Much like the mad scientist above , the music business is full of inventors running around trying to find that secret potion that will change the music business and their lives forever. Well, their ain't no such thing. Success comes in the form of hard work. That's the skinny! The reason most miss it is, it's dressed up in overalls and looks like hard work! The good news is, you can have it if you put in the time.
Once again meeting with Matt Still yesterday, I had lot's of questions and was opening the answers would make me a Grammy award winning producer just like him. In listing to Matt is was very re- affirming, you become successful by doing what successful people do, Work Hard!!!!! Apply yourself to your craft and never look back.
We where talking about mic techniques, Matt confidently shared, to quote him; I will share any thing I know with anyone if it helps. On the topic of setting up instruments he stated. I can tell you how I did it, and you can do exactly the same way, but most likely it will never sound the same. You see, it took Matt years of mixing to acquire his ear for music. While his techniques are extremely valuable, you still have to develop, and spend the time to truly get to know sound, There are no short cuts, quit trying, your just wasting your time. Enjoy the journey of learning your craft, in the end you will look back, and go, WOW WHAT A LIFE!
Ok, I'm going to give you the holy grail, the short cut, the secret formula to everything you need to know about recording music. But you have to promise not to tell anyone. It's way easier than you would have ever imaged. I learned this secret formula from a Grammy award winning producer. I had a lunch with Grammy award winning producer Matt Still yesterday. Matt is currently working with Sir Elton John, and has worked with everyone from outcast. to Santa, and many more. So, I asked him the proverbial question. How do you get such a great sound? We talked about everything from the mic chain, to mic placement for drums, to the size of the room and tape as opposed to digital and all of the different platforms in between. Man did I get some good stuff. I guest your ready for the secret formula? I'm getting there. Be patient!
During our discussion we talked about the different schools on audio engineering. I love his comment on interns fresh out of school with their fancy degree. He said, when their looking for an internship he tells them "the only thing hey are qualified to do is bring him coffee", Believe me that's not arrogance talking, that's years of experience. I have worked with many interns fresh out of school in my career. While they have a great grasp of the technical side, most don't have a clue on how to manage a session, or how to handle the talent, and all that comes with it. So my point is, it takes years, and hours upon hours to master this craft. You must pay your dues to get the goods!
Undoubtedly, some of the best sound engineering I have ever listen to has been a direct result of Mr. Stills work! So I'm going to give you the secret formula he so freely gave me. In a minute! Here's my advice , work hard ,work with passion, and don't give up before the miracle! HERE IT IS , STRAIGHT FROM MATT. THERE ARE NO SECRET FORMULAS! I will be writing a part two blog, soon to explain why he said what he did. Stay tuned there is some great info coming, that you can carry throughout your career as a engineer.
How many singer songwriters do you think exist? Tens of thousands, are more? Entertainers? Performers? A bunch, maybe? So which are you? Do you know? Finding out who you are is probably the most important thing you will ever do in your career. Have you written some cool songs? So have thousands of other writers. I just got back to the office from a meeting with Grammy award winning producer Matt Still. He commented,"ARTIST WHO ENTERTAIN WILL RISE TO THE TOP". Do you believe that?
What has to happen in order for people to listen to your songs rather than the millions of others out there? Maybe it's build it, and they will come? Probably not! So what must you do? If you don't already know the answer, you had better get with the program. Time is passing fast ,and will fly by before you know it. You must get to work. No one is going to do it for you. The good news is there are people out there willing to help if your willing to do the work. If your not willing to do the work my advice is quit now and don't waste your time or others. That's the reality you must face!
I hope this signs for you, and your not just slowing down to avoid hitting someone that is at work. The truth is the ones that are working will run over you if your in their way. So get to work and make something happen!
So sad another part of history fades into the digital dust. I spent many years wondering around music row. Always bumping into to another connection making new friends, exchanging ideas. Sadly those days are gone. Check out the article below.
Nashville music industry shifting away from Music Row
By Jaquetta White, The (Nashville) Tennessean9:15p.m. EDT March 18, 2013
Cost, connectivity and communication are driving some to depart one of music's most prestigious neighborhoods.
NASHVILLE -- The house at the corner of 16th Avenue South and Tremont Street has served Mary Hilliard Harrington well for six years. From that post in the Music Row neighborhood, she has watched as her company, The Green Room PR, a music industry-focused public relations firm, has tripled in size and come to count Tim McGraw, Jason Aldean and Dierks Bentley as clients.
But the little house has become restrictive as The Green Room has grown. So Harrington is trading in the quaint office space next month for a contrasting view of exposed brick, high ceilings and an open floor plan.
The move means giving up the firm's address in a neighborhood long favored by the music industry for a mailbox in the emerging SoBro neighborhood. Fifteen years ago, such a decision would have seemed to fly in the face of logic. Today, though, Harrington is on trend.
"I'm not concerned about moving off the Row at all," Harrington said. "I think a lot of the music business is spreading out."
From SoBro to Berry Hill and suburban Franklin, the physical presence of the Nashville music industry is shifting.
And while it is hardly time to write an obituary for Music Row — it still is at the heart of the music business -- the place no longer holds the cachet it once did as the aspirational neighborhood of music-related businesses in Nashville.
