Talking music & entertainment talent:
I’ve been a music, entertainment, and sportswriter (and ghostwriter) since 1968. In that time, I’ve watched an unbelievable number of bands and musicians with real, undeniable talent. Some climbed all the way to the big stages and bright lights. Others, just as gifted, never made it past the local circuit.
It wasn’t a question of talent. Many of them had the chops, the charisma, and the skill set to rise to full‑blown rock stardom. So why did some break through while others stalled out?
Instead of relying only on my own opinion, I reached out to people (longtime friends) across the industry, promoters, producers, touring musicians, agents, venue managers, and long‑time insiders to get their take on why certain artists make it, and others don’t. Here's what they said:
Some acts rise, and others fade because the music business rewards far more than raw talent; it rewards work ethic, branding, timing, networking, and that unpredictable, lightning‑in‑a‑bottle magic that no one can fully explain. The artists who make it usually out‑hustle, out‑promote, and out‑connect the ones who don’t. They show up early, stay late, treat every gig like an audition, and build a brand that fans can instantly recognize. Timing plays a huge role, being in the right city, with the right sound, at the exact moment the industry is hungry for it. And yes, luck absolutely plays a part. One chance meeting, one canceled headliner, one viral clip, one industry insider in the room on the right night can change everything. But even luck needs something to land on. That’s where the “It Factor” comes in, that unteachable mix of presence, charisma, authenticity, and emotional electricity that makes an audience lean forward before the first chorus hits. It’s not just talent; it’s magnetism. It’s the difference between someone who performs music and someone who becomes the music the moment they step onstage.
{My Take}
Since relocating to the Entertainment Capital of the World in 1999, I’ve seen countless bands that had everything they needed to break out — talent, drive, stage presence, and the kind of chemistry you can’t fake. But the biggest reason many local acts never make it past the Vegas scene is simple: a handful of them do everything right at first, then lose steam too quickly. They push hard, build momentum, start getting noticed… and then stop just short of the finish line. Maybe they burned out, maybe life got in the way, or maybe they didn’t give their talent enough time to be discovered by the world beyond Las Vegas. In just the last couple of years, I’ve watched several bands with real potential stall out right when the door was starting to crack open — a reminder that in this business, consistency and endurance matter just as much as talent!
In this business, even the biggest names didn’t rocket to fame overnight. Aerosmith spent years grinding through tiny clubs before anyone outside Boston cared. Bon Jovi played every Jersey bar that would have them long before “Runaway” finally cracked the radio. KISS hauled their own gear, slept in vans, and got rejected by every major label before the makeup, the fire, and the spectacle finally caught on. Even Journey didn’t explode until years into their career when the right voice and the right song collided at the right moment. The truth is, discovery takes time — sometimes a long time — and the artists who make it are the ones who refuse to stop showing up.
Remember: the moment that you quit trying, or slow down your efforts, might be the moment right before the bright lights hit you!
Gary England
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100% true! Been there, done that - Jeff in Nashville, TN
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