Fight #691: DJ Excellence vs. P.A.T.
[Fight Ends: 6 days, 9 hours, 20 minutes left]
@Sincock; If you don't understand something, ask about it. Simple as that.
I don't know about 'people' misinterpreting...maybe YOU didn't catch something.
So as simple as that is, what did I say that YOU are unclear about?
Seeing that the rap/hip hop analogy thing has been done to death..
Rap game = drug game/sports/ colors/chicks/movies/clothing etc
At least keep it parts to a whole.
Labels = restaurants and rappers = food
Labels = car manuf. and rappers = car models.
So maybe it was you that didn't understand.
How many people here ENJOY selling beats?
Maybe that was too obtuse?
How many people ENJOY MAKING BEATS and hope to sell them....
At 20 to 30 USD dollars a track, you're not fooling anyone. With the passion of doing folk music (hip hop is folk music) you're not cashing in anytime soon.
You spend 40 hrs a week working somewhere and consider music production your real fantasy job. Doing beats all day.... and making enough bread....to make beats all day. maybe you want to run a business that gives you the time to be home all day making beats without worrying about your bills. But that would be thinking outside the box.
I like that. In a somewhat related note, lots of cats can't see anyone else unlike themselves being involved in music for honest reasons. And to be honest I don't know what honest reasons are. Some producers actually enjoy rap-club music. Just because I make something 'bangin' doesn't mean I'm a corrupt SOB. Just because I make premier type beats...
Somewhere Someone is doing something purely for money...
Signing with a sports team...
Getting married...
religion....
politics....
Having a kid...
Switching jobs...
Killing...
With all thses other motivations I don't understand, whoops, let me not say I don't understand. Someone might get hung up on that phrase. um.. It doesn't make sense...no, let me not say that either. Hold on....
I don't agree with artists/musicians that have a single 'okay' reason to make a piece of music.
The moment you decide to sell it, you're in business.
The fact that you like what you sell and every product is some kind of work of art to you doesn't change that.
i had to examine this question for myself and this is the answer i came up with for me.
i had to basically look at why i was making music. if you're making music as a business to earn money, then you have to conduct yourself in that way. you make beats that people will want to pay money for. and make a lot of them. not necessarily the most artistic, but the most profitable. it would be great if those two things fell in line, but a lot of times they don't. take little drama boi for example. its no secret he wants to make it in the industry. he does what he has to do to get his beats to sound like they belong there. he's not worried about pushing the limits of what hip hop can be, or bringing a message to the world. he makes hot tracks that are going to sell.
i personally made the choice to give up trying to earn a living making music. the music i want to make isn't suited for that. it doesn't fit into the mold of what sells millions of units. i either had to change what i was making or change my goal. so i changed my goal. i've made a lot better music since making that choice and feel like i'm going in the right direction.
so i guess my point is, if you want to make a living doing this, then act like it. get on the bandwagon. make a product that will sell and sell that bitch to anyone that will buy. all those producers who make big money (just blaze, neptunes, timbo, dre) have found their formula and they stick to it. just like mcdonalds, toyota, and microsoft do.
i had to examine this question for myself and this is the answer i came up with for me.
i had to basically look at why i was making music. if you're making music as a business to earn money, then you have to conduct yourself in that way. you make beats that people will want to pay money for. and make a lot of them. not necessarily the most artistic, but the most profitable. it would be great if those two things fell in line, but a lot of times they don't. take little drama boi for example. its no secret he wants to make it in the industry. he does what he has to do to get his beats to sound like they belong there. he's not worried about pushing the limits of what hip hop can be, or bringing a message to the world. he makes hot tracks that are going to sell.
i personally made the choice to give up trying to earn a living making music. the music i want to make isn't suited for that. it doesn't fit into the mold of what sells millions of units. i either had to change what i was making or change my goal. so i changed my goal. i've made a lot better music since making that choice and feel like i'm going in the right direction.
so i guess my point is, if you want to make a living doing this, then act like it. get on the bandwagon. make a product that will sell and sell that bitch to anyone that will buy. all those producers who make big money (just blaze, neptunes, timbo, dre) have found their formula and they stick to it. just like mcdonalds, toyota, and microsoft do.
It's not about "selling out" to mainstream if you prefer to do "underground" music. It's about knowing what is selling right now, today. Especially if you're contemplating quitting your day job! For those that may not know "U CAN DO BOTH"!
yo dj swivel, im just curious how you got into the game if yo dont mind me asking
I do it for a living