aisling wrote:Tone Deft wrote:![]()
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I think I need a session with therapy cat.
there's your problem right there - there is no grandeur in musicaisling wrote:I often ask my self if I am just deceiving my self with delusions of grandeur in music production .......
you never SAW the Paris Hilton sex tape, did you. after that performance I'm surprised Adonis is still into her.Angstrom wrote:creative talent is not rewarded by mainstream capitalism as far as I can tell. Selling coke and having good oral skills is how to 'make a mark on pop culture' if you really want to do such a thing.
didn't Manson play guitar?My dad is an amazing classical guitarist, really top quality, yet I can guarantee that this sentence is about as famous as he will ever get. Unless he kills again of course
no see this is where I think musicians get it wrongTone Deft wrote: it pisses me off that musicians and teachers are so undervalued in society.
I like that thought, I agree wholeheartedly. Nicely statedethios4 wrote:
One thing to remember is that you will probably never ever get to experience your own music the way you experience other people's music.
how about a meatshake instead. Or you could go over to veggie hut for a soy shake.hangar17 wrote:not really but could i have a milkshake instead?
everything ok?Machinesworking wrote:aisling wrote:Tone Deft wrote:![]()
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I think I need a session with therapy cat.
absolute poetry!Angstrom wrote:creative talent is not rewarded by mainstream capitalism as far as I can tell. Selling coke and having good oral skills is how to 'make a mark on pop culture' if you really want to do such a thing.
The world is full of creatively musically talented individuals, but life isn't 'fair' like the movies. Some talented people live in a 6 foot by 5 foot shack along with 12 kids and they scrape by for money. The talented kid doesn't makes it big, the lucky one does.
People can be talented and get nowhere, people can work like bastards and get nowhere, people can have both and get nowhere ... but maybe, just maybe you happen to live in a certain country where the climate is just right and the work is OK and you know a guy who introduces you to a fella who knows a man who ... etc. Just plain luck.
But anyone making a mark that way will tell you it was their hard work or their talent, but that are merely the requisites, not the causes of success.
After you have been in this business for a while you will meet loads of session players who have playing talent coming out of their arse but will never be remembered.
You will meet amazing composers who are so mentally unstable that they can never get it all together. You will meet people who were hard working and talented, made a mark and then fell from grace / out of fashion and are now doing a Masters Degree in seriously quiet life. The person that lives next door to them doesn't know who the hell they are, or care at all.
you see, it's all relative.
One mans talented is another mans talentless. You say underworld are amazing, they very likely think they are average. My dad is an amazing classical guitarist, really top quality, yet I can guarantee that this sentence is about as famous as he will ever get. Unless he kills again of course
Yeah, totally agree, you are too "inside" with your own music, theres no mystery at all to it and you have a huge emotional attachment to it so you can never perceive it as you do other music, but at the same time it means that maybe others can perceive your music in a way that you cant, which is cool tooaisling wrote:I like that thought, I agree wholeheartedly. Nicely statedethios4 wrote:
One thing to remember is that you will probably never ever get to experience your own music the way you experience other people's music.
That's sig-worthy.ethios4 wrote:One thing to remember is that you will probably never ever get to experience your own music the way you experience other people's music.
http://www.myspace.com/kristallinethios4 wrote:One thing to remember is that you will probably never ever get to experience your own music the way you experience other people's music.