We caught up with the brilliant and insightful Sean B a few weeks ago and have shared our conversation below.
Sean, thanks for taking the time to share your stories with us today Learning the craft is often a unique journey from every creative – we’d love to hear about your journey and if knowing what you know now, you would have done anything differently to speed up the learning process.
Well I wouldn’t say i learned to do music, it was a passion attached to it so I was drawn towards it. I believe once you have a passion for something it’s not much of a race. You fall in love with the journey and within that journey you notice that you progress overtime. Even though on the journey there can be a lot of obstacles. For me my biggest one was going viral and dropping out of college with a “bad song”. Trying to take the first step of my music career and getting 2 million views of mostly hate comments would make anyone reconsider. The skill that situation taught me is self love within my art. Learning that you can’t please everyone and that you have to start with yourself first . Eventually people who have the same interest or taste in music will come along. Not saying that I didn’t take any feedback from that song lol, but most importantly I learned not to let what other people think about me, affect what I do.

Sean, love having you share your insights with us. Before we ask you more questions, maybe you can take a moment to introduce yourself to our readers who might have missed our earlier conversations?
What got me into music was really myself honestly. Ofcourse I had other people along the ride come to help but it started off with me taking the first step of doing something I felt I really could do and building from there. The biggest feedback that I get from my music nowadays is that it just makes the feel good inside of that it’s therapeutic. I believe that from my versatility of not making one type of sound. The most thing I’m proud of today is just how far I have came. Started with just headphones as a mic and a old laptop. Now I go to the studio, photoshoots, and music videos. I would want my supporters to know that I am more than the music I create and hopefully down the road I will be able to show them more of my characteristics through generous acts.
Can you share a story from your journey that illustrates your resilience?
I wouldn’t call this a story but a overall lesson. On this journey in my career you get into rooms that can really benefit you but along with that comes people you don’t get along with so easily. I think I have shown resilience when it come to having to do business with people that I don’t see eye to eye with but having to complete the bigger task at hand. It also shown me how to not take anything personal during business and understanding that it’s all business.
Is there something you think non-creatives will struggle to understand about your journey as a creative?
I think what it will be hard for non creatives to understand is how I continue to do better and better consistently. Not to toot my own horn or nothing but eventually Artist will hit a peak and sometimes have a hit or miss. I believe my career has been a linear path. Not to mention bouncing back from 2 million critics. It’s like I don’t see any competition in anyone else, just myself.
Contact Info:
- Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/cvshy/?hl=en
- Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/cvshy.cvshy
- Twitter: https://mobile.twitter.com/WhoCvshy
- Youtube: https://youtube.com/channel/UCD_AkayxA3vauMBjSsCqQkA
- Other: https://on.soundcloud.com/pcfn51Pko7WV4uDp6
Image Credits
@undefinedtm

