
You can scroll through my iTunes and I've got everything. I've
You can scroll through my iTunes and I've got everything. I've got Ace Hood, Alt-J, Annie Lennox, Arctic Monkeys, Beanie Sigel, the Beatles, Beth Hart, Big Sean, Bob Dylan, Bon Iver, Chief Keef, Coldplay, the Flaming Lips, Mariah Carey, Miley Cyrus, Nicki Minaj, OutKast, Pet Shop Boys, Peter Gabriel, the Smiths, and the list goes on from there.






When Mike Will Made It declared, “You can scroll through my iTunes and I’ve got everything. I’ve got Ace Hood, Alt-J, Annie Lennox, Arctic Monkeys, Beanie Sigel, the Beatles, Beth Hart, Big Sean, Bob Dylan, Bon Iver, Chief Keef, Coldplay, the Flaming Lips, Mariah Carey, Miley Cyrus, Nicki Minaj, OutKast, Pet Shop Boys, Peter Gabriel, the Smiths, and the list goes on from there,” he was not simply boasting of a vast collection of songs. He was speaking of the richness of human creativity, the necessity of diversity, and the truth that to create great art one must immerse oneself in many voices, many moods, and many styles. His words carry a lesson for all seekers: greatness is born not from narrowness, but from the breadth of what we embrace.
The meaning is clear. To possess such a wide catalog of music is to acknowledge that wisdom is not confined to one genre, one sound, or one generation. The presence of Bob Dylan alongside Nicki Minaj, of the Beatles beside Chief Keef, reveals the humility to learn from both the old and the new, the lyrical and the raw, the classical and the experimental. Music, in this vision, is not bound by labels; it is a living archive of human experience, each artist adding their own voice to the eternal chorus. To scroll through such a list is to walk through the corridors of time and culture.
History has always honored those who drew inspiration from many sources. The great Renaissance master Leonardo da Vinci studied anatomy, architecture, engineering, and art alike, weaving them together into works that transcended categories. Herodotus, called the father of history, gathered tales from many nations to form his record of humanity. In the same way, a producer like Mike Will Made It, drawing from everything, stands in this lineage of those who refuse confinement, who recognize that truth and beauty can be found in the most unexpected places.
There is also a profound origin to this hunger for diversity. Music itself is born of fusion. Jazz was born from African rhythms meeting European instruments. Rock emerged when blues met electricity. Hip hop was born when rhythm, poetry, and sampling collided in the Bronx. To honor everything is to acknowledge this eternal truth: no genre exists in isolation. Each is a branch on the great tree of human expression, nourished by the same soil of longing, joy, struggle, and celebration.
The lesson is not only for musicians, but for all who seek wisdom. Do not confine yourself to a single voice, a single culture, a single way of seeing. Open yourself to the vastness of the world. For truth is many-sided, and beauty wears countless masks. Just as Mike Will Made It fills his library with songs from every corner, so too must we fill our minds with ideas from across time, with stories from distant lands, with experiences beyond our own. Only then can we create, speak, and live in ways that are rich, layered, and alive.
Practical action flows from this teaching. If you are an artist, broaden your influences; listen to voices that differ from your own. If you are a thinker, read beyond your comfort. If you are a traveler, go where you have not been, and if you are a leader, listen to those you least expect to learn from. Carry within you, like an iTunes library of the soul, a diversity of voices, for in this wealth lies strength.
Thus Mike Will Made It’s words are not mere description of a playlist; they are a testament to the art of openness. “I’ve got everything,” he says, and in this we hear the creed of the creator, the learner, the seeker. To embrace everything is to prepare oneself to give back something new, something vibrant, something timeless. And so the wisdom passes down: let your library, whether of music, of books, or of experiences, be vast. For in the chorus of many voices, the soul finds its true song.
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