Why Music
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Here is a video to enjoy and discover the absolute power of music. This is the PS22 Chorus -- an elementary school chorus from Public School 22 in Graniteville, Staten Island, New York composed of 60-70 fifth-graders. Students are assigned to the chorus after an auditioning process at the beginning of each school year.
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Clicking the photo on the left opens a new window where people have posted their answers to "what music means to me."
Please share with North Boone Fine Arts what music means to you. We will post your response on our What Music Means to Me page. |
What Can You Do with a Music Degree?
from an article online at https://majoringinmusic.com/what-can-you-do-with-a-music-degree/
21st century musicians typically combine multiple jobs with multiple income streams to support themselves and their families, and to experience fulfilling careers. Performance and non-performance work do not have to be mutually exclusive; many of the fields below allow musicians to do both.
Note that some of these careers require graduate education (such as college-level teaching and conducting) or additional training beyond what you’ll find in an undergraduate program. Internships are especially important for working in any of the music industry/music business/technology/recording fields. Entrepreneurial skills, the ability to use the latest relevant technology, and some basic business skills like marketing, are also useful in every area of music.
Pay attention to ever-changing opportunities created by technology. New avenues for consuming music, innovative products, new teaching methods, and expanding uses of music as a therapeutic tool all translate to new career options in a rapidly changing world of music.
from an article online at https://majoringinmusic.com/what-can-you-do-with-a-music-degree/
21st century musicians typically combine multiple jobs with multiple income streams to support themselves and their families, and to experience fulfilling careers. Performance and non-performance work do not have to be mutually exclusive; many of the fields below allow musicians to do both.
Note that some of these careers require graduate education (such as college-level teaching and conducting) or additional training beyond what you’ll find in an undergraduate program. Internships are especially important for working in any of the music industry/music business/technology/recording fields. Entrepreneurial skills, the ability to use the latest relevant technology, and some basic business skills like marketing, are also useful in every area of music.
Pay attention to ever-changing opportunities created by technology. New avenues for consuming music, innovative products, new teaching methods, and expanding uses of music as a therapeutic tool all translate to new career options in a rapidly changing world of music.
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