* #1 – Waiting
* #2 – Unreasonable Expectations
* #3 – Poor Planning
* #4 – Comparing Apples To Oranges
*#5a – Black and White Thinking (Day Job)
*#5b – Black and White Thinking (Career Trajectory)
It’s a very odd thing to talk to your average musician about their career goals. As I have mentioned before I often hear things like “getting to the next level” or wanting to “make it”. Part of the problem is that statements like these aren’t specific enough to be of much use to those who utter them. I’m not here to tell anyone that the music business isn’t difficult or isn’t filled with frustration – it is absolutely frustrating and the pace at which it moves (especially when you are starting out) makes glaciers look like Ferraris. Many musicians need to get a grip on what the majority of career trajectories look like and stop comparing themselves to so-called overnight successes. The harsh reality is that yes- some seemingly talentless people get rich and famous doing music and as much as that can mess with your sense of justice – there is absolutely nothing you can do about it.

I should mention that I don’t blame anyone for their perception of what the music business really is and what making a living making music looks like. Pop Culture and Hollywood have done a number on us all by presenting us a constantly whispered message that anyone can be a celebrity for seemingly no reason at all. The VH1 behind the music series (which I loved and still do love) was a classic representation of what is broadcast about a musician’s career. It had an hour slot and usually was about 43 minutes long. It usually looked like this:
Minutes 1-4 – Where the musician grew up, who their parents were and how they always wanted to be a singer / guitarist / rockstar / rapper
Minute 5-7: – Quotes from Mom, family and friends about how this person was very driven
Minutes 7-10: some footage from a talent show, the chance meeting of a collaborator or label executive – perhaps some brief mention of the artist gigging in obscurity for an unmentioned period of time and at least once getting close to calling it quits.
Minutes 10 onwards – Minor problems in the studio and then rocket ship ride to superstardom including the obligatory dark period (usually someone close to the subject dying or a drug habit) followed by the redemption of them still being on top – and everything being okay.
The point is it is not an interesting Hollywood story that it took a ton of hard work and someone built their fan base one fan at a time over years and years. It is not an interesting Hollywood story that people slowly but surely got better at the craft and kept moving forward. The hard work, the struggle, the doubt, the waiting for better… this is a great deal of the process but it is presented as little more than a footnote in the folklore of being a successful musician.
What I mean to say is that it is easy to think in absolutes when this is the cultural message we receive every day. Try to avoid this. If you don’t avoid this it becomes far too easy to be that older crabby musician or ex musician who has a chip on his or her shoulder about how the business (and everything else) sucks.
Try to remember you are slowly building a business and that as long as you are slowly aligning your work life with your passion for music you are on the right track. Your career isn’t nowhere if you aren’t drawing 500 people a night nor is it nowhere if you aren’t 100% self-sustainable yet. Startup businesses take time and very often the ones that survive are the ones that are flexible enough to adapt to whatever is put into their path. Your career in music might not look like the one you envision. God knows when I was a nineteen and getting my first tattoo I thought I was going to be in a touring band for the rest of my life.
The biggest lesson I think I ever learned about the business or probably even life in general (and it hit me like a ton of bricks) was when I interviewed an old band mate of mine who had gone on to be very successful. He said quite simply “I haven’t done anything different in 15 years”. It was when I realized that I had never worked towards anything with consistent daily effort for more than 2-3 years without losing my focus and that I lost my right to bitch.
Click here for the next and last of the series.
If you missed the last installment check that out here.
Tags: career trajectory, Music Business Mistakes
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February 1st, 2011 at 6:43 pm
this was great!
thanks
bess
February 1st, 2011 at 7:19 pm
Thanks for reading!
-R-
February 1st, 2011 at 8:58 pm
Thanks. I read all the segments and it was at times painful– but you saved me even more pain.
February 1st, 2011 at 10:20 pm
Great Read,thanks for all your insight.
A successful musician once said ” The difference between being Good and being GREAT ? About 10,000 hours.”
February 2nd, 2011 at 1:43 am
very informative – a lot of great suggestions – thanks for helping me focus with a new set of ideas
February 2nd, 2011 at 2:12 am
Hey Rick,
All 5, really great points. From experience, I know you’re right. I was signed to a Atlantic in 2006, long story, but didn’t fly.. I’m back for another round. so i loved the part about Kid Rock & this being a “marathon”.. Thanks for the encouragement & thoughts! all the best,
vince
February 2nd, 2011 at 10:16 am
Thank you very much for sharing these tips with us. I’m fresh in the field, writing goals and planning so this was well received.
Keep it Gandhi ^_^
February 2nd, 2011 at 11:04 am
This was a very good installment. Now…to get honest with my thinking on this business!
Thank you for the words,
Chad
February 3rd, 2011 at 3:48 pm
Mr Rick, I could write this with you(lol)… You tell it just how is. I’m glad someone took the initiative to let every know before they have to learn it the hard way, like I did.
February 5th, 2011 at 4:06 pm
I am not a musician, I am a writer. And I just recorded my best selling book “Darktales acollection of sick twisted scary stories” to audio. Darktales did really well and way outsells all my other books. I wrote d-2 (Darktales Volume Two) and am working on Volume three. I think this is a good move for me. People can go on I-Tunes and buy the whole book or buy just one story. Its knd of like the choice between buying a whole album or just one song. Very often if people like the song they will go back and buy the album. I am hopeful my audio book will work in much the same way. Your advice about ‘connecting with people’ was right on the money. Good work. All my other books sell OK but Darktales is what they want so obviously thats what I’m gong to focus on.
That’s my two cents. I liked your article on the top 5 mistakes and I have found myself making those same mistakes. You may notice have no website….I see a weakness that needs to be addressed….So I’m going to get busy and get a website…In which I will definately like to this article if thats OK with you.
Steve Zellers
February 5th, 2011 at 4:12 pm
Hi Steve, thanks for taking the time to comment. By all means feel free to link. As for websites – I am quite fond of wordpress (this is a wordpress site). Very best,
-R-
July 13th, 2011 at 7:54 am
Read all five pieces with my morning coffee and found myself nodding and learning simultaneously. Great work. Patricia Adams, bandleader & vocalist
July 13th, 2011 at 9:29 am
Thanks for reading Patricia!
August 16th, 2011 at 7:34 am
Great read, The Series was very eye opening, and it helped closed doors appear in the mind, This was great help, and saved a few bumps in the road, Continue your insight, it is very needed in the industry!