Thanks guys, I know the internet is cool and I'll try to still work the few connects I have but I just can't believe that I'm in a huge market and leaving from it. But a steady paycheck comes first but the grind will always continue. LA is where I probably should be but getting out there is easier said than done. Has anyone got any placements from the internet?
Max,
Let me break it down really cold for you as someone who's seen this done a couple of times:
1. I'm producing an album for a medium/somewhat major artist
2. My assistant is cruising the web and finds a hot beat that you made on your website.
3. They download the beat, rip it from YouTube, or just give me the link and everyone listens to it.
4. Me -- as the producer of the album -- really likes the beat and wants it on the album/single/whatever.
What do you think the next move is? Now be really honest with yourself, what did your gut say?
Do you really think I'm going to contact you and buy it -- or am I going to put one of my assistants to try and replicate the beat?
5a. The assistant replicates the beat properly, I'm happy and maybe he gets a cut of the royalty.
6a. You're left out in the cold -- now try and sue me, I bet you can't and I'd settle with you anyway (if you even made it that far.) Most of the time, I can prove that I "never heard your beat" and that it was "just a coincidence," and that's good enough for the law. You don't have enough money to fight me... you lose.
OR (and this is where you can be "one-in-a-million" lucky and HAS HAPPENED before -- and it's usually because of a SAMPLE, though because we're trying to replicate a sample, rather than the synth sounds everyone uses):
5b. The assistant tries to replicate the beat, but it doesn't sound right. Workarounds or additions to the beat don't work, it just doesn't sound as hot as the original.
6b. I hand it off to my friends and see if they can replicate the beat. Nope, their versions don't have the right "feeling" as the original.
7. Having no other way to get the beat and because I believe it is a hot song, I pick up the phone or email you and ask to buy the beat.
You finally get paid.
Usually, you never get paid if the beat is replicated, though.
That's the way the internet works...
Now I'm not knocking it, the internet does positive things for artists and it does help promote your music, but there's a ton of stealing going on and if it can be stolen it WILL be stolen, especially if you do not have the resources to file a good lawsuit.
Keep grinding and keep your hopes alive. My friend told me the band Everclear hit it big time when they were 38, so there's hope, but the music industry is cutthroat and fucked up.