Usually, when you go in to make a record, you have 30 songs, and you record 30 of them, and 12 of them make it to the record.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
You know, when you're making a record, you come up with 15, 20 songs. Then they start to fall by the wayside as your interest wanes. It's kind of like a process of elimination to determine which songs wind up on the record.
You have all these song titles and song time, and you put it in a certain order, and you slap a cover on it. That's a record. That's how I've seen all my records.
You can get so many sounds out of one record. Every record can be used in some way.
I had 25 or 30 songs. Sequencing the record, I left that to the producer. I'm not into doing that stuff.
Either you write songs or you don't. And if you do write songs like I do, I think there's a natural desire to want to make records.
But I think it's hard for me to only put out one record a year. Because I get too antsy. But it's good I'm learning to do that, because each record counts. And you should make it count.
When you love what you do, you just really fall in love with it. Sometimes you record a lot more songs than the album will even hold. You record like 300 songs and only 12 songs go on the album. It takes time. But if you love what you do, it works out.
All my records have been written to be records, rather than writing a group of songs and seeing if they fit together.
I don't know how many records I'm selling.
I want to make 20, 30, 50 studio records.
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