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Product Description
The most comprehensive music career guide available: covers the entire range of career issues most musicians face.
Contrary to the standard joke about how to get to Carnegie Hall, “making it” in music is not simply about practice, practice, practice. Today, over 200,000 people in the United States work as musicians. With competition for traditional employment opportunities for musicians becoming ever more heated, today’s musicians must know how the music industry works and how they can tailor their skills accordingly. How can musicians create their own professional paths?
In Beyond Talent, veteran music career counselor Angela Myles Beeching offers up a comprehensive guide for musicians in search of work, demystifying the steps to success. A musician herself, Beeching offers her fellow artists the tangible tools and information they need to chart their own career paths. Written in clear, accessible language, this practical handbook covers the full spectrum of career issues that confront musicians.
Understanding the unique talents and training of musicians, Beeching presents a wealth of techniques and creative solutions for career advancement in the highly competitive music industry. Step-by-step instructions detail how to:
–design promotional materials, book performances
–network and access resources and assistance
–jumpstart a stalled career
–expand your employment opportunities while remaining true to your music
Drawing on a wealth of real-life examples, the book untangles artist management and the recording industry and explains how to find and create performance opportunities. Guidance is also provided on grant writing and fundraising, day jobs, freelancing, and how to manage money, time, and stress. Straightforward and reader-friendly, Beyond Talent is filled with practical tips, examples, checklists, sample budgets, goal-setting exercises, and extensive resource listings.
This essential handbook goes beyond the usual “how-to”; Beyond Talent helps musicians tackle the core questions about career goals, defining success, and imagining and then creating a meaningful life as a professional musician. Beyond Talent is an invaluable hands-on resource for all musicians for career advancement and satisfaction. It is the ideal companion for students and professionals, emerging musicians and mid-career artists –- for any musician looking to start or expand a career in music.
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A little while ago I reviewed a strangely titled book called “Making Music in Looking Glass Land” by Ellen Highstein. A labour of love, this book became the seminal “text book” for the classical musician and, now it its fourth edition, is still the book I would recommend to any musician either starting out on their career or working actively in the industry. However, this year an equally good, authoritative and comprehensive book has been published that aims to equip the classical musician with the tools and techniques required to make a success in this career.
Angela Beeching, an author who has gained a tremendous amount of experience through her work as the director of career services at the New England Conservatory of Music in Boston brings to this book real life problems and practical solutions that can help any and all musicians. Staring off by talking about the entrepreneurial musician, Beeching embeds in the mind of the reader the thought that success in this profession is up to you, the musician, and no one else. The characteristics a musician needs, Beeching writes, include “flexibility, resiliency and the ability to find opportunities in the midst of difficulties or challenges”. It is from this position that she then moves the reader onto some of the key soft skills required to run your career such as the art of networking (or “Schmoozing for Success” as she puts it), time management, dealing with performance anxiety and the fundamental questions of what you, as a musician, actually do. However, it is the practical advice that really sets this book apart.
Each chapter deals with a different topic including information about creating promotional material (brochures, biographies, etc.), recording demo CDs, using the internet to promote and advance your career, securing performance opportunities, raising funds, tax (although this is geared towards the American market), writing letters and press releases, publicity photographs, contracts, setting up and running residency or community education projects and on and on. For a relatively short book, Beeching manages to cover a lot of ground without being too detailed nor too information light. Each section is liberally peppered with real-life examples, case studies, handy tips and checklists in order to provide a complete start-to-finish tutor covering all of these vital subjects.
All too often I have reviewed similar books in these pages with the recurring caveat that, while they are useful, they are very much aimed at the non-classical musician. Here, in Beeching’s volume, we have a useful and informative book that is aimed solely and directly at the classical musician. Buy it now!
Rating: 5 / 5
A music business book for the classical musician? Is that some sort of oxymoron? Imagine my amazement upon finding this absolute gem while browsing in the BYU bookstore’s small music section. I’ve never seen a book with this focus before, and had no reason to hope for one. This book descended on me out of the blue, almost like a revelation.
