English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

I love music and I do not have experience in music as far as work goes. I was told that since I appreciate all kinds of music, I would be good at being a music critic.

The only thing is, I am in my senior year at University of Redlands-School of Business. I have very little training in music and I can't play an instrument (at least, not yet).

I have a few classes in music- fundamentals of music and appreciation of music (Jazz, Classical, Rock etc).

Does a music critic need to have good writing skills or is it more verbal communication skills?

2007-11-25 12:05:47 · 5 answers · asked by Beth 4 in Arts & Humanities Performing Arts

5 answers

To your main question--hell no! In fact, most music critics obviously know nothing about it--they couldn't get onstage and do a tune to save their lives!

My advice would be to earn a degree in journalism from any college program accredited by the ACEJMC (link below). Then you can start your career as a journalist doing whatever you can get paid to do--sports, wedding announcements, school board meetings, obits. Eventually you work your way into writing some music reviews, and then you can build your future.

2007-11-25 12:20:02 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Any critic has to have very good writing skills as well as verbal skills, in the event he performs in the speech media. To be a music critic it stands to reason that the person must have an infinite love and understanding of music and the gift of distinguishing good from bad. They have to be familiar with the classics, jazz, swing, rock, country and western to do a proper jpb.

2007-11-25 12:17:02 · answer #2 · answered by googie 7 · 1 0

as long as you in no way confuse your tenses, your writing speaks for itself. I certainly tend to disagree incredibly approximately critics - i think of they have an inclination to comprehend somewhat little with reference to the subject handy. I had a critic write nasty feedback approximately overpedaling in one in all my comments, while i substitute into needless to say following the composer's instructions. The critic in basic terms did no longer comprehend the music nicely sufficient. i visit proportion a humorous tale some former buddy of mine who have been given a dream interest writing as a junior critic for a substantial newspaper. He desperate to bypass the stay overall performance and evaluation it besides. What he did no longer comprehend is that there substitute right into a software substitute, and he reviewed the revealed software, no longer the replaced software. He substitute into of course fired the following day, yet enable that be a lesson to any aspiring critic! And, do get to comprehend opera. it is an excellent medium, and has skill and command that in basic terms approximately no different classical venue does.

2016-11-12 19:44:59 · answer #3 · answered by eaddie 4 · 0 0

No, because critics offer opinions, and you don't need a degree to offer an opinion. Art is subjective, unlike science.

Both verbal and writing skills are needed; you might wind up on t.v.

2007-11-26 02:09:49 · answer #4 · answered by serious_searchlight 2 · 0 0

I would think so! its a bit hypocritical to critic music when you don't know about general music!

2007-11-25 19:11:41 · answer #5 · answered by bcooper_au 6 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers