Get
Up, Get On And Get Off: The Early Bird Catches The Record Deal!
By
Sheena Metal
Imagine
this…you're in the local hospital's pre-op ward waiting for the removal
of your pesky rupturing appendix. You wait and wait in side splitting
agony while your doctor chats it up with the nurses, gathering phone
numbers from the hot ones. After what seems forever, he gets you prepped
and begins the surgery. What should have been a 20-minute procedure
turns into two hours. He cracks jokes and talks about his cherry red
Ferrari, while you're lying unconscious with your abdomen split open.
Finally, you're sewn up and ready for recovery but super surgeon and
his crack anesthesiologist are having a heated discussion about the
science of their golf games and have seeming forgotten you're passed
out underneath them with tubes stuck in every orifice. If this were
your surgery experience, you'd freak out, sue the hospital and your
hot-shot doc would wind up cleaning bedpans at the state convalescent
hospital.
Sadly, like our skirt-chasing doctor, many musicians think that the
consequences of their actions are immaterial and treat their audience
with the same lackadaisical disregard that the before-mentioned doctor
treated his poor patient with. These selfish creative types show up
to gigs late, set up at their own leisure (roughly the same pace that
a 100 year-old tortoise would run the Boston marathon), play as long
of a set as they please (regardless of their designated set time) and
break down/clear the stage at their own whim with little or no regard
to the club's schedule.
However, if you asked any of these artists, they would say that they
consider music to be their career…and shouldn't a career be treated
with the same importance and professionalism whether you're a budding
rockstar or an established surgeon? It should, but often it's not and
bands then find their reputations are tarnished with labels like: slow,
lazy, and irresponsible simply because they seem unable to get their
show on (and off) in a timely manner. Get branded as a slovenly flake
and watch the music industry folks jump ship faster than the rich ladies
on the Titanic.
The following are a few tips that will help you to get up, get on and
get off in a timely, professional manner that will impress the powers-that-be
and leave your fans wanting more:
- Have
Everything Set Up Before You Set Up---It's not like you just found
out you were playing five minutes before. Gigs are booked days,
weeks or months in advance so there's no reason not to be well informed
and well equipped prior to your arrival and set up. Guitars and
drums should be tuned, drum kits and guitar pedals set up and dialed
in, and song lists printed and distributed so that set up time is
minimal. Once the stage is free, a professional band will simply
haul their gear onstage, plug it in, and do a few last minute tweaks
before they're ready to rock and roll. The ancient tortoise rockers,
however, will plunk the road cases down on the stage and then force
friends, fans and industry alike twiddle their musical thumbs in
anticipation while each piece of gear is pulled out, unwrapped,
wiped off, place into position and screwed in slowly but surely.
Truthfully, it's about as interesting as watching paint dry without
the guilty pleasure of getting high off the fumes.
- Sound
Check/Line Check Is Not A Mini Concert---You may view your sound
check as the concert before the concert but you're not making any
friends dragging out your sound check to an hour and a half while
bands are lined up out the door waiting to set up their own gear
and check their sound. Same goes for the line check. You may be
surprised to know that audiences aren't all that excited to sit
and listen to you work out your live sound in front of their eyes
and on their time. Save the lengthy tune-up and checking for the
Making Of The Band video. Get your levels quick and get to rockin'!
- Plan
Out Your Set Time Well Before Your Set---The key to a tight set
is the prep work that goes on before the night of the gig. Many
artists believe that the longer they're onstage the more the audience
gets revved up, but there is something to be said about "too much
of a good thing." Plan out your set, time it and then time it again
and make sure that it comes in a few minutes under your designated
set list time. Little passive aggressive tricks like cramming in
two or three extra songs at the end of the set or coaxing your friends
into screaming for an encore only serves to enrage your sound man
and confuse your crowd and extensive tuning and chatting amongst
yourselves and audience members in between songs is just plain tedious.
The tighter your set is the more professional it sounds to the ears
of your audience and the happier you'll make your bookers, promoters
and club owners.
- Tear
Down Should Be The Quickest Of All---If you thought your set up
was quick, your band's tear down should be lightning fast in comparison.
So much time is wasted every night at a music venue as musicians
dawdle after their sets, drinking and chatting with friends, while
their gear lies piled up onstage, preventing the next artists from
getting set up. Pick up your instruments, haul them of stage, and
take them outside or into the green room. There you can wrap your
gear up, clean it off, and pack it away into cases and into your
cars. Then, it's time to toss back a few beers and gab with the
masses until closing time, without interrupting the flow of the
evening.
Imagine
this…you're in a local club waiting to check out an act your label has
sent you to scout. You wait and wait, growing more bored and more drunk
while the band you've been sent to see chats it up with the women in
the room, giving t-shirts and CDs to the really hot ones. After what
seems like forever, the band takes the stage and begins their set. What
should have been a 30-minute showcase turns into an hour or more as
the band plays a loose set, stopping often to tune, complain about the
sound, yell to the bartender for drinks and crack jokes with select
audience members; while you sit unimpressed trying to get a feel for
the band's style. Finally, their set ends and you wait to approach the
band on behalf of your label but these super rockstars are still onstage
wrapping up endless cords and wiping down each piece of gear while they
chat with each other about how much their set rocked. If this were your
A&R experience, you'd give up waiting to speak with these lazy musicians,
go back to your label and tell them to forget about this particular
band and these hot-shot rockstars will wind up working at Starbuck's
until they go on Social Security. This doesn't have to happen to you.
Learn to get up, get on and get off. You'll soon have the reputation
as an easy-to-work-with, professional, reliable band. After all, you
never know who might be in the audience to see you on any given night.
Sheena Metal is a radio host, producer, promoter,
music supervisor, consultant, columnist, journalist and musician. Her syndicated
radio program, Music Highway Radio, airs on over 700 affiliates to more
than 126 million listeners. Her musicians’ assistance program, Music Highway,
boasts over 10,000 members. She currently promotes numerous live shows weekly
in the Los Angeles Area, where she resides. For more info: http://www.sheena-metal.com.
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