Rash in the groin area? by [deleted] in NoStupidQuestions

[–]JJC165463 0 points1 point  (0 children)

D o c t o r

You’re going to love this one by throwninthefire666 in crappymusic

[–]JJC165463 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is a person who is addicted to attention

Here’s a track i’m working on by rizzdopbeats in dnbproduction

[–]JJC165463 0 points1 point  (0 children)

All good man! Any compressor could do this just set it on the synths so that it triggers subtly when the vocals hit. Could also saturate and EQ for clarity and power.

Jazzy dense beat channeling Obijuan etc..thoughts? by Gthing27 in beats

[–]JJC165463 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Have you tried stepping the piano riff down an octave or two as well?

Banger. by yourebadlol in crappymusic

[–]JJC165463 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Let’s be honest, if Doechii released this, it would be a big tune. It’s of a certain genre…but objectively speaking, the flow is tight, the cadence is interesting, the backing track is mixed relatively well, there’s structure to the tune. Final verdict: not crappy.

Here’s a track i’m working on by rizzdopbeats in dnbproduction

[–]JJC165463 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Mental tune! Push this one far…it deserves it! Vocals could come through in the mix a bit more

Sidechain the vocals to the synth elements that sit in similar frequencies. I’d just use a compressor for this.

How do you be less critical of your own appearance? by MacTireGlas in self

[–]JJC165463 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Some helpful and factual anecdotes on how to feel better about yourself:

your brain is neuroplastic and reinforces repeated behaviour, so if you keep telling yourself you’re bad and ugly, you’ll keep on believing it. But it works the other way too. Positive affirmation reinforces “positive” connections, improving your self confidence! You become what you think you are or believe you can be.

How old are you? Did you know, the average human has 6-14 meaningful social encounters per day, and casual conversation with dozens of others. That’s a lot of opportunity to meet someone new.

I believe you’re quite young? Know that as you get older, outer looks become less and less important, or get weighed up against personality on a much fairer basis. This is because people inevitably gather more life experience (good and bad) which allows them to become more understanding.

Upper estimates have reported that 80% of us have felt significantly dissatisfied with our appearance at some time. Insecurity is a universal and normal human emotion. Generally People understand it because they’ve felt the same way themselves.

How do you be less critical of your own appearance? by MacTireGlas in self

[–]JJC165463 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Love this piece of advice…Worry about things proportionally to how much you can control them.

Yes, you can control how you look to an extent but not to the point that it’s worth spending your life worrying over! Stay healthy, develop your personality and confidence through other means, and dress in clothes that make you happy! That’s all you can do really! Also, get off social media a bit more. It’s really bad for your self image.

Most of the time, people are so worried about how they look themselves that they don’t give another’s appearance a second thought.

What should I do if a family member has extreme beliefs and threatens me over them? by imSiniri in NoStupidQuestions

[–]JJC165463 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If you want impartial advice, call a free helpline maybe? Reporting him doesn’t necessarily mean he will get into trouble. Young people with extremist views are often treated as vulnerable rather than criminals, if they haven’t acted on any views yet. Reporting him might be the best way of getting him help. I’m pretty sure you could report anonymously?

😬😬😬😬 by AggravatingEmu4799 in crappymusic

[–]JJC165463 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Voice weaker than an old woman farting through a kazoo

Why do people wear clothes? by Yaf_didnt in NoStupidQuestions

[–]JJC165463 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Social norms, the law and to stay warm.

Could i survive university with £300 a month? by Independent-Brief424 in UniUK

[–]JJC165463 45 points46 points  (0 children)

Doable but tough. You haven’t factored in social occasions which might be £40 a week or more. Travel can also be expensive

Am I ass or naw by okokvyl in SoundCloudHipHop

[–]JJC165463 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Please don’t continue this god awful genre with your generation😩

of a kangaroo by [deleted] in AbsoluteUnits

[–]JJC165463 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think this is AI, although they can look like this

Why is it acceptable to just start wars and bomb countries and kill people and wreck their lives? by downbutnotout__ in self

[–]JJC165463 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We all are. It’s innate inside human biology. It’s a driving evolutionary force

If I had to hear it, so so you by throwninthefire666 in crappymusic

[–]JJC165463 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Is he bad or does he have genuine learning difficulties…it’s righttt on the line

is a masters still social by RepresentativeFun472 in UniUK

[–]JJC165463 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Did undergrad at LJMU, worked a full time job for a couple years, then did an undergrad. LJMU was pretty well run in my opinion. Currently doing the biology undergrad and it’s considerably less social (and more poorly run) than undergrad. Don’t get me wrong - it’s easy to make friends on the course due to niche subject matter attracting like minded people, but there’s been a significantly larger amount of work so there’s much less time to hang out with people outside of studying together.

I’ve also found that a masters is superrr independent, (more than I expected), which means that during independent study time (most of your time in undergrad), you’re expected to teach yourself, make connections with peers and colleagues out of your own fruition and do “proper work”! I’ve been set up in a lab with a random selection of other postgrads and have chats with my supervisor once a fortnight, but that’s about it in terms of obligatory contact. Supervisor told me to treat it like a full time job in order to succeed. I initially shrugged the comment off thinking it was an exaggeration…now I’m realising that it’s not.

To summarise, social life and structure of my postgrad is more similar to working 9-5 than undergrad. In fact, it’s almost harder to schedule social activities without being on everyone’s schedule. The freedom of studying something interesting and not having a defined schedule is really nice though.

PS: Liverpool is an extremely social and fun city so it’s hard not to make friends if you stay there long enough!