Aaron
01-18-2007, 10:44 PM
Hello Janek,
I have started gaining a sense of the great importance of networking, being that the few fairly lucrative gigs I have landed arose primarily from knowing the right people.
I also feel that the networks I have developed were achieved due to luck more than anything else. The modest network I have developed was started by only a handful of people who happened to either be a friend from my hometown, related to me, or happened to be in the audience watching me play.
There are also geographical limitations, as for the past year I've lived in a fairly small city of 70,000-100,000 people. It has allowed me to know a lot of gigging musicians fairly quickly, but the city can't support musicians as bar gigs that pay well only come around about once a month (New Year's, Mardi Gras, St. Patrick's Day...) and private party gigs are rare. I would really like to extend my network geographically without moving from my current location. It is difficult to justify playing many gigs in Seattle as it costs $30-35 in gas to get there and back.
Sorry for the long-windedness. But do you have any advice for a younger player trying to get consistent work- hopefully enough to live off of in the future. Are there any secrets to networking that make "luck" less of a factor? Could forming a career out of music become realistic considering my desire to stay in Bellingham, WA?
Thanks in advance.
I have started gaining a sense of the great importance of networking, being that the few fairly lucrative gigs I have landed arose primarily from knowing the right people.
I also feel that the networks I have developed were achieved due to luck more than anything else. The modest network I have developed was started by only a handful of people who happened to either be a friend from my hometown, related to me, or happened to be in the audience watching me play.
There are also geographical limitations, as for the past year I've lived in a fairly small city of 70,000-100,000 people. It has allowed me to know a lot of gigging musicians fairly quickly, but the city can't support musicians as bar gigs that pay well only come around about once a month (New Year's, Mardi Gras, St. Patrick's Day...) and private party gigs are rare. I would really like to extend my network geographically without moving from my current location. It is difficult to justify playing many gigs in Seattle as it costs $30-35 in gas to get there and back.
Sorry for the long-windedness. But do you have any advice for a younger player trying to get consistent work- hopefully enough to live off of in the future. Are there any secrets to networking that make "luck" less of a factor? Could forming a career out of music become realistic considering my desire to stay in Bellingham, WA?
Thanks in advance.