Living the Dream: Making Music my Career

I’m currently running a Kickstarter fundraising campaign to raise money for my new hard rock recording project, Total Flower Chaos. Here’s the link:

Total Flower Chaos Kickstarter Campaign

But what I want to write about here is not so much the fundraiser campaign, or even the music that it’s funding. In this blog I’m going to discuss my decision to make music my career late in life.

When I was designing the fundraising campaign for the recording project, I wasn’t going to mention any of this. I didn’t think it would be relevant. I figured that it was the music that mattered. But in the process of writing the script for the video, and running the drafts by a few friends, I discovered that it was my decision to do leave a fairly good-paying job in the computer industry and do music full-time that appealed to people the most. One friend said that she admired me for this, and wanted to donate as a way of “living vicariously through me.” So I rewrote the video script to put that first.

The first week of the campaign confirmed this. Most of the donors are friends who aren’t really into hard rock music. Some donors have been people I used to work with, and congratulated me for “living the dream.”

Here’s how I came to “live the dream” and do music full-time.

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I began playing guitar at age 12. I was also into sports at the time– football, baseball, and later, soccer. In my last year of high school, I developed an interest in politics.

During my first two years of college, I began taking more guitar lessons, and trying to form bands. I was also coaching soccer, and getting involved in political activism. And all the while I was working part-time jobs.

It soon became apparent that I wouldn’t have time for all my interests. My parents could not afford to pay for college for me, so I had to work at least part-time. I decided to stay with political activism, and give up soccer and music. (That’s a whole ‘nother blog.) But of course I still found time to play guitar as a hobby.

I liked history and politics, and figured the only thing I could do in those fields was teach high school, so I graduated from college with a degree in Secondary Education. But I never really wanted to teach high school, so I never even applied for a job.

I worked factory jobs for a few years, and then went to a Community College and got an Associates Degree in Electronics– not because I liked electronics, but because I didn’t to teach, and didn’t want to be a laborer the rest of my life. Working as an electronics technician paid better and was a little more interesting.

Around this time, I shifted priorities in another way: the political activism subsided and I got back to music. I picked the electric guitar again, started taking lessons, and joined a few bands.

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I remember once, back in my early 30’s, after being laid off from an electronics technician job, I went to a career counselor. She talked to me, and gave me various tests, and the conclusion was that music should be my career. But I dismissed that, saying that I can’t make a living at it, playing the type of non-commercial music that I liked. It never occurred to me that the way you have to do it is, you work a day job while building up your music career. Then, when the music career is built up, you can quit the day job and do music full-time. But I didn’t understand that then, and I don’t remember the counselor suggesting it.

Meanwhile, music was growing in importance. I co-founded a band called Faded Innocence, and recorded two cassette albums at my apartment in Tucson.

As electronics work became outsourced overseas, I migrated to computers. In the 90’s UNIX was big, so I learned UNIX system administration, thinking that would get me a job anywhere, and pay pretty good. Sound familiar?

I used to hate the question, “What do you do?” because my job didn’t really reflect who I was. Perhaps it reminded me that I had failed to follow my heart for my career.

About 15 years later, in 2007, I figured it out. I decided that music would be my career. I developed a plan. I started calling my computer job “my day job”, and music my career. And from then on, whenever someone asked the dreaded question, “what do you do?”, I would answer, “I’m a musician.”

From then on, I no longer dreaded the question. I actually looked forward to it. Inevitably, the followup question would be, “You’re making a living as a musician?” And I would answer, “Oh no, I have a day job.” But it established who I am.

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Around this time, the company where I worked had been having layoffs every year. Laid off employees got a severance package, with several months pay. That started looking good to me. I realized that, with a severance package, I could live on that and do music full-time, at least for a few months, maybe a year. I wondered how much more I could accomplish musically if I didn’t have to work. How many more songs I could write. How much better a musician I could become if I had more time to practice.

About a year later, I told my boss, “next time there’s a layoff, pick me.” I also began cutting expenses and saving money. I cut off Comcast TV, which saved $75 a month. I didn’t buy a new car since mine was paid off. The stock market began rising, and and continued rising for the next 6 years, so my mutual funds were doing well.

The layoffs continued each year, and I went through 3 bosses, but none of them ever picked me for a layoff. I guess I took too much pride in my work.

By November, 2013 I had saved a full years pay. I approached my current boss and said, “I’m going to do you a favor. I know from talking to other managers that the thing they hate most about their job is having to lay people off. So I’m going to let you layoff someone who wants to be laid off.” I told him the reason– I wanted to do music full-time for awhile. He thanked me– he said that he couldn’t sleep for a week the last two years when he had to layoff people.

Four months later he called me and asked if I really wanted to do this. I told him yes. He let me pick my date. I chose March 14, 2014.

I’ve been doing music full-time ever since.

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I’m not making a living at it. Far from it. I’m mostly living off my savings. And unless I find a way for my music to make more money soon– a lot more– I’ll have to eventually take another day job.

