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RobertRollie
Senior tranceaddict

Registered: Jun 2003
Location: Melbourne, AU
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Um well you can do courses on how to use various pieces of software or hardware, but at the end of the day if you dont understand MUSIC then youll never be able to produce anything worth listening to. I worked in a recording studio for a year or so and the amount of bad musicians that came in wanting to produce albums and demo tapes was shocking.
As to making it big in america, well i think the short answer is no. From what i've seen the american electronic music scene is a) small b) isolated to afew small areas of the country and c) completely different to the rest of the worlds idea of electronic music and how it shoudl be played.
At the end of the day, if youre producing stuff in america, chances are no one outside america will ever listen to it, and if you want to make it big in electronic music then you really have to crack the european/uk market. Take DJ Irene, supposedly one of the biggest DJ's in america, biggest hard house dj in the country. a) 9/10 european clubbers have never heard of her, b) any of them who listen to her music or listen to her play laugh when theyre told its supposedly hard house.
The bottom line is, if you want to make it big as a dj or producer, you need to be on the other side of the atlantic.
___________________
Lets FUCK! I wanna rock your body rock.
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Jul-25-2003 11:12
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DaveSZ
When The Levee Breaks

Registered: Jan 2003
Location: ATX
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| quote: | Originally posted by RobertRollie
Um well you can do courses on how to use various pieces of software or hardware, but at the end of the day if you dont understand MUSIC then youll never be able to produce anything worth listening to. I worked in a recording studio for a year or so and the amount of bad musicians that came in wanting to produce albums and demo tapes was shocking.
As to making it big in america, well i think the short answer is no. From what i've seen the american electronic music scene is a) small b) isolated to afew small areas of the country and c) completely different to the rest of the worlds idea of electronic music and how it shoudl be played.
At the end of the day, if youre producing stuff in america, chances are no one outside america will ever listen to it, and if you want to make it big in electronic music then you really have to crack the european/uk market. Take DJ Irene, supposedly one of the biggest DJ's in america, biggest hard house dj in the country. a) 9/10 european clubbers have never heard of her, b) any of them who listen to her music or listen to her play laugh when theyre told its supposedly hard house.
The bottom line is, if you want to make it big as a dj or producer, you need to be on the other side of the atlantic. |
So you guys don't know BT, D:Fuse, or Markus Schulz over there?
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http://www.discoboomer.com/forums/
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Jul-25-2003 15:56
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