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How To Transition From Your Day Job Into A Successful Music Career, date: april 23, 2009
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How To Transition From Your Day Job Into A Successful Music Career

author: tomhess date: 04/23/2009 category: general music
rating: 8.3 / votes: 12 
POSTED: 04/23/2009 - 07:01 am
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 11 
 comments posted
metalonastrat :
first! oh, wait it's a tom hess column.
POSTED: 04/23/2009 - 07:23 am / quote |
Cheesepuff :
tom hess may suck.. but he makes sense in this one
POSTED: 04/23/2009 - 07:56 am / quote |
akhimakhi93 :
well its good you got hold of this topic...this is the exact problem im facing....
POSTED: 04/23/2009 - 08:33 am / quote |
ChucklesMginty :
Nice, Tom's putting his own backup plan of 'guitar tuition site' to good use. XD
POSTED: 04/23/2009 - 09:13 am / quote |
djmay71 :
the first few paragraphs were captivating enough to grab me, but i lost interest at point #1.
nevertheless, i'm not downgrading the effectivemess of this article, its just that Tom Hess needs to work on getting his point out faster, rather than in 5 paragraphs.

POSTED: 04/23/2009 - 10:04 am / quote |
LaminatedPig :
Didn't he already post this a couple months ago?
POSTED: 04/23/2009 - 10:49 am / quote |
Giorgi :
I found the article very good. It said what it was supposed to say. IMO the ideas developped in the second part are the most interesting. (How your "day job" SHOULD be).

Good points were made, I don't understand why you guys hate Tom Hess so much? (Well yeah he promotes his site like everybody)

POSTED: 04/23/2009 - 06:55 pm / quote |
merkalos666 :
dude my dad was giving me a whole talk about day jobs, and telling me i'll never make it in music, but this article seems to offer me hope that i can disprove it. thanks for posting this, tom!
POSTED: 04/23/2009 - 07:33 pm / quote |
Zugunruhe :
so his solution is to be a music teacher? thats a little vague, guy. there can only be a certain number of guitar teachers in each town, and not everyone wants to teach twelve year olds sweet child of mine all day.

not to mention that people can enjoy jobs that are unrelated to music, and still have ambition.

not to mention:
point 1: there are other jobs that allow you to work less than full time. music teachers arent unique in that.
point 2: so making less money per year is better? why not just save up enough money that you can take the hit of losing 60k, instead of living hand to mouth all your life and never putting anything away?
pint 3: the kids you teach will come back after a year? not likely. you'll have to start all over, but without any respectable job history that gets you a high paying job.
point 4: you would probably have to work more hours as a guitar teacher, because you are making less per hour.

yea, brilliant advice, guy.

Zugunruhe, reporting for duty to smash your dreams.


POSTED: 04/23/2009 - 10:01 pm / quote |
SwampAshSpecial :
err,

1.what in this article does the survey not tell you

2.What in this article isn't fairly self explanatory?

POSTED: 07/09/2009 - 07:05 am / quote |
opusthecat :
Sorry man but what a pointless article. The only two types of people that make a living in music are either professionals in the recording/publishing industry itself such as marketing, A&R, etc. and the band members themselves. The professionals usually come from upper-educated backgrounds in accounting or business degrees and bandmembers usually just work at a gas station or bookstore until they hit it big. Which of these two groups plans an "exit strategy" for entering a career in music? HAHAHA! Oh man I LOL'D for days.

And guitar teachers making good money...whatever, most good teachers have about 20 or so students which averages about $500 a week income...hardly good money.

Sounds to me like Tom Hess is just spouting off a bunch of nonsense he stole from a self-employment consulting site and applied it to a guitar-players site.

POSTED: 09/10/2009 - 11:17 am / quote |
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