Back Row story
Music Row was birthed in the 1950s. The stretch's origin is traced to the opening of the Quonset Hut, a recording studio created by country music station WSM's band leader and music director Owen Bradley in 1958. Other studios soon followed, as did music publishers and record labels. A clustering of sorts began to take shape. In just a few years, and helped along by the success of such artists as Bob Dylan and Elvis who recorded there, the Music Row studios made Nashville a recording mecca.
Still, for a place that has served as home base for many of the leading decision makers in the music world, the landscape is unassuming. With the exception of a few companies such as BMI, which occupies a massive building on Music Square East, studios and management and public relations firms on the Row often are located in houses. If not for the signs out front, they easily could be mistaken for residences.
"A lot of folks view Music Row as somewhat of a campus environment," said Lisa Harless, senior vice president of the entertainment and sports division at Regions Bank. "For folks on the Row, it's not uncommon to walk from a board meeting at ASCAP to Regions to do your banking to a meeting with a business manager."
The reasons for the decentralization of that campus are as varied as the businesses themselves, which included major labels such as Universal Music Group, which left Music Square East for downtown five years ago to cut costs and improve communication among its employees, who had been split between two buildings on Music Row.
For Harrington at The Green Room, moving was functional.
"I wanted the kind of environment where we could all see each other and bounce ideas off of each other," she said. "I really wanted a more creative-feeling environment for (employees) and my clients and anyone coming in for meetings. What we do here is creative, and I really wanted our space to reflect that."
Cliff O'Sullivan, general manager and senior vice president of Sugar Hill Records, said cyber connectivity makes being in close physical proximity to other music businesses less of a necessity.
"We're all on email 20 hours a day anyway," said O'Sullivan, who considered moving Sugar Hill to Music Row but has chosen to go to suburban Franklin instead. "We're a community in a much different way."
Changing neighborhood
While it's a relatively new occurrence that established music businesses are choosing to leave or not to locate on Music Row, the ebb and flow of music-related businesses in the neighborhood has been steady.
Real estate broker Ira Blonder said Music Row has been a "volatile environment" for two decades. The whims of the music industry — with businesses such as independent record labels created, bought, merged and closed with regularity — contribute to the area's changing dynamic.
"The volatility is representative of the volatility of the industry," Blonder said. "It's consistent with what's happened in the last 20 years."
Ten years ago, Bart Herbison counted more than 100 for-sale signs on Music Row. The executive director of Nashville Songwriters Association International tied the disruption to illegal music downloading early in the last decade that put many companies out of business and sent others searching for cheaper real estate as profits dwindled. It was a turning point for the neighborhood, he said.
"The big difference on Music Row (now) is that there are dentists' offices, condominiums, lawyers' offices — nothing related to the music industry," said Herbison, whose office is on Roy Acuff Place in the Music Row area. "Virtually every building on these streets was related to the music business, and that's not the case anymore."
The decentralization of Music Row has attracted the attention of Nashville city government, which is studying the neighborhood to discover if there is a "workable business model" that can recapture the music industry concentration on the stretch.
"My understanding is that one of the things that helped distinguish Nashville was the fact that the music industry was relatively concentrated in the Music Row area. You had everything there and there was a certain synergism," Metro Planning Director Rick Bernhardt said. "As Music Row evolved, I think we lost some of that synergy."
New age Music Row
Other areas, meanwhile, have emerged as music business hubs. One is Berry Hill, which is anchored by John and Martina McBride's Blackbird Studio.
Gary Belz, who owned Oceanway Studios on Music Row in the early and mid-'90s and now owns House of Blues Studios in Berry Hill, likens the cluster of businesses to a new-age Music Row.
"There are so many publishing houses and studios," Belz said. "It's a nice neighborhood to walk. There are restaurants, so you can run into musicians, producers."
But as Belz plants himself in Berry Hill, others like Jed Hilly are moving from that area and even farther from Music Row. After eight years in Berry Hill, the executive director of the nonprofit Americana Music Association is setting up shop in larger quarters in Franklin.
"We are moving to Franklin for the same reason we moved from Music Row to Berry Hill," Hilly said. "Music Row is a great location, but for what I'm paying in Franklin, I couldn't get that on Music Row."
O'Sullivan's Sugar Hill will join the Americana Music Association in Franklin.
"I certainly explored the idea of going on Music Row, but it occurred to me that people don't really care where your office is. Not everybody is on Music Row anymore," O'Sullivan said. "There might be people that will say it's not a good idea to be there, but to me, Franklin is Nashville. It's just another ZIP code."
There are many methods of teaching various musical endowments. They all have cool names, so for the sake of this blog I'm going to call my method of songwriting the Jacuzzi method. You may ask why? I'm glad you did. First ask yourself what are you looking for when listening to a song. Is it modality, beat melody, warmth, heat, peace, uplifting, spiritual, emotion, production? Everyone has some payoff their looking for when listening to a song, and there are as many differences as there are people.
The Jacuzzi method as a writer deals with sitting and soaking in the song as if you where to be engulfed by the bubbles. You must be surrounded by the song, embedded in the lyrics locked into the melody, while engulfed in the emotion. Songwritng is a craft and you must bring all of your tools with you in order to build a song. If you leave out any of the fore-mentioned tools you will not be able to finish constructing your building.
This is an explanation of how we are going to be teaching songwriting at AMP. There is the technical side as well as the business and mechanical you must have in your tool box as well. You must have a full tool box in order to be be successful. We want to help you pack your tool box with the right tools while helping you connect the pieces.