answers1: The most you would really be able to do is be a music
teacher or a choreographer or something of the like. If you are good
at acting/singing you don't need the school, if you need the school
you won't get anywhere. Keep your masters in medicine. Why risk a
stable future for something that you know in the end will turn into
nothing more then a "Why didn't I become a doctor?" in the end. If you
have an interest in it and you know there will always be a need for
scientists and doctors, then why waste time and money on a big "what
if...?"
answers2: not much. in this economy don't waste your money on that
kind of thing. you don't really NEED school for that anyway you can
teach yourself. <br>
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To get a masters in it would be overkill, not only would you be
overqualified for anything you tried to do you know that graduate
students can't take out loans the way they used to right? <br>
<br>
Seriously I'm an animation/ film major and i switched a really
technical field in the same industry nobody wants to do because i
know i will get a job, i know i will get health insurance. Sure it
will be harder but i will make money, i will NOT regret this. <br>
<br>
You can always go back to doing performance arts. You can teach
yourself even, seriously any degree in arts is unneeded and overkill.
<br>
<br>
Seriously though establish yourself first, then go back to it. <br>
You will have double the skills and be better off
answers3: I'm virtually in the identical situation. Tune is my
passion, but if i get a measure in track, what are the possibilities
to get a excellent job someday? Very slim. So that is why i picked a
principal wherein i am more prone to discover a job. I'm now not
saying to go away tune at the back of. Keep doing it. Do it as a
passion besides going to school. Or additionally you could double
main, but that's quite a lot of work. But when you find it
irresistible the whole thing is viable.
answers4: tricky point. do a search with a search engine. that could
actually help!
answers5: There are far more people graduating with degrees in music
performance every year than there are jobs opening up. A while back
the New York Times did a survey on Juilliard instrumental graduates
from a particular class in the nineties and found that just under a
quarter had full-time jobs, roughly half were cobbling together a
living through freelancing and private teaching, and just over a
quarter had left the field completely. That's Juilliard, the hardest
school to get into, the one that turns out the best performers. Other
music schools probably put a much smaller percentage into full-time
jobs and had more graduates have to find jobs in other fields. <br>
<br>
There is no economic security attached to a degree in music. None.
However, I know loads of doctors who are excellent musicians and
continue to play chamber music or perform in local recitals.
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