An interesting thread about goals and direction that a lot of musicians miss. It really is simpler than you might think:
Figure out who you want to play to... who your musical audience is, and play music they like. If your audience is blueshounds and there are enough of them, and you know where they are, you can always get paid.
If your musical audience is jazzbos and you know where they are, get in there and play jazz they will find interesting.
If your musical audience is high-octane stadium rock fans, and you know where they are, play music they can rock-out to.
If you have no musical audience. No significant number of fans who want to listen to the music you make. Your music may still be significant but realize you may never get paid. Van Gogh never sold a painting in his lifetime so he was truly a starving artist. His art was clearly significant though.
In Bob's case, playing original music may be a dream come true for Bob but knowing where the fans are will be important if he wants to get paid for his services. The local "dive bar" that no longer wishes to pay ASCAP fees is dying and withering away. Not enough regular business to warrant the fees so tying your success to this place is like lashing yourself to a sinking ship. Not the best business plan. Soon enough they will no longer be able to pay the talent.
The trick is to find the places that successfully pack the room with your fan base and get in there.
The sad model in LA is hundreds of death metal bands with no audience. They spend $10k (of borrowed money) to do an album of forgettable songs, pay-to-play off nights in dying "former glory" Hollywood clubs to no one but their devoted family members and girlfriends. The goal of course is for a Sony A&R guy to come in, sweep them off their feet with a 7 year $10mil recording contract. Never gonna happen. They attract no audience and those A&R guys were laid off 10 years ago.
Bottom line, play music that attracts an audience if you want to get paid. Regularly get in front of an audience that will bring their friends next time because they are moved by your music. If you attract an audience wherever you play, a regular paycheck is in your near future.
Generating referral/spinoff business and tips from every gig is a big clue that your music is working. Closing a dive bar with only you and the bartender left is an equally important clue.
Figure out who you want to play to... who your musical audience is, and play music they like. If your audience is blueshounds and there are enough of them, and you know where they are, you can always get paid.
If your musical audience is jazzbos and you know where they are, get in there and play jazz they will find interesting.
If your musical audience is high-octane stadium rock fans, and you know where they are, play music they can rock-out to.
If you have no musical audience. No significant number of fans who want to listen to the music you make. Your music may still be significant but realize you may never get paid. Van Gogh never sold a painting in his lifetime so he was truly a starving artist. His art was clearly significant though.
In Bob's case, playing original music may be a dream come true for Bob but knowing where the fans are will be important if he wants to get paid for his services. The local "dive bar" that no longer wishes to pay ASCAP fees is dying and withering away. Not enough regular business to warrant the fees so tying your success to this place is like lashing yourself to a sinking ship. Not the best business plan. Soon enough they will no longer be able to pay the talent.

The trick is to find the places that successfully pack the room with your fan base and get in there.
The sad model in LA is hundreds of death metal bands with no audience. They spend $10k (of borrowed money) to do an album of forgettable songs, pay-to-play off nights in dying "former glory" Hollywood clubs to no one but their devoted family members and girlfriends. The goal of course is for a Sony A&R guy to come in, sweep them off their feet with a 7 year $10mil recording contract. Never gonna happen. They attract no audience and those A&R guys were laid off 10 years ago.
Bottom line, play music that attracts an audience if you want to get paid. Regularly get in front of an audience that will bring their friends next time because they are moved by your music. If you attract an audience wherever you play, a regular paycheck is in your near future.
Generating referral/spinoff business and tips from every gig is a big clue that your music is working. Closing a dive bar with only you and the bartender left is an equally important clue.
Cajundaddy