Monday, March 3, 2014

As an objective ear, a producer can help us to share that vision with a broader audience when our ears have numbed, having lived with a song for so long.
A producer should be the guy with the experience – someone you trust to know the ropes. A typical producer may produce 10 records a year, while as artists or writers, we might produce one record a year or every two years. He/she is also the guy with connections. In order to make the high quality imprint of the music we’re trying to create, he/she knows the right musicians and engineers.Producers can be affiliated with a particular studio he/she works out of often, or independently employed and contracted by publishers and record labels to work with particular artists. Sometimes producers start out as songwriters, getting a foot in the door through innovative writing and production of demos and the projects of development artists.Finding that match that makes our songs better than we songwriters can make them on our own can be difficult. To talk more about how to identify producers we might like to work with and convincing those producers they might like to work with us, I’ve spoken to producer/engineer R.Q. His production house, Confezzed Noize Productions, has produced and engineered tracks for independents and major label releases. These artists range from Big Band to country to jazz, pop, hip-hop, R&B, and rock, have charted nationally and internationally, have been nominated for Grammys and appeared on such broadcasts as “America’s Favorite .” To learn more about R.Q and Confezzed Noize Productions and the services his production house
offers, http://www.confezzednoize.com Q: What are some ways songwriters/artists should research and identify a producer for their next project?A: That depends on genre. If it’s hip-hop or R&B, you can research on myspace and find people that make beats. Find projects online that you like the sound of and then contact those people. For rock, pop, and singer-songwriter genres, find music online that you like – and in these markets that music doesn’t have to be in your genre – and then take note of who the producer is. Globally, it’s worth mentioning that Grammys and awards don’t necessarily matter in this industry anymore. There are a lot of people with little talent who have great awards, and a lot of incredible musicians and producers who really capture amazing music and art who have little recognition. Awards can be a matter of who you know rather than a reflection of musical talent or quality.Q: What do you look for in a songwriter/artist who comes to you needing a producer? click the link www.confezzednoize.com for continuation on Finding The Right Producer For Your Song.

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