I have long acquaintance with "pop" music, although I personally prefer classical, renaissance, jazz, folk, etc. with "pop" or maybe death metal coming behind.
BUT, don't kid yourself. Most of those folks are highly trained. Maybe not the hip hop guys so much, but the musicians they hire to back them surely are.
And they work very, very, hard.
My son plays trumpet, which he didn't actually pick up until fourth grade, after violin, drums, and being taught "people are strange" on the piano by my friend when he was 4, after whish he learned it in all twelve keys before the night was out.
But he had natural embrochure for trumpet and he learned jazz improv, and that was all she wrote.
He was accepted at the YoungMusicians Program, at UC Berkeley when he was 11. Every summer, for seven weeks, he studied music - classical mostly and jazz - from 8:30 to 5 pm five days a week. He did Jazz band, was accepted in the Berkeley High School Jazz Ensemble as a freshman, was lead as a sophomore, played San FRancisco Jazz All Stars, Monterey Jazz All Stars, and was asked to be in the S.F Youth Symphony (also Oakland) but just didn't have time.
Got a World Scholarship to Berklee, which he chose over New England or Boston Conservatory, and, two days before leaving for college, had a farewell, benefit concert, where a couple decided that they were going to pick up every single expense he had that wasn't covered!
When this enabled him to graduate in three years, they offered to stake him to a master's at Juilliard, but, as he explained, he had never had a summer off since he was eleven.
Yeah, most of the times, his lines are buried and could have been played by a synth, although his flugelhorn solo in the second season of "The Boondocks" in the "invasion of the Katrinians" was pretty, and BTW he barely got minimum scale, no residuals, etc., on Mary J/ Blige, and others, just "play for pay" and stiffed (last I heard, maybe it's changed) by Bruno Mars.
But when they played the Grammies, with 105 players "in the band", His horn section, "The Regiment Horns" (Kevin Williams,trombone: Sean ERICK, trumpet: Leon Silva, sax) plus the addition of Rashon Ross, trumpet) the precision and exactitude, the unisons, had the same demands that any "classical" symphony player has. Go check it out. I challenge you to hear the slightest difference in the unisons. I was actually impressed, whereas I just couldn't see al the praises there were being made by the critics about the horn lines, actually saying, "can you imagine, all the education and practice that went into those six notes?"
And then there are the hours, and the travel. The first year, touring with an American Idol winner, the management was so bad that they left emails after midnight to tell the musicians to be in the lobby at 8 am.on Tuesday morning. In his hurry, my son left behind his phone charger, so he had it Fed Exed to LA. Only to discover that "management" and i use the word loosely, flew them back to do a Good Morning America on Thursday morning, because it was cheaper to sly them home for a night than pay hotel and per diem. They stayed in the same hotel!
And with Justin.....well,, Jay Z tried to get them to play in his band for no extra money! I don't know how they worked it, if he gave them more or they are not playing, but as a mother, I hope they don't have to take on any more. They have been sooooo busy.
And somehow, when the played at the White House, "A Tribute to Memphis Jazz" they played as the house band, not just for Justin, but for the whole show. This after Super bpwl pre game, the grammies, SNL, a whole week on Jimmy Fallon, a concert in Austin the next day and a live hour long broadcast performance two days later. They deserve to get paid.
My son turned 28 last week. Since he was 21, when he graduated, he has done an average of8 to 9 gigs a week, yes, usually going from recording to a live gig at night at least twice a week, and being at church (just outside LA) at 7 am to play two services every Sunday, even when they were playing a Friday and Saturday Night gig in Las Vegas for over three months, driving "home" after the last performance.
So don't either begrudge, or think those sidemen are wither having it easy, or are under educated. Like the film business, where probably over half the crew will have a BA or an MA, but no one talks about it, those dedicated men and women who provide backup have had, up to a point, a very similar musical education to yours.
Why do they play as sidemen? It's a choice. When asked if he wanted to be recorded, to put together a group, as a teenager, my son replied, "No, I just want to be the guy who shows up, plays the music, gets paid and go home."
When his teachers said he could go as high as he wanted in music, all I could say is "Well, he has world class talent, he just doesn't have world class ambition."
But it seems he's on the world stage, anyway. And last time I talked to him, he told me, "I really have to start stepping up my game."
And the names, well, they have to be very, very, very, healthy and reliable. Never make a mistake, always make it seem fresh, always seem happy, no matter how sick they might actually feel.
Sounds like doing classical, doesn't it?