Entrepreneurs in Music — and Don’t Forget about Mozart!

I’m approaching music entrepreneurship from the vantage point of a music career advisor. My day job is working with music students and alumni on advancing their careers, and this often involves entrepreneurial projects, so I’m happy to be part of this discussion!

My background is as a cellist — I studied at Boston University, New England Conservatory, and got my Master’s and DMA at SUNY Stony Brook, where I studied with Tim Eddy. I also studied for two years in Paris with Roland Pidoux. My goal then was to get a tenure track teaching job and play lots of chamber music. I taught cello first at California State Fresno and then at SUNY Potsdam. I found out that my goal wasn’t exactly how I’d imagined it. So I moved back to Boston and took the job here at NEC as the director of the Career Services Center, thinking I’d do this for a while until I figured out what to do next. That was 1993 and what I figured out was I love this work — helping other musicians sort through their career goals, plans, life transitions, and entrepreneurial projects.

As a grad student at SUNY Stony Brook I complained to the administration that there wasn’t any specialized career services for musicians. The department chair had me write up a proposal and then after I handed it in, they said, “Fine, we’ll make this your teaching assistantship — you get to start the music career center. ” I did the work, learned a lot, finished my doctorate, and went on with my goals and getting teaching jobs. I never thought this career work would later end up being my own career path. I teach career courses, write on music career topics, run a workshop series, and oversee a comprehensive music career opportunities database called Bridge: Worldwide Music Connection. I’m fascinated by the myriad ways that musicians find to advance their careers.

Here are some observations about music entrepreneurship that I hope our group will explore this week:

1. Musicians often get hung up on the word “entrepreneurship” because it may seem (to some folks) antithetical to the arts. It doesn’t matter what you call it as long as musicians can take charge of their own careers, and so that they can create projects: take initiative, dream, envision, plan, and implement.

2. Musicians are multi-talented and so they typically have multi-layered careers, combining a range of skills and projects.

3. The stereotypical musician — the one who can’t balance a checkbook, get to rehearsals on time, organize a project or a meeting, speak from the stage, or talk with non-musicians at a reception or board meetings — that stereotype is SO old school. It’s a brave new world and emerging musicians are creating new and exciting career paths.

4. Orchestral musicians often catch the entrepreneurial bug because they want or need to:

a. exercise their individual creativity
b. have a sense of ownership and leadership
c. make additional income
d. have an additional musical outlet (explore other repertoire and musical roles)
e. have a non-musical outlet
f. experience a satisfying sense of completion (concrete outcomes or physical products versus the reality that practice is never done and performances are fleeting)
g. satisfy a need in the marketplace or in their community

I look forward to reading responses and more postings from you all!

About the author

Angela Myles Beeching
Angela Myles Beeching

Angela Myles Beeching is director of the NEC Career Services Center, an internationally recognized comprehensive career resource office for students and alumni. A Fulbright Scholar and Harriet Hale Woolley grant recipient, Beeching designs and facilitates the Young Performers Career Advancement program for the Association of Performing Arts Presenters' national conference. Beeching has been an invited speaker for the National Association of Schools of Music, Chamber Music America, Eastman School of Music, Oberlin Conservatory, Peabody Conservatory, and the North Carolina School of the Arts, among others. She chairs the education committee on the board of Chamber Music America and locally, serves on the board of the Winchester Community Music School. Beeching's articles have appeared in Chamber Music magazine, Inside Arts, the National Business Employment Weekly, and Managing Your Career, published by the Dow Jones. Her book, [i]Beyond Talent: Creating a Successful Career in Music[/i], was published by Oxford University Press in January, 2005.

She holds a B.M. from Boston University and M.M. and D.M.A. degrees in violoncello from SUNY/Stony Brook. She studied cello with Timothy Eddy and Roland Pidoux, and studied at the Tanglewood Music Center and Banff Centre for the Arts. She has recorded for Summit, and was on the faculty of California State University/Fresno and the Crane School of Music, SUNY/Potsdam.

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