Bwah! We are making me laugh!
Hey, bitches, I followed my dream and gave it all up for my art, by way of learning about and regularly filing payroll taxes. So I've played music for a living for a decade. Take your art and shove it up your soundhole!
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
Bwah! We are making me laugh!
Hey, bitches, I followed my dream and gave it all up for my art, by way of learning about and regularly filing payroll taxes. So I've played music for a living for a decade. Take your art and shove it up your soundhole!
all I can think is, if that had happened to me younger, and the label was there, wow, I'd have grabbed on like a lifeboat.
Yeah, I TOTALLY get that.
And you're one of my A-Number-One examples of ditching it all, while living a life of greater connectedness and responsibility.
Oh my god did Rent make me eyerolly, loved the music and left the theater grumbling about those snotnosed abnoxious irresponsible tools.
They all ran plan b at some point to get to where they are.
But not everybody does. I don't know why anybody's upset to hear iconoclastic advice from Amanda Palmer. The list of artists who've gone homeless to achieve their success includes people like Michael J. Fox, Tom Waits, Kurt Cobain, Harry Partch (composer) and on and on. Faulkner fucked off on his post office job to write masterpieces, and Nathanel West was a hotel manager who let writers stay there for free.
Frankly, I believe Plan B is often inimical to creative work.
This is the Sunday in the Park With George argument.
(There's probably like two people who are going to get that.)
Faulkner fucked off on his post office job to write masterpieces, and Nathanel West was a hotel manager who let writers stay there for free.
But I assume they were still getting paid.
Frankly, I believe Plan B is often inimical to creative work.
I think what's pretty inimical to creative work is being so sick you can barely lift your head and not having the money to see a doctor. Living on so much ramen and PB&J you're actually malnourished because you don't have money for decent food.
I don't know why anybody's upset to hear iconoclastic advice from Amanda Palmer.
Partially because I KNOW that Amanda Palmer's plan A included the safety net of being able to go home to her parents, and (as I said upthread) relied on other people taking care of her and the people working for her.
Frankly, I believe Plan B is often inimical to creative work.
We have different opinions on this. That's really all I can say.
My friend C is the pie baker -- she was a baker , did the corporate thing and is now a baker again. I know what she did to become a baker again. She took care of business - put together a plan to get back into a creative field
her last newsletter
Wed night is not a great kerfuffle night for me, not really feeling it.