Do you have the lung capacity and the natural bite required to make your voice be heard over a crowd of people if that’s required? How would you be able to signal hundreds of people to stop and pay attention to you if that was something that was desperately needed? Frankly, most of us would fail at this. Honestly, most of us have neither the required training nor the natural skill for anything like that.
Then again, isn’t pop music just another way of arresting the attention of hundreds, maybe even millions of people, and getting them to do what you want? Maybe this is why it’s so hard for record labels to find compelling rockstars. Perhaps this is why those who have the knack for grabbing your attention are the ones who become millionaires. Maybe they have some of the skills that WizardX utilises.

In a world where thousands of songs become public every day, would-be rockstars need something to get you to look their way and to listen closely. This is how WizardX designed “Monster Mind,” particularly the intro that also serves as the song’s hook. That distorted scream is the first thing you hear, followed by a riff that seems to arrive from the short-lived golden era of brostep.
And then? With the listener glued in, the songwriter/producer delivers pop-rap lines about being forced to retreat and seek shelter against the devastating power of its own imagination. But don’t worry. Don’t song reaches back and pulls out that memorable hook, always making sure you’re glued in. It takes all of that effort to get a modern audience to listen, but WizardX is ready to put in that kind of work.
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