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- Newsgroups: rec.music.makers
- Path: sparky!uunet!gatech!destroyer!ncar!neit.cgd.ucar.edu!kauff
- From: kauff@neit.cgd.ucar.edu (Brian Kauffman)
- Subject: Re: Tha Bizness.
- Message-ID: <1992Dec22.230343.19551@ncar.ucar.edu>
- Sender: news@ncar.ucar.edu (USENET Maintenance)
- Organization: NCAR, Boulder CO
- References: <0105009A.ldt6t0@david.roth-music.com>
- Date: Tue, 22 Dec 1992 23:03:43 GMT
- Lines: 87
-
- > = david@roth-music.com (David A. Roth) writes:
- >> = gds@oahu.cs.ucla.edu (Greg Skinner) writes:
- >> > = fiedler@netcom.com (Dragon (David Fiedler)) writes:
- >> >> = gds@york.cs.ucla.edu (Greg Skinner) writes:
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
- >> >>Equally, you may be a struggling musician, thinking on the quiet
- >> >>evenings about your friends in other professions, who are making
- >> >>decent incomes. I have a friend who is an aspiring actor who is going
- >> >>through this. He is thinking about going back to law school.
-
- >> >Sorry, I consider this excessivley negative. Your friend might just be on
- >> >the verge of becoming the next Tom Cruise or something. The world really
- >> >doesn't need another lawyer, you know, but a good actor, musician, or
- >> >other creative person can brighten millions of lives.
-
- > No one knows
- >a person better than they known themself and you couldn't possibly
- >peer into another person's soul and suggest what is best for them.
- >It sounds like you are projecting your fears about yourself on to others.
-
- While I certainly don't know what's best for others, I also think it's
- pretty clear *many* in the artist/music biz are fooling themselves.
- That doesn't mean we should all drop out of the music biz, but we should
- be realistic about our chances for "success" and "failure".
- By all means, go for it, but do it with a reasonable assessment of the risks.
-
- ---------------
- >> There are millions of people trying
- >> to become the next Tom Cruise, etc., and only a few positions of that
- >> type open. There are not that many positions open that would pay my
- >> friend as much as I make, either.
-
- >Are you making millions of dollars in software? Since Bill Gates
- >is and he is successful than you must be a failure. Of course, you
- >are not but if someone goes into entertainment and is not making millions
- >of dollars doesn't make them a failure either. This comes back to your lack
- >of understanding of exactly what types of work is out there in the
- >entertainment field. This would be like me talking to software programmers
- >at a party and say that it must be tough out there because I don't
- >se their picture on the cover of Byte or Newsweek.
-
- So what is the reality of making a reasonable living in "entertainment"?
- Does it *usually* involve creating your own art?
- Does it *usually* involve people listening to *your* music?
- Does it *usually* involve people waiting in line just to see you?
- Or something more along the lines of making jingles and performing other
- people's music according to their specifications?
- And is this why we all want to be musicians?
-
- ---------------
- >If your friend is considering giving it up to do something else it's
- >because he doesn't have the belief in himself and doesn't want it
- >bad enough. The people on their way in a journey who make it are
- >the ones who were happy just to be out there doing what they love
- >and a chance to do it and to continue doing it.
-
- "Wanting it bad enough" doesn't make it so. Certainly you can't succeed
- if you don't try, but failure is always a risk you should understand.
-
- ---------------
- > When was the last time after a
- >hard day you placed a cassette tape in your car of your favorite attorney
- >speaking? When was the last time anyone stood in line all night just
- >to get tickets to see -- an attorney!
-
- Is this the clarification of "understanding of exactly what types of work
- is out there in the entertainment field"? Is this reality for a substantial
- number of musicians who "want it bad enough"? People will go out and buy
- your tapes and wait in line all night just to see you? I think not.
-
- And if people aren't buying your tapes, or waiting in line to buy a ticket
- to see you, just exactly what are you doing in the entertainment field?
- Gigging in local clubs? Writing jingles? Reading charts as a session-person?
- How about being a waiter?
-
- Is being an minimally-employed entertainer and waiting on tables [or working
- in a music store, or teaching, or writing jingles] for money better than
- being a full-time lawyer [or whatever] and a part-time entertainer?
- I think this is the reality many are ultimately faced with.
-
- The bottom line is: "wanting it bad enough" doesn't guarantee success,
- there is always a chance of failure. And in music, assuming your idea
- of success is making a reasonable living by selling *your* music to
- appreciative audiences, it's not unreasonable to perceive rate of failure
- as being pretty high.
-
- -Brian
-