Quote:
Originally posted by Florges
No but it sounds like something exactly like he'd produce
And this thread is for songs everyone thinks he produced and everyone just happens to think he produced it cause it's obvious
|
Lmao at how your argument has literally deteriorated to "cause it's obvious"

Honestly WFH is too messily produced to be a Dr Luke song, eg Dr Luke would never allow Camila's horrid "you're the boss at home" at the end of the second pre-chorus, or the weird production on the word "early" at the end of Ally's verse etc
Ammo literally did an interview about how writing WFH came about... no Dr Luke involved.
Quote:
DK: Now currently, you have another hit on the charts, “Work From Home” for Fifth Harmony. How did you co-write this song?
Ammo: Well, last summer I threw these summer (writing) camps. Basically, I wanted to do a pretty loose style of writing. I would invite 15 people over here every day and have three or four rooms going, and just kind of bounce back and forth between rooms. That’s like my favorite way to work, because no idea ever gets stale, because I get to bounce from room to room. I’d say “this should be like this, or this should be like that.” It’s like the most creative I’ve felt in years. So this was like the first day of one of those camps. It’s fun, because I actually got to write the song with a group of my friends, which was really cool, including my fiance Jude Demorest. She’s one of the writers on this song as well…she’s really good. So basically it was me, Jude, Dallas K, Explicit, and Brian Lee, and we’re sitting in this room and I’m like, “Let’s do something like this.” And I played the chords really quick on keyboard. Let’s do something really simple that’s a lot of fun. I didn’t want to ovethink it at all. The melodies came so quick. It’s almost like I can hear it before they existed. Then immediately, Jude and Explicit came up with the title. And I’m like “Yeah, this should be really simple, like ‘Work…Work…Work, something fun and easy.” Then I think we honestly wrote the song in about half a hour. Our main goal was to not to make it too complicated, and let it be fun—let it breathe and be simple, so it will get stuck in everybody’s heads. We we’re thinking the more repetitive it is, the more likely that people will remember it.
|