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	<pubDate>Mon, 07 Apr 2025 10:24:05 +0200</pubDate>
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<p>6 music-making lessons from Skrillex’s new album, ‘F*** U SKRILLEX’</p>
<p><img width="2000" height="1500" src="https://musictech.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/Skrillex-album-tips-hero-credit-Nakeesha-MusicTech@2000x1500.jpg" alt="Composite of Skrillex and a DAW, photo by Nakeesha and MusicTech" srcset="https://musictech.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/Skrillex-album-tips-hero-credit-Nakeesha-MusicTech@2000x1500.jpg 2000w, https://musictech.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/Skrillex-album-tips-hero-credit-Nakeesha-MusicTech@2000x1500-400x300.jpg 400w, https://musictech.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/Skrillex-album-tips-hero-credit-Nakeesha-MusicTech@2000x1500-800x600.jpg 800w, https://musictech.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/Skrillex-album-tips-hero-credit-Nakeesha-MusicTech@2000x1500-696x522.jpg 696w, https://musictech.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/Skrillex-album-tips-hero-credit-Nakeesha-MusicTech@2000x1500-1392x1044.jpg 1392w, https://musictech.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/Skrillex-album-tips-hero-credit-Nakeesha-MusicTech@2000x1500-1068x801.jpg 1068w"></p><p>Packing 34 tracks of blistering sonic intensity, <em>F*** U SKRILLEX</em> is a tour de force of the artist’s past, present, and future. The album is also a treasure trove for producers of all stripes – full of practical lessons, inspiring creative approaches, and mind-bending technical finesse.</p><p>Here are our key takeaways:</p><h2>1. Got a ton of unfinished ideas? Make an album anyway.</h2><p>As creators, we tend to sit on a bunch of tracks we hope will release on an EP or album one day. <a rel="nofollow" href="https://musictech.com/artists/skrillex/">Skrillex</a> is the latest producer to prove we can forget about waiting for that to happen.</p><p>Mixtapes of 30+ tracks aren’t new — <a rel="nofollow" href="https://musictech.com/artists/j-dilla/">J Dilla</a>, <a rel="nofollow" href="https://musictech.com/artists/flume/">Flume</a>, Childish Gambino and many other artists have released masterpiece mixtapes full of 90-second songs. But <em>F*** U SKRILLEX</em> is an abrasive reminder that you needn’t expand all your sonic sketches to five minutes for them to be memorable and impacting. Just look at <em>Things I Promised</em>, which manages to get its angst-y, hyper-pop <a rel="nofollow" href="https://musictech.com/tag/vocals/">vocal</a> hook stuck in your head with a bare 57 seconds of playtime.</p><p>Try it — bounce out around 10 of your dwindling project files and arrange them in a new project window as one continuous mix. Use <a rel="nofollow" href="https://musictech.com/tag/effects/">effects</a> like <a rel="nofollow" href="https://musictech.com/tag/reverb/">reverb</a> and delay to transition one beat to the next, and use risers to build up tension as you blend the tracks. You might find that a lot of your sporadic ideas fit better together than you thought.</p><h2>2. Sample the sh*t out of your earlier ideas and releases</h2><p>This tip gets thrown around all the time, but Skrillex does this masterfully in <em>F*** U SKRILLEX</em>. From reprising vocal lines from older songs like <em>Summit</em> to taking his brooding <a rel="nofollow" href="https://musictech.com/tag/bass/">bass</a> track, <em>Tears</em>, and remixing it into a high-energy anthem, Skrillex proves there’s always more gold to be mined from your previous work.</p><p>Use an old melody line with a new beat, or chop up an unused vocal take and drop it into a near-complete <a rel="nofollow" href="https://musictech.com/tag/production/">production</a>. It’s amazing how quickly ‘failed’ musical ideas can take on a new character and energy when put in a different context. Even a finished track can be a rich source for one-shot samples, or, with a bit of pitch and time shifting, could become the basis for an ambient interlude. It’s your work – nothing is off limits.</p><figure aria-describedby="caption-attachment-189250"><img src="https://musictech.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/Skrillex-credit-Nakeesha@1050x1400.jpg" alt="Skrillex photographed in a home making devil horns with his hands, photo by Nakeesha" width="1050" height="1400" srcset="https://musictech.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/Skrillex-credit-Nakeesha@1050x1400.jpg 1050w, https://musictech.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/Skrillex-credit-Nakeesha@1050x1400-400x533.jpg 400w, https://musictech.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/Skrillex-credit-Nakeesha@1050x1400-800x1067.jpg 800w, https://musictech.