contested practice
in theEDM community
,ghost producing
is argued by some toenable obscure producers
to earnincome
and advance theirindustry
notoriety, but the reality is that they may actually be doing their careers more harm than good.___________________________
Guest Post by Collin McLoughlin on Medium
I’m going to come right out and say it: ghost producing is killing EDM.
It’s a widespread practice that’s hurting producers, writers, artists, and fans. I am writing this to urge newer musicians to realize that they do not need to resort to ghost production to have a successful career as a producer or DJ, and that ghost production oftentimes can hurt more than it can help.During my career as a musician I’ve had some incredible opportunities to write and produce songs with the likes of Hardwell, Laidback Luke, and Vicetone. I was even fortunate enough to write and sing a hit with Dash Berlin in 2015. In each of these cases the artists had no issue crediting me for my contributions. I am lucky to have been able to work with brilliant musicians who have good integrity.But not every artist has been as lucky as I have, and many creators in the dance music space go quietly uncredited. I’ve become close friends with a variety of EDM producers and writers, some of whom are or use ghost producers. I’ve met artists who can’t even operate a DAW (digital audio workstation) to create original music even if they wanted to, yet they “release” a steady stream of records each year to throngs of hungry listeners. Some of my friends have had their creative work played on Top 40 radio around the world without even being named in the title or credits of the records they’ve created.
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