Submitted by No_Representative_23 t3_zvr138 in Music

Hi, I’m a 19-year-old college student and I wanted to ask what’s better I want to start a rock ‘n’ roll band and take it seriously and I want to start it in a city that has a good scene and I have two choices Seattle in Dallas I want to know which one is better to start a band in which of those two scenes is more supportive of a rock band who are coming up where is the best place to start?

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XDenzelMoshingtonX t1_j1ql0ct wrote

You are basing your decision where you wanna live on what city it’s better to start a band in?

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RagingLeonard t1_j1qlz3l wrote

Seattle will have a better infrastructure to support struggling artists than Dallas. Also, trust me, Texas sucks and is getting worse. Nobody who enjoys human rights or personal freedom should ever move to Texas.

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XDenzelMoshingtonX t1_j1qmspi wrote

It’s almost 2023, most of your musical journey will be done online on social media/streaming platforms. I don’t think there‘s a particular place where your band will have a bigger shot than elsewhere. In the end the music and the online marketing are way more important than the locality. Getting into a popular playlist on Spotify exposes way more people to your music than you could do via playing locally.

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RagingLeonard t1_j1qpvoi wrote

Basing a move on where a music scene used to be is dangerous. How long ago are we talking? Early 90s Grunge? That scene is dead.

Scenes are born from specific sets of circumstances and there's not some sort of fairy dust sprinkled on an area. For example, Detroit was a flashpoint for R&B in the 60s, but imagine moving there to start a Motown-style group today?

If you're looking to plug into a scene, look at where contemporary bands are popping up and move there. Bonus if it's in a community that cares about artists and has a system in place to support their art.

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No_Comfortable6029 t1_j1qrbef wrote

Portland is probably more "Seattle" than Seattle is these days. I moved from Texas five years ago because the writing was already on the wall for the direction it was headed. With that said, Austin is still one of the best cities for live music so it depends on what you are seeking. New Orleans might be the only music city that stays true to its roots, all other local genres/trends come and go with the times.

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Zalenka t1_j1qrsse wrote

Living in Seattle will be a huge wakeup call to capitalism. I once went to a farmer's market with $15 for lunch and everything was more expensive than that.

Literally any apartment is $1500/mo, so it is onerous. Maybe that's everywhere now though.

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MoogProg t1_j1quck7 wrote

Really depends on what you mean by start a band? Are you a gigging singer-writer who needs a backup band to take things into larger venues? Or are you hoping to find bandmates you get along with, to write songs together, play gigs and build a following from the ground up. These are very different paths.

When I have relocated as a musician, I tend towards joining an existing band more than looking to fill out my own 'roster' of players. Just me, you do you and good luck with all the music!

Vote goes to Dallas. The Seattle 'freeze' is real and can take years to thaw your way into a scene.

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Charming-Twist-7514 t1_j1qww1d wrote

Denton, Texas is another option closer to Dallas. All of the comments have good points

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Notinyourbushes t1_j1r4x8t wrote

Had a group of friends that I can say without hyperbole were as good, if not better, as any major act out there. I've seen easily 500 live shows in my life and I count their performances up there with any group I saw on a label. They were making a name for themselves and did a short tour with a major act.

There motto was "we're going to prove a Texas based band can make it."

You've never heard of them because of that.

Big problem was they went with local, indie labels starting out and while they went into the studio at least 3 times, none of the Texas producers were good enough to capture what they were doing live in the studio.

Do some bands make it out of Texas? Yeah, a few but not many and usually not until they relocate. Outside of Spoon, the Old 97s were one of the biggest bands out of Texas in decades and I'm willing to bet more people hadn't heard of them than had when watching the Guardian's of the Galaxy holiday special.

You can start in Texas, but you're going to want to relocate eventually anyways. Just far more opportunities to get discovered on the west coast than by the gulf coast.

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No-Inside769 t1_j1rf59m wrote

Seattleite here and while I don’t know much about the rock scene I would recommend to keep the cost of living in mind when choosing where to move. I have spoken to former patients who are aspiring musicians though and they seemed to really love the scene out here. Best of luck!

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Chocolate_Rage t1_j1rij5m wrote

I'd go Seattle personally. You're closer to more places, Seattle is a nicer culture from what I've seen and is more known for music imo

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Pure-Masterpiece1986 t1_j1rn8m2 wrote

lol as a Dallas native who lived over a decade in Austin and my fair time in the Denton area due to my college girlfriend/now wife....unless your like SRV you will get lost in Dallas at its size atm, Denton would be better... but obviously Austin is the best TX offers in this... good luck with Austin rent....search south in San Marcos or north of Austin I guess for cheaper living.also lol Good luck in general, I have friends in bands that got written articles in reputable papers/great reviews and even they didn't make it...im a little older, but the only band I knew people of "make it" was Explosions in the sky..

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3f2rf3rfrf23r t1_j1s4jwu wrote

Texas is much more business friendly. Seattle is depressing and there's a reason Jimi Hendrix hated it, and so many others from there destroyed themselves.

