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liverpool - uk

I used to have a job where I was sat in a little room with a door that locked and most of the time there was nothing to do. I would sit there with headphones on and run milky tracker on my work pc, come home and finish off whatever I had started. I did that for years!

Now that I have a job where actual work is required all through the day, on top of coming home and having to make a meal etc its hard to find time to get into that music production flow.

So, for the people with full time jobs, how do you go about finding time for your music?

Last edited by poisoncut (Apr 3, 2013 10:27 pm)

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Melbourne, Australia

The only benefit of the hour-long commute to work is I get to bust out the dmg when I feel inspired, or even when I don't. Sometimes on weekends too.

I think the important thing is making time. I know I usually spend an hour or two a night playing video games, if I didn't do that I'd have more time for music, but normally by the end of the day I'm fairly creatively drained. The option is still there though.

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vancouver, canada

for me, part of my strategy is remaining organized and eliminating anything that may impede the songwriting process.  that and being intentional about carving out time for writing, any time that i can - even if that amount of time only amounts to 5-10 mins at a time.

for one, i have a half-hour commute to/from work via rail, so much of my writing happens on the train.

i have all my music programs installed on my work computer - BGB w/ LSDJ, schism tracker, famitracker, audacity, EMS cart drivers, SAV management utils, etc., so that i can fire it up when i have short breaks.  even if i have 5 minutes to mess around, that's enough time to at least start a new musical idea. 

i now have much of that work synced through Google Drive so that i can save my work to the cloud automatically and continue it at home, or vice versa, with no fuss.

one more thing, i know this may be a luxury for some, but try to promise yourself that you won't work for more than X # of hours a week.  this is more of a general time/resource management thing at work but the greater the effort you make to not let your work bleed into the other parts of your life, the more incentive you have to write when you've gone through all the trouble of getting the time to do so.

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Poisoncut, what was your old job and why did you switch?

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Brunswick, GA USA

I spend two to four hours a day on music, rarely taking a day off. If you want to do something, you'll invent at least a little time for it.

Last edited by chunter (Apr 4, 2013 12:26 am)

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IL, US

ive been known to work on video and design stuff during down time... never work on tracks there, but if im working on a release, ill listen to playback on headphones at work

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Have no social life/outside obligations/other hobbies and you're golden

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Montreal, Canada

If you're in a job where you need to do actual work, then you're doing it all wrong.

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The Hollow Earth

These days I save it for when I have a long, uninterrupted stretch of time (i.e.-a day off) where I know I can spend plenty of time on it and still have time for other unproductive activities like listening to music, watching movies etc. I've been having a lot of trouble getting inspired lately, so it just sort of happens when it happens.

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BK

There's a reason Game Boys are big in NYC- the subway is a perfect place to make music if you can get a seat. 30-40 minute commutes suddenly become 30-40 minute tracking sessions.

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liverpool - uk
Awol wrote:

Poisoncut, what was your old job and why did you switch?

It was an IT support job in an office, but there was already a phone helpdesk before things came to me and most of the time they managed to sort it. I didnt switch through choice, it was because they eventually noticed that they had loads of people sat around with hardly anything to do.

Thanks for all your replies, there are some useful tips here. I suppose just sitting down and starting whenever I can is what is what i'll have to do for now but as Subterrestrial says, it does help knowing there is a long uninterrupted stretch of time so you can focus and really get into the flow of things. 

I suppose train rides are good places to record ideas, an android tablet with milky tracker would be nice.

Last edited by poisoncut (Apr 4, 2013 10:17 pm)

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Greenland
theflightaway wrote:

Have no social life/outside obligations/other hobbies and you're golden

That is the way to go!

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Kris k wrote:

There's a reason Game Boys are big in NYC- the subway is a perfect place to make music if you can get a seat. 30-40 minute commutes suddenly become 30-40 minute tracking sessions.


This Im finding that after spending 12 + hours a day on a computer for work the absolute last thing I want to do is see a computer, even for pleasure.

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Brunswick, GA USA

Don't forget the occasional sleepless night.