It’s one thing to create a “hit song”. It’s another to get people to listen to it :/
@blubbblubbblubbishАй бұрын
It only becomes a hit song if people listen to it, before that it's just a song.
@officialWWMАй бұрын
@ that’s entirely my point.
@Music-By-MattieАй бұрын
Absolutely
@felixmarquesАй бұрын
@@blubbblubbblubbish This is why the major labels own Spotify and spend a fortune pushing the songs on radio. It's the same with books. Most blockbuster movies will have the same amount of money that the movie took to make, just to advertise it. “Hit songs” aren't a style, it's just that labels demand certain “safe” products for financing and pushing.
@vincevangoat1Ай бұрын
if it really is a hit song, people gonna listen. It has to be more than just pretty good in production
@karlspear672911 күн бұрын
I've been a musician for 57 years and what was true back when I started is still true; you can have the "best" track out there, but if no one listens, it goes nowhere.
@theend94947 күн бұрын
I am in a number of Facebook groups , I have not heard anyone write a song that even come close delusion is a big factor, knowing what is bad and good is an important starting point
@just2comment2Күн бұрын
a lot of hit songs are not good songs these days anyway, i find better music that doesn't chart.
@weekipi5813Ай бұрын
I think understanding the market is what makes hit songs. Because you understand your people, and what they want.
@shadowselfCA28 күн бұрын
You have to write music that non-musicians can understand. They will eat up the simple formulaic stuff. Forget the ribeye steak, the masses want McDonalds.
@myriaddsystems15 күн бұрын
I think you're closer to the answer there
@theend94947 күн бұрын
yep, correct, my mate wrote a number 1 hit in 1970, he still thinks he has got it, but has no idea, because he does not know how to write to the market
@BuntyDave5 күн бұрын
Only slightly is it understanding the market. It's more about creating the market. Most of these hits are probably signed to the same company. It's not ”Oh, you like this?”... it's ”You’re going to like this!"
@iamhunterreeceАй бұрын
Great video! Love taking the science-first approach strictly and rigidly. Now for anyone watching, the trick is to do it again, and again, and again. Creativity is like a muscle, and it helps to stretch it everyday. This can be as simple as a line, one melody, or even random ideas, but "show up to work" everyday and it will help. Using these ideas and guidelines are key, and then one day they will become ingrained naturally so that you don't have to think about it. This is when your natural style can begin to blend with the "formula" and create real gems. When the style and the science naturally happen, you can make hit songs that are hits because they are authentic, honest pieces of art that represent who you are as an artist. Wow, didn't mean to go on this long. Keep rocking!
@Music-By-MattieАй бұрын
Very well said! Keep on making music and good things will happen!
@CyrusAugustus28 күн бұрын
Exactly... show up every day, wherever you do your work, show up, do the work, even if it's shit, even if it's only 20 mins a day minimum, go through the motions, develop your process, then trust the process. Once you've started to set up the right conditions, and have the skill set to actually handle and record/write/capture/etc. the magic when it comes, efficiently enough, before it vanishes back into the ether.... the inspiration will start to come for you more and more, and you'll be able to capture it more and more, until one day you'll be able to walk into the studio any time and just go off any random idea, melody, progression, lyric, etc. and put it through the process until it blossoms into something truly special, that is uniquely you, that nobody else in the world ever couldv'e made. It's a long journey, but it does get alot better, funner, more fulfilling, and the music eventually does start to become very special. Also the GENERATING of the ideas, other than the inspiration we can't really explain where it comes from.... use brainstorming, song maps, writing things out, teamwork, jam sessions, songwriting sessions, whatever you gotta do to initiate things so the inspiration and magic can come. Learning alone will NEVER cause this to happen, only DOING, like it's your job, purpose, and destiny... for years on end. 💯
@CyrusAugustus28 күн бұрын
The learning and practice is important too, don't get me wrong, but it only FACILITATES the special magical thing so it can come through you and into your creation. It's all very important, inspiration won't even come if you can't handle/interpret/capture it yet, and if it does it'll disappear just as quick as it came. Plus if ur also the artist recording it you gotta have some legit skills in order to perform it well enough to do it justice. So I'm not tryna downplay the learning part, and DEF not downplaying the practice/rehearsal/etc. part either... but I would lean heavily towards hands-on learning and practice, rather than passive learning and watching others. Just to clarify 😅
@moonl131428 күн бұрын
As always the best music comes from the heart and is made for the artist, and you always gotta keep making songs true to yourself to get good and perfect your unique style. Treat yourself right, and of course take inspiration. I've found I made my best music when listening to a song once then loosely basing it on my memory of that song, which ensures that my style is retained while also helping me to pick up new skills and really make the music I want to make (I love skrillex :D)
@kebman25 күн бұрын
The statistics of getting the hit song right, is about the same as getting stock prices right. Let that sink in.
