THE MUSIK-ZONE
|
|
Your Goals & Attitudes as a Musician/Songwriter |
|
To Sign or Not to Sign One of the first things you need to decide is whether you want to go with the Old Business Model or the New Business Model. Do you want to get signed with a Big Music Company? Or do you want to go the "Indie" route? Both have advantages and disadvantages.
The pros and cons of both models could be a lot longer of course, but this gives you a rough idea. Today, computer technology has enabled us to have a recording and mixing studio right in our own spare bedroom or garage ... and it is just as good as the hundred thousand dollar equipment found in most professional studios just a decade ago. The question is - do you have the patience, the tenacity to learn how to use it ... without getting so bogged down in the engineering that you forget you are first of all a musician? There's a balance that has to be struck there. Music can be one of the most discouraging careers on earth, and you're going to need inspiration, motivation and spiritual/emotional encouragement to stick to your goals. This series provides just that with lessons such as:
One of the biggest keys to your success or failure will be your attitude and your ego. I've worked with well-known music stars and with wanna-be's, and it's almost always been the wanna-be's who were the most egotistical and hard to work with. All of the truly successful artists I've known or worked with have been gracious, compassionate and sharing. One of the kindest, most gracious "stars" I've ever met was my good friend Mickey Newbury, a legend in the business but little known to the general public, except for Europe. We spent a couple of days together not too long before he passed on and I was treated to my own private concert of some of his then-unpublished songs. The beginners are the most demanding, dooming themselves to failure. When I produced the "Country Pickin's" series of concerts back in the 70's, we featured artists such as Lee Greenwood, Tracy Nelson and Dianne Davidson. I remember some of the bands - unknowns - insisting that they play before someone else. One band I don't remember didn't have it's own sound set-up (most of them insisted on plugging their own equipment into our sound boards) and they demanded that we provide them their own equipment or they would walk out. Tracy Nelson and Dianne Davidson quietly and graciously offered their own equipment to quell the temper tantrum. Still other bands demanded they be allowed to play up to twice as long as the schedule permitted. This kind of behavior will get you a bad reputation in the business and you'll find the gigs just aren't there. Success is as much, if not more, about attitude and relationships than it is about talent. The Goals & Attitudes Course will help teach you how to act around record labels, audiences - even friends and family ... because the basic lessons of relationships are the same everywhere. Now I'm not trying to be preachy. All my life I've had a problem with relationships. I'm a Cancer, and tend to be emotional - sad, angry, ecstatic, whatever - like a roller coaster. I'm not going to take drugs for it because I believe all of us could do with less drugs. Besides, the problem we have is one of understanding ourselves first. In my case, I have to keep reminding myself - "I am NOT my emotions!" Either my emotions control me, to my detriment, or I control my emotions. My emotional make-up is just a part of the total me. |
|
|