I'm a small artist but do sign my work. I've been enjoying Lemmy for some time now and want to push this community to interact more and grow! So I thought one way I could contribute is to do a little AMA about what it's like as a signed artist making house music :)
1: Learning experience was VERY slow. I still feel like I'm playing catch-up, but I can be proud of what I put out now. DAWs have a very steep learning curve, then it flattens out for a bit, then gets steep again as you start to realise just how little you know!
2: I have had no musical training whatsoever, so it took 6+ years of playing around and teaching myself through experimentation to get a track signed.
3: Most important thing, and something I still struggle with, is to focus on the music. It may sound silly, but when you're a producer, you're doing everything from start to finish. So it's easy to get caught up in the production, in the technicals, or even in trying to get a specific style down — sometimes you have to step away and listen after a week so you can go "oh this is actually musically interesting".
4: Most recent is taking advantage of macros and modulation to give sounds character and slight imperfections, such as a randomised LFO on a cutoff filter that changes the texture slightly throughout :)
This answer is a bit more specific to what program I started with (FL Studio) — but organisation! Colour coding, naming, etc.
Another one I'm still learning and struggling with is not to sit on songs. I have 20+ 90% done ideas that I should finish and get out. Sometimes waiting for that 'spark' to come back is detrimental. Trust your talent and finish it.
For me it was definitely a big deal when it first happened! I was working alongside artists I listened to for years. However, these aren't massive corporate labels, so I have the freedom to contract one song or EP to a label, and one to another, etc.
All of my stuff can be found under my name on basically all platforms :) Not sure if links in comments are allowed.
Nice! That’s the channel I used to listen to most on DI.FM before it went to premium or whatever the paid tier is now. I should just sign up for it anyway to support them.
They're great! I used to be an artist on that channel and relax and listen there to find new artists and sometimes share my own tunes. If you want to support the artists directly, following label channels such as Emergent Shores and Synth Collective can help!
How did you get signed? Did you reach out to various A&R, or did they reach out to you? I'm an indie music producer and I've never gotten noticed by anybody in the industry for distribution.
For me it was networking via Facebook and supporting the labels who released the music I enjoyed. It doesn't go unnoticed. But for larger labels, I think it's about submitting good work consistently, even if the first few are rejected.