@elijah246018 күн бұрын
Elaborate 🙏
@vescopetcov17 күн бұрын
@@elijah2460 It's pure luck...
@jerrylev5912 күн бұрын
@@elijah2460 There are a lot of judgement calls in designing a good predictive statistical model. You have to decide which parameters to include and how to weight them. If you understand the environment you're in and know what you're doing well enough, you should be able to make it work pretty closely. It's possible, IMHO.
@edwardmacnab3545 күн бұрын
some hit songs sound kinda meh before the sound engineers get ahold of it .
@5thdigitАй бұрын
To be honest, you left out the most important thing, the artistic skill, this is definitely a hit, and needs a very experienced singer.
@jamalcole198519 күн бұрын
Nice... Let me know when you make a video covering all of what he addressed and missed 😅
@theend94947 күн бұрын
its harder to write a pop song
@lambretatuga5 күн бұрын
Thanks for sharing this amazing study.Very hands on to get that magic cocktail.
@Pulse2AM29 күн бұрын
Thanks for the video and all the work to put it together! There is a loose rule in advertising you need to get the product, thing etc. into someones ears or eyes 6 times before they decide to engage further like buy something. Same goes with music, which traditional radio was good at with a song playlist on rotation throughout the day. So marketing and curators make hits by feeding you the same thing over and over. All those studies are really mapping trends of what hit songs are made of, it's the diet you're fed but also there is musicality too. Case in point a hit from the 70's may not be a hit today given equal exposure and marketing etc.
@mrfabiodevinАй бұрын
youtubers trying to understand science. Gotta admit it didn't disappoint , good job!
@Mossbotmusic24 күн бұрын
i am very disappointed lol this is extremely unscientific
@mrfabiodevin23 күн бұрын
@@Mossbotmusic that's why I wasn't disappointed, I knew what to expect: a complete trainwreck and a good laugh
@Eddierath26 күн бұрын
Where is the sound cloud link, you cleared 1000 likes 🎈 🥳 🎉
@seanpage10Ай бұрын
I havent looked at those papers in depth but I'd be skeptical that their algorithms would be that accurate to a brand new song. My thoughts are that their models would likely be making their predictions largely from the 'popularity' feature for each case, which would make the model very accurate to historic data and less-so for unreleased songs. Also depends what they are sampling. If it's taking a random sample of say 1,000,000 songs from Spotify, there wont be many (if any) Top 100 songs in there, and the most distinguishable feature between a hit and a regular song from an independent artist will be the popularity score. As you said there are so many external factors that turn songs into hits, and a lot of the time those are what actually make hits rather than the raw quality of the song
@Music-By-MattieАй бұрын
Popularity has got to be a huge factor in ranking for these algorithms. Since it's based off of the amount of plays and how recent they are, it's basically predicting hit songs off the songs that get the most plays. Well duh. That's what it seems like to me after reading the study a bit further in depth. But still, 88% still seems high to me even with that.
