Imagine finding your voice and boosting your
music production skills at lightning speed…


While creating a style that gets rabid fans saying:


“This is my new favorite artist.

NO ONE is doing this stuff!!”



My name is Harry Lodes, and a few years back I created a remix for an album that became the #1 Soundtrack on iTunes. In the process, I discovered a secret to rapidly building kickass music production chops and a unique musical voice.


I regularly get comments praising both the production quality of my music and its unique style — and in a moment I’m going to share my secret with you, which you can use to level up your music production skills faster than you’d ever believe is possible.


For example, take this comment from my recent hiatus… (though it pains me to realize I may have actually caused someone this much anguish in my absence)

But before I get into that, I want to share with you where my journey really began as I want you to know — I’m just like you.


It wasn’t that long ago when I’d just graduated from music school — I’d done a crap job preparing for the real world and was essentially unemployed for longer than I’d like to admit. That is, until I was spilling my guts to an old professor, Jeff Williams, and off-handedly he asked…


“Would you like to do a couple of remixes for RWBY? That’s the most concrete thing I can offer you in terms of real work.”


(If that name is foreign to you, it’s an anime web series that became a HUGE hit in the US and even made its way to fame in Japan. People all over the world were totally hooked.)


Would I … LIKE to?


I could barely suppress

my internal screams of joy!


Of course, I said yes in a heartbeat. To be given such a huge opportunity at such a young age was more than I dared to hope for at that point.


Anyway, he sent over vocal and backing stems, and I got to work for my remix on the Volume 4 official soundtrack.


In all, I probably spent over 100 hours on those two remixes, attempting to make them perfect. This was my chance to show the world who Harry Lodes was and start my professional music career off with a bang!


I kept reworking the same sections until I was happy and felt I’d put my unique stamp on everything. Soon after, I received my first check for music services — I was officially paid to produce music.


An anxious 2 months went by as I waited for the soundtrack to drop. After a dry spell of more than a year, things were finally turning around.


That is ... until the soundtrack dropped.


I went online the moment I knew it had been released, expecting to see praise roll in for my hard-earned college education.


But I found THIS instead:


OUCH.


To make things WORSE, the album literally jumped all the way up to the #1 Soundtrack on iTunes…


Dragging my blistering mistake with it.


Tens of thousands, if not hundreds, heard my work — and because for some reason I chose not to use an artist name, they immediately began associating the cursed remix with my ACTUAL name.


I felt lower than dirt. Music was everything to me, and I’d given more than 10 years of my life to it at this point. I’d won multiple awards and received glowing reviews from my teachers for my composition and audio tech skills.


But this was EDM production, and I was arrogant enough not to see how unqualified I was to work at this level. I tried to cut to the front of the line as a producer, which became abundantly clear to the entire RWBY fanbase.


Thankfully, there was a silver lining:


Jeff wasn’t concerned — the album overall was a huge success. Two years later, he gave me the opportunity to contribute a remix to the Volume 6 soundtrack.


Needless to say, I hauled ass trying to level up my production chops … and I wanted to work with a clean slate, so I used an artist name (KAIRI) this time.


I needed to do something radically different if I wanted to avoid a repeat mistake, so...


I studied the living hell out of

as many producers’ music as I possibly could.


There was just one problem … I HATED most popular EDM. Snob alert, I know … but I’ve mellowed out since then, okay?


But that snobbery led me to perhaps the greatest accidental discovery I’ve ever made:


I’m now convinced the fastest way to become a better, more creative producer is to study the production techniques of multiple niche genres and incorporate them into your own music.


The more I thought about it, the more I realized:


If you only learn by copying what’s popular, you’ll inevitably become a ripoff artist.


But if you only learn by paving your own way with zero regard for what people enjoy…


NO ONE will want to listen.


I finally had what I needed to create the music I was happy with, AND make it accessible to the fans I was creating it for.


Of course, I was still nervous.


When the release date came, I went online, find the YouTube upload, and was greeted by this:

I could’ve cried, I was so relieved.


My commitment paid off, my method worked, and I’ve used it to improve by leaps and bounds since then.


But the more I invested in leveling up my skills further with production courses, the more I asked myself:


“Why is nobody teaching this stuff? Am I REALLY the only one doing things this way?”


Sure, I found some great resources on improving my foundational knowledge and finishing songs faster…


But NEVER a consistent method for generating and polishing creative songs at scale.


Sure, you can learn to produce a great dubstep track…


But what if you want to go beyond a genre? Do you want to spend months of trial and error trying to frankenstein your own sound together from different sources?


Or would you rather have a roadmap for how to find your unique voice and keep refining it, without sacrificing production quality?


If that’s you, fill in the form below to: