Episode 93: How Hit Songs Actually Happen (Inside A&R with Pete Ganbarg)
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概要
Hits don’t happen by accident. They happen when the right singer meets the right song and a focused team executes without ego. That’s the throughline of my conversation with Pete Ganbarg—a two-time Grammy-winning A&R leader whose fingerprints are on era-defining records and publishing wins—spanning artist development, writer mentorship, and the power of aligned campaigns.
We start with the essentials: what makes an artist investable today. Pete is blunt about work ethic, output, and urgency in a short attention span world. From there, we bridge the recorded and publishing sides. He treats writers like artists, investing patience and guidance until they can “ride the bike” solo. That approach has generated heavyweight copyrights and resilient careers, supported by smart admin partnerships and precise registrations across ASCAP, BMI, and global sub-publishers.
As the landscape shifts—piracy, social feeds, streaming, and now AI—Pete’s stance is steady. A&R doesn’t change: great songs plus great voices. He sees AI as a tool, like sampling or synths, provided provenance is trackable and creators are paid. The public cares about what they feel, not how a track was made. To show what execution looks like, Pete breaks down the Daughtry debut: five people, six weeks, crystal roles, seven million albums. That’s what happens when a team plays its positions and the music lands seamlessly with listeners.
We also dig into Pete’s path from chart-obsessed fan to A&R chief, the advice he’d give his 18-year-old self, and the “invisible fingerprints” philosophy—do the work so well no one knows your name, only the artist’s. Finally, we explore Rock and Roll High School, the podcast he launched to teach music history to young teams that has grown into a living archive of first-person stories from the creators behind the songs we love. Context sharpens ears; literacy in the past fuels better signings and smarter strategies today.
If you care about building a durable music career—artist or writer—this is a masterclass in development, royalties, rights, teamwork, and taste. Subscribe, share with a creative friend, and leave a review telling us the biggest lesson you’re taking into your next release.
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