@ThreadBomb11 күн бұрын
75% accuracy in predicting hits is very impressive when you consider just how many thousands (millions?) of songs have been released.
@theend94947 күн бұрын
@@ThreadBomb what a load of crap,
@MinusMedleyАй бұрын
The 80% of chart topping hits is the reason why I don't listen to commercial radio, it all sounds the same. Radio plays will always take the safe bet. So yeah the idea of genre is dead, bizarre sound design and simple repetition seems to be dominating the market. I'm perfectly fine with my nine subscribers - refuse to dumb it down, maybe one day I'll make something everyone likes.
@balintszikora884626 күн бұрын
I feel you man! I think its always the same question: - Is your goal to make a popular hit? Cuz then you need to follow rules and copy. - Is your goal to express yourself without any limits? Then you have much less chance to get popular. Its always about Popularity VS Authenticity
@alexjaquet9458 күн бұрын
there is also the whole idea of marketing where even if its not the best song a fun dance or it being under a lable (who would work to have it been seen) could heavily sway the popularity of it
@Y0URD4DDIE21 күн бұрын
The section on lyrics reminded me of the fact that most of those hard and heavy 80s rock songs..... were love songs.
@kebman25 күн бұрын
Statistics: If Hip Hop is popular in the USA, and you want to break through, you either have to be _the best_ at Hip Hop, which is very hard, cuz that's where most of the contestants are, or you have to find a niche that is easier to dominate.
@ThreadBomb11 күн бұрын
Or you need a lot of money for publicity.
@kebman11 күн бұрын
@@ThreadBomb Hot take: You don't really need a lot of money for publicity. You can do _a lot_ just with the free tier of Instagram and Facebook.
@dimosscratch2797Ай бұрын
i think the max martin rules are way more helpful in predicting or crafting a hit. many of them are directly tied to limitations of the auditory system or evolutionary arguments. an example of the first: never introduce two new ideas at the same time. humans typically can only focus on one thing at a time, e.g. it is very difficult to talk to two people simultaneously about different subjects. an example for the second is hierarchy in music: not all elements in a piece of music are equally important. once a voice appears in a piece, most people will focus on the voice. we are wired evolutionary to listen to other people, that is why it is so hard to not listen in to the discussion on the neighboring table in the restaurant.
@jerrylev5912 күн бұрын
Women can't ignore a baby crying. That's why male falsetto always melts them.
@MrJohndl19 күн бұрын
All the best music has been written. 60s, 70s, 80s and 90s. Here endeth the lesson.
@jamalcole198519 күн бұрын
Former teacher , current electrician part time engineer. Have to say, your editing skills and verbal presentations are A-1.
@ThreadBomb11 күн бұрын
You overlooked a couple of things: You need a couple of short, memorable musical hooks that get repeated a lot. Start big, not low-key. Hits often start with the chorus or main refrain.
@theend94947 күн бұрын
the big thing is 99% just dont know how to tell what is good and bad delusion its the killer, hence only a handful are successful
@NoName-dr8wt21 күн бұрын
Excellent song, especially from the experimentation position. Really good. I learned a long time ago that the best and most powerful songs have simple melodies (singability, which cements it to memory), and are written in 3/4 or 6/8 (the whimsical meter I call it). I'm compsing orchestral/symphonic concert band music, after 25 yrs of homeschooling our 8 kids.😂
@nicodemolalli56439 күн бұрын
aye yall should be hitting like as soon as you finish hearing how much work he put into the vid. i dont know him. but love the work already.
@abbey8k21 күн бұрын
you've got a great voice mate
@ericgriffin120Ай бұрын
You should have studied the producer that has made the most hot 100 hits in the last 20 years. Max Martin. There are definitive patterns that can hone in on all the things you mentioned. There are a couple of BIG things that Max does that were nowhere in your research.
