

    Step 1 – Choose a Parameter

    Select the knob, slider, or fader you want to automate—this could be a volume fader, filter cutoff, reverb wet/dry, or plugin parameter.

    Step 2 – Enable Automation Recording

     

    Click the Record button in the top toolbar and select Automation (or “Score and Automation”). This tells FL Studio you’re ready to capture parameter changes in real time.

    Step 3 – Start Recording

     

    Press Play. Move the selected knob, slider, or fader on your hardware controller or plugin interface. FL Studio will record your movements as an automation clip in the Playlist.

    Step 4 – Refine Automation Clips

     

    After recording, click on the automation clip in the Playlist. Use points and curves to adjust transitions, smooth abrupt changes, or create precise ramps.

    Step 5 – Layer Multiple Automations

     

    You can automate multiple parameters simultaneously by recording additional clips or layering automation manually. Name and color-code clips for clarity.

    Step 6 – Edit in the Piano Roll (Optional)

     

    Right-click the automation clip and select Edit Events to fine-tune parameter changes in the Event Editor. This gives micro-level control over every automation movement.

     

    Step 7 – Use Automation for Creative Effects

    Experiment with automating reverb, filters, pan, or plugin effects to create buildups, risers, and dynamic transitions. Subtle automation often adds the most professional feel.

     

    Pro Tip

     

    Use linked controllers and automation clips together for flexible, reusable automation. Record multiple takes if needed, then choose the best performance for a polished final mix.

     

    Check back tomorrow for more!