-Melissa Mulligan (MMVS)
How many times have you heard "Like, oh my gosh you should be on American Idol!!'" If you have a decent singing voice, chances are you hear it every other time you open your mouth. I am still told I should be on that show, which is funny... maybe as a judge?
Brian Dolzani - excellent songwriter, excellent person |
The best application of your talent, passion, and hard work is not a TV game show. Telling a good singer she should be on American Idol is like telling a brilliant science student that she should be on Jeopardy instead of going to medical school. A producer friend of mine says it's like deciding you want to be a millionaire... and then just playing the lottery.
I think most people associate American Idol with the way to "make it big" because it's the most highly publicized entry point into the music business and the rest of it seems like a big mystery. But I'm pretty sure the career that you want goes beyond being on TV for a few months and then vanishing when the season is ends. Out of the estimated one million people who have auditioned for the show in the last ten years, perhaps six true stars have emerged.
The truth is that the path to success in music requires excellence at what you do and the ability to make fans along the way. As for fame - there is no path to fame. Fame requires a funny combination of timing, luck, and excellence that you can prepare for but can't dictate. Most of the finalists on American Idol aren't famous, and they met a lot of "important" people along the way, so it's not just about who you know. The fact is there are always way more talented people than the public can be interested in at one time.
Frank, Cole, and Shelby. We're a community at MMVS. |
In short, nothing guarantees fame. You can't be in this for the fame. You must be in this for the love of music, the enjoyment of sharing your music with lots of people, and the desire to be excellent at all of it.
Five Steps on the Path to Excellence
1. If you want to be a performer, you need amazing songs.
2. Focus on becoming the best version of your most unique self.
3. Create a show that is fun, engaging, and musically enjoyable.
4. If you want to make music for a living, you need to work at it like it's your job. Starting now. That's right, before anyone pays you to do it. It's your education prior to graduating to the real world.
5. Stop trying to think of the quickest way to get people to know who you are. Because there is nothing worse than having everyone's attention and having nothing meaningful prepared to say to them.