@CyrusAugustus28 күн бұрын
Yeah.... work for a dozen giant record labels who put millions behind your songs/artists every time, that's the BIG one 😂 Nah, I'm only half serious, I'm sure he's extremely talented and I'll bet ur correct that there are some valuable insights to be gained, not that I think AIMING FOR A "HIT" is the way to go, but for general use and to become a better producer myself.... I'll research him, thanks 💯
@ericgriffin12028 күн бұрын
@@CyrusAugustus LOL, True, but wern' they all funded by Big Labels? Anyway the economist looked at Max Martin and some of the patterns here: kzbin.info/www/bejne/fGrTeo2Me6yUba8
@michaelciancetta639722 күн бұрын
This guy is oblivious about music in general😂
@DruidofLa10 күн бұрын
Thank you for your informative content. IJuno Roland can be used as a midi board with DAWs . I’m looking forward to learning more.
@shadowselfCAАй бұрын
The hit song sounds like something that Suno would make.
@mind_reloader670Ай бұрын
Its a shure i think
@shadowselfCA28 күн бұрын
@@mind_reloader670 Suno is an AI song generating service. Impressive, but formulaic and forgettable.
@anthonyaird15 күн бұрын
Great study. Thank you!
@theend94947 күн бұрын
has he written any hit songs
@EmpireState-ui1csКүн бұрын
= you either got it or you don't, no-one can teach you how to write a hit song, thats why there is only a handful of top writers
@aleatoriac7356Ай бұрын
Well done, the song works from what I heard of it.
@kingaustin63409 күн бұрын
Wow!!! These is the formular everyone needs.... That all it is
@battleframestudios8989Ай бұрын
This is what happens when you try to measure mostly subjective traits in music as if their objective stats. It doesn't work. For instance, the study tries to measure a songs emotion by the lyrical content, the use of major or minor chords, and the instruments used. None of those things actually matter that much in describing how happy or sad a song is. If there's any objective marker for a song's emotion it would be the rhythm and how "upbeat" it is. Even that isn't universal. There are tons of happy songs with depressing lyrics like Maroon 5's "Misery", and sad songs with happy lyrics like "Time in a Bottle" by Jim Croce (the lyrics' literal meanings are happy but when you know the origin of the song they're quite sad; not that the study would even know the difference) The mismatch of the tone and the words actually adds its own interest. Also there are tons of sad songs in major like Good Riddance by Green Day, and tons of happy songs in minor like the majority of Rock and Roll. You can actually make the argument that it happens more often THAT way around depending on what genres you listen to. Also no matter what instrument you play whether it be guitar, piano, ukulele, violin, or vocals/choir you can make a song of ANY emotion. This should be so obvious I don't even need to give examples. The only objective measurement in this study seems to be "popularity" which is perhaps the least helpful. "You wanna get on top of the charts? Get popular then." Why didn't I think of that?
@CyrusAugustus28 күн бұрын
Very good points!
@moonl131428 күн бұрын
Juxtaposition my beloved
@jakubdasАй бұрын
Thank you for the conclusion! I was afraid you would say: aaaaand kids, this is how you suppose to write hits. Imho It is definitely the true challenge to aim for the 12/100. And I believe these are actually the songs that will last. Like Stings or Stevie Wonders hits. The 88/100 seem to obsolete very quickly. Because these have barely something to offer except the hit parameters.
@nikolaihemal6637 күн бұрын
Great vid m8! I really enjoyed this content. When are you dropping that SoundCloud link? 👀
@Fred_FreeАй бұрын
Billboard's top charts are very much about the songwriter's career. It's all about networking, luck, and being in the right place at the right time. Writing songs for famous artists with a large following automatically leads to high chart positions, which in turn leads to writing songs for other big artists, and so on. There are no recipes for success, just lucky circumstances and coincidences. 😎
@MrHistorymade24 күн бұрын
well done Mattie! very interesting content :)
@-Maiki24 күн бұрын
First of all I really learned something from this video so I subscribed. Me being an audio engineer/music producer for a living thats kind of rare these days. Second the song was catchy, your also a good singer and clearly know how to produce... However why did you decide to add that annoying "what" vocal sample that hits on every beat? This is just my opinion but that ruined the whole song for me 😅 its way too loud for a vocal chop, sounds robotic and repeats way too often. It does suite the song, but I would turn it down by at least 35-50% volume and maybe EQ the mid/high freq even more. But overall great video and song! 🙏🏼
@jeffgarrison705624 күн бұрын
1st time viewer = New Sub!!! Great video... I have never heard the songs you referenced, well, at least that I know of, but I got a lot from the rest of the video. Thank you
@BuddyJones-g1l7 күн бұрын
Man this song is a bop!
@itchykisses25 күн бұрын
pretty much what like every song playing in the grocery store sounds like lol
@comedycrackhead26 күн бұрын
Great video utilizing data and studies to simplify the concepts behind hit songs, made it so simple to understand
@Eddierath26 күн бұрын
💯/💯... This song is actually a marketing GOLDMINE... Sonically it had my foot tapping and bobbing my head Subconsciously at times .. As an artist It had me already picturing visuals to box office films like spiderverse this song is a success.
@austincino808729 күн бұрын
Can you link the article?
@seanraye29 күн бұрын
Love this song bro, great content
@cca8069Ай бұрын
I loved this video. ❤Had to subscribe! Gearing up to write one of the 12 the algorithm never saw coming. (What an epic way to end a video btw)😊
@JohnnyJitsu11Ай бұрын
Hmmm it’s a vibe for sure
@Grizzleface15 күн бұрын
dude, that's a banger.
@Nectagon20 күн бұрын
watching you from Europe, so you are international dude
@Stevo-t8c12 сағат бұрын
A potential ‘hit’ is likely to sit unnoticed on streaming services lost amongst the mega millions of other songs. Doesn’t matter how great it is.
@Ccescui2 күн бұрын
I loved your song BUT I was watching your video at 1.5X and def sounds much better this faster than your normal speed! And I don't know your Soundcloud, what is it?!
@anthonybriscoe8901Ай бұрын
it was dope just take out the vocal loop with the drums
@antoniozimmerman776729 күн бұрын
Totally agree!! The vocal loop is annoying and boring. It’s too repetitive and it lacks originality. I would prefer a syncopated synth countermelody instead.
@matheoschulz4 күн бұрын
greetings from Berlin, wich Programm u using to write your lyrics?
@acoustically92019 күн бұрын
If people are so bad ar predicting "hits" ....then The Jam song Going Underground with its lyric "the public wants what the public gets" is truer than we thought. PS... it went in at #1 in the UK and was there for 3 weeks.
@sasa-sv8kdАй бұрын
It sounds like something that is forced on me while being in the supermarket and if I am gullable enough will create a earworm. - You cannot write a hit song for everyone, only for those easy to please, once you get their attention. Hit songs are written to complement the attention a medium creates. Combine Visual with Audio and you got a hit. Your sexy look won't make me listen, and your sexy voice won't make me watch, necessarily.
@JSaunOfficial26 күн бұрын
This was a banger!
@mtanaysarkar222 күн бұрын
How many hit songs have you made sir? Can you name them? I wanna add it to my playlist..
@oiFelic13 күн бұрын
it's already over the 1k goal of likes, where's the soundclound link? :)
@andremunoz124829 күн бұрын
Wow, nice work, thank you a lot.
@jerrylev5912 күн бұрын
One issue with your predictive model is that the average alone is not enough to get an idea of the shape of the real world distribution of any characteristic measurement. You need to include additional statistics, like standard deviation, at least. The average may not be at the optimal point. There may be significant clustering at disparate ranges that you're overlooking with just an average as your guide. There are fast dance and slow dance numbers, somewhere in between is not the only sweet spot. Decide which one you're going for and commit to it.
