How to get a gig

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Post by Mojo workin' »

and behind in earnings.
Heavens! Say it isn't so! You just might have to forget that trip to Bermuda that you as an American are entitled to. A catastrophe indeed.
and kick somebody´s *** (physically
Are the brown shirts still marching over there?
to prove that I´m worth the professor´s time and effort
General points previously made taken, still isn't the professor the hired help? He/she's the one going home with the paycheck.
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Post by Dean »

While professors are not the "hired help," they are compensated for their time. Studio teachers, more than other professors, are a resource for the students. Its up to the students as to whether they utilize that resource to their fullest potential. IT'S NOT UP TO THE TEACHER.

There are 168 hours in a week. ONE of those hours is spent in a lesson. Maybe you have studio class for 1 or 2 hours to learn a few tricks there. Maybe your teacher coaches your tuba quartet or brass quintet for an hour. Still, that leaves you with 164 hours for the rest of the week. THAT'S where you "get er' done." Any student who fumbles around all week (or doesn't practice at all) and expects their teacher to "fix it" in that one hour is fooling themselves. It's not about how much you practice either. I've heard students play and play and play and not get much better. One person, a friend of mine, really stands out in my memory. I'd hear him very often throughout my undergrad in the next room (we had adjacent "favorite" practice rooms). He was there much more than I. He'd be there when I got there, and still be there when I left. But he was just playing, he wasn't working--wasn't thinking--wasn't using what his teacher gave him.

Performance degrees don't matter. So to say that schools should or shouldn't be giving so many out is pointless. I say let's give one to everyone in the country--send em in the mail like those $600 checks.

This is pretty off-topic, like most every other post on Tubenet. But, I think the topic creator has been properly answered. The rest of it, I do find interesting. Colleges and universities don't have a "responsibility" to "make" job-winners. They only have to provide the tools so those students are able to succeed. Whether the student succeeds is up to them and them alone.
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Post by Dan Castillo »

I know a fair number of people who were/are performance majors for the scholarship money. They are double majors pursuing other fields, but these other departments may not have funding to put these people through school. They double in music so that they can get a scholarship from the music school at said university. Usually they can do all requirements for a performance degree (which, c'mon....is not very hard), but once they get their degree, they're off to become an orthodontist, or molecular biologist, etc.

I don't see anything wrong with that. They fulfilled their duty to the school and played in the band or orchestra, but once they graduated the contract is over. You can find many of these people hanging around your local community band or orchestra. Probably making way more money than the "pros".
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Post by Rick Denney »

Dean wrote:Colleges and universities don't have a "responsibility" to "make" job-winners. They only have to provide the tools so those students are able to succeed. Whether the student succeeds is up to them and them alone.
I would go even further, and say that colleges should not be concerned about job training in their undergraduate degrees. They should be concerned about education. A broadly educated person should know a lot about a lot of subjects, and that broad knowledge can provide the basis for making a decent living doing something or other.

Lots of people study languages, or mathematics, or history, or even science and end up in a completely different field. But they succeed because in addition to language, history, or science, they also learned language, mathematics, history, AND science.

A master's degree is another matter. That's a job-training degree.

You learn how to do a job by being trained by one who is a master at doing that job. That's just as true for engineers as it is for musicians.

90% of the engineering calculations I used in daily work I learned post-grad. But that 90% would not have been possible without the 10% I learned in school. And much of what makes me a competent engineer is the non-engineering stuff or engineering stuff in other fields that I learned. I have no use for engineers who can only calculate.

Any undergraduate degree in music performance should include wide-ranging topics in languages, mathematics, history, and science, sufficient to provide a well-rounded education. If it does, and if the student takes that breadth seriously, they'll come out of it with far more than major and minor scales. Most of what they learn in terms of music performance they'll get in their studio and lessons, and those can be had outside college. In fact, if performing professionally was my goal, I might choose a university near a city where there is a really high-end professional who could teach me, and then get a good general education at college while studying and practicing my butt off with the pro. Whether the pro is on the faculty or not almost doesn't matter.

Someone close to me has a recent undergraduate degree in music performance, and is working on a master's in performance. It's unlikely that a pro career is in the cards, but the kid has learned to be self-sufficient and that's what counts. I am surely not worried about the kid being successful in life.

Rick "not confusing trade schools with universities" Denney
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Post by MileMarkerZero »

Too many people think that college is where you learn your job. But that isn't the case. College is where you acquire a skill set that makes you marketable for any number of career paths.

And as an aside to Marty, U of Oklahoma offers a Fine Arts degree that is about 1/2 your fine arts discipline and 1/2 another discipline. So if you want, you can "major" in tuba perf and secondary in journalism and become a music critic. Or major in tuba perf and secondary in accounting or business or whatever. You could even secondary in metallurgy and come up with a radical new tuba design that is perfectly in tune with a gorgeous sound and only weighs 1-1/2 lbs.

