Sunday, August 19, 2012

Getting On Part 2

As part of my duties as an A&R Consultant with Lisa Davis Music Management, I receive and go through hundreds of emails daily from producers and songwriters who are hoping to land a placement with a major label artist. Read my journey towards "Getting On". This post is for those producers looking for feedback from an A&R and wanting to "Get On".

Tips on How to Become a Better Music Producer:

  1. Get The Right Equipment, with the right equipment and a small amount of money you can start producing. You need three basic things to get started a computer, monitors and MIDI Controller.
  2. Perfect Your Craft, a producer that doesn't know what he's doing cannot create the possible music.
  3. Learn From the Best, I have learned the most valuable information from watching and talking with others whether it was an artist, producer, engineer, music executive or even journalist. Producers, you can learn the most valuable information by watching and talking to other producers. You can now watch the pros, provide music production tips on YouTube and other video sites. 
  4. Trust Your Ears, close your eyes and trust your ears. Whether it is hunting for that new sound or listening to your mix. If it sounds good to you, it is probably good.
  5. Take Care of Your Ears. Keep the volume at a reasonable level while you are working.
  6. Record Dry and add effects later.
  7. Always save your work.
  8. Experiment as much as you want. Producing music is about stretching the boundaries outside of the mainstream. You don't have to sound like everyone else .
  9. Be open to criticisms. Aim to keep an open mind to feedback from anyone no matter how big your music gets. 
  10. Don't be scared to go back and edit a track. Even if you initially think its complete, you'll sometimes notice something isn't quite right or could sound better.
  11.  Persist.  You will reach a point where you can produce like a pro. Keep growing, pay your dues and soon you'll be the one who makes it look easy. 
  12. Order is freedom, whether it is your studio or computer files. Keep things tidy so you won't get over whelmed with technical issues or searching for files when you want to be creative or productive. 


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