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Metal For Life Blog

~ The official blog of Metal Mike. I'm a heavy metal musician most commonly known as a long standing guitarist to Judas Priest frontman, Rob Halford. I'm a highly sought after heavy metal guitar and music coach. I am also a solo artist, an entrepreneur, a business owner, an avid car nut and a closet extrovert. I believe Heavy Metal should be lived loud & proud and it has been a highly motivating source in my life. I'm here to share my thoughts, pass on lessons learned and sometimes chew on big subjects. If you enjoy the content of Metal For Life, I only ask you to share my blog with one more person. Thank you & welcome.

Metal For Life Blog

Monthly Archives: July 2017

How To Define Success As A Musician

26 Wednesday Jul 2017

Posted by Metal Mike in Uncategorized

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Every year, I spend time with metalheads aged 12 to 22 at a destination Metal Heroes Summer Camp in Up-State, New York.

These camps are a fantastic, positive experience on several levels, fueled by young energy, enthusiasm and “go get ‘em” attitude from the young rockers. Many of them want to make metal music their life. While I am at the camp, I always start to collect my thoughts on the definition of “success,” and what it could mean to these young people as metal musicians.

There are countless thoughts and possibilities that come to mind, because success is a very personal thing. It means something different to everyone. To top it off, the vision of success often changes as you travel along on your journey.

Here are a few ideas that can help you ponder the meaning of success:

What Do You Want? Be Honest About It.

What is your current vision of success? It cannot be your teacher’s or your best friend’s. This is just for you. What is it that you want to get out of being a musician right now? How do you think it could look in five years? You don’t need to know every detail, but capture the picture that appears in your mind.

You have to be honest with yourself because the path you choose will be often traveled by you alone, so you’d better be sure it is the one you want to take. No dream is too wild or too big, simply because if somebody else is doing it, it is possible.

There are many ways someone can be successful as a musician.

It can mean you signing your name next to “musician” as your occupation on your tax return. You’ve achieved success at being a full-time musician. It certainly takes guts to do it, and many people fill out that line every year.

Being successful also can mean having a guitar in your hands every day, playing the style of music you love. Honestly, it doesn’t matter if you make your living doing something else. There’s no rule that says you can’t. As a matter of fact, hats off to you for having skills to do two things amazingly well. If a pop singer can have a jewelry line, own a restaurant and be a recording artist, why can’t you fix cars during the day and play the music you love at night? That sounds pretty successful to me.

I think it is important not to cave under the social conditioning that you must be a full-time musician so you can tell so to people you meet. In all honesty, some of the full-time musicians I have come across were some of the most complaining, unmotivated people I’ve ever met. They played gigs and music they didn’t care for just so they wouldn’t have to get a job. This distorted their view of what they loved in the first place.

Others find jobs within the music industry just to stay in the biz. Yes, it does work for many as it allows them to make contacts. For me, it makes little sense. I prefer to spend my time with people who don’t wish they were somewhere else. Why not use other non-musical skills to make money if you have to (Yes, you have other skills outside of playing your instrument) and save the music part only to the type you love?

Some musicians find a lot of satisfaction in the DIY approach.

They might work during the day to save enough money in order to get in a van and tour two months out of the year, which also allows them to sell their music across the US or whatever. It has its challenges, but for many young metal musicians, it also can mean the time of their life. Traveling across the country while spending time with people who love the same thing you do sounds pretty successful to me.

There are many types of success.

All I wanted to do was support myself while playing and teaching heavy metal. That’s all I wanted. I also wanted to release records of my own music, which I still do, and the hard-core love for what I did later on lead me to work with many of my heroes within the genre. That was icing on the cake. With the new opportunities, however, my dream grew to include tour bus arena tours, in-store appearances, album release parties, meeting more of my heroes, a visit to the Playboy mansion and buying a fine-tuned Italian automobile.

This is what my vision was. I am not telling you this to yank my own chain. I am telling you to simply explain that I was (and still am) very precise about what it is that I’m shooting for. You can’t find things unless you know what you’re looking for. Once you obtain your goals, you’ll get bored unless you set new ones. As you obtain them you’ll be fulfilling your own vision of success. You don’t need to tell your dream to everyone. As a matter a fact, the closer you keep it to your heart, the more it means to you.