It's like a music ed degree, except instead of taking the ed major core sequence, you take the core sequence from another major and graft it into the degree. My wife went that route with flute and is happy as a clam designing newspaper front pages.

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Post by NDSPTuba »

There is one thing about the Dallas area that put an end to my playing in the local (paying) regional orchestras. The union head for the Dallas chapter plays hardball with all the large paying ensembles, if you want to gig with one, you HAVE TO be in the union, he has seen to that. Which for someone like me, that was barely getting enough gigs to actually pay the dues for one year, isn't something I want to do. That and my chop problems put an end to my playing career for good.
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Post by Eupharitone »

Rick said pretty much what I was going to say as I read this thread.

Music Performance is a pretty worthless degree in and of itself, but not much more worthless than a degree in say Psychology, History, Art, Business or General Education....you don't have to have an Education degree to know how to teach, you don't have to have a Business degree to start a business etc.....and of course there are plenty of smart individuals who simply study something as a hobby their entire lives and by the time they're in High School they know more about the subject than someone who studied it for 4 years at a college or university but yet aren't considered "knowledgeable" bout a subject until they pay $100,000 for a piece of paper.

I think people look at a Music Performance degree in the same way they look at a regular "Music" degree; the person holding said degree was a music major in school and therefore studied the art of music. It's just another academic major (a liberal arts degree) and it's still a "college degree", which makes them better off than people without one. Especially considering only like 60-something percent of people actually end up doing something that's remotely similar to their field of specialty when they get out of school.

Me: So what's your major?
Random person: Latin
Me: So what do you plan to do with this degree in "Latin"
Random person: I don't know, but I like Latin, and it's having the degree that's important because I'll still end up with a better job than if I'd never gone to college

It's the same with Music Performance I think.....
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Post by lgb&dtuba »

Eupharitone wrote: Me: So what's your major?
Random person: Latin
Me: So what do you plan to do with this degree in "Latin"
Random person: I don't know, but I like Latin, and it's having the degree that's important because I'll still end up with a better job than if I'd never gone to college

It's the same with Music Performance I think.....
Admittedly my opinions on this (and they are certainly only opinions) are colored by the profession I'm in; computer programming.

My version of the above conversation during an interview:

Me: So what's your major?
Random person: Latin
Me: So what do you plan to do with this degree in "Latin"
Random person: I don't know, but I like Latin, and it's having the degree that's important because I'll still end up with a better job than if I'd never gone to college. Will you hire me?
Me: Do you know any computer languages?
Random person: Well, no. But I went to college and Latin is a language.
Me: Thanks for coming in. Next!
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Post by tuneitup »

lgb&dtuba wrote:
Admittedly my opinions on this (and they are certainly only opinions) are colored by the profession I'm in; computer programming.

My version of the above conversation during an interview:

Me: So what's your major?
Random person: Latin
Me: So what do you plan to do with this degree in "Latin"
Random person: I don't know, but I like Latin, and it's having the degree that's important because I'll still end up with a better job than if I'd never gone to college. Will you hire me?
Me: Do you know any computer languages?
Random person: Well, no. But I went to college and Latin is a language.
Me: Thanks for coming in. Next!
The problem in your analogy is that previous poster said you can get a "Better" job, and not any job. There are tons of occupations that need special training in college setting, and computer programing might be one of those. Of course, you can study computer language in high schools and trade schools as well.
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Post by lgb&dtuba »

tuneitup wrote:
lgb&dtuba wrote:
My version of the above conversation during an interview:

Me: So what's your major?
Random person: Latin

etc.
The problem in your analogy is that previous poster said you can get a "Better" job, and not any job. There are tons of occupations that need special training in college setting, and computer programing might be one of those. Of course, you can study computer language in high schools and trade schools as well.
Care to come up with a real world example of this better job this Latin major might land over someone with only a high school diploma?

I have nothing against studying Latin, by the way. Took a couple of years of it in high school myself and I even recommended that my daughter take it in high school and college since she was pursuing a biochem degree with an eye towards medical school at the time. (She's got her master's in forensics and is a forensic scientist now.) But I can't really imagine a job outside of academia where an undergraduate Latin degree by itself would give an advantage. There may be one somewhere, just like there may be an orchestral position for a tubist somewhere :-)

Jim "Getting that tuba reference in just in time." Wagner
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Post by tuneitup »

Just go to Monster and type "college degree." You will see bunch of non-specialized jobs that require a college degree in any major.
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Post by MaryAnn »

Weeeelllllll...........
My music degree did not land me a music job. IIRC the job I got right after my music degree was in retail at minimum wage. No matter that I did eventually end up with a union job in a regional orchestra; it was my skill at my instrument that landed me that, not my music degree. My advice to people who really just want to play for a living is to go study with the very best teacher they can find, putting all available time into that study, and don't even worry about the degree. But if it's an education you want, like Rick says, go get that education. It is a good thing to have, and much easier to get when you are young and not supporting a family.