@Solrac9249 күн бұрын
What's the name of the song & where is the link?
@KingDreamzАй бұрын
Amazing content ✨
@UnityGainProductions22 күн бұрын
This sounds like AI made it. Well done, you;ve found the formula for the lowest common denominator.
@giginogigione5769Ай бұрын
Very nice video! Can you please link in the description the various paper cited in it? (Also, next time if you can, try to filter that ground noise under your voice, it's very annoying)
@Music-By-MattieАй бұрын
I'll link all of the papers I used in the description!
@Music-By-MattieАй бұрын
Also, not sure what you mean about the ground noise. I'm not hearing anything on my end...
@U-inverse369Ай бұрын
I dont like the thinking of pleasing the market, rather please the soul! It will find the right people. It may takes hundreds of years but thats how it is. Always ahead of 99% of civilization. You can still create mainstream music tho, if you got nothing to eat. Thats totally fine
@hygro962510 күн бұрын
listen back to your song sped up like 1.5
@NeerajSharma-xo9hd27 күн бұрын
The popular Hollywood musician Hans Zimmer said something in one of his interviews, I don't remember it word to word but it was something along the line of what makes music great is Human presence! As if you are in an unknown planet and you suddenly hear a sound, maybe of a voice, or a mouth organ or a string, you would immediately get drawn to it because of the way it is imperfectly produced. There are tons of AI music channels too and at first I couldn't tell the difference but I wasn't subconsciously liking it either (I unknowingly opened a song generated by AI and I groved to it but after a while it just stopped making me feel groovy, I think it wasn't because the music wasn't well produced but maybe because it wasn't produced with the pluck of a string struck by a finger of a agitated/peaceful/frustrated human being). The same is the case with these algorithm and the way they analyze music. We need human ears to truly analyze something produced by human. Because we make mistakes, and it shows/sounds in the music. which is attractive, again, because of human presence. One of the last things we wanna be is lonely and these human presence sounds will fill us up. AI can't replace that. Finger crossed.
@Collect-AI3 күн бұрын
How many hit songs do you have under your belt?
@hankfowler8194Ай бұрын
Pretty good song. A bit more rhyme with the lyrics maybe. Bit nice vibe.
@Music-By-MattieАй бұрын
Thanks for the feedback!
@alexchargerclipsАй бұрын
It has great arrangement and structure but it feels boring. Maybe lower the background in the beginning with a side chain compressor and also do a pitch rise for the drop in the beginning vocals
@Ugandan_skitz_official28 күн бұрын
15:34 sounds Classical ❤
@frankeee7726 күн бұрын
I guarantee I could have gotten faster results going to Suno, prompting very specifically and then throwing the clips into FADR to generate the midi of the beats, chords and the melody
@SK-uf9fi26 күн бұрын
Naah this is actually too good. I would actually listen to it again and again
@pianomanpaulthomasАй бұрын
And in our data driven society the tail also wags the dog. I tell some big wig execs that I have an algorhythm to predict hits. Instead of even listening to the songs, the big wig only backs songs picked by my algorhythm. They become hits only because songs that might have been better never even got a chance.
@aw375221 күн бұрын
I suppose if you want to make cookie-cutter fast food McMusic for the masses, this is great.
@f1rstp3rsonngaming96Ай бұрын
there is a hum in your audio ,great video by the way
@JTFullerАй бұрын
I'ownknow bruh, this to me takes the fun out of just making good jams.. I could be wrong but like you said, unpredictability.. I believe a hit is something jokas put money behind.. There have been thousands of hits outside of bilboard.. They push the repetition into jokas subconscious on the radio to make it popular.. I feel.. I use to work in radio and you're like, who the flip picked this, then a month later, yo stankin A$$ singing that crap.. And it's all subconscious... I say do you unless, you're on that route.. Man, outstanding video for sure, you put some thought into this bruh.. Great work.. Good mix too dude.. I see the structure or hear it.. outstanding again young man..
