*YAWN*... SNORE.... blah, blah, blah- this debate is a bore to me.... but i must contribute my 2 to it, so here goes.....
this is like the "mc's and rappers are different" argument. there really isnt a point to it. guess what? the "beatmaker" IS the producer. the guy who OVERSEES the project- yeah, he's the producer too. and then you have the engineer, who can lay claim to that name as well, if he likes. HOWEVER... in hip hop, "produced by" is almost always followed by the name of the guy WHO MADE THE BEAT. (*as far as mastering, most studios (to my knowledge) send the finished tracks to a seperate place to be mastered by a seperate team.)
Now, these days we are a little more savvy- we cant all play guitar, so it will say "Produced by: Cold Truth. Guitars by: R. Johnson. Viola by: C. Medina.".... now that means that while i still PRODUCED it (made the beat), i didnt play EVERYTHING, although i did do all the chords and melodies for it. I still did most of the work myself. now, if another guy handles all of the engineering or arrangements, he'll wind up with a credit as well.... co-producer.
i think that its ludicris that we sit here and switch labels and try to make a distinction where there really is none- because there are different aspects of production and all are valid. now, when you go and take credit for humming a damn melody and tapping the snare on the 2 and 4 beat, thats a different story..... thats "The Guy Who Takes The Credit And Makes The Money But Doesnt Do A Damn Thing"..... lol, not exactly, but this is the place where the lines blur and you cant really say one way or the other- its just up to your perception.
remember, the root word for "producer" would be "product" and wheter you are the CREATOR of the "product" or the SUPERVISOR of the "product", you are STILL the "producer".
now, formant, guess what? you can call a duck a pig, but its still a duck- it is what it is regardless of its name- and while you may call yourself a "beatcreator" there is no difference, regardless of how you go about wording your own label. producer, beatmaker, beatcreator- "tom-ay-to", "tom-ah-to"- its all the same in hip hop.
if yuo venture into other forms of music where the "producer" USUALLY performs different functions then your traditional hip hop producer, the definitions are once again blurred here- because it is a different game then. rock producers dont always make the track. they guide the songs, and how they fit into the album concept, they offer advice, they work the boards and handle the recording process- and many times another engineer, an assistant, will handle mixing chores.... and then others do different things.
the point being, once again, there are many things that go in to being a producer. call it what yo uwant, but its the same thing.