Anybody Can Do That
Anybody Can Do That
"Anybody
can do that."
It's a
phrase I've heard more than once in recent months. A dismissive wave of the
hand. A casual attempt to minimize what Yahuah has been doing through
J.A.L.M.-MUSIC. Some suggest that making music—even with AI tools—is so simple
that anyone could replicate this work. That the anointing I walk under is
somehow transferable to anyone who decides to pick up a microphone and press a
few buttons.
Let me
be clear: I'm not here to argue about whether anyone could do
this. I'm here to present what has been done—and to ask a simple
question: If anybody can do that, then where is everybody?
The
Numbers Don't Lie
In the
past six months, J.A.L.M.-MUSIC has produced:
40
Studio Albums
571 Original Tracks Written and Recorded
This
isn't a hobby. This isn't casual content creation. This is a sustained season
of creative acceleration and spiritual focus—where projects moved from concept
to completion at a pace rarely seen in independent ministry production.
But
here's where it gets even more interesting.
The
Acceleration
2025
Creative Pace (First Five Months)
- 25 Albums
- 280 Tracks
- Timeframe: 5 Months
That
alone would be considered prolific by any standard. Most independent artists
release one album per year, maybe two if they're exceptionally productive. I
was averaging five albums per month.
2026
Creative Pace (As of January 29, 2026)
- 15 Albums
- 291 Tracks
- Timeframe: Less Than
1 Month
Read
that again. What took five months to produce in 2025 was surpassed in under one
month in 2026. Not just matched—surpassed. More tracks. Deeper teaching
density. Expanded musical scope per release.
The
shift isn't just quantitative. It's qualitative. Each album carries more
weight, more revelation, more intentionality. The music isn't getting faster at
the expense of depth—it's getting deeper while getting faster.
So Let
Me Ask Again: Where Is Everybody?
If
this is something "anybody can do," then I have some questions:
Where
are the 40 albums?
If the tools are available to everyone, if the anointing is generic, if the
process is simple—where is the flood of content from all these
"anybodies" who could supposedly replicate this work?
Where
is the acceleration?
Where are the artists who started slow and then experienced a supernatural
multiplication of output? Where are the testimonies of others who went from 5
albums in five months to 15 albums in one month?
Where
is the consistency?
Anyone can have a burst of creativity. Anyone can produce content for a week,
maybe a month. But where is the sustained, relentless, month-after-month output
that doesn't diminish in quality or spiritual weight?
Where
is the anointing?
Because here's the truth that makes people uncomfortable: tools don't create
anointing. Technology doesn't generate revelation. AI doesn't write lyrics that
pierce the heart and awaken the spirit. The tool is neutral. The anointing is
not.
The
Real Issue Isn't the Tools—It's the Calling
Yes, I
use AI tools in my production process. I've never hidden that. But the tool
doesn't write the vision. The tool doesn't wake me up at 3 AM with a melody and
a message. The tool doesn't sustain the discipline required to turn 571
concepts into 571 completed tracks.
The
tool is a brush. I am the painter. And the painting comes from somewhere beyond
both of us.
When
people say "anybody can do that," what they're really saying is:
"I don't want to acknowledge that there's something different operating in
your life." They don't want to recognize the anointing because recognizing
the anointing requires recognizing the Anointer. And recognizing Yahuah's hand
on someone else's work means confronting the question of what His hand might be
calling them to do.
It's
easier to dismiss. It's easier to minimize. It's easier to say "anybody
can do that" than to say "Yahuah is doing something through you that
I haven't seen Him do through others."
The
Invitation Still Stands
So
here's my response to "anybody can do that":
Prove
it.
The
tools are available. The platforms are accessible. The technology is
democratized. If anybody can do this, then do it. Not for a week. Not for a
month. Do it for six months. Produce 40 albums. Write 571 original tracks.
Experience the acceleration where your output in one month surpasses what took
you five months previously.
I'm
not being arrogant. I'm being honest. This isn't about competition—it's about
calling. And the truth is, not everybody is called to do what I'm called to do.
Just like I'm not called to do what you're called to do.
The
anointing isn't generic. The calling isn't transferable. The grace on my life
for this specific work is a gift from Yahuah, and I steward it with everything
I have.
The
Real Question
The
question isn't whether anybody can do this. The question is
whether anybody is doing this. And if they're not, we need to
stop pretending that the only thing separating intention from execution is a
decision to try.
There's
a difference between potential and actualization. There's a difference between
having access to tools and having the anointing to use them for Kingdom
purposes. There's a difference between saying "I could do that" and
actually doing it—day after day, week after week, month after month, without
burning out, without giving up, without losing the fire.
My
Challenge to the Critics
If you
believe anybody can do what I'm doing, I invite you to join me. Not to compete
with me, but to multiply the impact. If the anointing is truly generic, if the
process is truly simple, then let's see a movement. Let's see a wave of
anointed artists producing at this pace, with this consistency, with this
spiritual weight.
I
would love nothing more than to be surrounded by others operating at this
level. I would celebrate it. I would amplify it. I would thank Yahuah for it.
But
until that happens, I'm going to keep doing what I'm called to do. I'm going to
keep stewarding this grace. I'm going to keep producing, creating, writing,
recording, and releasing—not to prove anything to anyone, but because this is
what Yahuah has placed in my hands.
The
Bottom Line
40
albums. 571 tracks. Six months.
That's
not a boast. It's a testimony. It's evidence of what happens when anointing
meets obedience, when calling meets consistency, when vision meets discipline.
So
yes—anybody can do that.
But
the question remains: Why isn't everybody?
J.A.L.M.-MUSIC
Walking in the anointing. Stewarding the calling. Producing the fruit.
"Not
by might, nor by power, but by My Spirit, says Yahuah of hosts." —
Zechariah 4:6

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