and why do the authors publish their abominations proudly instead of going back to the drawing board and trying to make something that people will enjoy?
i get that not everyone has been making music for 5+ years, and yes, i know everyone had to start somewhere, and yet, it still baffles me hearing a terrible youtube remake (of which there are many), or a track on splice clipping so much that the lyrics are inaudible.
When i started making music, i was very careful not to go posting everything i made, on every site i could, as were some close friends of mine, we all believed that waiting until we could actually make a song, not just noises and sounds, would pay off in the long run, because when we finally did get around to the branding, and when the major labels did eventually start knocking looking for people to produce their songs, i wasn't worrying that they would find all my early poorly produced tracks on soundcloud, or other sites, because i didn't post any, my portfolio was as i wanted it to be, and i could justify every track i had produced.
I've never understood this mindset that modern producers seem to have, don't they understand that it's better to wait until they can make music at a professional level? there's no race to whoever can spam shit songs on their soundcloud page the fastest.
Submitted February 03, 2018 at 08:58AM by sclasts https://www.reddit.com/r/edmproduction/comments/7uyxjr/why_are_songs_on_splicecom_so_poorly_produced/?utm_source=ifttt
Javier Rodriguez
Saturday, February 3, 2018