Spektrem was the name I produced music under as my first career. It began in 2012 when my first song, In a Dream became a surprise hit in my college town. It ended in 2016 with the last song I made, Don't Look Down.
The most significant recording from this period is “Shine”, which found a home in the world of NoCopyrightSounds and has amassed over a hundred million plays as of today. Ten years later, it's amazing to me that Shine, and the other songs, still have a loyal base of support.
I don't make music anymore, but it shaped my understanding of the creative process. I still view every creative project as a song, just with different tools and instruments.
A year after I released what I thought was my final song, I wove together fragments of old songs I had never released, and turned them into an album.
Sugar was released during a phase where I was trying to spend less time perfecting my songs. This is where I started to learn the difference between wasting time on details that don't matter, and taking the time to get the important ones right. There's a difference, and a lot of people don't know what it is.
Corr is another example of a song I released before I’d gotten it right. It’s a really subtle thing, getting the kick drum to gel perfectly with the bassline, so that when you hear it, you just have to move your body.
So when I hear Corr, I hear unfulfilled potential. Because I was trying to cut back on production time, even if it cost on quality.
In a Dream was my first "hit" song. By hit, I mean it was a hit in my college town, where I would hear it blasting out of cars and playing at parties.
And it did well on the music blogs of the time. It rose to #1 one on a popular music-ranking website at the time called FindNewJams, which was like a Reddit for new music. It stayed in the top spot for almost a month. A team in Miami found it and wanted to become my managers, and I agreed.
For me, who had never released an electronic song before, it was a massive experience, and it gave me the confidence to keep making music.
I made music since the age of 12. My focus was always on songwriting. I only cared about instruments to the degree that I could write songs on them.
One of the first things I was really proud of was reaching my goal of writing and recording 100 songs before I left for college. It felt like a big accomplishment, and it laid the groundwork for my time as a music producer a few years later.