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Reproduced from Sound On Sound August 1994
PRODUCTION LINES
MIKE STOCK
Mike Stock, once one third of production giants Stock, Aitken and Waterman
ponders on the future of British Pop...
People who control the music business have never taken dance music
seriously. But what we are now seeing is a change in the way this music
is created and exploited; record companies have opened their cheque
books and departments dedicated to exploiting this area of music.
However, they do not create music anymore, nor do they look for new
artists to develop - they merely license the latest hot tracks from the
continent, assault the dance charts and hope for a pop cross-over. It
doesn't surprise me that records like 'Doop' by Doop were so successful,
but will they ever have another hit? It would seem that this doesn't
really matter. The record company is already purchasing its next release
from somewhere else, and the producer/artist has already changed his
name and act and is busy trawling the dance floor for inspiration to
produce his next 'one-off'.
This is not where I come from - I'm involved in dance music to develop new
long-term acts, because I think it is the only area of popular music
that is pushing out of the boundaries of what is possible. Today's dance
music is much more technically complex than it has ever been. It has become
incredibly creative and inventive, as a result of experimentation with new
sounds and new technology. Of course, record companies may only see it as a
way of making money, but I see it as a much broader venture than that - and
one that has continued to develop over the last ten years.
If it were left to A&R departments we would never find anything new.
I'm not knocking the musical and lyrical skills of people like Phil
Collins and Sting, but the type of music they are making could have been
made at any point in the last 30 years. None of them are doing anything
revolutionary or original, and the majority of today's record buyers don't
find them exciting any more; they know what to expect from them. Of course
dance music is itself not new, but at least the things that people are
producing now within the dance sphere are new and exciting.
I am setting up a studio for dance-based music because I take it very
seriously. I believe is isn't possible to make truly great records in
a bedroom, although it is possible to do much of the development and
experimentation in that kind of environment. If you want that record to
reach as many people as possible, and cross over into the mainstream pop
charts, you do need a properly-equipped recording studio. For example,
Matt Aitken and I recently co-produced a remake of Donna Summer and Barbra
Streisand hit 'No More Tears (Enough Is Enough)' with Kym Mazelle
and Jocelyn Brown. That record has crossed over from the clubs to the
pop charts. No obviously, we needed a fully-equipped professional studio
for that, because we used real players and real singers, with not a sample
in sight.
As a producer, I don't sample other people's work - I prefer to be more
original, and create new drum sounds and bass lines using the skills of
an engineer. When other people use sampled drum loops and bass lines, they
are using the work of other musicians who have had to go into a studio and
record them at some point. I think the original creators should be
credited for their work. If we are to continue creating music that is new
and exciting, we should not be stealing something from someone else, to the
point where we ourselves lose the skill and talent needed to actually create
original music.
Contemporary dance music is at the cutting edge of modern music. Dance
music is the only area in which, to me, things are constantly changing and
challenging. Moreover, I disagree with the idea popular among the major
record labels, that dance artists are incapable of combining dance floor
hits with long-term careers and healthy album sales. It's just that up
to now the major record labels have failed to achieve this. It is largely
left up to the independents to carry the flag for dance pop, and I am quite
happy to be in there marching with them.

Producer and songwriter Mike Stock achieved fame, fortune, and a place in
the record books as one of the hugely successful Stock, Aitken and Waterman
writing and production team. To date he has worked on over 100 Top 40
records, making him the most successful record producer of all time. Stock
is now going it alone, and is in the process of building his own
state-of-the-art recording studio in London. He is also running a number
of record labels from the studio complex including Love This Records and his
Ding-Dong label, which recently signed a non-exclusive label deal with
Arista/Bell.
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