Hello!
What I mean is that how do they end up in the hands of internet users when they are never released by the artist itself?
Could it be the producer of the instrumental releasing them or an engineer who worked on the song?
Thanks.
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Hello!
What I mean is that how do they end up in the hands of internet users when they are never released by the artist itself?
Could it be the producer of the instrumental releasing them or an engineer who worked on the song?
Thanks.
from producer and engineer, yes. it also come from the DJ of the artist, the manager, label, etc
Instrumentals are often produced alongside the master track for a variety of reasons... for example, the artist needs them for live performances to sing over.
A lot of the time they are also produced for use in adverts etc.
How they end up in our hands is a bit of a mystery to me though.
haha same here
Yet another quality post from DJRemixer101 there!
I was wondering the same thing
Every session recorded by an artist contains an Instrumental, TV Track and Acapella print. At least that has been the normal for the past 16 years or so.
I am almost sure all labels house the Instrumentals, someone here knows how to get Instrumentals from UMG database. But I believe they only rip in 128kbps.
Record Pools, Remix Artists, DJs, are the usual.
man i just want the entire oops i did it again album without vocals... where would those session mix downs without vocals be? (since it was claimed that most sessions of the 21st century was mixed down to instrumental)
i already have four songs from the album without vocals (from maxi singles) but i've never known anyone to claim that they knew the whereabouts of the other nine.
Guitar Hero, Rock Band...
"Where do instrumentals come from?"
Well you see son, when a daddy instrumental and a mommy instrumental love each other very much, they want to express that love, and yada yada yada nine months later....
@Sir Taurean
It is interesting, moreover, what will happen if that person dies?
itaih9
Well, as we've seen lately from Michael Jackson and far more from Queen, those are slowly leaked out as the agent has a lower paying job without releasing new singles. So they have to make either a big album of the discography of that artist, or start selling stems/instrumentals/mixdowns.
Sometimes they're also released because of that person dying. Remix contests can spring up from that I'm sure.
Sometimes it's the producers of the songs that leaks their material or it's either published by claimants on compagnies sites like UMG publishings.