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Archive for July, 2009

You Need an Audience

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009
Passing the scared senseless barrier and into the realm of rocking your face clean off.

Passing the scared senseless barrier and into the realm of rocking your face clean off.

You know what’s really awesome?

When you’ve done enough gigs that you spend barely any time worrying about executing. That frees up all sorts of room for you to just focus on being entertaining and on having fun.

I seriously wish that everyone who runs across this blog would take up an instrument and gig enough to get there. It’s a really wonderful feeling, and a sensation that’s terribly difficult to explain adequately.

Pay attention to what I’m saying now: Grab an instrument. Get proficient. Jam with others. Start doing open mics or whatever you can do. Do it until you cross that barrier where you’re sick to your stomach 12 hours before a gig, to where you can’t wait to boot the act before you offstage so you can get down to business.

Do it if you love rock. Do it if you love punk. Do it if you love country (I can’t believe I just said that). Do it if you’re a heartbroken acoustic navelgazing crooner. Do it if you play the accordian. Do it if you play the meanest didgeridoo on the planet. Just don’t let another day pass you by if you have any desire to perform in front of people.

I promise it will make your life better.

Paul Gilbert’s “Intense Rock”: Necessary!

Saturday, July 25th, 2009

I know I off-handedly mentioned Paul Gilbert’s guitar instruction DVD, “Intense Rock”, some posts ago.

Now I’m going to give it its true due: If you are a serious and half-way decent guitarists, buy this DVD immediately. You also know I don’t hawk products here. People don’t send me free stuff to promote. If I say something is awesome, it’s because it it.

“Intense Rock” is one meaty collection of licks and tricks. Most are fairly familiar to advanced guitarists, and they will do a lot to jog the memory and spur creativity. Most of the sequences are based on the modes and cycle of fifths, so you’ll be able to apply what you’re learning quickly if you already have that knowledge.

So far, my favorite part is the sweep arpeggios section. It’s done more to help my sweeping technique than any other lesson I’ve seen anywhere. Best of all, is I’ve been able to transpose Paul’s sweeps into my own keys and scales, opening up some nice new horizons for me. Very cool!

If you want to be a better rock/metal guitarist, this is the best $30 you can spend.

Paul, if you ever happen to run across this post - thank you thank you thank you!

9 Ways to Prevent Your Band from Looking Like Tools on MySpace

Monday, July 20th, 2009

I think I’ve already adequately covered my disdain for MySpace in previous posts. And we know that I accept it’s existence as a -for now- necessary evil for bands.

With that in mind, I’m going to share some advice with any upstart local bands out there. Trust me, these simple tips will make people visiting your MySpace page a lot happier.

1. If you can’t write your band’s bio in less than 250 words, find someone who can.

2. Do not flip off the cameras in your photos. That’s so Hot Topic, circa 2002. Stop it, okay?

3. Skip the fancy backgrounds. They take FOREVER to load. Do what Spinal Tap would do: Make it black. None more black. Or red. Or just one color of whatever.

4. Use multimedia wisely. Look, fuzzy videos of you playing at local venues or backyard parties  won’t really impress anyone. If you must do a video, execute it well, and show only one of them. More videos also slow loading speed. By the time your page would’ve loaded, the MySpace visitor has already moved onto the next band.

5. Nobody really cares what sort of gear you play, especially if you’re not endorsed. Mind this advice even more if you’re playing cut-rate garbage. If you’re playing a BlackMachine guitar through a Kasha RockMod head, I might be intrigued. Otherwise, no. Just no. And no company is gonna offer you free gear, either, unless they stand to gain from it. Learn to play the instruments first.

6. Back to the subject of band photos, brick walls and railroad tracks are also verboten.

7. Don’t tell me you’re gonna change/redefine/revolutionize music as I know it. Please.

8. Friend some real people, not just other bands. Look, few other bands are good audiences. Especially established bands. We’ve got day jobs, outside interests, maybe even families. We’re interested in a few bands, but we’d rather have real people as your friends - and so should you.

9. If you friend somebody, drop them a note. Generally, I’ll send a message along with a friends request. Usually, it’s just enough to let them know I actually looked at the page and added someone for a reason. Yes, that involves more work. But it’s more friendly. I even do this for bands.

The Rise of Friend Rock

Thursday, July 16th, 2009

There are some venues and promoters here in Arizona that are really setting a new low for the music scene.

Here’s their game: They get a bunch of inexperienced high school bands to buy tickets, which they then sell to their friends (I call this “friend rock”). The promoters may also get clever and try roping an older band that hasn’t experienced this trick yet. They tell everyone to show up at, for example, 6 p.m. for load-in.

The promoter won’t tell you what time you’ll play. That’s a ploy to get all the bands and the fans they bring to stay there the whole time. If the standard of music was high, that wouldn’t be so bad. But typically, these gigs burst forth with the most god-awful noises and shambolic performances you’ll ever see. Since they’re mostly kids, these bands will use amps that sound like Africanized bees living in an empty keg of frat boy beer, and drums that sound like discarded septic tanks.

Let me be clear on this: Most of these young bands stink. But some have some potential to improve, and I’m glad they’re getting out there on-stage. I just prefer gigs with other seasoned bands, not kids that look like the Jonas Brothers dressing up as Cannibal Corpse for Halloween (and why is it that each of these bands has at least one member that looks like the fat kid from Superbad?). It also really cracks me up that they’re acting all gruff and playing angry music, while their supportive parents (who are usually Judas Priest fans!) are smiling in the audience, sometimes with the grandparents!

