June Posted July 15, 2012 Posted July 15, 2012 Tough decision time. I'll be one of many composers in a new music performance/composition workshop. There was a miscommunication about the dates, and I bought my international plane tickets leaving one day too early. I now have to choose: either change my tickets -- which would cost about $450 U.S. -- or miss the workshop's big final concert. Things we know: - The final concert will be recorded well, and I'll be sent a copy; - There's no way to be sure until during the workshop whether the final concert will include a piece of mine, but there's a good chance it will; and - I will definitely have a couple of pieces on other concerts/readings earlier in the workshop. I know the final concert and whatever socializing we'd do afterwards is really important for building connections with the performers and with the other composers. I have enough money saved up in my workshop/travel budget that I could change the tickets. But it's a lot of money. Enough for a whole other workshop locally or any number of other things for my career. Any input to help me think about this would be appreciated! Quote
June Posted July 15, 2012 Author Posted July 15, 2012 (Just to clarify: $450 for the change fees really seems to be my cheapest change option -- I can't do a trick like dropping the original tickets and looking for other deals, since the original tickets are non-refundable. So the question is simply: is not missing the last night worth $450?) Quote
robinjessome Posted July 15, 2012 Posted July 15, 2012 I doubt the concert is important.... it's the "schmooze" afterwards that can be worth it. Is anyone interesting/important going to attend the concert? Will you have a chance to hang out with them that you would not otherwise have? If it's just a performance, skip it. Quote
June Posted July 15, 2012 Author Posted July 15, 2012 Good question. As far as I know, the most interesting/important people at the concert will be faculty composers and performers with whom I will already have been working for the preceding week. Quote
June Posted July 16, 2012 Author Posted July 16, 2012 I decided to keep the tickets the same and miss the concert. Lesson learned: double-check info like this by explicitly asking even if it seems clear! Quote
Austenite Posted July 16, 2012 Posted July 16, 2012 I wouldn't have missed a performance of one of my works, but that's because I've never had one before. Otherwise, it's your call. Quote
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