That's pretty much it. Not to knock on school. It has served many well. But there is no need to go into THAT much debt to learn something that you say (as an assistant) could have been PAID to learn anyhow. If you want to get into recording as a job just get a good demo reel going and hope you impress someone. Will a degree help your chances? maybe... maybe not. If you suck nobody's gonna care about your piece of paper. And likewise if you know your shit and do excellent work nobody cares if you don't have it. I'm more inclined to think that the degree is worth more for the connections that come with it than anything else. I don't mean that to offend anyone either. I know what you learn there is good stuff but it's minimum of a bachelors degree to work here in this department, and also the financial department & sales. Don't go to school, go and try and persue music, but this IS a hard industry to win over. Out of 10,000 people, maybe 20-50 may succeed fully in the music industry or even lesser. 30 years old, and lost the battle, with no degree. IDK, I don't want that to be me... or anyone else. MrT has some valid points, because he speaks from experience. However, I'm also speaking from experience, and I'm only 24 years old. Wish yall could meet my teacher J ames, he's a freakin' genius. He made me realize that there's more to it than knowing how to set shit up, and hit the record button, or just putting reverb or delay or compressing something... Without million dollar equipment to learn on, a person comes out to a big time studio to get hired, and they ask him a question like how much experience do you have. You answer back oh yeah plenty, and they ask you with what type of equipment. You answer them back with a lineup of equipment. So what if you know how to use a mackie onyx, or how a B-1 sounds, or how to hook up a DBX166 comp. SO, they could either hire you or not. Lets say they DO hire you. They lay you down on say a smaller SSL console like the 6000 and say work it...
1. You don't have ANY experience in equipment that's like that. You rmixer at home has 2 busses. The SSL 6000 has 32 busses.
2. Your fired, cause you had to "learn it first". Someone's paying $600 dollars an hour, for you to track their work, and your goofing off saying "oh this is where the so and so is located at, but what is this??"
....
well even school couldn't help you then lmfao.... HOWEVER I go to school, I have the SSL6000 console right in front of me every day, and other studios have their own equipment, digital, and analog of course.... Put me in the same studio, I know how to work it. Maybe with more experience, I'll have them tracked, mixed down, and ready to go within' 4 hours, instead of their regular 7 hours... So we don't get paid the extra ** hours, but they come back, and bring more clients because you are good. hell they think you are GREAT.
So then, what's more better??
Buying the SSL console at $300,000 and learn it on your own
or spending $10 to learn it in school.
Unless you have the money don't waste the $300,000 on a SSL console lmao. sure you would have a new ssl console, but um... it won't fit in the 2 bedroom apartment. And why spend $300,000 and not go pro?
* Experience is one of the things you need
* Someone who knows more than you teaching you is very effective (taking the 10 years it takes you to learn it and shoving it down in 1 month, spend that extra 9 years 11 months gaining experience and more, or be 30 with 10 years of learning... your choice)
* Network - Very Very important. If not going to school to learn, go to school to network lmao.
* this industry is FAST, like a speeding bullet, if your not ready, it will pass you by with a blink of an eye. It's better to learn all you can in 1 year and use 9 years to gain experience or whatever, than it is to learn everything you can in 5 years and gain 5 years experience.