
Dot_Robinson
Psalms 37:4
About a year and a half ago I stumbled upon the Myspace page of a very well known manager and label exec. Now I'm not going to reveal his identity because that would be in bad taste, but let's just say this gentlemen is sitting on millions and is managing one of the most sought after producers in the game.
Being the ******* that I am, I decided to test this gentlemen's music taste and see if he really has an ear for hit records.
I'm not one to contact people via Myspace (unless I have to), but I decided to send him a friend request to see if he would respond. Sure enough by the days end I was on his friends list.
I send him a brief message with a description of who I am, where I am from, and a run down of my business intentions. Long story short, I asked that he grant me permission to send him a copy of my first "single". To my surprise he says "yes".
At this point I really have no intention of sending him a real song, but more so something from someone already in the industry. I look threw my mp3 folder and find Ryan Leslie's Diamond Girl, which at the time was very underground R&B and had not become the HUGE hit it was destined to become.
I upload the song onto z-s-h-a-r-e and send him a link via Myspace to the song.
A few days later I get a response (ANOTHER SHOCKER).
Needless to say...this guy trashed the song. He said:
I burst into laughter three months later when the record blew up. I thought to myself:
"What the **** do these people really know at the end of the day?".
Like Russel Simmons said; *In a lisp* "Do You".
100% truth.
Being the ******* that I am, I decided to test this gentlemen's music taste and see if he really has an ear for hit records.
I'm not one to contact people via Myspace (unless I have to), but I decided to send him a friend request to see if he would respond. Sure enough by the days end I was on his friends list.
I send him a brief message with a description of who I am, where I am from, and a run down of my business intentions. Long story short, I asked that he grant me permission to send him a copy of my first "single". To my surprise he says "yes".
At this point I really have no intention of sending him a real song, but more so something from someone already in the industry. I look threw my mp3 folder and find Ryan Leslie's Diamond Girl, which at the time was very underground R&B and had not become the HUGE hit it was destined to become.
I upload the song onto z-s-h-a-r-e and send him a link via Myspace to the song.
A few days later I get a response (ANOTHER SHOCKER).
Needless to say...this guy trashed the song. He said:
I really don't know where to begin. This record is horrible. The concept and chorus are just too corny for mainstream R&B or Pop. Granted, the mixing is superb, I doubt any label would want to clear this sample. If your going to sample a record, at least make it sound like an original piece. You might have some of what it takes to make it someday, but right now, records like this aren't cutting it. Listen to your local radio station and hear what people are listening to. Gauge the commercial viability of your music by that of what the radio is willing to play.
I burst into laughter three months later when the record blew up. I thought to myself:
"What the **** do these people really know at the end of the day?".
Like Russel Simmons said; *In a lisp* "Do You".
100% truth.
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