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-   -   Social network for music learning (https://www.musicbanter.com/general-music/61329-social-network-music-learning.html)

matem 03-12-2012 04:58 AM

Social network for music learning
 
If there was a social network site for where you could learn music from professional teachers (beginner to pro level) would you join? Members would get badges/levels for the completed lessons if their progress is approved by teachers, so it would also be a "social game". Thanks for the answers!

Queen Of The World 03-12-2012 05:20 AM

Sounds interesting.... it wouldn't suprise me if that actually happens at some point. I would join. What would you learn???

matem 03-12-2012 05:41 AM

You could take lessons from the basics like tuning your guitar, holding a drumstick properly, scales, chords. Then it would continue with more and more complex exercises. Learning accompaniment, solo licks etc.

mr dave 03-12-2012 07:23 AM

Short answer - no.

Long answer - How is that different than asking for lessons / tips RIGHT HERE? How would it compete with youtube? If you load up youtube right now and search for 'guitar lessons' you get 218 000 results. 35 000 specifically for beginners. Piano lessons - 45 000. Drum lessons - 40 000. Like it or not any potential site idea you have of this nature IS going to be directly compared to youtube.

How do you plan on paying for those professional teachers? How do you plan on not having their lessons stolen and circulated for free after their first publication? The only real way around that is to make it a private (read: PAID) service. Why would anyone pay for online lessons when the vast majority of those same people could pay similar amounts to have personal face to face lessons?

That badges / levels thing you describe is inane as well, sure it's a way of tracking progress within the training mode in Rockband on ps3 or xbox but actually learning to play music isn't a competition, there's no checklist that upon being filled to X amount means you're a for really real musician now. No one who isn't involved with that service would honestly give a crap about what badges / trophies you have on some online profile as opposed to just wanting to hear what you can do with the instrument.

Ben Butler 03-14-2012 10:38 AM

Sometimes it can be difficult and costly to learn lessons from music teachers. Using social networking sites will make it more accessible and cheaper to people to learn music. There will be far more people benefiting. Every industry is relying on social networking these days.

mr dave 03-17-2012 07:36 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Ben Butler (Post 1165261)
Sometimes it can be difficult and costly to learn lessons from music teachers. Using social networking sites will make it more accessible and cheaper to people to learn music. There will be far more people benefiting. Every industry is relying on social networking these days.

:bonkhead: How do you figure it would become cheaper? Do you work for free? Why would a proper music teacher work for free?

The reason it can be difficult and costly to get lessons is because being a professional music teacher is a specialized skill. If you're offering a service where the public needs to pay for access to a site that will feature professional instruction then you need to pay for professional instructors.

The site also needs to offer something more than what's already available, so no canned streaming lessons (free on youtube / music sites), no volunteer teachers (free on any music forum including this one). Otherwise what do you really have?

So what does that leave? Either class based instruction or individual one on one instruction. Neither of those is a cheap option, nor does the original concept provide much in terms of market viability. Especially not when originally pitched like some half baked video game idea.

Ben Butler 03-18-2012 11:15 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mr dave (Post 1166157)
:bonkhead: How do you figure it would become cheaper? Do you work for free? Why would a proper music teacher work for free?

The reason it can be difficult and costly to get lessons is because being a professional music teacher is a specialized skill. If you're offering a service where the public needs to pay for access to a site that will feature professional instruction then you need to pay for professional instructors.

The site also needs to offer something more than what's already available, so no canned streaming lessons (free on youtube / music sites), no volunteer teachers (free on any music forum including this one). Otherwise what do you really have?

So what does that leave? Either class based instruction or individual one on one instruction. Neither of those is a cheap option, nor does the original concept provide much in terms of market viability. Especially not when originally pitched like some half baked video game idea.

I just get that feelings that things on the internet are cheaper. You wouldn't have to travel anyway.

Queen Of The World 03-18-2012 09:31 PM

If it provides accessable music tuition to people who need it/want to be part of something fun then sure. I certainly can't afford private lessons. I learn off what I can find on the net so yeah it could work providing there was some way for the professional tutors to get paid something

steve0211 03-19-2012 08:09 AM

The potential market for something like this is absolutely there!

As evidenced by this site, and others, there are plenty of people that like social networng and have interest in playing music.

There may be a way to do something like that through this site. idk. lol

Queen Of The World 03-19-2012 11:51 PM

I'm sure there are people here that know a thing or two that could teach some things to willing pupils. Just depends on what you want to know and who could give the time of day.


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