You really aren't going to make it just going for it like it's 1992. You will make much more with a youtube following, and connect easier with those in the industry. I know that sounds shitty telling someone they can't, but you are better off playing the lotto.

The biggest benefit to social media hustle is you reach an audience beyond the US. Even someone as big as Taylor Swift no longer bothers with the US for new music. It's barely worth her time. There are places in the world where rock music is still popular.

If you are intent on grinding the scene like days of old, you are going to need to move out of the USA to a country where that scene exists. If you fail, you will have a much better perspective and maybe be on the road to success.

Source: I'm old enough to know many people with homes filled with platinum and diamond records. OG pros. It's not the same business model, have to make your own lane. Everything has changed. Anonymity is the new fame.

Edit: Poo poo on the people who downvoted you. I wouldn't want to be 19 right now. That's for sure. On second though too, leave the US. Go to Argentina or something. Go to Germany. People still rock, just not in the US. You're going to fuck up massively anyway in some regard, just don't have it be with substance abuse. All of us have failed at music at some point.

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Sweet_Bang_Tube t1_j1s606a wrote

No way! Pantera, Butthole Surfers, ZZ Top, Willie Nelson, Beyonce, The Toadies, Polyphonic Spree, The Mars Volta, Nora Jones, Kelly Clarkson, Usher, The (Dixie) Chicks, Barbara Mandrell, just to name the ones I know, all came out of Texas. I'm not sure if you're talking about a particular era, but all of those musicians were/are wildly popular. And there's many more than that.

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Nizamark t1_j1s69k3 wrote

houston ! great town for live music

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Notinyourbushes t1_j1s73ol wrote

You're talking dozens of bands that made vs thousands that tried - and that's not even getting into how many were born and/or started in Texas but relocated to a different scene. Outside of Spoon, name me 10 new Texas bands on major labels from the last decade.

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Sweet_Bang_Tube t1_j1s7mam wrote

I guess you'll need to define "affordable", since that's a bit different for everyone. 45-60 min was never a normal drive for me, in Austin. Maybe in Houston. I just bought a house here this year and it was anything but affordable. The suburbs, like Cedar Park, Round Rock, Pflugerville, Buda, Kyle, Lakeway, Manor, Elgin, Lago Vista, Tyler Georgetown, Jonestown, Leander Hutto, are all in the $400K range now. That isn't affordable to most musicians like the OP who are young and just trying to start out.

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No_Comfortable6029 t1_j1s8127 wrote

I get what you are saying but OP prob isn't looking to buy a house yet either. There are apartments and I have plenty of former friends in what I'm guessing is a similar financial situation that have managed to get by; even living in Austin proper.

Edit: are you sure you have lived there for 40 years? lol You could spend 45 mins in Austin traffic alone

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Sweet_Bang_Tube t1_j1s8b6a wrote

I just listed some musicians from this decade, and you just blew them off as not mattering because it wasn't enough. No, I'm not going to waste my time on naming even more, because you'll say you haven't heard of them or find another way to discount it. Calling a record label "major" is also a pretty ambiguous descriptor that would need to be better defined (such as, brings in a certain amount of money per year? Or has a certain number of artists?)

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Sweet_Bang_Tube t1_j1s8zvf wrote

Yes, I'm sure I was born and raised here. Maybe that is a normal amount of traffic to be in now, but that only started being an issue about 5-8 years ago, when so many people really start migrating here. It was too much, too quickly.

Apartments are not any cheaper, unless you share with multiple people and don't own a car. I'm not sure if saying you have "former friends" who you are "guessing" are in similar financial situations is a good supporting statement to make.

But it makes no difference to me either way. People can show to here themselves and see what it is like.

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No_Comfortable6029 t1_j1s9wdp wrote

Hah is it because I'm not still friends with them? Not sure why having friends (or former) who have tried to do the same thing is not a good supporting statement. Agreed, your lifestyle ain't gonna cut it as an up and coming musician but not everyone in Austin is living the high life either. Also, I think your memory is a bit short if you think traffic only got worse in the last 5-8 years.

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Notinyourbushes t1_j1sbo3y wrote

Tell you what, we're going to put my facts against your feelings. OP asked which was better to make it as a musician, Seattle or Dallas. I said Seattle was a better choice and Texas is harder to make it.
You'll find Seattle at the top and Dallas in the middle

You'll find Seattle at the top and most Texas cities at the bottom

And from Dallas itself

Maybe think a little before giving shitty advice, huh?

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mrxexon t1_j1scjjr wrote

Greetings from the Pacific NW.

I'm not knocking places like Austin, but if you want quality of life as a musician, this area has things Texans can only dream about.

Ski in the morning. Surf in the afternoon kinda stuff...

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Gromit801 t1_j1sn4w9 wrote

Between those choices, Seattle is your ONLY choice.

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NewAssumption4780 t1_j1u25rk wrote

Seattle is fucking awful for live music venues. I mean, really, really terrible. It went from a decent music city to a wasteland in 25 years.

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