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Last edited by Drumbler; 12-10-2018 at 12:38 PM.
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12-08-2018 01:25 PM
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"The music business is a cruel and shallow money trench, a long plastic hallway where thieves and pimps run free, and good men die like dogs. There's also a negative side." -Hunter S Thompson
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Originally Posted by cosmic gumbo
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my friend.. one of the greatest musicians I know... says:
- they pay me close to nothing for the unique things that only I can do
- they pay me average for the thigns that many can do too
- but best of all they pay for the things that any idiot could do
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Originally Posted by Jonah
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Ah, so that's why presidents earn so much!
But in my last company the enviroment was so good that I accepeted an offer...
In a year or so I understood that I actually work much much less than before but I earn more... other bosses used to tell me: it is because you can take decision and resposibility for the actions of other people... that is what you are aid for more.
Partly so... it is actually qiote a challenge to be responsible for others people actions as for yours... it is something you have to get used to, the more people you have the more unexpected problems come to you (sometimes you feel yourself real idiot actally when you have to deal with something you would never have done yourself).
But to be honest all I mostly see around on management level - especially in corporations - is just people who are smart enough in connections and communications - mostly no special skills and professional talents needed...
And at the end it seems that they do not work at ll - just imitate work... and often do not even notice it.
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Originally Posted by Little Jay
By the way I think American president works for free now? Or no?
If so - it's not good... presidency is not a hobby... one should be motivated.
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Originally Posted by Jonah
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He did that by choice because he's an independently wealthy billionaire. He wouldn't be too motivated by the usual presidential salary.
But agree.. it would be great if president's wife would have been counting dollars till his next salary day ... and if he loses job the only job he can go to is taxi driver.
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Originally Posted by Little Jay
Making it in a field governed by "the fickle finger of fate" is always a longshot. It happens. And sometimes to deserving people. But it's much, much more likely NOT to happen in any individual case.
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What is "making it"?
I say.....
Sometimes, we gotta take a different route in order to get from point A to point B.
Not all of us might be capable of doing that or would WANT TO do that and I get that.
Curtis Mayfield once said something to the effect of,
you gotta serve your audience in order to get/earn the right (wherewithal, fill in the blanks) to serve yourself (so to speak).
That being said...
This guy is an inspiration. He resorted to finding "new tools" to add to his arsenal in order to "succeed" past his wildest dreams as a musician. Maybe we'll get to see what he wanted to be as a musician one day. I cannot believe that he grew up wanting to be a Youtube musical star. Youtube is only 13 years old.
He clearly has a jazz infused background - I hear Steely Dan meets Michael Franks
Bill Wurtz - Wikipedia
bill wurtz
- YouTube
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"The salary isn't much but the benefits are excellent." -- George Washington
I've heard this quote in some form attributed to him.
George Washington was considered to be the wealthiest man in the United States in his day.
The expense account of modern U.S. Presidents dwarfs their "salary". The salary is a mere pittance.
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It's 2018, why some old white dude still talking about how to make it big as a GUITAR band? Who cares about bands? It's not just talent that's not important, it's the market that's non existent almost.
Cardi B is Grammy nominated for Album Of The Year, woohoo! We are living in the times when people cheer up the trashiest, most unwitty and unmusical creations, while doubling down on old innocent Christmas classics.
Wanna make it big? Ditch the guitar or any instruments, also any signs of intelligence or wit, and 'drop' a hip hop record, then maybe.
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I didn't watch any of these videos, but....
I think the definition of 'making it' is being redefined everyday.
Unless your a pop, country or rap artist these days, it doesn't matter.
Everyone has access to social media and YT. If at the end of day you can still enjoy music, and make a living from it-you've made it. A lot of the rest of it is an illusion. I toured at a very, very high level for 3 years with guys that 'made it'(was not jazz) and they were the most pathetic, back stabbing people I've met(especially to each other). I made good money and got ripped off equally just the same(money and writing credits).
Most of the Artists we really, really enjoy aren't house hold name anyways.Last edited by DS71; 12-10-2018 at 03:14 PM.
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So now we can talk politics?
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Originally Posted by DS71
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Depends also on personality.
Maybe some of them dont ever want to be "big"...
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you have to have a great PR person and you have to have a realy hard working Manager. Get as much public notice as you can. Gimmicks, Style, Personality. Oh and the ability to take alot of Guff,
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The guy in OP's video isn't telling anyone with any music biz experience anything that hasn't been said a thousand times before. In fact, what he's saying is as cliche as it gets. What our balding Canadian music biz expert didn't mention as an almost mandatory trait to be a star is physical attractiveness. This has always been a factor but it became even more so in the 1980s and beyond. Look at a few examples of major popularity from just that decade: Madonna, Blondie (with Debbie Harry), Van Halen (blonde, muscular David Lee Roth, puppy dog cute Eddie VH), Whitney Houston, Sting, Janet Jackson, Prince, Tina Turner, George Michael, David Bowie.
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Originally Posted by guitarbuddy
Everything that we might think superficial matters- how you talk, how you dress, how you move, how you stand (or seat) on stage. If you dont care, its maybe not the business for you. But its all part of being an artist, even if you're not going for a mega star career.
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Originally Posted by BigDaddyLoveHandles
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Wasn't it Michelle Shocked who sued her label for violating her anti-slavery rights and won, thereby giving her sole ownership of all her masters... way to go!
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No one ever accused Mick Jagger or Steven Tyler for being handsome, but sure they got it!
Thouhg showbiz is showbiz.. there were periods when social and ideological things took over finance...
There were artists who did not care about their bahaviour and how it corresponds the conception of artisitc behaviour from commercial point of view.
Yes promoters and producers tried to use it anyway...
I am sure that - at least in teh early period - Jagger, Bowie, Morrison, Hendrix - they all of course were artists on stage - but motivation for their artistic behaviour was not commetrcial...
they mostly did what they thought proper for their art and the producers managed to use it for marketing.
'There is a guy.. Bob Dylan.. he sings his songs... young kids and intellectuals like him.. how can we earn some money on him?'
Of course they will not dress him up like Elvis - they will try to use what they already have.
Stars like Elvis... or The Beatles in the early career were of course purposefully promoted and had to adjust their apepearances to fit the commercial demands (probably McCartney did not care much, and Lennon obviously did it reluctuntly).
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I don't keep up with rock music, so I may be wrong, but it seems to me that musical talent has been forgotten in the 21st Century. EVH and his contemporaries, people who came to fame in the 1980s, were the last generation to be valued for their chops. Since then, a lot of music has been produced, but none of it particularly proficient. I look in the music magazines and see articles about the same people every month, those who give their names to signature models. None of them strike me as interesting musicians. I may be forgetting somebody, but it is not Joe Bonamassa or Eric Johnson.
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Originally Posted by Jonah
Building relationships, effective communication, conflict resolution, and decision making are not only real professional talents; they are life talents. And they are not that common either.
I manage a team of engineers. And I spent half my career being one, so I have "walked the walk." Some of the engineers are absolutely terrible at these crucial people skills. They may be great at designing and building things, but nothing would get done if they were left to their own devices. Without leaders, the company would have no long term business strategy, no tactical direction in times of crisis, no efficiency of effort across departments, no cross-functional collaboration, etc. etc.
Of course there are terrible managers, too (often the ones who get promoted, it seems!). But the general sense that a manager is just a more highly paid idiot is bogus.
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