Creative offer Workshop Young People Teenagers Miscellaneous Vernetzung German English

enter the music: Beatmaking Workshop with Paradox

Here you can learn how beats are created and how to build your own tracks with a DAW. From the basics to your first own sound: practical, creative and without prior knowledge. Perfect for anyone who wants to get into beatmaking.
[Translate to Englisch:] Foto: Mark Frost

Event information

Date & Time

until

Location

Chemnitz, Compact youth club

entrance free of charge

enter the music is a two-year participatory music and involvement project for young people in the Heckert area. The project invites young people not just to consume music, but to produce it themselves, help shape it and make it visible to the public. The series of workshops on DJing, beatmaking and songwriting, open jams, mentoring formats and public presentations create new sounds, networks and spaces for creative self-development.

Together with local and international musicians, KJH Compact, Bandbüro Chemnitz and the Selbstgebaute Musik collective, a sustainable music structure is being established in the district, including a permanently usable music space and a self-organised community. One highlight is the joint sound installation in public space in 2027.

Project management: Nadine Moser.

more information

Sponsoring

enter the music is a project within the framework of enter - Young Cultural Region Chemnitz, initiated and funded by the German Federal Cultural Foundation and supported by the Federal Government Commissioner for Culture and the Media.

Team Generation

As part of Chemnitz 2025, Team Generation is tasked with involving different generations (children, young people, young adults and older people) and developing a programme that takes up and combines their perspectives.

City of Chemnitz The Federal Government Commissioner for Culture and Media Free State of Saxony European Capital of Culture

This project is cofinanced by tax funds on the basis of the parliamentary budget of the state of Saxony and by federal funds from the Beauftragter der Bundesregierung für Kultur und Medien (Federal Government Commissioner for Culture and Media), as well as funds from the City of Chemnitz.