Thursday
Sep232010
No Money, No Music.
Thursday, September 23, 2010 at 4:05AM
Though I am having an incredible time working as an Intern, learning about America in a way I never thought I would, and having some wonderful experiences along the way, I am sadly doing it for free. It's the way things are here; you want to get into a career, you start off at the bottom, as an unpaid intern. It's a privilege just to be in the position I am in, but that still doesn't stop me from wishing I could earn some money. My visa won't let me get a part time job on State Street so I am stuck, living like a true student still, with no income. Nada. Zilch.
Currently, this doesn't mean re-wearing clothes to skimp on laundry, or folding and folding and folding over toilet paper to make it last longer. However it does mean foregoing on life's little luxuries: not much eating out, or going out, unless its for something free; no more going to the cinema; none of this expensive organic stuff at the supermarket- cheap as you can get is what's on our list. And worst of all, no music.
Oh how I used to love walking down to the local record shop after one class in college on a Monday morning to buy the new releases. £30 a week was probably about the average I spent on new cds. Then I started buying vinyl too. Now though, I can't buy any more cds, or even iTunes downloads, for I am poor. I have a nice pile of un-listened to music stocked up, but when that runs out, I don't know what I am going to do. No more splurging online, no more wandering the racks in the 2 local record stores here. I suppose I'll just have to try and steal as much music from my friends as I can. Maybe I should unsubscribe to those annoying Amazon and iTunes emails, which tell me every week about all the great new music I am missing out on.
No money, no music also means no gigs. Despite it's relative obscurity, Madison attracts a large number of great bands every year. I already chose not to spend half of the weekly shopping budget on a ticket for the Gaslight Anthem. In the future, I plan to miss The National, Goo Goo Dolls/Spill Canvas, Stars, Guster, Ingrid Michaelson, Josh Ritter, The Boxer Rebellion, and maybe more. We are going to see Justin Nozuka though, so we can write a review for the Badger Herald. Shame the newspaper is poor too and won't pay for our tickets.
Don't feel sorry for me though. It's a small price to pay for being where I want to be right now. I'll just look forward to the day when I am rich and famous and can walk into a record store and ask for one of everything they have. Heaven?
Currently, this doesn't mean re-wearing clothes to skimp on laundry, or folding and folding and folding over toilet paper to make it last longer. However it does mean foregoing on life's little luxuries: not much eating out, or going out, unless its for something free; no more going to the cinema; none of this expensive organic stuff at the supermarket- cheap as you can get is what's on our list. And worst of all, no music.
Oh how I used to love walking down to the local record shop after one class in college on a Monday morning to buy the new releases. £30 a week was probably about the average I spent on new cds. Then I started buying vinyl too. Now though, I can't buy any more cds, or even iTunes downloads, for I am poor. I have a nice pile of un-listened to music stocked up, but when that runs out, I don't know what I am going to do. No more splurging online, no more wandering the racks in the 2 local record stores here. I suppose I'll just have to try and steal as much music from my friends as I can. Maybe I should unsubscribe to those annoying Amazon and iTunes emails, which tell me every week about all the great new music I am missing out on.
No money, no music also means no gigs. Despite it's relative obscurity, Madison attracts a large number of great bands every year. I already chose not to spend half of the weekly shopping budget on a ticket for the Gaslight Anthem. In the future, I plan to miss The National, Goo Goo Dolls/Spill Canvas, Stars, Guster, Ingrid Michaelson, Josh Ritter, The Boxer Rebellion, and maybe more. We are going to see Justin Nozuka though, so we can write a review for the Badger Herald. Shame the newspaper is poor too and won't pay for our tickets.
Don't feel sorry for me though. It's a small price to pay for being where I want to be right now. I'll just look forward to the day when I am rich and famous and can walk into a record store and ask for one of everything they have. Heaven?