
AlChuck
Well-known member
Well, hi there, folks. Some of you might know me from my thousands of posts in the Guitar, Cakewalk, Sonic Foundry, Soundcards, MIDI, Newbies, MP3 clinic forums and the Cave. But I've never in almost two years so much as looked over here.
See, I always thought I had almost zero chance of making anything beyond a mere pittance at music and so have not pursued it on a financial level for a couple of decades now. But last week I found myself, along with millions of others, facing the unemployment rolls for the first time since 1991, and all sorts of thoughts are going through my head about what to do with myself.
In the last few years, as a hobbyist I've developed a pretty good level of skill with some computer-based tools of the music production trade, and DV editing tools as well. For a while I've had an interest in scoring for visual media, and took a class in it. I'm a fairly well-educated and accomplished guitar player and composer.
Anyway, it's likely a pipe dream, but I've thought that maybe I could make something of a living from being able to offer a variety of services as a contractor -- edit and sweeten corporate training videos, wedding videos, score independent films, play some duo or solo jazz gigs, teach, whatever.
I'm also a web developer by most recent day-job trade -- I'm a fairly accomplished Perl programmer and JavaScripter, having built several CGI applications that manipulate SQL databases, and I also know enough Java to be comfortable with it. I have also had extensive experience with writing VBA stuff to "smarten up" Word templates and several other such things. I'm the kind of person that has a very firm grasp on the underlying technologies and concepts and can quickly learn particular tool kits and implementations and apply them intelligently and creatively, rather that just regurgitating small variations of some boilerplate stuff I hammered into my skull in some class one time. Before doing the programming stuff, I was a technical writer and have also done SQA work and lightweight UNIX and Windows NT sys admin stuff and a myriad of other related (and unrelated) things.
It's likely I'll end up getting more of that work -- it will be easier and certainly more lucrative right off the bat (assuming I can find any work at all! -- times are bad), but while I'm phasing out of this job and trying to figure out what's next for my career, I can't help thinking that maybe this is the time to start making steps towards doing what I have a passion for, and trying to make some things happen. Or perhaps I can make a hybrid career out of web programming, video editing and scoring, and playing.
I really have no experience in trying to take such steps. In the past I was hopelessly naiive about a music career -- I spent the first ten years of my adulthood playing in rock bands and thinking that one of them would actually be good enough that one day some A&R guy would hear us and be knocked out, sign us, and the rest would be history... all the while playing in dives in crappy bands for peanuts and having to work at a day job the whole time.
Now I'm older, wiser, and better yet, I have a lot of skills and much more confidence in my own abilities and creativity.
Basically I'm just looking for encouragement -- or discouragement.
See, I always thought I had almost zero chance of making anything beyond a mere pittance at music and so have not pursued it on a financial level for a couple of decades now. But last week I found myself, along with millions of others, facing the unemployment rolls for the first time since 1991, and all sorts of thoughts are going through my head about what to do with myself.
In the last few years, as a hobbyist I've developed a pretty good level of skill with some computer-based tools of the music production trade, and DV editing tools as well. For a while I've had an interest in scoring for visual media, and took a class in it. I'm a fairly well-educated and accomplished guitar player and composer.
Anyway, it's likely a pipe dream, but I've thought that maybe I could make something of a living from being able to offer a variety of services as a contractor -- edit and sweeten corporate training videos, wedding videos, score independent films, play some duo or solo jazz gigs, teach, whatever.
I'm also a web developer by most recent day-job trade -- I'm a fairly accomplished Perl programmer and JavaScripter, having built several CGI applications that manipulate SQL databases, and I also know enough Java to be comfortable with it. I have also had extensive experience with writing VBA stuff to "smarten up" Word templates and several other such things. I'm the kind of person that has a very firm grasp on the underlying technologies and concepts and can quickly learn particular tool kits and implementations and apply them intelligently and creatively, rather that just regurgitating small variations of some boilerplate stuff I hammered into my skull in some class one time. Before doing the programming stuff, I was a technical writer and have also done SQA work and lightweight UNIX and Windows NT sys admin stuff and a myriad of other related (and unrelated) things.
It's likely I'll end up getting more of that work -- it will be easier and certainly more lucrative right off the bat (assuming I can find any work at all! -- times are bad), but while I'm phasing out of this job and trying to figure out what's next for my career, I can't help thinking that maybe this is the time to start making steps towards doing what I have a passion for, and trying to make some things happen. Or perhaps I can make a hybrid career out of web programming, video editing and scoring, and playing.
I really have no experience in trying to take such steps. In the past I was hopelessly naiive about a music career -- I spent the first ten years of my adulthood playing in rock bands and thinking that one of them would actually be good enough that one day some A&R guy would hear us and be knocked out, sign us, and the rest would be history... all the while playing in dives in crappy bands for peanuts and having to work at a day job the whole time.
Now I'm older, wiser, and better yet, I have a lot of skills and much more confidence in my own abilities and creativity.
Basically I'm just looking for encouragement -- or discouragement.