Spend enough time around musicians and you realise pretty quickly nobody really starts with a master plan.
You just start.
First songs. First rough recordings. First gigs where five people show up, and two of them are your friends. You slowly figure things out through repetition and small wins. Sometimes, after a long night recording sessions in a vintage recording studio where you suddenly realise how much better things can sound when everything is done properly.
It’s messy.
But everyone goes through that phase.
1. Everyone Sounds Rough At The Start
Most musicians have recordings they secretly hope nobody finds.
Early demos.
Early mixes.
Stuff that felt amazing at the time and now just sounds like part of the learning curve.
That phase matters more than people think. The musicians who improve fastest usually aren’t the most naturally talented. They’re the ones who keep writing, keep recording, keep playing even while they’re still figuring things out.
Bad songs.
Then better ones.
Then occasionally, something you’re actually proud of.
2. Opportunities Usually Come From People
Some of the best breaks musicians get don’t come from auditions.
They come from being around.
Someone remembers you showed up prepared. Someone remembers you stayed back to help pack gear. Someone remembers you were easy to work with during a stressful session.
Music scenes are smaller than they look.
Reputation travels quietly.
And most working musicians eventually realise reliability gets you called back just as often as talent does.
3. The Business Side Sneaks Up On You
Nobody starts music because they love paperwork.
Then one day someone asks about splits. Publishing. Licensing. Payments. Suddenly you realise there’s a whole second side to the industry nobody talks about early on.
Most musicians learn this gradually.
Sometimes after signing something they probably should have read more carefully.
You don’t need to become an expert.
Just aware enough not to get caught off guard.
4. Showing Up Beats Waiting For Inspiration
There’s a myth that great musicians only work when they feel inspired.
Reality usually looks different.
Practice rooms.
Rehearsals when you’re tired.
Sessions where nothing great happens but you still put the hours in.
The musicians who build careers usually just show up more often than everyone else. Even when motivation dips a bit. Even when progress feels slow.
Consistency looks boring.
But it compounds.
5. Success Looks Different Once You’re In It
Early on success usually means getting noticed.
Later it usually means stability.
Enough work. Good collaborators. Projects you actually enjoy. A schedule that doesn’t burn you out.
Most musicians who stay in the industry eventually realise there isn’t just one definition of success. There’s touring. Producing. Writing. Teaching. Session work.
Different paths.
Same craft.
And most people end up finding their own version somewhere along the way.
