Jump to content
Why become a member? ×

When do you consider yourself a musician.


bubinga5
 Share

Recommended Posts

At college a lecturer told me that when he was asked what he did for a living he replied "I'm a piano player". People would then ask him what tunes he knew and could he play this or that.
After a while he got fed up of this, so when people asked him he started saying "I'm a musician". He said people then would say "really!? What drugs do you take".

Link to comment
Share on other sites

As an electrician and a musician (still open for debate) I'd say the difference there is that my qualifications as an electrician are quantifiable where art isn't, does a grade 8 on violin make you any more enjoyable to listen to if the person listening hates the sound of a violin?

Edited by stingrayPete1977
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I started playing bass in the 1980s to get in a band and be part of a gang, to get girls, and because I wanted to be Steve Harris.

Although those who book my band may perceive me to be a musician, I know in my heart that I am really a pretend pop star (and proud of it).

Link to comment
Share on other sites

[quote name='Shaggy' timestamp='1471764418' post='3115571']
Lol - he still isn't! ;)

Singer / rhythm guitarist was though; a guy called Boo Hewerdine
[/quote]

You were in a band with Boo? Was it The Great Divide by any chance?

Boo's a great guy & one of the best songwriters this country has ever produced IMO. Great voice too.

Here's a picture of me & Boo in Scotland last year:

[url="http://s86.photobucket.com/user/RhysP/media/IMG_0131_zpsv5kt6vks.jpg.html"][/url]

Edited by RhysP
Link to comment
Share on other sites

[quote name='stingrayPete1977' timestamp='1472114106' post='3118557']
As an electrician and a musician (still open for debate) I'd say the difference there is that my qualifications as an electrician are quantifiable where art isn't, does a grade 8 on violin make you any more enjoyable to listen to if the person listening hates the sound of a violin?
[/quote]
As a qualified musician(are my many music qualifications unquantifiable) and someone who can change a plug. I'd say whether someone enjoys your violin playing or not has no bearing on whether you are a musician or not.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

[quote name='Lord Sausage' timestamp='1472155175' post='3119011']

As a qualified musician(are my many music qualifications unquantifiable) and someone who can change a plug. I'd say whether someone enjoys your violin playing or not has no bearing on whether you are a musician or not.
[/quote]

You are missing my point, you can be a musician either by qualifications or as a recognised performer of music, there are many unqualified musicians who I think most of us would agree are still musicians, an electrician without qualifications is not an electrician even if they are good at it, at best they would be described as 'handy' or something.


If you employed an electrician with certain grades and extra certificates for extra associated skills you should get what you pay for, jib rates even try and pin that down whereas a musician is an artist imo, my neighbour loves opera and classical music, I wouldn't enjoy his music collection and he wouldn't enjoy mine, the level of qualifications gained or albums sold have no bearing on the final unquantifiable product do they?

Edited by stingrayPete1977
Link to comment
Share on other sites

[quote name='stingrayPete1977' timestamp='1472156900' post='3119033']
You are missing my point, you can be a musician either by qualifications or as a recognised performer of music, there are many unqualified musicians who I think most of us would agree are still musicians, an electrician without qualifications is not an electrician even if they are good at it, at best they would be described as 'handy' or something.


If you employed an electrician with certain grades and extra certificates for extra associated skills you should get what you pay for, jib rates even try and pin that down whereas a musician is an artist imo, my neighbour loves opera and classical music, I wouldn't enjoy his music collection and he wouldn't enjoy mine, the level of qualifications gained or albums sold have no bearing on the final unquantifiable product do they?
[/quote]
Unless i'm not understanding you you are talking about performance. You can get work as a musician that isn't just performance. Arranging, composing, teaching, conductors, MD's, choir leaders etc. But performance wise, in terms of clasical and opera (obviously talent is unquantifiable) but the better trained (qualified musicians) tend to get more of the work. I have two mates who are drummers. One who is self taught and a great drummer, one who went through The Royal Northern and has loads of qualifications. Guess which one tours the world with the BBC Orchestra, Halle Orchestra, does musical theatre work, teaches in conservatoires and schools etc etc etc and guess which one plays in pub bands and soul bands!

Edited by Lord Sausage
Link to comment
Share on other sites

[quote name='stingrayPete1977' timestamp='1472158334' post='3119048']
To me even just recording your own album in the basement is performing, once it's being done to entertain someone else be it live or recorded it's a performance and has artistic merit, the worst dross you have ever heard might be a number 1 hit, the fantastic album might never get burnt to a cd. Tricky aint it?
[/quote]
may i just say i don't think being a trained musician makes you a better (artistically) performer, writer etc than someone who isn't.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

[quote name='stingrayPete1977' timestamp='1472158334' post='3119048']
To me even just recording your own album in the basement is performing, once it's being done to entertain someone else be it live or recorded it's a performance and has artistic merit, the worst dross you have ever heard might be a number 1 hit, the fantastic album might never get burnt to a cd. Tricky aint it?
[/quote]

Yes, it is tricky, but that's because 'musician' encompasses such a wide range of activities, skills, abilities and a correspondingly wide range of opinions.

I think I can reasonably claim to be a musician because I can play a few instruments - some adequately, some poorly - have written a few songs and can record, mix and create an album of original songs. But I'm under no illusion that I'm good enough to do these things for a living. I can't read music (well, only painfully slowly) and my understanding of theory is tenuous at best so I'd be laughed out of any 'serious musicians' club. So what does that make me? An average musician? A poor musician? A better musician than the vast majority of people who can't play any instrument? Does it really matter? I am what I am and I play what I play - but the point is I make music and I don't know what the term is for such a person other than 'musician'.

Edited by 4stringslow
Link to comment
Share on other sites

On the electrician/musician analogy -
You would hire an electrician to do a certain job, and he/she would do what you asked of him/her (well not round here he/she wouldn't, but that's by the by)

The equivalent 'musician' would be a dep, or a classical muso - who will play the pieces you ask him/her to

That's the only real case where this analogy works.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

[quote name='Dave Vader' timestamp='1472206443' post='3119403']
On the electrician/musician analogy -
You would hire an electrician to do a certain job, and he/she would do what you asked of him/her (well not round here he/she wouldn't, but that's by the by)

The equivalent 'musician' would be a dep, or a classical muso - who will play the pieces you ask him/her to

That's the only real case where this analogy works.
[/quote]
Or a school/college/uni as a teacher. Or a theatre company may hire you as an MD. Or film/Tv company as a composer. Or a church as a choir leader. Or another musician who needs you to arrange/write parts. Or an orchestra as a conductor.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

[quote name='ambient' timestamp='1472157440' post='3119036']
You don't mention musician do you ?
[/quote]

It's ok, I'm not a musician. Well, I'm not sure now that I've read this thread. lol

Link to comment
Share on other sites

[quote name='4stringslow' timestamp='1472159289' post='3119057']
Yes, it is tricky, but that's because 'musician' encompasses such a wide range of activities, skills, abilities and a correspondingly wide range of opinions.

I think I can reasonably claim to be a musician because I can play a few instruments - some adequately, some poorly - have written a few songs and can record, mix and create an album of original songs. But I'm under no illusion that I'm good enough to do these things for a living. I can't read music (well, only painfully slowly) and my understanding of theory is tenuous at best so I'd be laughed out of any 'serious musicians' club. So what does that make me? An average musician? A poor musician? A better musician than the vast majority of people who can't play any instrument? Does it really matter? I am what I am and I play what I play - but the point is I make music and I don't know what the term is for such a person other than 'musician'.
[/quote]
Despite what I've said I totally agree with this. I guess it depends on your personal definiton of 'musician'.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

[quote name='Lord Sausage' timestamp='1472221176' post='3119588']
Or a school/college/uni as a teacher. Or a theatre company may hire you as an MD. Or film/Tv company as a composer. Or a church as a choir leader. Or another musician who needs you to arrange/write parts. Or an orchestra as a conductor.
[/quote]

Yep
:)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

[quote name='leftybassman392' timestamp='1471945098' post='3117106']
Being a professional musician is not the same as having a professional approach (whatever that might mean) to your music making.
[/quote]

I see "professional approach" as meaning that you adopt the same approach to playing music as you do to whatever it is that you do for a living, because you'd still like to be doing it tomorrow - ie. do it well and don't piss people off. Well, at least not the people that pay you.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Restore formatting

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

 Share

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...