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ychen306 | 1 year ago

Athletes and musicians pursue fundamentals because they have time; their “work” occurs in intense but short bursts of performances, leaving them the rest of their days to practice. Knowledge workers don’t “practice” because their job (long-term research or whatever) demands much more time and commitment.

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abletonlive|1 year ago

perhaps if you have a very narrow definition of what a "musician" is.

a modern music producer will literally spend 700 hours on a single song.

jameshart|1 year ago

Does that kind of musician also spend time practicing?

Because the comparison we’re being offered is to a concert musician, and their work routine is likely very different to a music producer.

johnnyanmac|1 year ago

It's all relative of course. But keep on mind that 700 hours is about 4.5 months of full time work. I sure have had epics lasting much longer than that. And the "concert" is just shipping/launching whole I'm already working on the next epic. Maybe later on we bug fix, but we never truly get to "own" a feature the way a musician owns a song and gets to re-perform it in their repertoire.

I'm not really trying to establish which is harder or easier. Just that the pipelines and layoffs differ immensely.

And

ychen306|1 year ago

In this instance what would qualify as “pursing fundamentals” for a producer as defined by the author?