Leaders Light The Path

PODCAST EPISODE

An important lesson from David Bowie

Why David Bowie was very selfish about his work and why you should be, too …

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Transcript
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When you're an artist, it makes little sense to try to please your audience.

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At least not if you take your art seriously.

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If an artist were to base his work on what their audience would like to see

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or hear from them, they would inevitably have to limit themselves to what they

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have already produced, simply because the public cannot know what it would like.

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They only know what they do already like.

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If you asked them, they'd almost certainly tell you: “More of that, please.”

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And that's what you would need to do.

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If you strive to please, the audience you're shooting too

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low, you are being too cautious.

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That's why David Bowie once said that: “All my big mistakes are when I try

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to second guess or please an audience.

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My work is always stronger when I get very selfish about it.

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When you are trying to please the audience you are being too cautious, which keeps

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you from breaking new ground, because, well, what if they don't like it?

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The problem is that no audience in this world can guess what kind

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of art they haven't seen from you?

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If Miles Davis had asked what his audience liked, he wouldn't never have recorded

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Bitches Brew and Eddie van Halen would never have played his Eruption solo.

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Stravinsky would never have composed “Le Sacre du Printemps” and John Scofield

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wouldn't have recorded Time On My Hands.

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Your audience understands not nearly as much about your art as you do.

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They don't know what art hasn't been made by you, yet.

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And they certainly can’t imagine how it looks like beyond the boundaries

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of what you've done before.

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So, what’s left is to trust your own judgment.

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That's what Bowie was referring to when he called himself selfish about his work.

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Rather than his audience he trusted his own judgment to lead him to places

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where others would like to follow.

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Just like Miles Davis and Eddie van Halen did.

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They pioneered uncharted territory and then lighted

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the path for others to follow?

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The same is true for any creative: developers, designers, engineers,

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communicators, you name it.

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So, how selfish are you about your work?

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