I received this question from a composer in Amsterdam who reads Sco. Instead of emailing my answer, I thought it would be a great topic to bring up here at SCOREcast:
“With all of the commitments you have pulling at you, how do you decide which projects to work on and which to leave on the table?”
Great question. Not an easy one to answer—because everyone is different—but an important one to answer, nonetheless. I’ll give it a shot.
We are all busy people. Some of us have two, three, four, ten, thirty things going at once. I’m scoring three movies simultaneously right now, I oversee SCOREcastOnline.com, I lead a successful, healthy, and happy team at Deane Ogden Music, my home life kicks ass, I rarely miss lunch with the woman of my dreams, and I still have plenty of time to play drums on people’s records.
“With all of the commitments you have pulling at you, how do you decide which projects to work on and which to leave on the table?”
Great question. Not an easy one to answer—because everyone is different—but an important one to answer, nonetheless. I’ll give it a shot.
We are all busy people. Some of us have two, three, four, ten, thirty things going at once. I’m scoring three movies simultaneously right now, I oversee SCOREcastOnline.com, I lead a successful, healthy, and happy team at Deane Ogden Music, my home life kicks ass, I rarely miss lunch with the woman of my dreams, and I still have plenty of time to play drums on people’s records.
- 6/12/2010
- by Deane Ogden
- SCOREcastOnline.com
IMDb.com, Inc. takes no responsibility for the content or accuracy of the above news articles, Tweets, or blog posts. This content is published for the entertainment of our users only. The news articles, Tweets, and blog posts do not represent IMDb's opinions nor can we guarantee that the reporting therein is completely factual. Please visit the source responsible for the item in question to report any concerns you may have regarding content or accuracy.