How To Advance Your Music Career (Grammy Nominated Mixer Joe Carrell) - TheRecordingRevolution.com
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- Опубликовано: 16 сен 2024
- Trying to land an engineering gig in a studio, grow your freelance mixing business, or just get your band/music noticed? Then this video is for you.
Dove Award winning and Grammy nominated mixer Joe Carrell sat down with me to talk about some simple (and repeatable) strategies you can use to get more opportunities for advancement in your career including:
- How to get people to WANT to see you succeed
- Why someone with LESS talent can get more opportunities than someone with more talent
- The "wide net" strategy for growing your career in the early years
Joe is an awesome guy with a great heart. I think you're going to enjoy this interview!
The best talk on business that I've ever heard!
Officially started mixing music today. The journey begins.
Andy Rosado Good luck, man! :P
Good luck brother! Remember, this is a skill that takes years to master so when the going gets tough, always keep at it!
Plenty of help online Andy, it's a beautiful road to go down man.
Best of luck!
And what a journey.
Oh man, good luck on your journey, I promise it will be fantastic, full of joy and sorrow, frustration and success, good and evil and much more! Have fun!
Thank you both for this amazing and powerful message. God bless you guys.
A. Rosado the journey also begins for me. So true with all these wealth of tips. Thanks G. Cochrane for posting this.
Graham, Joe, thank you so much for this video. I can't believe this jewel is free right here for everybody to be seen. Thanks.
My Heartful Thanks to Graham and Joe for sharing their experiences , to make life of young engr's , Artist and Musician more brighter . Thank you once again
all i learned from this video is "never outshine the master"!
Really enjoyed this interview. There really is nothing more important in any aspect of life than being a nice person.
First off, Thank you Graham for all of these videos. I'm just getting started with my own home studio and I'm (to use a phrase from another one of your videos) eating this kind of content up. I have a few unique and a little ambitious goals in mind and I find these kinds of videos invaluable. Second, add me to the list of people on here that want to say thank you to Joe for investing some time to help us. You've got an intent student and subscriber here for sure.
Some huge truth bombs dropped here. Thanks Joe and Graham.
😀 you guys are reading my mind, best wishes!
You Are impacting people's lives, Graham. You certainly have impacted mine.
Excellent content Graham, thanks!
Very profound advice that is highly applicable in any field out there n not just pro-audio alone. Thanks guys for sharing this
Big up to you guys really enjoy this interview. So much wisdom, keep up the good work.
Thank God I stumbled onto your page! Great advice and info!
You want people to do for you? Do for them first. You want people to respect you? Give respect first.
This is some powerful information in any industry--But it is especially useful in the music industry.
Thanks Graham & Joe. Our dreams are out there but they're not owed to us. We have to earn them...That's part of the journey.
Thanks for the advice guys. Really got me thinking. ;)
This a really good interview and you both touch a lot of subject in great depth!
This is fantastic advice. Not just for a life in music and studio work, but life in general. Great wisdom from Joe. Love it...
Great talk, thanks so much to both of you for taking the time to do this. If anyone needs help finishing tracks, mixing, mastering, or even collaborating, I want to help free of charge! Just shoot me a message. JP
really great video lot of great points that had everyday common sense and life scenarios. I see this all the time at my job doing auto body work. this is stuff that should be taught in schools. thanks for the great videos I enjoy watching them
Fantastic video, really insightful.
When I moved to nashville 20 years ago one of the first things I learned from a seasoned professional was nice people who weren't as talented got more gigs than very talented douchebags.
Invaluable information here!
A BIG THANKYOU to both of you gentleman for doing this interview! Ive been doing this for a good 15 years or so and a lot of good points were made that make all the sense to me. I think it goes without saying that it applies to any profession one choses. I'm writing all of these down for future reference.
*Thank you* so much for these!
Thank you for making this video guys. Technical help is important but this is valuable on a universal level :D
Great video guys.
