How to Make Things Happen, Regardless of What City You're In

Hi. It's 3 a.m. My editor Shawn is gonna kill me, but it's hard being a doctor sometimes. Shout out to Gaslamp Killer, Daddy Kev, Nocando, D Styles, and Nobody for having me out to Low End Theory tonight. It's such an honor to be able to be a part of something that special. To everyone who writes in and wants to know how and why to do things, research their story. They started from scratch, played what they believed in, stuck with it, and it worked. It's amazing. LA has been great. I went to the Innovative Leisure Boiler Room last night. Rhye was awesome. Nosaj Thing was awesome. NAMM was nuts. Someone needs to make a documentary about the parking lot—that's where the action is. The Ableton Push is gonna be crazy. It's incredible. I saw a bunch of other cool stuff too. Anyways, here are some questions. Don't forget to send in your questions. Let's keep this interesting. **Hi Doctor Nick,** Okay. I really think you should move to Houston. Maybe they will understand your music more. Furthermore, there's a trap house, but there's no such thing as trap house… unless it's trap playing in the house that's the trap. Seriously though, I think you need to worry less about genres and stuff and just get started. Look at Low End Theory. They were just like you, fed up with everything and thinking they had something new to share. They picked a weird club in a remote location downtown, assembled a crew of five, and got started. It took a minute for things to really get going, but they stuck with it. Now, the party is traveling around the world and people come to hear every record that every dude plays. It's incredible. Everyone successful I know has done the same thing, going from unbookable loser to the person everyone wants to be a down with. Get a good crew, be organized, play dope music, and stick with it. You can do it.
Hi Doctor Nick, I caught your afterparty set at the TNGHT show in Brooklyn a while back, much respect. I'm currently a freshman at Georgetown University with a huge passion for electronic music, yet I am trying to figure out how to get involved in the scene and really make a name for myself. I've been DJing and making beats for about four years now, and during this time I've been balancing being a musician with being a very diligent student who spends a lot of time studying. Still, I am increasingly finding that I really miss making music and kind of loathe the whole academic system. I'm originally from LA and I'm a product of the Low End Theory community there, and I am finding it increasingly hard to find a scene in Washington DC, where it seems like people don't really know what the "beat scene" or even any other electronic music besides dubstep is. So here are my questions: 1) What do you think the importance of being in a music community is? I've really struggled to find like-minded people like myself at home and at school and I have been seriously considering transferring back to LA or to NYC where there are already established electronic scenes where I already feel safe and know connections. 2) If I choose to stay, how do I get a scene going here? So much of what you talk about is the importance of collaboration and mutual development, and I'm just looking for a way to get myself in that position and be involved in a thriving artistic community where I feel at home and that's not on the Internet. 3) At school, here or elsewhere, I have been heavily considering studying some form of music (culture, business, musicology, etc.) and I was just wondering what your opinion is of the value of a college education regarding a job in the electronic scene. My goal right now is to be a person who could get behind the velvet rope at shows and stand on the stage while TNGHT is on stage very much like yourself, yet I just don't really know how to get there, whether it be through my music, a label I start, music journalism, or some other way. Many thanks for reading my long-winded question/comment and keep being an inspiration to kids like me. Gabe
this archive is a curated mirror — the canonical source is XLR8R. their original page may have updated photos, comments, or related links.