Here’s a truth nobody in music school prepares you for: the vast majority of working orchestral string players are freelancers. They don’t hold a single full-time position. Instead, they piece together a living from substitute work, per-service orchestras, chamber music, teaching, recording sessions, and anything else that requires a professional violinist, violist, cellist, or bassist. It’s a career path that offers remarkable freedom and variety, but it also requires a completely different set of skills than what you learned in your conservatory practice room.
Understanding the Freelance Ecosystem
The freelance orchestral world runs on relationships, not applications. There’s no job board where orchestras post sub openings. Instead, personnel managers maintain call lists—ranked rosters of players they trust—and work down the list when they need someone. Your goal as a freelancer is to get on as many of these lists as possible, and to be ranked as high as possible on each one.
In a major metropolitan area, there might be a dozen orchestras, opera companies, and ballet orchestras that hire freelancers regularly, plus recording sessions, musical theater pits, church gigs, and corporate events. Each has its own network. The violinist who subs regularly with the symphony might never cross paths with the one doing Broadway pit work. Understanding the landscape of your specific city is the first step to building a sustainable career.
Getting Your First Gigs: Breaking Into the Network
If you’re just starting out, your primary network is your former teachers, classmates, and anyone you’ve played with in youth orchestras or summer festivals. Reach out to working freelancers you know and let them know you’re available and looking for work. Many gigs are filled by word of mouth—a section player can’t make a service and recommends someone to the personnel manager.
Attend local orchestra concerts and introduce yourself to personnel managers during intermission or after the concert. Bring a business card with your name, instrument, phone number, and email. Keep it simple and professional. Follow up with an email the next day including a brief musical resume. You’re not asking for a job—you’re making yourself known as an available, qualified player.
Another underutilized strategy: reach out directly to section principals and ask if you can take a lesson or coaching. Even if you’re already at a high level, this shows humility and eagerness. More importantly, it builds a personal connection with someone who has direct influence over who gets called for sub work.
Financial Planning: The Freelancer’s Survival Guide
Freelance income is inherently inconsistent. September through May is typically busy season, while summers can be lean unless you secure festival work. The single most important financial habit for a freelance musician is maintaining a cash reserve that covers three to six months of expenses. Build this before you build anything else.
Track every gig, every payment, and every expense meticulously. Freelance musicians can deduct instrument maintenance, strings, sheet music, concert attire, travel to gigs, home practice space, and continuing education. These deductions add up significantly, but only if you keep records. Use a simple spreadsheet or an app like QuickBooks Self-Employed to track income and expenses throughout the year rather than scrambling at tax time.
Set your rates and stick to them. Know the going rate for sub work in your area—it varies enormously by city and orchestra. Don’t undercut other freelancers to get work; it damages everyone, including you. If an organization offers below-market rates, it’s reasonable to negotiate or decline. Your time and expertise have value, and treating your career like a business from day one establishes the habits that sustain you long-term.
Saying Yes, Saying No, and Managing Your Calendar
In the early years, say yes to almost everything. Play the community orchestra concert even if the pay is modest. Take the last-minute church gig even if it means sight-reading a service. Every performance is a chance to meet other musicians, impress a contractor, and add another name to your network. The cellist sitting next to you at a pops concert might be the one who recommends you for a recording session next month.
As your career develops, you’ll need to be more strategic. Double-booking is the freelancer’s nightmare—and it will happen if you’re not disciplined about your calendar. Use a single digital calendar for all musical commitments and check it before accepting anything. When you have to turn down work, do it immediately and recommend another player if you can. Personnel managers remember players who handle conflicts gracefully and offer solutions.
The Long View: From Freelancer to Full-Time
Many freelancers eventually win full-time orchestra positions. Others build thriving portfolio careers that they prefer to any single job. Either path is valid, and neither happens by accident. Keep taking auditions if a full-time position is your goal—the audition skills and repertoire knowledge pay dividends even in freelance work. If you love the variety of freelancing, invest in diversifying your income streams: build a teaching studio, develop a chamber ensemble, or explore adjacent fields like arts administration or music education.
The freelance life isn’t for everyone, but for those who embrace it, it offers something rare in the orchestral world: the ability to shape your own career, play with multiple ensembles, and experience an enormous range of repertoire and musical colleagues. The players who thrive are the ones who treat it as a business, nurture their relationships, and never stop growing as musicians.
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Get the Free GuideEthan Kim is the founder of Orchestra Kingdom, helping string players win auditions and move up in their sections. Follow him on Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube for daily tips.
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