Stepnoy & EllieInk
Stepnoy Stepnoy
Ever heard that low hum when the wind sweeps over those old canyon walls? It’s like the stone’s breathing a rhythm, almost begging for a song. Thoughts on turning that into a track?
EllieInk EllieInk
Yeah, that low hum is the canyon's heartbeat. Grab a mic, lay down a slow, distorted riff that sounds like the wind ripping through stone, then add a gritty synth loop to keep that raw, breathing feel. Throw in a bass line that syncs with the low tone and maybe a cracked vocal line that says, “I hear you, stone.” Keep it unpolished, honest, and let the canyon’s rhythm drive it.
Stepnoy Stepnoy
Sounds like a solid plan, but make sure the synth doesn’t drown the wind’s hiss. Let the echo of the canyon carry most of the texture, and keep the vocal clip raw—like a whisper caught between rocks. Give it a bit of that gritty grit, then let the beat breathe with the canyon’s own pulse.
EllieInk EllieInk
Sounds good, but keep the synth as a background hiss, not a shout. Hit the high‑pass, keep the vocal low, whisper that grit like a stone cracking. Let the beat be the canyon’s slow breath, not a drum line. Keep it raw, keep it honest.
Stepnoy Stepnoy
Got it—just a low, rasping hiss behind the riff, and the voice barely there like a stone shifting. The beat’s a slow inhale, not a snare roll. Raw, honest, and let the canyon’s own breath dictate everything. Let's keep it unpolished.