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What You Need To Know Before Pursuing A Career in Music

You’re not crazy for wanting to work in the music business, but there is something you should know before your journey begins.

I know you because I was you. In your mind, music is more of a religion than an art form. You know everything about the artists you love, and you understand the basics of the business more than any of your friends. You get excited by crunching the math behind a tour routing as you do the artists on that tour. In short, you spend every free moment thinking about music, and you wouldn’t have it any other way.

If you’ve shared your passion for music with friends or family, they probably expressed concern. “Music is cool,” they may say, “but it’s no place you should want to work.”

Such criticisms are not entirely unfounded. Music is not the right industry for most people. Working in music often means long hours, low pay, limited benefits, and no clear path to professional progression. Some may start in the mailroom of a big label and rise to the top of the executive ladder, but far more do a little bit of everything they can until something takes off. Most music professionals are really good at one thing and adequately qualified to do a dozen other things, some of which may or may not relate to their current role.

Furthermore, music is often thankless. For every bit of appreciation you receive for your contributions, there will be countless hours spent toiling away on a project that is never attributed to you. It is very easy — not to mention entirely possible — that you will work yourself to the bone on something the world disregards almost as soon as it’s made available to the public. That happens far more often than the other, the more glamorous outcome of working in music. For every team of professionals that helps a superstar reach the heights of popularity, there are thousands of similarly qualified teams of professionals duking it out for even the slightest amount of success. That, as they say, is just the way it is.

I say none of this with the hopes of crushing your dreams or pushing you to other pursuits. After all, I’m now in my thirties and still working in music. If I thought this industry was evil or somehow unscalable, I would have quit and started teaching as my parents asked me to do no less than one-hundred times before writing this open letter. I honestly do not know if I could survive outside the industry at this point. Music is my life, and I would prefer it to remain that way for the foreseeable future.

Sometimes I’m invited to speak at conferences and schools about working in the industry. Inevitably, someone in the audience will raise their hand and ask for advice on how one goes from being a person who is passionate about working in music to someone who has a job in music. The same information that applies to virtually every career path applies to music as well: Work hard, learn as much as you can, network often, and treat everyone you meet the way you wish to be treated. It’s all the same no matter what you’re trying to become, but it doesn’t help.

What I have to share today might not seem helpful at first, but those who are truly meant to be in this industry will understand why it matters.

When it comes to working in music, the best way to start and build a career is by doing the work. Pick something you’re interested in, do it as much as possible to the best of your abilities regardless of the money you make, and in time you will become an indispensable part of the music business.

Let me rephrase. The best way to have a career in music is to keep your hopes high and work to do the things that interest you as good as you are able.

It seems simple, right?

If you’re upset that this big reveal wasn’t some trick that helps you skip over the difficult early stages of professionalism where you balance multiple jobs to make your dream possible, I’m sorry. I understand your frustrations, as does everyone else working in music because we were once where you are now. We were all lost beginner, trying to find our way toward prosperity while desperately wishing to be taken seriously.

I started booking and promoting concerts when I was fourteen. I was playing shows with my own music by sixteen, and while walking across the stage to get my high school diploma, there was a box of CDs in my trunk that I needed to distribute as part of my role as a record label street team member. In college, I studied music business during the day and ran a music blog at night. I also promoted for more labels, hosted a radio show, and promoted for local venues. I didn’t see a dime in compensation until I landed my first job in music roughly six months after graduation, and I didn’t make enough to cover my bills until a year after that. Was it hard? Yes. Would I do it all again if I knew it leads to the role I have no? Absolutely.

In music, there are no shortcuts. A degree won’t get you a job, nor will knowing the right people. The only path to a career in music is by doing the work that needs to be completed. The long hours, thankless efforts, low pay, and downright frustrating hurdles to complete even the most seemingly simple tasks are all part of the journey. It’s a litmus test, in a way, that helps separate those who love music from people who are passionate about the business of music, and it never fails.

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News

Staying focused while staying connected

The world is always a crazy place, but things appear to be a bit crazier as of late. Forget your political stance for a moment and think of everything that has happened since the start of 2017, both good and bad, and how it will impact the future of existence. Pretty wild, right?

Whether you see the world as falling apart or finally starting to turn a corner, there is no denying the nonstop onslaught of news and political discourse that is being fed to us through countless channels around the clock. Most find it impossible to stay on top of everything, especially while working full-time and trying to have some semblance of a personal life, but deep down they know they need to be informed.

So how do you do it? How do you stay informed about the world at large without losing focus about what matters in your day-to-day life?

If there were a simple answer to this question I believe that solution would be something taught to all high school seniors before they are let loose into the world of adulthood. The truth is that no one has a perfect solution because everyone’s ability to process information, not to mention the way they react to information, is different from everyone else.

The best advice anyone can offer is to listen to your body and adjust your behavior as necessary. If you find yourself waking with a sense of dread or depression resulting from nonstop news consumption it’s perfectly okay to unplug and unwind. There is no shame in choosing to not be connected around the clock to something that is causing you to feel physically or emotionally ill.

There may be a war you need to fight, but you will only be able to do that if you first take care of yourself. Rest. Unplug. Eat well. Exercise. Do the essential things each and every day before losing yourself in headlines.

As for the struggle to balance work, life, and maintaining a global awareness, the best way to start is a single, simple change. If you find yourself constantly out of the loop on important matters maybe you should try signing up for a morning briefing from one of the nation’s top news organizations. If you find yourself scrolling through updates when you should be focused on work or family, download one of the numerous apps that limits your access to social media and the internet during times you wish to dedicate to family/work/etc. Maybe you need to shut your phone off altogether. 

Find what works for you and take steps to it habitual.

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