Sunday, 7 November 2021

Music Changed My Life. Here’s My Story

Music

 As a kid, I sang along to the radio. And I was very good. However, I didn’t really know what I was singing. Or, in fact, I didn’t care. I was just happy to be singing. But one day, my mom was in the kitchen and she heard me singing and she began singing along. We kept singing together. And she gave me a new appreciation for music.

She noticed that I liked what she was doing and asked me what I was doing. I told her that I was singing at parties. She said that she would try to get me to sing at some of my parties. She became a vocal coach for singers. It was a big deal at the time, because she was one of the few people who could teach me what was needed to sing well.


So my mom had been singing for years, and she had lots of singing talent herself. In fact, she could sing at a very high level and she was good at teaching. She was also a music lover, having owned her own record store for several years, and she had a lot of other things to learn to become a great singer. So when she heard my voice and saw that I sang well, she began tutoring me.


That is one of the most important things in life, but it is also one of the hardest things to do.


It took a lot of patience and time and a lot of practice. Once you know the basics, you can actually sing the most beautiful songs people have ever heard. It is hard to sing at a high enough level to be successful, but once you know the basics, you can really do it.


So when I was a kid, I had no idea how much I could sing. I used to sing a song and the crowd would go “oh, look at that kid!” but the next day, it was already been changed into something completely different. That was the hardest thing to learn.


The hardest thing to remember to do is to sing high notes.


Once people see you, they’ll start to repeat your name over and over again. So after a few times, you get a knack of it. You can sing pretty high notes. Once you learn the basics, the audience will start to repeat your name over and over again. So once you get the knack, you can sing pretty high notes.


In the video above, you can hear me sing at the beginning of the song, and then the notes start getting high and it gets harder and you get to the point where I get to the note where I’m about to lose it, so when I do that, I just stop.


My name is Scott. Over the last few months, I've been working on a project called The Name Machine. I've been recording myself singing your name over and over again (and then recording myself singing your name again). I wanted to help with the problem that I get asked a ton of times, should I call myself Scott, or should I use my stage name, Scott Stevens?


The truth is that it depends.



Music


Your name is the name of your first name, your middle name, and your last name. The name of your first name, the name of your middle name, and the name of your last name is the one that you give yourself when you sign on to a website. It is one of the most recognizable pieces of information on a website.


Scott Stevens was the name I would introduce myself with when I first got into the music business. It was the name I signed under on every website and was the name that I used to get on the phone. I didn’t start using it as my stage name until I was ready to start making music for a living. I was making a living as a songwriter for years before I started producing my own music.


I started out making demos for a friend of mine in college. The demos were mostly done in the computer so I was able to record them without spending a whole lot of money. I started producing my own music in the late nineties. I have a lot of memories from that time that are linked to music. I made a lot of good music that I think made me feel good about myself, but I always kept the music I made around for friends and family to hear.


While I was making music I didn't see myself as being an artist, but I had a lot of fun making music and sharing it with friends and family. I also had a lot of fun learning about the business of music. If I'd started out going to school and getting a music degree, I would've spent six years of my life and thousands of dollars, and I wouldn't have gotten to do what I'm doing now.

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