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/Skrillex-credit-Nakeesha@1050x1400-696x928.jpg 696w"><figcaption>Image: Nakeesha</figcaption></figure><h2>3. Don’t stick to one lane, whatever you do</h2><p>From track to track, or even second to second, the album hurtles through sounds, styles, and genres at a velocity few can match. On <em>Andy</em> we get classic R&amp;B vocal lines and laser-like synths, and less than a minute later <em>Look at You</em> busts in with crystalline pianos, ethereal glitch, and mangled vocals from Sigur Rós’ Jónsi.</p><p>This insane kaleidoscope of an album could never have happened if Skrillex hadn’t spent the last 15 years experimenting, listening widely, trying different styles, and learning, learning, learning.</p><p>Pushing out of your musical comfort zone can be challenging, but it is essential if you want to grow. Consciously trying to write in an unfamiliar genre can be a great way of upskilling as a producer, but you can also get surprising results by simply opening up a <a rel="nofollow" href="https://musictech.com/tag/plugins/">plugin</a> you don’t know how to use or picking up an instrument you don’t know how to play.</p><p>Music making is the art of trial and error – so chuck everything you know in a blender and see what new flavours pour out.</p><h2>4. Details matter — percussion, filters, effects, sound design and more</h2><p>What holds <em>F*** U SKRILLEX</em> together is the skill and finesse that undergirds every snare hit, filter sweep, and bass drop. Without those details, we probably wouldn’t listen past track 3, let alone track 30.</p><p>Achieving ear-candy with real depth is no easy task, but it starts with mastering the fundamentals. If you’re at an early stage, then get busy learning how to get results from <a rel="nofollow" href="https://musictech.com/tutorials/tips/how-to-create-authentic-vintage-drum-gated-reverb-for-synthwave-chillwave-music-styles/">time-</a> and <a rel="nofollow" href="https://musictech.com/tutorials/tips/production-tips-exploring-digital-distortion-and-mimicking-retro-samplers/">frequency-based</a> plugins. If you’re already a pro at processing, mix things up with unusual sound sources. Skrillex himself has been known to use <a href="https://youtu.be/DUTNuG1xl2M?feature=shared&amp;t=88" target="_blank" rel="noopener nofollow">cracking soda cans for snare drum hits</a>, and the new album is littered with audio curios such as the ASMR-style vocal clicks on <em>Redline Dash</em> and the heavily processed birds on <em>Animals Beat</em>.</p><p>Try bringing some <a rel="nofollow" href="https://musictech.com/tutorials/tips/how-to-bring-the-outside-world-into-your-beats/">household objects or outdoor field recordings</a> into your <a rel="nofollow" href="https://musictech.com/tag/daws/">DAW</a> for further processing – the possibilities are endless.</p><p></p><h2>5. Collaborate, collaborate, collaborate</h2><p>It takes a village to build a career in music. Skillex has always been open about the support he gets from his creative team and his fellow artists. With over 25 collaborators on the record, <em>F*** U SKRILLEX</em> is the purest example of what happens when you bring more creative energy on board. Hell, <em>Korabu</em> has six featured collaborators, and it’s one of the album’s best moments.</p><p>The real lesson here, however, is in <em>who</em> Skrillex chooses to work with. The new album has plenty of established artists and newcomers like Naisha, but also platforms up-and-coming creators like Nakeesha, whom many of us might not have heard before.</p><p>This is essential for any producer – spot talent early, bring the right people on board, give them a framework, and then get out of the way so they can do what they do best.</p><h2>6. Nostalgia is one hell of a drug</h2><p><em>F*** U SKRILLEX</em> is a career retrospective in the best possible way. Drawing liberally from the genre that he basically created, Skrillex takes us back to the <a rel="nofollow" href="https://musictech.com/tag/vintage/">vintage</a> days of dubstep – but he doesn’t stop there. Sure, <em>San Diego VIP</em> gives mega-fans exactly what they’ve been waiting for but <em>Hold On</em> also gives us iconic trap tropes, and <em>Voltage</em>, the album’s euphoric closer, takes us back to a never-quite-released 2012 demo and hints at Sonny Moore’s pre-Skrillex days when he fronted emo band, From First To Last.</p><p>Us mere mortals likely don’t have genre-defining back catalogues we can dig into, but we <em>can</em> use nostalgia to our advantage. The music that shaped your youth can still be a rich source of inspiration – you just need to distil those sounds and styles for a modern palette.</p><p>Try taking a bygone beat or a classic production style and coupling it with the sounds that define our current moment. Retro doesn’t have to be cheesy, it can be a joyous celebration of a special time and a place – while still moving the musical conversation forward.</p><p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://musictech.com/tutorials/tips/6-music-production-tips-from-skrillex-new-album-f-u-skrillex/">6 music-making lessons from Skrillex’s new album, ‘F*** U SKRILLEX’</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://musictech.com/">MusicTech</a>.</p>]]></description>
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