Start Your Music Career In The Air Force Band
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- Опубліковано 29 вер 2024
- Have you ever wanted to join the Air Force band whether it was regional or premier, but didn't know how. Starting or continuing a music career can sometimes seem difficult, this video will detail exactly how to do it through joining the Air Force Band.
I will discuss why joining the Air Force band is a great oppurtunity, and I'll also discuss some of the benefits and differences between the two bands. Later in the video I will cover exactly how to join the Air Force band, and what you need to know.
If you want to know if you'd be qualified for the Air Force, here is a video you can watch which will help
• Here are the Air Force...
You can learn more about the Air Force band process by going to this link
www.music.af.mil/
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Nice video! I'm a Regional Band member and want to add a few comments-
(1) We enter as an E-3 into the Regional Band career field after BMT. There isn't a range from E1-E3.
(2) There are actually two Premier Bands in the Air Force: The USAF Academy Band in Colorado Springs & The USAF Band in Washington D.C. However, simply saying the band's name is a blanket statement because within these bands are several different ensembles, such as a concert band, jazz band, rock band, ceremonial band, and vocal group. Any one of those ensembles could have an opening and sometimes auditions are specifically held to fill those vacancies. So let's say that I play trumpet and want to audition for the Air Force Premier Band in D.C. I would be able to audition for either the concert band or jazz band (Airmen of Note) if there is a spot open in that ensemble. (This also applies to the Army, Navy, Coast Guard and Marine Premier Bands in D.C.)
(3) One perk of being in a Premier Band is that it's a stationary assignment, so you avoid getting PCS'ed until you separate or retire. Regional Band members tend to get PCS'ed every 3-5 yrs on average. All this being said, it's possible for Premier Bands to travel more than Regional Bands because it depends on budget and demand. For example, the US Army Field Band Concert Band (one of the Army's Premier Bands in D.C.) does an extensive, 100-ish day summer tour every year. COVID has shifted our focus to mainly virtual outreach, so none of the military bands are traveling as much as they normally would right now.
(4) Vacancies come up in both Premier and Regional Bands whenever someone retires or separates, so auditions are highly competitive. Candidates can expect to be going up against 30+ people (civilians and current Military Band members from all the branches) for 1 spot. Air Force Regional Bands in particular are coveted over Army, Navy, and Marine Regional Bands because we do not have AIT/Tech School after BMT. The audition takes the place of this training since the AF seeks to hire musicians already capable of jumping into the career field.
(5) Both Premier and Regional Band members deploy overseas to provide troop morale and build partnerships between nations through music. Members come together to form the Air Force Central Command (AFCENT) Band (more info can be found on the music.af.mil website or by searching "AFCENT Band" on social media). Military musicians often get a bad rep because "we just play music" but we do so much more than that. We go through BMT, qualify for our jobs, complete mandatory training, deploy, etc. just like all other military jobs.
Great info and thanks for sharing. I’m gonna pin the comment. Thank you.
I really appreciate this video, and honestly all of your content. Looking into moving from my current civilian musician profession into either a Regional or Premier band position. I have several friends who currently serve as musicians in the military (Air Force, Navy and Army) who absolutely love their job.
What if you never played an instrument at all
Unfortunately you wouldn’t be able to qualify for the band. They won’t train you. They want you to already be proficient.
Bro🤦🏾♂️🤦🏾♂️🤦🏾♂️ I wish they trained me
Sign me up doc.
0:35 this clip was taken in my HS lol. I think 2016
LOL, I was literally at that invited vocal audition in Colorado :) The AF is the service I've auditioned for the second most (Army being first), and I can tell you from first hand experience of pursuing this route for 3 years that it goes without saying that all these service band jobs are hard to win, but the AF is THE hardest service to win a band job...AF is the pickiest service about everything they do as that's the service most people want to enlist in, so they can afford to be picky, but they're the absolute pickiest about the musicians they choose, primarily because there is no music school AIT after BCT, you have to be job ready for all their bands. But even being invited to a premiere band audition in any service is a pretty big deal, they don't invite just anyone, so I was more than happy to be at that Academy Band audition!
That’s awesome. We’re you fortunate enough to be selected for the job?? 🤞🏽
@@Jodywithawhy If only! It's a long story as to why this is but as you can see, all their auditions this year are a week long, so I was up against an upwards of possibly 30-40 others, so their pickings certainly weren't exactly slim ;P I do know that it's a current AF regional bandsperson who won it and I can't kvetch about that, because for other fun red tape reasons, AF Premiere Bands tend to choose from the civilian pool...it's not impossible to win an AF Premier job as an AF regional musician, but it's more rare than say, in the Army or Navy where it's more common to see a current regional/fleet musician win a Premiere job. Each service is slightly different in how auditions go, so the info I've gleaned over the past few years still astounds me at times, but it's useful!
Oh really? That’s sounds quite interesting!
How often as a recruiter did you see Fire Protection on the list of jobs available?
1 like every 3 months. For an entire squadron of 50 recruiters. 50 recruiters are looking for jobs for an average of 4 people a recruiter. That’s about 200 people. Of those 200, maybe about 40 of them listed fire. 1 of those 40 will get fire every 3 months.
Moral of the story, fire is hard as hell to get, unless you have fire 1 or 2 certs.
You should do a basic training video.
I thought about it. I would just need to do some solid research to make it effective.
Major Glenn Miller is the father of the Air Force Band 🇺🇸✈️
I wanna be on the band 😮💅💯
Hi. Some confusion and maybe you can help. Joining the AF at 18 and staying in 20 means retiring at 38. Retirement pension is less than $2000
but the TSP with a good percentage investment is well into 6 figures. Can you begin withdrawing funds each month to bolster your income and what are the details?
I think you can but you will be penalized if you’re not the required age. I’m honestly not familiar with how it works, so I don’t wanna mislead you.
Bro I need to know, the lady from your video thambnail, her UA-cam channel, today she performed is Doha qatar, I forget her band name, I remember only she said us airforce.
Excuse me sir I really want to learn how to play the saxophone but I don’t have any experience on playing instruments but i wanna know as a hobby not a career is there any clases or courses in the AF?
Can you audition if you're already enlisted and want to switch career fields?
Dear brother am interested in job to bands please
Take this like bro.
Can you join without experience??
I want to play the drums for the rock band
That’s what I want to know too
I don’t think so