A traditional music resume can tell people what you have done.

An RTV profile can show examples of your actual work.

Many musicians already have videos, certificates, repertoire lists, and performance experience. The problem is that this information is often scattered. Some videos may be on YouTube. Some pieces may be listed in a document. Some certificates may be saved somewhere else. Some experience may only be described in an email or application.

That can make it difficult for a school, teacher, church, studio, or employer to understand your musical background quickly.

Road to Virtuosity helps organize that information into one public profile.

One Place for Your Repertoire, Videos, and Certificates

One of the useful parts of RTV is that your public profile can work like a musical portfolio or repertoire resume.

Instead of sending someone several different links, you can share your RTV profile. That page can show completed pieces, performance videos, points, levels, and certificate completions in a way that is easier to understand.

This can be helpful when applying to a music school, auditioning for a studio, applying for an accompanist job, applying for a music director position, joining a church music team, or showing your experience as an instrumentalist.

The goal is simple: make your musical work easier to share and easier to review.

The Problem with Scattered Music Videos

YouTube is very useful for hosting videos, but YouTube by itself does not always explain your musical progress.

A YouTube channel may have many performances, but it does not clearly organize them by musical level, point value, certificate progress, or repertoire difficulty. Someone watching your channel may not know which pieces are your hardest, how many pieces you have completed, or which styles of music you have the most experience with.

They may have to guess where to start.

RTV adds more structure. Your videos are still watchable, but they are connected to specific pieces, levels, points, certificates, and musical progress.

That makes your performances easier to review.

What Someone Can Quickly See

A public RTV profile gives someone a faster way to understand your musical background.

Depending on what you have completed, they may be able to see:

  • Your completed pieces
  • Your total number of performed pieces
  • Your more difficult pieces based on level or point value
  • Your progress through different levels
  • Your completed certificates
  • Your public performance videos
  • The types or categories of music you have worked on

This is useful because people do not only want to know that you play music. They often want to know what kind of music you play, how much repertoire you have completed, how difficult your pieces are, and whether they can watch real performances.

Certificate completions can also show that a student has finished a defined group of repertoire, not just uploaded random individual videos.

RTV helps answer these questions in one organized place.

Useful for Schools, Churches, and Music Jobs

In many music situations, people do not only want to read about your experience. They want to hear it.

A student applying to music school can share an RTV profile to show completed repertoire, certificate progress, and actual performance videos.

An accompanist can use a profile to show practical playing experience. For example, someone hiring an accompanist may want to know if the musician has played hymns, classical music, lead sheets, or other useful repertoire.

A church musician or music director can share a profile to show musical range, consistency, and real examples of playing.

An instrumentalist can use a profile to show growth across different pieces, levels, styles, and certificates.

This does not mean an RTV profile replaces an audition, resume, transcript, application, or interview. Schools and employers may still require specific materials.

But it can be a helpful extra link that shows real musical work in an organized way.

A Public Record of Musical Growth

Over time, an RTV profile can become more than a place to earn points.

It can become a public record of your musical growth.

Your profile can show what you have learned, what you have performed, what certificates you have completed, and what kind of musician you are becoming.

Instead of asking someone to search through scattered videos, an RTV profile gives them one organized place to see your repertoire, certificates, and performances.