University of Minnesota senior David Smith was surprised to see his work featured at the Billboard Music Awards in May as part of Latto's top-rated performance.
The 21-year-old Woodbury resident created the 20-second ending for Latto's live performance of "Big Energy" on the awards show.
"It's just like, 'Wow, this was literally just files from my computer, and now they're up on a stage in front of thousands of people,'" Smith said last month. "It's crazy to me, and I don't think it's a feeling that will ever get old.
"I don't want it to, because I just get a lot of joy from it. And it pushes me to keep going, makes me even more grateful for the God-given gift that I have."
As a music producer and engineer, Smith takes individual parts of a produced song — vocals, background vocals, instrumentals — and edits, reworks, rearranges and adapts them for live performance, which is often different from the recorded studio version.
Other major artists also have used his arrangements in live performances. Last year, he created music tracks for a SZA virtual concert, Jazmine Sullivan's songs "Bust Your Windows" and "Price Tags" at the Day N Vegas Festival and Tiana Major9's "Collide," which was featured in the movie "Queen & Slim."
Smith's interest in producing and arranging began at age 14 while watching YouTube videos. Even though producing and arranging tracks is a relatively lesser known job in the music industry, Smith said the feeling of seeing his work onstage with big-name artists still is nearly indescribable.
The social media stepladder
Smith has used Instagram to post samples of his music and to network with other artists. This includes his work with Shedtracks, an online drumming community where people share drum-less play-along tracks that can be used for practice.