Now, my engineering degree was a whole different ball o' wax. On graduating I had six reasonably lucrative job offers from a variety of places, including Bell Labs in New Joisey, Knolls Atomic Power Lab in Schenectady, IBM in Minnesota, and a some public utilities (just as an example of the difference immediately post-degree between music and engineering.) I took a utility job based on location, and while I haven't been entirely happy I have stayed here reasonably satisfied and made several zillion times more $$ than I would have as a fiddle player.

Even in my short decade of professional music/freelancing/private studio teaching, I found that, for me, playing the violin became just another job like when I was a graveyard shift dishwasher while in music school. BUT....it was the music lesson business that I finally got going successfully that allowed me to return to school for the engineering degree, and the scholarship to play in the orchestra that paid the tuition for the first couple of years.

If I could give myself advice back then from my vantage point now, I'd tell myself to forget my math fear and get my rear off to Berkely in Boston and major in studio recording engineering. I'da been pretty damn good at that. Whether I would have been any better at the necessary politicking is a different question with an unknown answer.

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Post by Mark »

Rick Denney wrote:Any undergraduate degree in music performance should include wide-ranging topics in languages, mathematics, history, and science, sufficient to provide a well-rounded education.
... including remedial spelling and grammar when necessary ...
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Post by lgb&dtuba »

tuneitup wrote:Just go to Monster and type "college degree." You will see bunch of non-specialized jobs that require a college degree in any major.
Depends on where you are, my friend.

Doing exactly what you said, using Raleigh, NC and a 200 mile radius it pulled up 12 jobs. 8 of which required specific engineering degrees. The other 4 were sales jobs.

Now, I know there are certainly more than 12 open jobs in a 200 mile radius of Raleigh, but since I'm not personally looking for one I'm not going to waste my time any further with Monster and your little challenge.

Bottom line, I didn't see all those jobs you think are there for college graduates with no specific skills. I'm not arguing that there aren't companies out there with that as a minumum requirement before they'll even talk to you. Clearly there are.

But generally speaking you are certainly going to land a better (higher paying) job with some kind of technical or engineering degree.

And after a certain number of years have passed experience trumps most degrees. Not in fields like medicine where you aren't going to practice without the degree in the first place, though.
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Post by Todd S. Malicoate »

tubashaman wrote:But in college, you STUDY your instrument to get the skills for being good to win an audition
It's on the tip of my tongue to say it...

but I can't help remembering that I used to think the same thing.

Nevertheless, James, you are in Abilene, Texas (which, by my reckoning, is not the place to be if you want to study to win a tuba audition) lecturing many folks who have stood where you stand about why a person should study the tuba in college.

You're probably the best player at your school...hell, you've probably always been the best tuba player in your area. You have no perspective, and (with the exception of some posters here) no one is going to tell you how truly ridiculous the odds against you are.

Perhaps someone else can present the argument in front of James in terms so plain and firm as to command their assent?
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Post by Rick Denney »

lgb&dtuba wrote: Admittedly my opinions on this (and they are certainly only opinions) are colored by the profession I'm in; computer programming.
I have managed a number large software development projects, and developed several commercially successful software products in my narrow field. What I want in a programmer is not someone who knows a particular language--languages and even programming paradigms come and go. What I want is someone who can understand the user's needs, write a good set of requirements, and then write a program that fulfills those requirements, on time and within budget. That takes good listening skills, a strong expressiveness, and logical clarity.

I have met very few college-trained programmers who can do that straight out of school, and most of those could do it before they went to school. I've met more experienced programmers who can.

It's about listening and logic, not about languages. The hot languages when I was in college were FORTRAN and COBOL, in addition to assembly language (which I have managed to avoid, for the most part). Later, they were Pascal, and then C, followed by C++. Now, it's Java, and even Visual Basic. When I was in school, people paid a lot to be trained in IBM's Job Control Language. Nobody even knows that that is any more.

FORTRAN and Pascal were procedural, and that paradigm shifted to event-driven approaches, which then shifted to event-driven, object-oriented approaches. All that has happened since college for me, and I have 15 more years of work before reaching normal retirement age. I abandoned my college-based computer training within a handful of years of graduation.

