What you hear in your head can be a reality. Let me help you get there. Your art deserves high-quality sound and a detail-oriented production! Mixing credits with Universal Records Production credits at Amuse. I specialize in Hip Hop and RnB but have also been contracted to produce and mix edm, pop, and metal!
Hi my name is Joe! I have been doing music since I was 6 years old and pursuing it as a profession for the last 5 years. I am an artist, producer, songwriter, and engineer. I have just finished a year at technical school for an all-around producer course and am moving into my second year. I have managed to secure some jobs working with well-known artists and record labels such as Universal Records and Amuse and am currently the owner-operator of my own business called Kumo Is Cloud Productions offering producer, engineer, and songwriting services.
I love Hip Hop and RnB but have worked with pop, metal, and EDM artists and can do just about any genre. I work HARD on the projects I am given and am grateful for any opportunity I come across. Whether you are Drake or someone who just finished recording their first track in their basement I will treat you with respect and do my best to offer as much help as I can including attempting to teach you and improve your skillset along the way.
I am a total audio nerd and love talking about the physics of sound, gear, plugins, niche genres, and anything that has to do with the world of audio and music so feel free to reach out with questions or strike up a friendly conversation! Thanks for any consideration and I look forward to working with you!
Send me a note through the contact button above.
Languages
- English
- Swedish
Interview with Kumo Is Cloud Productions
Q: Can you share one music production tip?
A: There are no rules.
Q: What type of music do you usually work on?
A: Lately a lot of pop. My own music is usually hip hop or RnB.
Q: What's your strongest skill?
A: Writing lyrics, mixing, and producing in that order.
Q: What do you bring to a song?
A: I think I have a really good handle on what sounds good lyrically. I think a lot of people miss the sound of words. Some words just sound better together and a lot of people miss the opportunity for pairing them well and focus too much on the meaning. I also think I have a good ear for emotion in music.
Q: What's your typical work process?
A: I usually start with samples or a melody and then build around it. I try and keep it pretty basic if I am going to add lyrics and then let the topline drive the rest of the production. If I am mixing I go in this order, gain staging, routing to busses, subtractive eq, volume balancing, mix bus, other busses, individual tracks.
Q: Tell us about your studio setup.
A: Two Adam A7x's running out of a duet Apogee from a 2021 Macbook Pro. Rode K2 Condenser Mic, Native Instruments MK3, Komplete Kontrol A49, Reloop RP2000MK2 Turntable.
Q: What other musicians or music production professionals inspire you?
A: Right now I really just watch a lot of mix with the masters and youtube. I don't have anyone too specific that I like but I just appreciate good info. My two favorite books on the subject are "Zen and the Art of Mixing" by Mixerman and "74 Creative Strategies for Electronic Music Production" by Dennis DeSantis
Q: Describe the most common type of work you do for your clients.
A: At the moment I am doing mostly full mixdowns and masters of pre-recorded or produced songs. I have been doing some recording engineering on these projects. I have also been continually ghost-producing for a record label and doing custom beats for some other clients.
Q: Can you share one music production tip?
A: There are no rules.
Q: What type of music do you usually work on?
A: Lately a lot of pop. My own music is usually hip hop or RnB.
Q: What's your strongest skill?
A: Writing lyrics, mixing, and producing in that order.
Q: What do you bring to a song?
A: I think I have a really good handle on what sounds good lyrically. I think a lot of people miss the sound of words. Some words just sound better together and a lot of people miss the opportunity for pairing them well and focus too much on the meaning. I also think I have a good ear for emotion in music.
Q: What's your typical work process?
A: I usually start with samples or a melody and then build around it. I try and keep it pretty basic if I am going to add lyrics and then let the topline drive the rest of the production. If I am mixing I go in this order, gain staging, routing to busses, subtractive eq, volume balancing, mix bus, other busses, individual tracks.
Q: Tell us about your studio setup.
A: Two Adam A7x's running out of a duet Apogee from a 2021 Macbook Pro. Rode K2 Condenser Mic, Native Instruments MK3, Komplete Kontrol A49, Reloop RP2000MK2 Turntable.
Q: What other musicians or music production professionals inspire you?
A: Right now I really just watch a lot of mix with the masters and youtube. I don't have anyone too specific that I like but I just appreciate good info. My two favorite books on the subject are "Zen and the Art of Mixing" by Mixerman and "74 Creative Strategies for Electronic Music Production" by Dennis DeSantis
Q: Describe the most common type of work you do for your clients.
A: At the moment I am doing mostly full mixdowns and masters of pre-recorded or produced songs. I have been doing some recording engineering on these projects. I have also been continually ghost-producing for a record label and doing custom beats for some other clients.
Q: Can you share one music production tip?
A: There are no rules.
Q: What type of music do you usually work on?
A: Lately a lot of pop. My own music is usually hip hop or RnB.
Q: What's your strongest skill?
A: Writing lyrics, mixing, and producing in that order.
Q: What do you bring to a song?
A: I think I have a really good handle on what sounds good lyrically. I think a lot of people miss the sound of words. Some words just sound better together and a lot of people miss the opportunity for pairing them well and focus too much on the meaning. I also think I have a good ear for emotion in music.
Q: What's your typical work process?
A: I usually start with samples or a melody and then build around it. I try and keep it pretty basic if I am going to add lyrics and then let the topline drive the rest of the production. If I am mixing I go in this order, gain staging, routing to busses, subtractive eq, volume balancing, mix bus, other busses, individual tracks.
Q: Tell us about your studio setup.
A: Two Adam A7x's running out of a duet Apogee from a 2021 Macbook Pro. Rode K2 Condenser Mic, Native Instruments MK3, Komplete Kontrol A49, Reloop RP2000MK2 Turntable.
Q: What other musicians or music production professionals inspire you?
A: Right now I really just watch a lot of mix with the masters and youtube. I don't have anyone too specific that I like but I just appreciate good info. My two favorite books on the subject are "Zen and the Art of Mixing" by Mixerman and "74 Creative Strategies for Electronic Music Production" by Dennis DeSantis
Q: Describe the most common type of work you do for your clients.
A: At the moment I am doing mostly full mixdowns and masters of pre-recorded or produced songs. I have been doing some recording engineering on these projects. I have also been continually ghost-producing for a record label and doing custom beats for some other clients.
I was the Everything in this production
- Mixing EngineerAverage price - $100 per song
- ProducerAverage price - $100 per song
- RapperAverage price - $100 per song
- Ghost ProducerAverage price - $100 per song
- Mastering EngineerAverage price - $70 per song
- Podcast Editing & MasteringAverage price - $100 per podcast
- Songwriter - LyricAverage price - $70 per song
-5 revisions for every project
-1 week/song turn around time
- ADAM A7X
- MacBook Pro 2021
First track discount of 20% off, 10% Bundle discount when purchasing 5 or more items