re. Surf Digby's post..
Hey, whaddya know, two of us writing from the same perspective at once!

You're absolutely right about the jobbers having bigger heads than the guys with the real bragging rights; put simply, the jobbers feel like they have to prove themselves; hell, when I was jobbing I did it. There's this ethos, this arrogant attitude you're trained into to stop you from wondering if you're playing for the right reasons these days (no life, no forward direction and not that much money either. Plus it made me hate music for a while). And if every agent and soundman I've met who claimed to have toured with the Rolling Stones had actually done so, Mick, Keef and the boys must have a policy of hiring a fresh crew every gig they've ever played.
Actually, there's another quote that I think is some of the best (unwitting) career advice I've ever encountered for any artist or performer (and wrestler, I guess);
There was a band we had supporting us once who had one of these middle-aged drummers who go on about how they've been professional musicians all their lives, man and boy, yada yada.. he spent ages crowing on about all the jobbing function bands and anonymous cruise ship engagements that had been his career as if he was being interviewed by Melvyn Bragg. Then at the climax of this dreary tale, he said these magic words, which should be written in big red letters, _frame_d, and hung on the bedroom wall of everyone who aspires to turn their passion into their living;
Now, some people might say I've not followed my dream, but I say; I'm forty-five. I've still got time to do my own thing.Read those words and shudder. You now know what to avoid at all costs.