@Music-By-MattieАй бұрын
I think it takes the fun of out music making as well! Sure, follow the 'formula' if that's the kind of music you like making. But for me, make music for YOU not for the faceless masses and the record label execs. Appreciate the kind words and the comment
@boukourhsАй бұрын
Its actually good bro give it to an artist 👏
@ritchxmusicАй бұрын
This feels very general still kind of more like platitudes than specifics
@stevedeweysmith21 күн бұрын
The most popular song of all time was written in 3/4 time signature. Does that mean we should write more songs in 3/4 ?
@midiwhale3 сағат бұрын
"mindless drivel" is my 50% wrong vote. I don't think your stats did you any favours a all. FEEL IT dude!
@237vuАй бұрын
whats the mic u use called?
@feon567Ай бұрын
awesome song, how did you learn how to sing? and how long did it take to get good?
@fritsvanzanten357329 күн бұрын
I think you went to the supermarket and bought the right ingredients you learned from the recipe. But do you have those mysterious skills that make a good cook?
@EmperorKamikaze22 күн бұрын
And do you have a restaurant to attract customers?
@priya402327 күн бұрын
What app do u use to write lyrics?
@Infamous_B_C21 күн бұрын
Idk i enjoy my music always. Its simple but i also don’t take longer than 4 hours on any song.
@glennmaillard907625 күн бұрын
What’s the secret for producing a song that is still listened to twenty years later?
@zertypeshiii26 күн бұрын
tks u!!!
@kenneth176712 күн бұрын
The question should be asked: Can I make a hit song if I can't sing or play an instrument?
@trapbeats895310 күн бұрын
What about of the level of cheesiness ???
@anantgillmusicАй бұрын
The chorus was definitely Amazing
@MrMikomi5 күн бұрын
Interesting, and thanks for putting this together. Unfortunately, the acquisition of all the knowledge expressed in this video is very much not sufficient to enable the vast majority of people to make a hit. And ironically, not having the knowledge in this video will not stop and has not prevented a significant number of people having a hit.
@WedeWezah2 күн бұрын
True
@RanitvisualsАй бұрын
Hey Matti , Loved your videos! I’ve been enjoying your content , and i saw your hiring post on YT jobs . so, do you think there’s room for a collaborative effort in video editing?
@hernannieto14 күн бұрын
Hey that's actually a nice song
@Oh_ChiengАй бұрын
The song is almost a hit🙂
@Music-By-MattieАй бұрын
Appreciate it haha
@IG00114 күн бұрын
>>> Saludos Hii
@CyrusAugustus28 күн бұрын
This investigation is assuming that what makes a song a Billboard hit record is all within the music itself, but that leaves out all the other major factors in the equation. The big budget marketing, the branding, the gatekeeping and prevalent crooked practices within the industry, and the power of having an iconic famous star record the record; are all major factors in the equation, and arguably (combined) more important than the music itself when it comes to that particular measure of success. They force hits, pay for them to become hits, (often EXTREMELY annoying horrible songs too, or very mediocre... that literally just aren't that good, and most people find them annoying, yet they're playing everywhere you go 24/7... clearly the fans and their actions do NOT determine what becomes a hit and what doesn't); the majors and their business partners, as a group, literally control the entire game on every level... they have an unchecked manopoly to this day, in fact it's stronger than ever bc Spotify, Apple Music, Distrokid, Tunecore, etc. are all part of it. Now they even control the fates of almost all independents too, not just signed artists. The industry DEFINATELY has formulas and guidelines to follow while churning out so called "hits"... but those formulas only make the songs digestible on a mass scale, they don't actually MAKE the songs truly great and timeless classics. That's why even with all the best ingredients, all the best producers, artists, songwriters, composers, and engineers money can buy, from all the world.... they majors STILL can't crank out hits every time, let alone classics that will be loved by millions for generations to come. They shoot a thousand shots for every one that hits, to this day, that will never change. The real thing only comes from the true artistic journey, and it's