It’s May.
Thousands of young people across the country move on from their college
education into the real world. Some of them entered college not knowing what
their career path might be, and some of them graduate from college still not
totally clear on where they are headed. It’s been my experience that music
students are among of the most focused of all young people. Music students know
exactly why they’re going to college. They may be headed on a performance path
or a music teaching career, but there is no doubt of their planned trajectory
from day one of their freshman semester. Four, six or eight years later their
hoped-for destination may have shifted, particularly in the field of jazz. Jazz
is one of the most creative, exciting and challenging career paths a musician
can pursue, and equally fraught with competition. In this blog we’d like to
offer three opinions about a jazz career and how to prepare for it.
In a most
recent interview, I spoke with Denis DiBlasio, saxophonist and educator at
Rowan University. His take on careers in jazz is highly relevant for the times.
Denis DiBlasio, in 2019 |
MR: So
are you able to give [jazz majors]
advice on what their possibilities are after they graduate?
DD: Well the ones that are serious we usually have a talk right around the
sophomore, junior year. And it’s different for these — the age that we’re
teaching now than it was for us. They can’t do what I did, because what I did
doesn’t exist anymore. You know you go out in the big band, maybe get a name. I
mean almost everything that happened to me happened because I was on Maynard’s
band and I maybe took advantage of it afterwards, doing these clinics and all
this business you know. It all came because people saw me with that band and
you know then you’re able to keep it going. Most of us that have been on the
bands, a lot of them, like when I think about the people I know who are doing
things now, they either were with Count’s band or Duke’s or Woody’s or Stan’s
or Maynard’s or Buddy’s, you know? And when these guys leave they either go to
Chicago, New York or LA for the most part, and there’s pockets of guys, and
they’ve all had that kind of experience, so — but now that whole band thing
doesn’t exist. And I don’t want to say it shouldn’t, it just doesn’t. But when
a student starts talking now about you know what am I going to do when I get
out, I get them in my office and we look at YouTube. And I talk to them about
how certain people have to — well you have to kind of design your own life.
There’s nothing that you’re going to go to and join and that’s going to be your
life in jazz. However, you look up — look at some of the people who are
creating their own thing, and I’ll pull up you know Leo Pellegrino? Too Many Zooz?
He’s a baritone sax player. He’s playing. And so I’ll pull that up. And I said,
“Look at what he did.” Now no one would think you’re going to make a living
doing this. But he put this up. Social media is a big part of it. You develop
your own audience so your audience comes and sees you, where before you would
play a gig to sell your CDs. Now you’re giving away CDs to hope they come to
your gig kind of, because you have to have, how do you develop your audience?
You’ve got to have an online presence. It’s all the stuff that didn’t exist
before. Have a website. People start to follow you. People ask you questions, you
answer them back, and I have a couple of students that have gone out and been
successful but part of the work is this online activity that is very much a
part of it all. We have a Music Industry major at our school. And these guys
that teach it like they’re all about this thing. And I asked one of the guys, I
said, “How do you get a record deal these days?” Because the record deal thing
the way it used to work was different. You have a name like Sal Nistico. Played
with Woody Herman, great tenor player. Sal gets off the band, Sal’s got
recordings, ooh let’s follow Sal. That’s over. How do we do this. And I said,
“What would the record companies even do?” He says, if you came to a record
company one of the guys told me that the record company is going to look at
your social media to see how many followers you have. And if you have enough
followers then I’ll just create a real nice slick video for you and we’re just
going to post it on the followers that you’ve already made and there’s your
audience. So if you have enough followers you’re apt to get a record deal, not
that the music isn’t that important but it’s almost not as important as how
many followers you have. Nobody’s going to listen to it to say man that’s great
tenor playing. They’re going to say who’s going to follow you? Nobody. Well
then we’re not interested. So I think wow, that’s a whole change. But they need
to know that. And as a teacher teaching something that is like an art form, and
the society around it is changing so quickly you can’t look at it like the way
it used to work. But it’s do-able and there are some kids doing it. So some of
my students they get on it, it’s not that foreign for a lot of them, and they
have a big presence. Because now it used to be the club would advertise it and
you would go and play and you know you get paid and hopefully somebody would
show up. But now they want a guarantee that you’re going to bring your peeps to
the gig, right? So you have to guarantee like 35 people before you get — but
for some kids it’s not a problem because they’re active on the social media.
And that’s a thing that never happened — that didn’t even exist before. And
when I had to learn that, I won’t say it was a bitter pill but it was so
opposite of how I came up. But we talk about it and we look and Colin Stetson,
this guy that plays bass saxophone and he sets up a loop, he does these
concerts — it’s great playing. It’s unbelievable playing. I never heard it. I
have about five different people that I show my students look at what they’re
doing. This is what you have to do if you want to have a future in it. Because
what I did is gone. It’s not a bad thing, it’s just what it is.
Denis
mostly works with instrumentalists who hope to carve their own niche in the
world of jazz.
