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In hindsight, I guess I've actually been in similar situations before. I spent much of my younger years working as a musician and I did a a fair bit of session work. Most of those gigs were very simple - show up at the studio with my bass, sign the paperwork, lay down a very simple bass line from a score, get a small check, and go cash it. And, there were many situations that I was just reading from a chord chart and had to invent my own bass line on the fly. These were mostly simple jingles for local radio/TV ads, so it's not like there was any credit to go around and I didn't write the jingle anyway. But, I suppose one could make the argument that what I was doing was tantamount to ghostwriting.
I've also been in the unfortunate situation of other people taking credit for my work (i.e., an unwilling ghostwriter), which probably has a lot to do with my negative views of DJs who want to buy other people's work and present it as their own. One of the singers that I used to work with would constantly take the credit for everything that she sang on in a very passive, yet deliberate and underhanded way, despite the fact that she had no input on the music, melody, or production and, quite frankly, has terrible pitch and timing problems. To this day she still refuses to mention my name when someone asks her about one of our songs. She would write the lyrics, which invariably had to be completely overhauled with my help because sense of timing, rhythm, or phrasing was pretty bad. Sessions would take 3-4 hours to get something usable, then I would have to spend hours pitch-correcting her voice. But, she was young, naive, and also very eager, so I figured that she'd eventually mature in terms of both integrity and ability. Instead she got consistently worse and started to rely on Melodyne as her crutch, rather than practice, and the last session we had was so gut-wrenchingly horrid that the PhD I earned in Melodyne by working with her couldn't even save it. Yet, to this day she still uses this passive approach to make people think that she wrote and produced the songs and she refuses to give credit to the one person who has made her what she is.
So, I essentially created this monstrosity, then quit working with her. To my knowledge, she hasn't finished an original song since, and I've gotten a few emails from other producers since then telling me that they're trying to work with her and asking how I get her to sing so well. So, she's being exposed now for the phony that she is, but much of blame can be placed squarely on my shoulders and, to be honest, it's one of the biggest embarrassments of my long musical career. The irony is that I now distance myself from her as much as possible and, quite frankly, I'm thinking it's best that my involvement with her is kept on the downlow.
So, hopefully that long-winded rant sheds some light on why I have a negative view of people taking credit for other people's work. Phonies will eventually be exposed, especially when they start to draw more and more attention to themselves as a result of their phoniness, and it's embarrassing to everybody involved.
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