In the “prelude” Ms. Beeching gives her “confessions” as a career counselor. First she expounds on the “truth about career paths” : there really is no such thing as a laid out path for any musician (classical or pop) that will lead them to enduring success. She then offers “five trade secrets” of her profession:
Look for the light in the eyes (what make you light up when talking?)
People often create their own obstacles
The first steps are most important
You already have the answers
People move ahead when they’re good and ready, and not a moment sooner
This is essentially a book about being a self-starter and taking things into your own hands rather than waiting for “them” to discover you. The book gives numerous tools for doing so. It covers qualities you must develop to “make it” as a musician, networking skills, developing your image (letterhead, bios, photos, promo kits, etc.), expanding your impact with demos and CDs, using the internet to promote your career, booking performance like a pro, building your audience (the media, publicity and you), connecting with audiences through residencies and community programming, performing at your best, freelancing – managing yourself, raising money for music projects (yes, you too can fund-raise), and getting it all together.
I am currently re-reading the book as there is so much information it will take a while to digest it all and even more time to implement it. The good news is, there are things you can do to promote your classical career and be a success.
If there is one drawback to this book, it is that I wish it contained more specifics on one of my main specialities, composition. There is some info for composers and composers will find the book of immense value, but the book is definitely slanted toward performers. The thing that almost negates this drawback is that Ms. Beeching states several times the need for performers to work with composers, newer repertoire or find some other niche in order to distinguish themselves from the mass of people already performing the standard repertoire. Sound advice.
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M. Ryan Taylor is a composer vocalist working out of American Fork, Utah. h t t p : / / M R y a n T a y l o r . c o m
Rating: 5 / 5
A few years back, Angela Beeching (my dear colleague at New England Conservatory down the road) wrote a “Career Guide for Musicians”. I was very impressed at how resourceful the guide was. Well, she finally got the chance to flesh out that first guide and “Beyond Talent” is the result. While ably covering all the nut & bolts of music career success (networking, building your image, recording, performing and raising support), the chief value of the book lies in the wisdom Beeching brings to creative career development. She understands the psychological profile of the career musician and that understanding shines through every page of her book.
In addition, Beeching tackles lesser-explored subjects geared to her primary readership of classical and jazz musicians: residency programs, performance health, teaching and grant opportunities. Up to date and immensely practical, Beyond Talent should be on the bookshelf of all career musicians.
Rating: 5 / 5
Angela Beeching’s “Beyond Talent” is a must-have book for musicians — both young musicians who aspire to a career, and working musicians who wish to be more successful. Full of practical advice, “Beyond Talent” gives step-by-step strategies for important aspects of building a career in music, covering topics like networking, promotions, and building and connecting with audiences. “Beyond Talent” also includes samples of bios, press releases, and other documents that are vital to the working musician. Beeching knows her stuff and writes with depth, and at the same time, her writing is accessible and inspirational. This book is a terrific companion for young and established musicians alike!
Rating: 5 / 5
Angela Myles Beeching’s book is a thoroughly excellent career guide for anyone who wants to be a professional musician. In music and in the movies, we’re often more aware of the glamorous lives of the biggest stars than of the hard work it took them to get there. And we may know next to nothing about the career of the musician who plays in a small town symphony or the actor who performs at a local dinner theater.
For anyone who wants to know more about the many variations of musical careers, I highly recommend Angela Myles Beeching’s book Beyond Talent: Creating a Successful Career in Music.
I have never encountered a more thorough or realistic book on creating a musical career. Ms. Beeching covers everything, from how to get an agent to how to create your own performing opportunities to what to wear for an audition. Her advice includes tips on marketing, finances, fundraising, and time management.
My favorite aspect of the book, however, is its emphasis on a varied, even shifting, idea of success. Many of us establish career dreams early on, like playing in a major orchestra, singing at the Met, or making a professional recording; but everyone encounters rejection at some point.
Ms. Beeching cautions wisely that each musician must define – and constantly refine – his or her own vision of success.
Catherine K. Brown
http://www.findingmysingingvoice.com
Rating: 5 / 5