Problem is I've got 5 courses & Work. Thinking about dropping 3 of my courses, I know about balance but I just feel that composing and learning music is so much more enjoyable.
Not really sure what I should do...
Advice would be helpful.
That's the feeling I had at 4 months in but I decided to play it safe and go to college and just do music for fun. Still as fulfilling and awesome to learn new stuff and make tracks in your free time. From what I hear it's a long and bumpy road trying to make a living off of music.Ficticious wrote:Pretty much full time, 16 hours a day minus the days I got work or go out with buddies.
always reading, always learning.
Could say that i'm addicted.
idontreallygiveashit wrote:What answer are you looking for?
"No, i have no objections to you being passionate about creating music around your job."
wtf.
Huts wrote:Don't drop classes or quit your job or anything like that. Work on music whenever you can but at this point, 4 months in and receiving no financial gain from your music, it'd be silly to cut out school when you can work on music whenever you're free. This stuff has no time limit, no age cutoff or anything like that. If you love it this much now, you'll love it just as much in a few years when you're done with school. Except now you'll have a degree, a job, some experience (4 month is awfully short to want to drop school and go full time with this), and you're love for music won't have altered. Just chill
Agent 47 wrote:Next time I can think of something, I will.
alphacat wrote:+1 on what Huts said, plus...
Everyone I've ever known with a creative passion who tried to parlay that passion into money wound up compromising somehow and losing their passion for the thing they did - painters who became graphic designers, musicians who wound up playing in cover bands or working at Guitar Center, or dancers who became giant-headed costumed mascots in amusement parks... because when the priority becomes making money off of it no matter what, you're compromising yourself. A lot.
If on the other hand you're making music because you're compelled to and you're less concerned with 'being a musician' (which is mostly image, and mostly other peoples' perception of an image at that) then it's not gonna go anywhere anytime soon, and it will be your joy and refuge; sometimes you won't be able to do as much as you'd like, but when you do get around to it you'll appreciate it more and take it that much more seriously. You can take time refining your craft, whatever it is, and when you're ready put it out there for release if you like instead of being so desperate for income that you're pushing releases that aren't reflective of where you're at musically and are really only designed to sell to some target audience (the true definition of selling out imo... "there's so much bad house music: I can make better bad house music, and that shit sells! I smell profits, yo...")
But I would add that the missing ingredient from the secret sauce - and something I wish I'd figured out when I was a young feller like you- is that it's a really, really good thing to cultivate discipline... both in music and in life in general. When your willpower is focused and resolute, that's when shit happens. So I'd say yeah, all of the above stuff about just getting well-grounded in life and letting the music be the icing on the cake instead of shlepping cake batter in a hot factory for a living, so to speak - that's all true. And when you come at your music, as with anything worth doing at all, be consistent and put the time in when the inspiration is flowing especially. Good things will follow. Don't half-ass it and then lament that you never got your shot. You don't have to hustle like a fiend, but do make the full effort. Only then can you say that you truly gave it your best shot, too, and feel proud about it no matter what happens.
Going to take my geriatric vitamins now... and by that I mean weed.
phaeleh wrote:Yeah I wanna hear it toobassbum wrote:The pheleleh tune I have never heard before and I did like it but its very simple and I could quickly recreate it.
Hircine wrote:learn how to do other shit aside from making beats. learn how to mix, record, capture live sound, perform acoustic treament (for factories and classrooms), fix electronics and instruments, in depth synthesis, how to edit audio, how to setup different sound systems for different situations, et coetera. then also learn how to do some other shit like how to manage a business, get a lawyer degree, whatever. Important thing is to be good at whatever you are doing and to always have options.
Thanks. Suppose that's what I needed.alphacat wrote:Hircine wrote:learn how to do other shit aside from making beats. learn how to mix, record, capture live sound, perform acoustic treament (for factories and classrooms), fix electronics and instruments, in depth synthesis, how to edit audio, how to setup different sound systems for different situations, et coetera. then also learn how to do some other shit like how to manage a business, get a lawyer degree, whatever. Important thing is to be good at whatever you are doing and to always have options.![]()
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you can dj every weekend with a full time job, you can also produce during the night. go out less, do less drugs, sleep less; you will have enough time to study, work, make music and perform. I'm currently in law school and doing scientific research for credits. Still producing 3~4 tunes per month (every two ~ three months I come up with one that is good enough to play out), got a gig coming in December and I plan to start a internship next semester. focus and discipline is all you need. And I always have time to record my friends' bands. just be realistic about shit, the more music feels like a getaway from every day life, the better your art will be.Ficticious wrote:Thanks. Suppose that's what I needed.alphacat wrote:Hircine wrote:learn how to do other shit aside from making beats. learn how to mix, record, capture live sound, perform acoustic treament (for factories and classrooms), fix electronics and instruments, in depth synthesis, how to edit audio, how to setup different sound systems for different situations, et coetera. then also learn how to do some other shit like how to manage a business, get a lawyer degree, whatever. Important thing is to be good at whatever you are doing and to always have options.![]()
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phaeleh wrote:Yeah I wanna hear it toobassbum wrote:The pheleleh tune I have never heard before and I did like it but its very simple and I could quickly recreate it.
That;'s discipline man. wish I had that discipline.Hircine wrote:you can dj every weekend with a full time job, you can also produce during the night. go out less, do less drugs, sleep less; you will have enough time to study, work, make music and perform. I'm currently in law school and doing scientific research for credits. Still producing 3~4 tunes per month (every two ~ three months I come up with one that is good enough to play out), got a gig coming in December and I plan to start a internship next semester. focus and discipline is all you need. And I always have time to record my friends' bands. just be realistic about shit, the more music feels like a getaway from every day life, the better your art will be.Ficticious wrote:Thanks. Suppose that's what I needed.alphacat wrote:Hircine wrote:learn how to do other shit aside from making beats. learn how to mix, record, capture live sound, perform acoustic treament (for factories and classrooms), fix electronics and instruments, in depth synthesis, how to edit audio, how to setup different sound systems for different situations, et coetera. then also learn how to do some other shit like how to manage a business, get a lawyer degree, whatever. Important thing is to be good at whatever you are doing and to always have options.![]()
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