r.a
meat popsicle
- Joined
- Jul 4, 2009
- Messages
- 496
- MBTI Type
- STFU
ok, first off, you should have posted this as a new thread.
ok, so far so good.
ok. "improve" is being used loosely. include the word "change". a change to tailor a demographic or a major label's demand doesn't necessarily mean "improve" all the time. it means you are not doing what they are asking you to do.
unfortunately it wasn't the end of the story.
what an ignorant, blindly broad, crude and inexperienced thing to say. well, its either inexperience or you're taste in music is based mostly on your programming, and you have accepted it as your reality. or you're just being a dick because you're ego hasn't been properly humbled yet.
its ok, you're still young and you're an entp so who knows, maybe in the next ten years you'll turn into a bad ass and not a salty prick.
its more obvious that its about who's marketable and who isn't. its not always who's "good", little feller.
oh word you work for a label? how many a&r guys for (financially and critically) successful labels do you know? wow, thats great! good for you!

again, marketable/good = debatable as being the same thing. there may be worlds out there for you to discover.
you compare making music to playing poker. how does that work, exactly?
and again, your concept of "good" or "bad" is skewed by the inner standards you place, which seems to be based on financial and commercial success.
thats a crutch and a weak attempt to feign avoiding criticism.
thats ok, i enjoyed responding to you.
Look, here's how it works in the music business...
If you're not making it anywhere, it's for one or both of two fundamental reasons:
1) Not enough people are willing to pay for your music, either because it's not good enough or not marketable enough (in business terms these are the same thing), or
2) You haven't made enough of an effort to market yourself.
ok, so far so good.
The whole "zomg the music business is just RANDOM LUCK!" thing is total bullshit perpetuated by non-musicians who don't know what the fuck they're talking about and/or failed musicians who want to make excuses for having failed/continuing to fail.
I don't buy it. The amount of luck required to succeed in music is inversely proportional to the amount of work and time you're willing to put into it. Starting a band IS starting a business, and if you're not making money it's because you need to improve your product and/or the way you market it. End of story.
ok. "improve" is being used loosely. include the word "change". a change to tailor a demographic or a major label's demand doesn't necessarily mean "improve" all the time. it means you are not doing what they are asking you to do.
unfortunately it wasn't the end of the story.
If you've been out touring the country and passing out thousands of demos for several years and nobody in the industry with any clout is taking notice or paying any attention, it's not because you're unlucky--it's because you suck.
what an ignorant, blindly broad, crude and inexperienced thing to say. well, its either inexperience or you're taste in music is based mostly on your programming, and you have accepted it as your reality. or you're just being a dick because you're ego hasn't been properly humbled yet.
its ok, you're still young and you're an entp so who knows, maybe in the next ten years you'll turn into a bad ass and not a salty prick.
Industry scouts are everywhere; too many bands delude themselves into thinking they'll "make it when the right guy hears us"--if you're truly good, you'll be showered with praise virtually everywhere you go, because to informed and experienced people in the industry, it's obvious who's good and who isn't despite what your personal tastes happen to be.
its more obvious that its about who's marketable and who isn't. its not always who's "good", little feller.
Notice how labels don't sign totally unmarketable bands no matter how much the A&R guy happens to enjoy them?
oh word you work for a label? how many a&r guys for (financially and critically) successful labels do you know? wow, thats great! good for you!

again, marketable/good = debatable as being the same thing. there may be worlds out there for you to discover.
It's just like poker players who whine and whine about how they're the unluckiest player in the world, because their perspectives aren't even wide enough to grasp the reasons why they suck. And yet the best players in both the music world and the poker world still come out with lots and lots of money every year, and I don't buy the bullshit socialist argument that everyone should be paid the same for not doing as good a job.
you compare making music to playing poker. how does that work, exactly?
If you think that any "bad band" ever actually makes a lot of money, you're judging music according to arbitrary inner standards and you lack context.
and again, your concept of "good" or "bad" is skewed by the inner standards you place, which seems to be based on financial and commercial success.
Well, this is an awesome demonstration of why Ti/Fi tends to do a poor job of evaluating art. This time, though, I'm going to demonstrate my Ni and just say that I'm confident in my position on this that I genuinely don't care whether or not you understand.
Peace out!
thats a crutch and a weak attempt to feign avoiding criticism.
thats ok, i enjoyed responding to you.