But I have been able to accomplish a lot more without a day job. I’m learning piano and music theory. I’m practicing more and improving myself as a guitar player.

I’m playing in two bands, Scupanon and Dorian.

I’ve been composing music for my hard rock project Total Flower Chaos, and have begun recording for that.

I also have written songs that don’t fit into any of the above categories. I have three spoken word songs, recorded them at home, and am now in the process of remixing them with a good engineer. Those will be released in the next few months.

And I have written other songs– enough for a new solo album.

I couldn’t have done all that with a day job. I could have done some of it; obviously, I wrote, recorded and performed music with a day job the past 10 years; but the above accomplishments would have taken 3 years, not one.

So I’d love to continue with music full-time for the rest of my life. If I can’t make enough money from it, I’ll get another day job. But I’d rather focus on music full-time. I think I have something original to contribute.

-Rob Roper July 20, 2015

New Recordings in 2015!

This month marks my one-year anniversary as a full time musician. I’ve played live shows with two bands, Scupanon and Dorian, played solo, and hosted an open mic. But I haven’t been very good about blogging. Sorry. Mainly I’ve been working on new music, and am now preparing to record some of it. Here’s what’s happening:

Rob Roper Solo Album(s)

This actually might be two or three albums or EPs. I have 3 spoken word songs that I have written and recorded demos at home over the past few years. They are “Wave the Flag and Give ’em God” from 2006, “Indigenous” from 2009, and “Accept, Embrace, Surrender”, co-written by Nancy Farmer, from 2012. Some of you may have heard the demos. They are now being re-mixed by Brian Hunter and myself at Sawtelle Studio at Swallow Hill. We are improving the sound quality and also adding a few new wrinkles to the songs.

I’ve also written some “normal” songs in the last couple of years that need to be recorded, both electric and acoustic, rock and folk in style. At this point I’m not sure exactly how I’m going to combine the three categories of songs. I could do three small EP’s, or combine the three categories in some way.

Or I could just release all of them as digital download singles, with no album. That is certainly a lot less expensive. Personally I still like to have a hard copy record, with notes about the songs, a list of musicians, and so forth. Not to mention that the sound quality of a CD is significantly better than mp3’s. What do y’all think?

Total Flower Chaos

The record will be the debut album of Total Flower Chaos, which is what I call my hard rock and spacey rock music project. It will sound very different from all my previous recordings. I will record at Evergroove Studio, a beautiful studio owned by Brad and Jenny Smalling in the mountains outside of Evergreen, Colorado.

I will serve as the overall producer, but I’m also excited to be bringing Dan Tracy as a co-producer. Dan is a very talented New York City-based actor, singer, pianist, songwriter and guitarist. I ran some of my song ideas by him, and his critical comments were among the best feedback I’ve ever received. So I decided to hire him. Brad Smalling will also serve as a co-producer, as well as the engineer for the project.

This recording will be done differently than my other recordings. Brad and I are putting together a team of musicians. I’ll be bringing in unfinished demos, jamming with the musicians, and finishing them in the studio. For many, I’ll be writing lyrics after the music been recorded. Other songs will remain as instrumentals. It’s risky and scary for me, but also exciting.

I’m still writing music for this project, and will continue to do so right up to the recording date in June. If you’re curious, you can hear the rough demos I’ve recorded at home at http://soundcloud.com/totalflowerchaos/sets/demos Keep in mind that these are NOT the finished recordings; they are just demos that I’ll bring into the studio to get the process started. They will be reworked substantially in the studio by the other producers and musicians (and recorded better).

Funding

As I mentioned at the beginning of this blog, I am now a full time musician. I’m loving it. But that also means I can no longer pay for recording projects from my own savings. I’m going to have to reach out to my fans and friends to help make these projects happen. I’ll be creating a fund raising campaign on Kickstarter or one of the other crowd funding sites. I’ll announce that in the next month or two.

I hope you’re ready to hear some new music from me! I’m very, very excited about these projects!

–Rob

What Are We Losing? (new song)

This is a song I wrote about what’s been going on in my neighborhood in south Denver the past couple of years. Developers are buying up the old one-story houses, tearing them down, scraping the lot, and building big, ugly 3-story triplexes with 5 bedrooms, 4 baths, and 3 living rooms.

The demo has some guitar mistakes in the solos but I put it up anyway. I banged this out pretty fast.

The Neighborhood (What Are We Losing?)
by Rob Roper 2nd Draft May 30, 2014

A small house is sold
A small house is torn down
What the hell’s going on
on my side of town?

Blue collar out
Suit and tie in
The swingset is gone
and so are the grandkids

This house was built
in 1953
when 1000 square feet
was all you’d need

They were paying rent
for all these years
Now they have 30 days
to pack up and leave

Chorus:
What are we losing?
We’re losing the neighborhood.

