Adveser wrote:
cry of the banshee wrote:
traptunderice wrote:
Oh shit son wikipedia!?
Yeah, I'm too lazy to look further, but the point stands.
Production does not equal songwriting, two completely different aspects that just happen to be shared by some individuals, i.e the songwriter also produces the album, especially in metal, where funds / creative license, etc. are an issue.
You are really out of your league. Andy LaRoche is a producer for about a half dozen bands, including Morifade, Dreamland and I believe Axenstar. All of those bands are clearly being influenced by his direction in the songwriting based on their similarity of the bands and the differences between having him and not. This is one example we could make out of hundreds, so don't act like he is the only one. I don't understand why you claim he produces only his own bands, he doesn't.
So nearly every band in metal is an exception? Do you want a far more comprehensive list of every metal album I have and how people that wrote material did not get a credit vs. the ones where everyone that did write gets credit, which is the issue here, not that they were or were not producers. Producers don't get "extra credit" because they aren't band members. I don't see how you steered the fact that Cliff's basslines did not get him credit for the song into he wasn't the producer. Whether or not someone is a band member or a producer makes no bearing on whether or not they would receive credit. Go read some books about the making of albums and you will clearly see what happens in reality, and not what is printed in the liner notes and that is misconstrued into something that isn't true.
That is beside the point. Producers get a 2-3% songwriting royalty on top of their normal fee for doing the record. I wonder why that is.
That wikipedia article is shit, a producer is not the studio manager. go read a few books with some credibility, some interviews with actual producers and fuck, call up lord tim or someone that has produced dozens of records (other than his own) and ask him if they had an impact or influence in the songwriting.
The Producer and production has a massive impact on the final effort and they contribute heavily to the songwriting process, even if they don't write a single note. I still fail to see how this is even arguable.
I'll send an e-mail to Lemmy telling him that you think he should fuck off if he likes any pop music. I don't think he'd react well to that, but I don't imagine he sits around listening to old demos of himself either.
Adveser wrote:Quote:
Andy LaRoche is a producer for about a half dozen bands, including Morifade, Dreamland and I believe Axenstar.
Does he write their material?
If so, than he is a partial songwriter, if not, he is a producer.
Simple.
Adveser wrote:Quote:
I don't understand why you claim he produces only his own bands, he doesn't.
Err, where did I make that claim?
Right, I didn't... what was that about reading comprehension?
Adveser wrote:Quote:
So nearly every band in metal is an exception?
Did anyone say they were?
Adveser wrote:Quote:
Do you want a far more comprehensive list of every metal album I have
No.
Adveser wrote:Quote:
how people that wrote material did not get a credit vs. the ones where everyone that did write gets credit, which is the issue here, not that they were or were not producers.
No, it's not.
You stated
Quote:
Production IS songwriting...
I say, that is a false claim.
Adveser wrote:Quote:
Producers don't get "extra credit" because they aren't band members.
No, they don't get "credit" because they didn't WRITE THE SONG.
Why is this hard?
Adveser wrote:Quote:
I don't see how you steered the fact that Cliff's basslines did not get him credit for the song into he wasn't the producer.
I'll attempt a rebuttal to this strange non-sequitur...
The basslines are not the SONG... if the riff was written by Hammet, than all Burton really did was follow along.
If Burton composed the riffs, he wrote the song, and would certainly be credited as such.
Adveser wrote:Quote:
Whether or not someone is a band member or a producer makes no bearing on whether or not they would receive credit.
As a songwriter or a producer?
I guess that would depend on whether that person penned the lyrics, composed the music etc.
Obviously one doesn't
have to be a band member to pen a song, outsiders contribute their writing all the time, that still makes them a songwriter as opposed to a producer (unless of course the guest writer just so happens to be the producer) what exactly is your point?
Adveser wrote:Quote:
Producers get a 2-3% songwriting royalty on top of their normal fee for doing the record
2%-3% does't sound like production and songwriting are the same thing at all... this just proves my point; if production IS songwriting, why such a negligible cut?
Adveser wrote:Quote:
The Producer and production has a massive impact on the final effort
True.
Adveser wrote:Quote:
and they contribute heavily to the songwriting process
That's why they are called "producers" and not "songwriters".
They contribute to the "process", which could mean a lot of things, but what it doesn't mean is "they wrote the fucking song".
Adveser wrote:Quote:
even if they don't write a single note
see above.
Adveser wrote:Quote:
I'll send an e-mail to Lemmy telling him that you think he should fuck off if he likes any pop music.
Yeah, you do that; let me know how it works out for you.
Adveser wrote:Quote:
I don't imagine he sits around listening to old demos of himself either
I imagine he listens to a lot of stuff from the 50's and 60's, mainly good old fashioned Rock and Roll, which, incidentally isn't really slickly polished to a mirror like glow in terms of production.
Anyway, who really gives a damn?