

Again, Odesi comes stock with a lot of different types that vary according to genre. Once you have your chords, you can then choose a drum pattern as well as a bassline.

These are apparently derived by a crowdsourced analysis of many decades of previous hit music, to get a sense of what ideas work and don’t when it comes to penning chart-toppers. The really interesting thing is that Odesi has a lot of progressions to get you started, which I think is really helpful regardless of the type of music you’d want to make. This is done through a site that looks like a very basic DAW – you specify the key and chord progression you want first. You create the gist of your production here, then you export it either as an audio loop or as Midi to finish in your DAW of choice. It’s not meant to be an all-in-one digital audio workstation, rather it’s meant to complement the digital audio workstation (DAW) you use, such as Ableton Live. Intrigued? Read on… How it worksĪt its heart, Odesi lets you sketch music ideas using just your browser. It takes a fresh approach to the subject, by “crowdsourcing” data from previous hits to help you come up with ideas that have better chance of success.

Odesi mail Pc#
Mixed In Key just released Odesi, a music composition tool for your browser (comes with a Mac companion app, PC forthcoming) that sets out to help DJs and producers get started on writing hit dance tracks. Sketch song ideas quickly with Odesi, a new music-making platform that lives in your browser and on a companion app for your Mac.
