We caught up with the brilliant and insightful Cameron Earle a few weeks ago and have shared our conversation below.
Cameron, looking forward to learning from your journey. You’ve got an amazing story and before we dive into that, let’s start with an important building block. Where do you get your work ethic from?
I would say that I primarily get my work ethic from my family. We are all unique in our own way, but one thing we definitely have in common is having a strong work ethic. One other factor that has fueled my work ethic is that over the past decade I have tried to surround myself with likeminded individuals who are just as passionate and driven as I am. When you have a solid core group of friends who are constantly feeding each other ideas, it pushes you even further and also makes the workload not feel as heavy. Another big factor I think is important, is loving the process. Creating and releasing music is such a fun process for me, that it rarely feels like work. I think that is key. If you are in love with what you do, it creates the energy needed to do the work.

Thanks, so before we move on maybe you can share a bit more about yourself?
My name is Cameron Earle aka ‘Enloh’. I am a music producer and musician based out of Austin, Texas. I produce and write all different types of music, with electronic music being my specialty. I am also a multi-instrumentalist and started playing drums at the age of 12. Originally from San Antonio, Texas, I lived in Los Angeles for 8 years, and I credit that experience significantly for where I am now. From assisting at legendary recording studios such as Grandmaster Recorders, LLC., and eventually going on tour in 2016, all those experiences shaped me to who I am today. I am currently hyper focused on my solo act and have a lot of music releases planned for this year. I think I am most excited to just keep writing and releasing over the next few years, because I feel I have arrived at a special place when it comes to my creativity. It took me a very long time to actually start liking what I make, and I am very excited to see what’s to come. I put out a song two weeks ago, have another song coming out in 11 days, and another song getting mixed and mastered right now, which will come out next month. I’ve hit a groove and will keep grinding to be the best version of myself. I won’t be slowing down anytime soon.

If you had to pick three qualities that are most important to develop, which three would you say matter most?
Three qualities, skills, and areas of knowledge that I would say have been the most impactful in my journey are recognizing your strengths and weaknesses, being a student of music, and surrounding yourself with people who have similar interests. With regard to strengths and weaknesses, once you can recognize what you’re already good at, as well as what you need to improve on the most, you have a good starting point for the work that needs to be done. For example, I wasn’t very good at playing piano/synthesizers 8 years ago. I had the desire to be a better composer. Over time I just naturally played more and more, which improved my ear and technique drastically. At this point I feel very confident in my ability to compose through all of the hours I put in. In regards to being a student of music, I can’t emphasize this point enough. There are so many things to study and improve on, and there will always be room for improvement. That’s one of the beautiful things about music. It’s never perfect and neither are you. If you can fall in love with the idea of growth, and being a student of music, you are on the right path. In regards to surrounding yourself with likeminded individuals, this idea is one of the biggest lessons you will ever come across. The truth is, I think I have learned more and grown faster through collaboration with my peers than I ever did in any classroom. Find a good core group of friends that have similar interests, and ride that wave.

As we end our chat, is there a book you can leave people with that’s been meaningful to you and your development?
There are two books that come to mind which have been extremely impactful in my musical journey, and I highly recommend them: The Music Lesson by Victor Wooten and The Creative Act by Rick Rubin. A few nuggets from The Music Lesson are to never lose the groove and to get comfortable making mistakes. This is crucial when coming up with new ideas. If you can maintain the groove and embrace mistakes, the ideas will be endless. Often, when a ‘jam’ abruptly stops, it’s because the groove is lost or there’s discomfort with mistakes—mostly mental challenges. From The Creative Act, key insights include recognizing that failure provides essential information for progress, and sometimes ‘mistakes’ contribute to the greatness of the work. Embracing failure is the surest path to becoming the best version of your work or yourself. Sometimes leaving a ‘mistake’ in a song can actually enhance its impact, resonating with the humanity in all of us.
Contact Info:
- Website: https://enlohmusic.wixsite.com/enloh
- Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/enlohmusic/
- Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Enlohmusic/
- Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/enlohmusic



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