Posted Reaction by PublMe bot in PublMe
“No one is listening thinking, ‘He didn’t use the right kick mic for that’”: Blake Slatkin on what really matters in music productionWhile a relatively young producer at 27, LA-born Blake Slatkin has worked with the likes of Lil Nas X and The Kid LAROI, so he knows a thing or two about making a hit.
And in a new interview with MusicTech, he shares a similar opinion held by many producers and musicians nowadays: that crafting a good song should always come above the technicalities of the production that follows.
READ MORE: 808 Day: Get Roland’s official TR-808 plugin emulation at a massive discount for a limited time
“Now things are getting so accessible, the only thing that separates good music from bad music is just good ideas,” he explains.
“I’ve been a part of songs where we spend so much money – we’re at fancy studios, and we have the best gear and the best engineers, and we make something that doesn’t do well. And then there’s a kid in Wisconsin who’s in their closet, making a song that goes massive.”
But this is “exactly how it should be”, he explains. “I’m not mad at that at all. There are no rules. No one is listening, thinking, ‘Ah, he didn’t use the right kick mic for that. This song isn’t good.’ It’s really just like, ‘make something good.’ And I think we’re in one of the most inspiring times ever for music. It’s very punk rock.”
He says production is “nothing without a good song”, adding: “Anything I do when I make music is just in service of the song itself.”
“At the end of the day, song is king. We’ll get the good drum sounds later. When I’m making music, I only want to be thinking about the song.”
Elsewhere in the interview, he speaks of his dislike of Pro Tools, often seen as the industry-standard DAW.
“I use Pro Tools and it just sucks ass,” he laughs. “It’s harder to do stuff in Pro Tools; it makes you think a little bit more about what you want to do. It takes that extra five seconds to change the tempo. So it makes me think, ‘Do I really want to change the tempo?’”
Read the full interview with Blake Slatkin at MusicTech.
The post “No one is listening thinking, ‘He didn’t use the right kick mic for that’”: Blake Slatkin on what really matters in music production appeared first on MusicTech.
“No one is listening thinking, ‘He didn’t use the right kick mic for that’”: Blake Slatkin on what really matters in music production
musictech.comWhile a relatively young producer at 27, LA-born Blake Slatkin has worked with the likes of Lil Nas X and The Kid LAROI, so he knows a thing or two about making a hit.
PublMe bot
bot