A big ugly box
goes up in its place
4000 square feet
multiplied by 3

That takes a lot to heat
and a lot of A/C
So you burn more coal
put a bigger hole in the ozone

A 3-car garage
where’s the oak tree?
How much room
does a lawyer need?

Soon the robins
will have nowhere to nest
And a gang of pigeons
will be all that’s left

(Chorus)

Builders on the make
Politicians on the take
history and memories
raped and scraped

They only care about money
and making it fast
Historic Preservation
that’s a thing of the past

(Chorus)

I Didn’t Believe (new song)

by Rob Roper  2nd Draft  July 31, 2014

It was a beautiful day
not a cloud in sight
when a guy with a cellphone
ran a redlight

Everything went black
and then it went white
I saw the gates of heaven
coming into sight

The angels came to get me
and led me through the gate
I was scared to death
of what would be my fate

I walked the streets of gold
up in the cloud
and there He stood
tall and proud

(break)

As soon as I saw Him
I fell down on my knees
I said, “Lord, have mercy
I didn’t believe.”

He said, “Don’t worry, son
It’s the believers who are screwed
they way they behave
I’d be an atheist, too.”

“Killing in my name
waging bloody wars
and all their church services
are such a bloody bore”

“You’ll see your fellow atheists
up here as well
while all the true believers
are burning down in hell.”

(break)

I asked, “What about your son
that you sent down to earth?
The one called Jesus
he of virgin birth?”

He said, “that’s the worst thing about
the Christians’ game
They ignore his teachings
but worship his name.”

“They think that they’re saved
just ’cause they believe
and that gives them the right to do
anything they please”

“But all their worship
that’s just kissing ass
It ain’t what you say
It’s how you act.”

(break)

He said, “I’ll see you later
here comes another crew
I’ve got to damn ten Christians
Three Muslims and a Jew.”

“So grab a harp
and have a glass of wine
you can jam with the angels
until the end of time.”

I stood there in wonder
at this glorious scene
and thanked the good Lord
I didn’t believe

A MADDman’s Dream (Poem)

The current Chairman of the Board of Directors of Mothers Against Drunk Driving is not a mother, or even a woman, but a man named William Windsor.

“The founding president of MADD, Candy Lightner, left in disgust from the organization that she herself created because of its change in goals. ‘It has become far more neo-prohibitionist than I ever wanted or envisioned,’ she says. ‘I didn’t start MADD to deal with alcohol. I started MADD to deal with the issue of drunk driving.’… Mothers Against Drunk Driving has clearly become not simply anti-drunk driving or even anti-impaired driving, but anti-alcohol.”

From the website Mothers Against Drunk Driving: A Crash Course in MADD by David J. Hanson, Ph.D.

A Maddman’s Dream
by Rob Roper   July 31, 2014

With your mercenary army
of lawyers and judges
cops and clerks
parole officers and counselors
politicians and breathalyzer companies
The enemy has been conquered
The nations put in their place
The ruins at your feet

A religious state
sober drones hard at work
The jails are full, the bars are empty
The brewmaster and winemaker’s craft a lost art
the restaurants serve diet soda
The Devil’s juice replaced by cancer juice

You push people off the grid
productive workers now criminals
the creative class driven underground
Logic and Reason nowhere in sight
the Policeman’s word is Law
a fascist nightmare

You show pictures of little Suzie
killed by a drunk driver
but according to your own statistics
75% of all accidents are caused by sober drivers
But you don’t care about their victims
do you?

And what about your victims?
Breadwinners thrown in jail
Fired from their jobs
Shamed and disgraced
Lives destroyed
Suicides
Shattered Families
What about all those little Suzies
whose moms and dads got DUIs
went to jail
lost their jobs
and committed suicide?
Hypocrites!

You lowered the BAC limit
from .12 to .10 to .08
and now .05 in Colorado
Two drinks and you’re a criminal.

DUI roadblocks
Unreasonable searches and seizures
Civil liberties crushed
under the MADDman’s boot.

Arresting people for sleeping in their cars rather than drive drunk!
or waiting for a cab!
riding a bike!
for doing the right thing!
Obviously this isn’t about public safety, is it?
This is about money
money for the DUI Industry
and for your neo-prohibitionist political agenda:
bringing back prohibition
one step at a time.

Heart disease kills more Americans than any other cause of death.
Studies show that moderate wine consumption
drastically reduces the chances of heart disease.
But you want to jail me for having two glasses of wine with dinner.

You raise the drinking age from 18 to 21
Old enough to vote
Old enough to be tried as a adult for a crime
Old enough to join the army
You can get your legs blown off in Iraq or Afghanistan
but you can’t have a beer
Brother soldier!  Sister soldier!
You should be fighting the Taliban at home!

First they came for the drunk drivers
and I did nothing
because I don’t drive drunk.
Then they came for the 18-to-20 year-olds
and I did nothing
because I was over 21.
Then they came for me
and there was no one left to defend me.

The world is not a better place.