If I was hiring someone to sit in a corporate bullpen and churn out lines of code, I would care about their languages. But if I need someone who can interpret needs into requirements and then write code cheaply and consistently with it, then I have to look way past languages. The most capable programmers (and systems engineers) I've ever worked with were math majors, and some have been EE's. Yes, they knew languages, but they could also add a language to their repertoire in a short time, just because they knew what a language should be able to do.

To answer Bloke's issue about college-trained engineers in charge of his genius friend, I would say that to be effective as an engineer, it takes historical understanding, strong analytical skills, specific training in relevant industry practices, design creativity in response to requirements, an intuitive understanding of the three-dimensional world, and a strong capability to work with and express oneself to people.

Maybe a quarter of that can be learned in college, but that quarter is hard to learn anywhere else. Much of that quarter is in the last skill set in my list above. Too many engineers can't explain their designs or analyses to other engineers, let alone non-engineers. But I have not noticed that non-graduates are any better, and many are worse, depending on their experience to justify what they cannot explain. Inabilities in expression are a reflection of college training having migrated to a job-training approach, however. Nobody with a really broad education, including that guy with the Latin degree, should have trouble expressing themselves, either verbally or in writing.

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Post by jtuba »

Todd S. Malicoate wrote:
tubashaman wrote:But in college, you STUDY your instrument to get the skills for being good to win an audition
You have no perspective, and (with the exception of some posters here) no one is going to tell you how truly ridiculous the odds against you are.
No odds aren't against him, the military is always hiring. Has anybody brought the Reserves or National Guard yet? Better pay and benefits than most gigs.
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Post by MartyNeilan »

Eupharitone wrote:you don't have to have an Education degree to know how to teach
True, but you won't get in the front door of any public school or most private ones without a teaching certificate in your state. NCLB has seen to that. There are numerous alternate programs to get a state certificate now (most of which require some sort of degree) but getting a standard Bachelor's in ed, or a Masters of Arts in Teaching (if you already have an applied undergrad in that field) are still the best ways to get that teaching certificate.
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Post by NDSPTuba »

Todd S. Malicoate wrote:
tubashaman wrote:But in college, you STUDY your instrument to get the skills for being good to win an audition
It's on the tip of my tongue to say it...

but I can't help remembering that I used to think the same thing.

Nevertheless, James, you are in Abilene, Texas (which, by my reckoning, is not the place to be if you want to study to win a tuba audition) lecturing many folks who have stood where you stand about why a person should study the tuba in college.

You're probably the best player at your school...hell, you've probably always been the best tuba player in your area. You have no perspective, and (with the exception of some posters here) no one is going to tell you how truly ridiculous the odds against you are.

Perhaps someone else can present the argument in front of James in terms so plain and firm as to command their assent?

Very true, being a big fish in a little pond gives you no real world perspective. Give Ron Little at UNT a call and see if you can show up one day and sit in with the UNT tuba/euph ensemble ( I'm assuming they have one ) , I'd imagine with the pool of talent they have there, you will most likely find yourself among better players than yourself.
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Post by Biggs »

lgb&dtuba wrote:
Biggs wrote:
the elephant wrote:Well, not everyone who pursues a music performance plans on trying to use that education to seek employment as a player.
I'm not trying to dispute your point that some institutions and some professors have no business producing "performers," but I consider myself a 'performance' major who will not seek employment as a player. I'm pursuing a tuba degree for my own satisfaction, not because I think I have professional potential.

I agree that there are delusional performance majors with no chance of becoming professional players; I just don't think you can discount the idea of a competent, casual performance major.
I've heard this type of statement many times (I work at a university now), so don't take this personally, but I have to wonder just why someone would waste 4 years or more in college to get a degree that they don't plan on using to earn their way in this world.

Unless you are planning on living on Mummy and Daddy's money for the rest of your life you're going to have to have a marketable skill. If you don't learn one in college, then you'll have to spend more time learning one. Having wasted time in college you'll then be automatically behind your age group and behind in earnings.

Education is a fine thing, but unless you're independently wealthy you'd better be learning something that will help you earn a living.
I'm going to college for my own benefit, so I think it is only fit that I decide what I want to gain from the experience. Since I like making music, I'd like to become the best musician I can be - not so other people can hear me and enjoy whatever noises I might produce, but because I attain a high level of personal satisfaction. Getting a tuba degree is all about ME. :wink:

Since I attend school on the highest level of academic scholarship, I'm in a position to take my own sweet time and make sure that by the time I graduate, I'll have gotten the most out of the time and energy spent on campus.

For the record, I am pursuing a BA in journalism in addition to the ol' BM in tuba performance. I don't expect either to make me millions of dollars, but I expect both to challenge and satisfy me.
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