
An 18-year-old music producer who started out at the age of 13. At age 14, I began collaborating with minor artists. Obtaining a major contract was achieved at the age of 16. I've produced an album available on Spotify by myself. Over the years, I have developed my skills and music, and I am still eager to learn more.
I specialize in Pop/R&B/Hip Hop BUT I can get out of my comfort zone to try something new.
Music has always been incredibly important to my life; it's not just a profession, but an art to express my emotions and colors to the world.That is why I began making music and producing. I used to use LMMS as my DAW, but now I use FL Studio, Logic, and soon Studio One. To improve my music, I learn how to play the piano, drum, and the foundation of music theory. My goal in collaborating with you is to demonstrate that your music, our music, can be distinctive.
Even though, I'm young and not experienced like the others producer with more than 10 years of experiences, I can provide you great results that you might not expect.
If you'd like to chat send me a message!
I'll ASAP.
Contact me through the green button above and let's get to work.
Credits
Languages
- English
- French
Interview with Anderson Bissainthe
Q: Tell us about a project you worked on you are especially proud of and why. What was your role?
A: My album called '' Was Me", I was the producer of it. I had help from my friends too. The album is a reflection on my past self and how he thought about life, along with the emotions he had deep down. It's kinda like a letter to my old self to say that I'm getting better now, that I'm not the same anymore.
Q: If you were on a desert island and could take just 5 pieces of gear, what would they be?
A: My laptop and my headphones.
Q: How would you describe your style?
A: Unique. I don't stay in one genre. My style is pretty much a mix of a bunch of genres.
Q: Which artist would you like to work with and why?
A: I would to like to work JID, Avenoir, J. Cole or Stromae because I feel like JID will work with anything a kill it, J. Cole too, but J. Cole would problably give me advice wich i'll appreciate, Stromae for his creativity and Avenoir for his unique style.
Q: Can you share one music production tip?
A: I can share three. First, if you're starting to produce/beat making, start with samples already made by other producers so you can focus on making your drums and mixing your arrangement. That's how I started. Second, try to learn music theory; some people say it's irrelevant for music production, but I can't agree with them. Music theory can help you so much with your workflow, on how you make your own melody, and it's giving more space for creativity too. Third and last, try to connect with people as much as possible; connection can help you build a bond with good musicians or artists, and if your goal is to have a major placement, it will help.
Q: What type of music do you usually work on?
A: Hip-hop music or cinematic.
Q: What's your strongest skill?
A: My strongest skill... is my creativity. I'm the type of guy who will mix a bunch of genres together in my production to make a beat. People call me crazy for this, but it's just my style. I can mix trap, synthwave, cinematic, and brazilian funk together, and it will sound good or jersey club, sad sample and blues. I don't like sticky to trend too much.
Q: Tell us about your studio setup.
A: I don't really consider this a studio setup, but it's my setup. I have my laptop connected to a PC with HDMI cable, I installed some vintage monitors and I have some horrible little speakers, but I only use them for mixing. So if it sounds good with those speakers, the mix is good. Also, I have my headphones to mix too. I mix with my headphones and my shitty speakers.
Q: What other musicians or music production professionals inspire you?
A: I don't know if people know them, but I like Avenoir and Elmiene; their music is very unique. ProducerX, another producer, inspires me a bit. The quality of his music and his type of beats are incredible. Of course, TM88 too, when I watched his descontruction of the beat ''XO TOUR Llif3'', he gave some pretty useful tips. Stromae play a part too.
Q: Describe the most common type of work you do for your clients.
A: Somehow, it's R&B music. Although most of my music can be considered Cinematic, Hip-hop, or Trap music, I face more clients with RnB/Soul requests for their projects. It's funny to me.

I was the producer/ beatmaker in this production
- Mastering EngineerAverage price - $70 per song
- Mixing EngineerAverage price - $250 per song
- ProducerAverage price - $150 per song
- RemixingContact for pricing
- Beat MakerAverage price - $150 per song
4 revisions, 1 if not 2 weeks of production full start-to-finish
40$ for Stems and negotiation of the price.
- Fl studio