Getting back to the promoters, it’s a cynical but effective way to make some money. The kids have built-in audiences at their high schools. But woe to the post-college band that gets suckered into one of these gigs. Oy vey.

Jekyll & Hide Weekend of Gigs

Sunday, July 12th, 2009

This weekend, we played gigs on Friday and Saturday. And I felt like two different guitarists.

The first gig featured some moments of brutal stupidity in two different songs. I had no idea what was going on with me. Last night, though, things went a lot better. But the night got off to a rough start.

See, local music venues run on much the same idea as airlines: If you’re scheduled to go on at 11, it might really be 11:30. Now,  that’s not such a big deal unless your bassist happens to start work at midnight. Apparently, an earlier band played long, which pushed everybody back. Fortunately, I explained the situation to the sound guy, who hustled the band before us off a few songs early.

Problem solved! It’s not always that easy, though.

As for my hard time Friday night - everybody has a bad gig now and then. I don’t have many, and I’m happy to have mine out of the way for awhile. It just goes to prove something else: Take none of your songs for granted. Rehearse well. Pay attention. The audience is listening!

Beyond the Metal - Finding Happiness in Other Music

Wednesday, July 8th, 2009

It’s very rare that I’ll buy an album that isn’t in the metal genre. So Flogging Molly must be some sort of gods considering that they’re albums are practically an automatic “BUY” whenever they release one.

For those not in the know, Flogging Molly sounds like the Ramones getting in a car accident with an Irish pennywhistle band. So you’ve got fiddles clashing with a Les Paul, bass clanging into banjos and the like. It’s very fast-paced music, for the most part, and upbeat. When it slows down, it swings into a sweetly melancholic realm.

So what makes this heavy metal savage love Flogging Molly?

First and foremost, it’s all genuine emotion that’s still skillfully arranged and executed. No, there are no sweep arpeggios or double-bass drums, no mind-frying guitars solos. But the musicians just sound good, like they’re playing exactly what they need to play at that moment. The vocals are understandable, which is great because most of the lyrics are also wonderful pieces of storytelling.

Which brings me to the second point: There is a terrific regional quality to Flogging Molly that I’d love to replicate in Hung Dynasty. You need not know anything about the band, and from the first few bars you’ll be like “yep, they’re Irish” (or at least the singer/songwriter/bandleader is). You can practically hear an audible “Jayzus Chroist, Ah’m fecking flewtered again” in every tune. I guess maybe it’s easier to convey a sense of Ireland than it is Arizona, but I’ll keep striving to attain that goal.

Now, I’ve gotta find me some Guinness.

3 Cold, Hard Facts of “Putting on a Show”

Sunday, July 5th, 2009
Big, beautiful stages like this are rare for us.

Big, beautiful stages like this are rare for us.

If you start playing in a band, you will be amazed by the number of people who want to talk to the band afterward - and often, tell the members every single thing they should do to be better live. It’s also plain to any experienced musician that none of these people have spent time on a stage as part of a live band - karaoke is the limit of their experience. With that in mind, here are a few things you should keep in mind when dishing advice out to bands.

1. Stages in local venues are perilous place - Yes, I know they look solid. But they’re clapped out as can be. Sometimes, entire pieces of the stage at certain venues will start sliding if I put my foot on them. One other venue has a section that is ready to cave in; even the most gentle step onto it causes it to bow downward eight inches. We will not be risking limb and possibly life to jump around like monkeys to entertain you. But we will play good music.

Showhorning us onto this stage was a nightmare - I nearly fell off at one point!

Showhorning us onto this stage was a nightmare - I nearly fell off at one point!

2. There’s really not much room to move - The dudes from Iron Maiden run all over the stage during their shows. And I so want to do that. Here’s the rub: If I want to go over to Matt’s side of the stage, I have to plot a careful course with the precision of a NASA shuttle launch to safely squeeze between Todd and the drum mic without knocking either down. I also have to navigate PA and instrument cables all and sundry. It’s like Han Solo piloting the Millennium Falcon through an asteroid field while gettin’ sweet lovin’ from Princess Leia, fixing the hyperdrive and dodging a giant ship-eating space slug, all while the Imperial Star Destroyer that is a 12-bar guitar solo is headed my way. And I have to time it right in the song, where I won’t have a busy part because …

3. Musicians can’t hear jack squat onstage - See, in the Big Leagues, musicians have these things called in-ear monitors. They allow the sound engineer to pipe directly into a musician’s ear what the audience is hearing. Here in the minor leagues, we seldom have monitors. Mostly, we hear our own instrument and the drums, and only traces of anything else. That means we DON’T HEAR OURSELVES when we go venturing around. We have to pick our moments.

A trip to rock out with a bandmate involves NASA-like precision planning.

A trip to rock out with a bandmate involves NASA-like precision planning.

4. We want to talk to you, but let us get off the stage first - This post might sound a bit like I’m complaining about music fans. But it’s the minority. Most are super-supportive, and can’t wait to offer some really sincere and uplifting compliments. I only ask one thing: We’re probably one of several bands that are playing on any given night, and we move our own gear. Hang out and have a brew while we load out - we want to be courteous to the next band and get our gear offstage so they can get set up and rocking as soon as possible. Once we load out, we’ll totally talk your ears off. I promise.

I hope this does something to dispel the notion that this is like Guitar Hero or the World Air Guitar Championship. You can’t just spend the entire time onstage acting wild, throwing your guitar around and banging your head. Let’s say a show lasts an hour. Imagine running for an hour. Does anybody sprint for a full hour? No. You pick your spots, and have some natural lulls. Add the quicksand of crappy stages and technical challenges, and you see why “putting on a show” can be a really tall order.

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