SKU: 73756426184

Workshop with Daniel Lopatin (Oneohtrix Point Never): Electronic Music, Film Scoring, and Production (February '26)

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Description

Workshop with Daniel Lopatin (Oneohtrix Point Never): Electronic Music, Film Scoring, and Production (February '26)All access to lecture recordings, songwriting prompts and all course materials for Daniel Lopatin's workshop taught in February 2026: by purchasing this past course, you're able to watch Daniel's lectures and go about the course at your own pace! In February 2026, Daniel Lopatin (Oneohtrix Point Never) led a four week School of Song workshop about listening, identity, composition, and collaboration. Across the series, Daniel treats songwriting and

All access to lecture recordings, songwriting prompts and all course materials for Daniel Lopatin's workshop taught in February 2026: by purchasing this past course, you're able to watch Daniel's lectures and go about the course at your own pace!

In February 2026, Daniel Lopatin (Oneohtrix Point Never) led a four-week School of Song workshop about listening, identity, composition, and collaboration. Across the series, Daniel treats songwriting and production less as fixed disciplines than as ways of sharpening perception: learning how to pay attention, recognize emotional resonance, and develop a clearer relationship to your own taste and instincts.

Class 1: Becoming (an Artist) begins with listening itself: what Daniel calls “the audible landscape of reality.” The class focuses on attention as the core artistic skill, hearing texture, context, contrast, and emotional implication in the ordinary world, and learning how to turn those observations into music. Daniel moves through tape experiments, improvisation, hip-hop production, film scores, and early electronic music, connecting them through ideas of mimicry, recycling, and transformation. Throughout the lecture, he returns to the paired archetypes of the Fool and the Hermit: staying open, playful, and exploratory in the studio while sharpening your sensitivity outside of it. 

Class 2: Rooms looks at the idea of songs as spaces rather than linear stories. Instead of treating a track like a journey from verse to chorus to climax, Daniel explores composition as environmental design: rooms, hallways, textures, perspectives, and objects available for your attention inside a shared space. Daniel then demonstrates how to put this conceptual framework into practice inside the DAW through a detailed breakdown of one of his own tracks, showing how ideas about mood, space, and perspective actually emerge during the compositional process.

Class 3: Constructing "Audentity" centers on what Daniel calls “audentity:” the cumulative sonic identity formed through repeated creative decisions over time. Using a detailed walkthrough of his own discography, from the synth experiments of Rifts and Returnal through Eccojams, Replica, R Plus Seven, Garden of Delete, Age Of, and Again, Daniel breaks artistic development into three interacting categories: Influence, Intention, and Implementation. The class explores how artists build coherent worlds without becoming stylistically trapped, how limitations can lead to artistic breakthroughs, and how artists can combine their influences to create a sonic world of their own. Along the way, Daniel discusses his own influences: library music, Enya, John Carpenter, DJ Screw, Georges Perec, collage, and world-building, using each as a way to think through how your artistic identity evolves across years of accumulated decisions.

Class 4: Service to Others turns outward toward collaboration, production, and film scoring. Framed through the metaphor of a lighthouse and the Queen of Pentacles, the class focuses on what it means to create conditions where collaborators can do their best work. Using examples from his soundtrack work, Daniel explores film scoring as a practice of support rather than self-expression: responding to image, shaping emotional pacing without over-signaling, and learning how musical time bends around cinematic time. The second half of the lecture expands those ideas into music production and collaboration more broadly, focusing on how to create environments where performers can take risks, how to recognize when a demo has real energy, and how rejected ideas often find new life elsewhere. Throughout the class, collaboration is framed less as compromise and more as learning how to support someone else’s instincts without losing your own perspective in the process.

Here are some words from the students who took this class:

"This class quite literally changed my perspective on art. I felt like he was opening locked doors. I can genuinely say I am leaving this class a better artist than beforehand. Dan was way cool, and fun, open minded, and down to earth. I am also leaving this class with better questions, and questions answered. Thanks very much!"
"Personally this class really helped me bounce back from burn-out - embracing and finding meaning in the day to day, focusing on what's in front of you, recovering inspiration and identity, and ultimately hitting a refresh on my role as an artist, collaborator, but most importantly as a human. Thanks for those reminders and for sharing your insight and light. You did an amazing job, this workshop was a spiritual experience for me in a lot of ways."
"As a university professor and as a recurrent participant in workshops and courses to improve my music and sound art skills, I have to say that Daniel has been one of the best teachers I've had. He is very knowledgeable, has great communication skills, is clear and insightful, comes off as a stimulating pedagogue, and goes in depth into conceptualization and process in a way that is inspiring. I'm very pleased with this experience and Daniel is an awesome artist and teacher."

This archived course includes:

  1. Class Video Recordings – Watch all 4 of Daniel's lectures and Q&As on his songwriting process.
  2. All course materials, including songwriting prompts crafted by Daniel.
  3. Access to the "community jukebox" – upload your new songs to the jukebox and share the tunes with fellow classmates!

FAQ:

Q: What musical experience should I have?
A: People across all musical levels will be able to gain something from the course. 
Q: What if I've never written a song before? Can I still participate in this workshop?
A: Yes! As with any new skill, just starting is usually the hardest part. The songs are optional and this workshop will provide the structure and accountability we all need to get started and follow through, for beginners and old guard writers alike.

Questions? Email us at [email protected].

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SKU: 73756426184

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NMS Johnson
Lexington, US
★★★★★ 1
Must Read before Purchasing!!!! Height is lost if you use this base!!!!
Size: 100LBS
I was so very excited about this for our umbrella - and then I put it together. I called my adult son to come and take a look - I had to be doing something wrong. To our dismay, I was not. The lowest pole in the umbrella system has 4 welded pieces with holes meant to connect to the legs, thus stabilizing the structure. The lowest pole measures (guestimate) 3 feet. When you choose this system, you do not use the original cross-bars, nor the original lowest pole with the 4 welded pieces. Rather, you use a newly provided lowest piece roughly measuring a foot. In doing so, the structure loses a total of almost 2 feet. For average-height individuals, this would not be a problem. For individuals 6' or greater, this is quite a problem. My son is 6'6. My husband is 6'2. I really wanted the portability of the product. However, we will be returning it for the kind that rest on the cross-bars. I wish someone had mentioned this in the reviews I read and saved me the trouble.
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Reviewed in the United States on August 7, 2025
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Sock_Bunny
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Makes moving your umbrella around a breeze.
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This is best idea in umbrella stands. Decent price. I love that the water intake/release is on the side. Many are on top of the stand. Doesn't leak. Easy to move around and easy to put together with the included tools. I have 2. One for a very heavy 10 x 6' umbrella, and the other for a very light 1/2 round umbrella. Works equally well for both. One tricky part the instructions don't include is that is parts F and J are 'in place' in the base and you need to remove them to re attach them to the cylinder, or what they refer to as the "stand pole". So, if you are looking for parts (and I did this twice), just remember you will find them on the underside of large plastic umbrella base. Both are black, and so not immediately apparent. Love that there are two locking wheels and they include an extra screw. IKEA could learn a few things here.
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