Great attitude!
instead of being negative about what's being said take notes he's where you want be good luck trying it your way. suck it up and take in this wisdom. Don't let your ego kill your chance to reach this status
So true, I've seen people in all kinds of industries not land jobs because they feel like they are entitled to look like a weirdo walking thru the door and smelling like sh!t, then walk around complaining that they cant find a job. i say good luck with that. smh, APPEARANCE AND ATTITUDE IS EVERYTHING
Excellent video! Thanks guys :-D
nailed it
Some people just aren't easy to like. But that's life. You can't educate the employers to give the jerks a break by explaining to them why people don't like them. It's sad that sometimes good people just aren't likeable because it's just their personalities. Remember the charm school that young women went to to learn how to act. Maybe that should be a big part of what you learn at any school. Those expensive production schools should focus some on those things. How to act with employers 101. I'm serious.
Love it. Thanks.
Please upload your webinar whatever its called. Not all of us were able to be there at that hour. :)
you are talented, there is only one thing you're missing with your voice, once you do it , done
putting the phone away now! bout to level ⬆️
Dale Carnegie folks. Be nice, Be relate-able, Be helpful.
chemistry
great stuff...
When you are young and starting out, make your boss's and clients' lives easier. Good advice. When you get to mid-to-upper, its is dog eat dog. You need a mix of technical expertise, social savvy, connections (who you know does matter), and presence. And if you don't do it, others are to your demise.
Thank you for your videos, they're really helped me a lot. Can I have a save link to download Ableton on my windows, and which version do you recommend to have?
thats why its better to start your own record label so you dont have to pretend to be someone your not. Its 2017 and people can do it themselves.
I help lots of people,but I don't butt kiss period.. If dudes think I'm good,they should appreciate having great people to use around..Respect goes both ways...
3:45 is where you wanna skip to
If there's anything I can do for you guys, let me know ! ;)
Work hard in silence, let your success be your noice - Frank Ocean and CarbonX -
To be successful = own a KRK rokit speaker?
be a slave to the industry and dont be yourself. Then you will make it! WTF.
Good advice!
Don't be yourself if you are a fuckwit.
Vas Deferens so im a fuckwit because I'm giving my opinion. nice
That's not what I said. If that's what you take away from my comment then that's how you see yourself; nothing to do with me.
I noticed that too.That is obvious to be punctual and well dressed for interview but pooring water and opening the door?This video should be about music career progress but after 16min of watching this vid someone tells me to be likelable?Of course that everybody should be flexible and to get foot in the door.But be a servant??If you are good and getting good feedback from some places then contact big fishes. If they do not respond then contact next ones.Mixing or producing different types of music?After you are so skilled and famous why not but whatever music you love and feel you will be good at.Experimenting is good but when you want to break from your routines to do something for fun.There is a reason why you should pick your own "channel". You want to deliver best possible and not just experimenting with everything for years.Only tips I could give is to be humble with approach,be nice but honest what you think.If you will not make your own say people will quickly categorize you and you always be a servant.Take any advices from those who are better than you. Sustain any connections with people working in industry.Do sometimes something for free but do not sell out yourself for free.
TL;DW: Have patience and watch out for the human interaction side of music
For those who has the right intetion to begin with, this tips will be cool, but otherwise wont make a difference
Who's using their phone while listening to this? LOL
Where else? WAVES, lol
Recordingrevolution, need any help???
I despise human nature, I suppose I'll just constantly approach the music business as an outsider. Lmfao
Maybe in the 90's not sure about the whole slave thing these days
You want to be a professional... act like one.
A selfish view is never a healthy view.
Hey great vid, except for the incredibly sexist language. Everything is "guy" this, "guy" that. And we wonder why more women don't get in to the music industry. Is it so hard to say "person"?
Vas Deferens apparently it is for me. When I say guy it is uni-sex I suppose. Many of the interns that are coming out of school now days are indeed females. No offense was intended. Leads me to another really good point… Don't look for opportunities to be offended in this business. And I mean that with good heart 👍