As I have achieved many things I wanted to do, my own vision of success has taken another dimension. In addition to recording and touring, I also found out that I want to share my experience with others, and I do this through blogs, guitar clinics, videos and metal camps. I find it satisfying to spend time with young metal players and share ideas with them while helping them with their dreams. I concentrate on creating as much value for others while being true to my visions.

Ultimately, it’s an amazing feeling to use your musical talent in order to help others. That sounds pretty successful to me, too.

Carpe diem!

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Eliminating Guitar Student’s Biggest Mistake

06 Thursday Jul 2017

Posted by Metal Mike in Guitar & Music, Inspiration & Motivation

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Throughout the years of teaching guitar I learned how to pick up on various behavioral patterns in my students. Depending on the student’s age, experience and commitment, some of the patterns are pretty typical such as expecting the teacher to magically do all the practicing for them, not bringing in ideas as to what they would love to learn next, being late for a lesson, etc. You get the idea.

However, today I want to talk about one of the biggest self-sabotaging mistakes many guitar students make. And, this silent assassin even applies to some of the most committed students that I teach.

It goes something like this. I show my student a guitar playing example and before I am done with it; my student starts to try to play it immediately. This happens more often than not while I’m in the middle of showing them ‘how to play it’. Get it? I have no idea why students do this. But, sometimes it drives me bonkers. It must be a human thing. But, as you can imagine there is huge disconnect there as obviously how can a student play something correctly when he or she doesn’t know fully how it is supposed to be executed in the first place.

I really do not know why this happens. Maybe they are anxious to see if they can do it, or are simply impatient. I don’t think people are even aware of it. But, ‘why’ is not really the point. So, here is a simple tip. If you are a taking a lesson remember to listen to the end until the teacher is done explaining something to you. It will make it much easier for you to learn it and then you will still have the rest of the day to practice it. And, you will make your teacher much happier to boot.

Simple Truths Regarding Focus For Musicians

03 Monday Jul 2017

Posted by Metal Mike in Guitar & Music, Inspiration & Motivation

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In photography, the term “depth of field” is often used to describe what object retains the focus and what is blurred out.

In a long depth of field, everything is sharp and ready for examination; in short depth of field, you will see the sharpness emphasizing the main subject, while the remainder of the picture is blurred out.

It doesn’t take long to realize you can apply these principles to the life of a musician. I like to follow Bob Parsons from Go Daddy. He says many wonderfully useful things in plain language. One of his rules is the fact that anything that is watched and measured grows and improves. Guess what? It is true.

If you go to the gym regularly and apply correct techniques, you will build muscle. If you run every day regularly, after some time, you will become faster and leaner. If you practice your guitar regularly, you will eventually get better at it. Same goes for songwriting and well, guess what – pretty much everything else, too.

The truth is that one of the only reasons why we fail at anything is the lack of focus to constantly watch, measure and chip away at achieving whatever we set out to you. Yes, even with constant dedication, you might not be the next Randy Rhoads, but you will definitely get better. It is just how it works.

The depth of field idea will help to remind you that sometimes you have to adjust your focus on what it is that you want to achieve in the upcoming week, month or even years. You have to hone in on it, zoom in on it and not let it out of your sight if you want to see improvements. Blur out the things that might not be as important. You do not have to take them out of the picture completely and you should sometimes treat everything to a long depth of field to take inventory of what things look like. Adjust as necessary and go back in zeroing in on the task.

I find this very helpful, because I must be honest that with the distractions that pull at our senses every day, it is extremely tempting to loose focus. Musicians and artists are very susceptible to this because we already have a lot going on in our heads before regular life steps in, don’t we? It’s crowded up there. Use the depth of field to zoom in and keep things in perspective.

Sometimes a simple visualization technique such as this can really bring is great results.

For a minute a day, you can imagine yourself adjusting your depth of field as you see your goal come alive sharper in your vision while the “other” stuff that could distract you is blurred out. It’s very helpful. This exercise allows you to move your thoughts through a process that jump-starts your actually putting priorities together. Otherwise, with so much pulling on us, our minds get so crowded that we never even get off the starting line.

On the last note, this technique can also help remind you that not everything in your picture has to be perfect in order for you to enjoy what you are looking at. Most people, of course, including musicians, wait for something to happen before they can be happy. One simple example is a weekend, a new pedal or a new guitar, a new drummer, gig or whatever. Here’s the truth: This approach never works for more than a minute. It never did and it never will.

I just want you to think about all of the above ideas for a few minutes and see how you can apply it to your development as a musician. Hope they will help out in a few simple ways.

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