Ametria
Dock is a valued vocal and theatrical coach and has worked with numerous
successful artists during her own career. She is adamant that setting goals is
essential. In our 2019 interview, she offered advice.
Ametria Dock, in 2019 |
MR: If
you get a student that comes to you about the age of when you entered the
business and they say, “I really want to make it in the music business.” This
idea of making it — do you address that?
AD: Absolutely.
So I have a lot of young artists, up-and-coming I call them, artists, creatives.
Now I have some that are really successful in movies and television right now
that are transitioning over to doing more musical things. And we sit down and
we talk about what is your idea of making it. What does that mean for you? What
does that look like for you? Who does that look like for you? Who are some of
the people that you think made it you know? Because sometimes what you think
making it is not necessarily — I mean is it making a lot of money? Is it doing
what you love everyday? So we sit down and we have conversations about that.
And I have some really, really intelligent kids that are way ahead of their
time. So I’m blessed to be able to mentor and sit down and have real
conversations about what that looks like. What does the next five years look
like for you in terms of working on this music and working toward whatever
goals you have. We sit down and we create plans and things like that. I think
that’s important — whether they’re kids or college aged, 20, 21 years old and
coming up with a plan of action.
MR: I
wonder how the technology and the way music is delivered these days affects
their vision?
AD: Yeah.
100%. I think it does. I think that social media, I mean it has its value, but
it also makes the creative, the artist see something so fast. It’s here today
and it’s gone tomorrow. And so music that artists that I loved growing up, you
know, they had albums upon albums upon albums. And now we have singles. And
they’re here for a couple of weeks and then it’s on to the next thing. And it’s
scary because you never really get to — I feel like a lot of artists got to
really dig deep and develop and evolve and become. Artists today, that
opportunity is, I mean you get a window and then you’re gone.
MR: There
used to be an art to creating an album concept, and which song should follow
which and the keys and all that kind of thing.
AD: Yeah.
There was a lot of thought put into making an album or creating a body of work,
and then introducing it to the world you know. I think now there’s more
emphasis on introducing it to the world than the body of work, in my opinion.
It’s like you’re pushing to put something
out instead of taking the time to really master and create, and so yeah that’s
my opinion.
And last,
but certainly not least, the late iconic saxophonist Phil Woods suggests that
the path to a jazz career has to start before you enter your freshman college
dorm. As a successful jazz man who paid many dues, I feel he is qualified to
offer the following advice:
Phil Woods, in 1999 |
MR: Do
you have advice for aspiring jazz musicians that might help them in their
careers?
PW: Advice
for young jazz men. No. I figure that if they’re going to do it, no matter what
I say they’re going to do it. It’s for those ones in between, those ones that
aren’t really sure, those are the ones I worry about. I mean I think jazz is
only for those that have no choice. I think if you’re a young man and you’re
entertaining thoughts of becoming a brain surgeon or a jazz tenor man, I’d go
with the brain surgery, you know what I mean? If you have a choice. If you’ve
got two burning desires, don’t pick jazz. I mean keep playing it, I mean
sometimes I envy the amateur, like all those dentists and doctors who play for
kicks. They don’t have to worry about making bread at it. They really enjoy
making music. And that’s really what it’s about. Never forget that joy, that
first time you made a note and it made you feel good. Musicians kind of forget
that stuff, you know, they’re sitting in the pit and reading The Wall
Street Journal and grumpy, grumpy,
grumpy. They forgot that feeling, that burn of the belly the first time they
sounded decent. And it’s easy to get kind of trapped into just making some
bread and trying to exist when the bloom is off the rose. But a young man
should consider — you only have one life. When you make a choice, a career
decision, it should be well thought out. Not too carefully structured mind you,
but I wouldn’t rush into anything. I wouldn’t rush to go to a jazz school or
any university. I always recommend take a year off man. Hitchhike around the
world. Take your horn and see if you can play for your supper around the world.
See what life is about while you can, before you have a family, before you need
bread. Get a couple of thou and just do it. Just do it, man. Take a chance.
Because you might never have a chance to do it, and that’s when you can really
kind of get inside your head. It’s hard to do it when you’re surrounded by your
peers or family or the pressures of society that you know — go somewhere where
it’s all fresh and pursue your — find out who you are. And then when you
decide, you’re going to be a much better player for this experience.
MR: Well
I think you just gave some good advice in spite of yourself.
PW: Darn.
There goes my image as the curmudgeon.
Jazz has evolved
at a rapid rate, as have the social and economic conditions in which it lives.
Opportunities for musicians that once existed have disappeared, but others have
presented themselves. The music graduate must be open to career opportunities
they create for themselves, which may not have existed thus far. Making a
living in any genre of music has never been easy. People who have the requisite
passion must also have parental support and enthusiasm behind them. Conversely,
convincing a creative and determined young person that a musical path would be
too difficult is unhelpful in the long run. Evaluating with an eagle eye the
current musical milieu should be undertaken by all music majors before they arrive
at music school.