basically like magic that only happens rarely and under the perfect storm of conditions, (imo)... the whole game is to catch lightning in a bottle, that expression sums it up perfectly. The only real argument here, that I see, is one of semantics; what exactly are we calling a HIT? If a HIT is a truly great song that DESERVES that status, and succeeds by it's own merit if given a fair opportunity, bc it's just THAT great of a song that the whole world loves it, and all that's required is for the population to hear it and catch on, and they spread it far and wide, (*what it SHOULD be, in an ideal world); then this whole investigation is alot more valid, and that should be every artist's goal ultimately. But if a HIT just means the established order has DEEMED it so, and shoved it down all our throats until the population became accustomed to it, and is based on making it onto Billboard and the published "success" stories put out by the same vested interests who profit from and push it onto us, and the fact that giant multinational mega-corporations are able to profit greatly from it.... well then this investigation is only half the picture, and these experiments are bunk, bc they don't account for MANY crucial factors that are actually at play in the results we're measuring. Also no real artist should aspire towards it, bc it's not a formula that gets you GREAT music, it's a formula you can use to make tons of money off good/mid/mediocre/bad/terrible music, IF you have the "machine" behind you, including millions of dollars budget, especially marketing budget. If we're judging things the 2nd way, then we'd have to call the king of all hit-makers in the restaurant industry McDonalds lmao But does that mean it's the BEST restaurant? No. Does it mean any of us actually prefer to eat that poison if we could choose ANY dish/restaurant? Absolutely not. Does it mean that all the young aspiring chefs and restaurant owners of the world should figure out the special "formula" for what makes McDonalds food what it is, then try to make their own versions of that, of pure garbage that's really at the very bottom when it comes to restaurants, and expect to somehow succeed based on it?? Nooooooope!!! lol The BIG MAC is literally the all time greatest HIT ever to grace the burger industry. Opioids, cocaine, and amphetamines are the biggest HITS out of the entire human history of positive OR negative drug use. TikTok is the biggest HIT right now when it comes to social media and websites. That doesn't mean those things are GOOD... it often seems to mean they're the worst things ever actually, (the more i think about it lol). 'Who Let The Dogs Out', 'Achy Breaky Heart', 'Thong Song', and 'I'm Too Sexy' were all considered to be HUGE hits, and all were on the precious Billboard Hot 100, all reached #1 in a bunch of countries, some even in the US..... and that's just the most memorable ones I can think of, (anyone who cares to dig deeper there's a long history of absolutely terrible songs being pushed into high positions on Billboard and achieving massive success, despite being almost universally hated by real people and experts/critics alike). Don't get me wrong, many songs that get on there ARE great... but in my estimation there are FAR FAR FAAAAAAR more truly great songs and albums out there that never graced that stupid list, than there are truly great songs that did. HITS.... if that's how we're defining them.. are not necessarily a good thing or something to aspire towards, in fact, they are an almost inherently BAD thing; in our society, bc of the way things are set up and how the world works in our time. That ain't what MUSIC is about folks... it's how they're ruining it. 💯💯💯
@ChrisEllett21 күн бұрын
I’m pretty sure Eminem used the titles for that set (titles) for lyrics
@adamdavid3731Ай бұрын
Nice vid
@abdelrahmanmohamed4990Ай бұрын
What is that app you write on plz?
@Music-By-MattieАй бұрын
The app is excalidraw
@slartibartfast126823 күн бұрын
Sorry, but using the garbage that spotify pukes out as the standard for your top songs is going to produce garbage. Garbage in, garbage out.
@dragin654320 күн бұрын
yaeh bro, try using not 2011 but 2001 studies and find some weird average bpm like 78.154367 cuz its the middle, right? ngl ur final result sounds MUCH better with 1.25 speed gl!