{"id":10011,"date":"2022-04-11T20:49:08","date_gmt":"2022-04-11T20:49:08","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/nftandcrypto-news.com\/nft\/prominent-music-producer-leaves-major-label-to-create-nfts\/"},"modified":"2022-04-11T20:49:10","modified_gmt":"2022-04-11T20:49:10","slug":"prominent-music-producer-leaves-major-label-to-create-nfts","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/nftandcrypto-news.com\/nft\/prominent-music-producer-leaves-major-label-to-create-nfts\/","title":{"rendered":"Prominent Music Producer Leaves Major Label to Create NFTs"},"content":{"rendered":"
In a lot of ways, Brooklyn-based electronic music producer MELVV represents the massive changes the music industry at large has faced in the past decade.<\/p>\n
April 7th saw the dual-release of his new single When I\u2019m With You <\/em>\u2013 as a music NFT on the Sound.xyz marketplace, and of course, as a song available for streaming on your platform of choice. Here\u2019s how his decision may predict future strategies of the independent artists of tomorrow.<\/p>\n Like a lot of other people who had their formative years in the 2010s, MELVV, born Jeff Melvin, found himself drawn to two growing subgenres of music: lo-fi and EDM. He would sit in his parents\u2019 basement mixing samples from Tennyson and Ryan Hemsworth into \u201cwhat [he] thought [was a] hip-hop beat.\u201d Those early experimentations led to the creation and release of his most popular track Vibe<\/em>; a 2-minute instrumental currently sitting at nearly 27 million plays on streaming juggernaut Spotify.<\/p>\n The thing is, millions of those plays didn\u2019t even come from an industry-backed campaign. Online, chillout music channels like MrSuicideSheep and Majestic Casual were instrumental in giving Melvin his first big push into the limelight. If you weren\u2019t around then, these channels were huge. Before Majestic Casual was shut down for copyright infringement in 2015, the channel boasted a two million-strong subscriber count.<\/p>\n Thanks to the initial push Melvin\u2019s music received online, he was able to land a recording contract with the legendary Atlantic Records. This relationship would last until 2021, mirroring Ray Charles\u2019s exit from the very same company over half a century ago. Despite making completely different kinds of music, both artists saw an opportunity looming on the horizon that offered more creative and financial control.<\/p>\n Since leaving Atlantic, the 25-year-old producer has re-committed to making the music he wants to make and playing the shows he wants to play. Unfortunately, he picked a particularly difficult time to make the transition back to the indie world \u2013 i.e. a global pandemic. <\/p>\n For thousands of musicians across the world, a big chunk of their income disappeared overnight as they suddenly found that they had no shows left to play. Melvin was no exception; he needed to find a new way to secure funding for his music. Lucky for him, the year he decided to go independent was the very same year NFTs became a major talking point for creatives.<\/p>\n Right after going independent, Melvin went straight to work getting his material minted as NFTs. He started out by releasing the Genesis Collection \u2013 a curated one-of-one collection of some of his most notable early work \u2013 on the music marketplace Catalog.<\/p>\nGrassroots growth online<\/strong><\/h2>\n
The realities of leaving Atlantic<\/strong> Records<\/h2>\n
Old and new pieces<\/strong><\/h2>\n