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Music schools do not work, in my opinion. Music schools will get you educated, sure.
I am not saying that they do not work to teach you what it is you think you want to know,
but you have to ask yourself; at what price are you willing to pay for an education? If
your objective is to get a career in music, film, or radio broadcasting, you are not going
to get a career from a film, music school, or radio broadcasting school.
What they are going to do is take your money and they are going to educate. You are going
to graduate from a music, film, or a radio school, and you are going to be in a heck
of a lot of debt.
It is a lot simpler way to just handle it in 6 months in a real recording studio than
it is to be a DJ and club promoter for 10 years, then reworking music retail, and then
finally decide to go to a school and be $50,000 in debt.
It is thwarting your dream. If you get into $100,000 worth of debt, that means you are
going to have to repay that debt, unless you are going to default. Is that what you want?
On top of everything else, add another $400, $500, or $600 because you went to film or
music school, and now you are bartending or waiting tables because they did not get you
a job?
For pretty much the price of just my console classes that I took, where I got no one-on-one
and maybe about a total of an hour or two of hands-on time a week, for only 4 weeks,
for the entirety of what I paid for that, you could actually do this program.
Every one of us wants to drive a Porsche, Ferrari, Mercedes, or an Audi. Are you willing
to pay $300,000 to drive an Audi when you know you can get one for $30,000, $40,000,
or $50,000? Of course not. Nobody is overpaying for an Audi, Porsche, or for those cars. Then
why would you overpay to get educated for film or music? It is ridiculous, and it will
kill your dreams.