distortedrumble said:
whats the best way to know 50 people.....go to college....not a community college but a college or university....if you live on campus..thats even better...if you belong to a frat....your crowd is automatic. i know college isnt for everyone but its in the best intrest of most original bands to have someone in the band in college. lol the only other option is to do house parties complete with kegs and all. and thats a slow process also.
That’s a great point. I was in a band in college and we started out doing talent shows and free parties. We did 80% original music (primarily because we were too lazy to learn cover songs) and a few caught on with the crowds that came to see us. Now make no mistake they were there for the free beer and women and we were just added value. Still a few songs caught on and were requested, which was great at first. But even those became like covers when people wanted you to play those songs 20 times a show. And of course we would still get the comments “ your original’s rock, but why don’t you play this or that cover.” (Usually what the hot cover bands were playing at the time)
Still anyone that is starting off and wants to guarantee a good crowd, play the college / Greek parties. Play for free or reduced rates. If they like you and want you back, up the price. Now don’t go too high or they’ll go out and get the hot cover band. But most Greek houses and looking to save a buck or two. And you can catch them over a barrel at times because a lot won’t try to book a band until the last minute or are stuck if the Hot Cover band gets a wedding gig that pays twice as much.
Of course playing for free (or just for the booze) gets old after a while. Especially when you hear what the hot cover bands are pulling in. There was this cover band that drove me nuts, not because they were a cover band but because they did the same exact show for three years. No new songs, no derivations. You could set your watch by it. As a musician in a band I had to ask people why they would go see a band 3 or 4 times a month when it was the same thing over and over again? It became a social event.
But that finally caught up with them and there I learned one simple rule: every “original band” wants the crowds that the cover bands bring in, & every cover band wants to be respected for their originals. By the time this band got serious and wanted to be known as a “original” act no one would take them seriously. They pigeonholed themselves and became a victim of their own success, eventually having to break up & do separate projects to get their originals heard.
The sad fact is that 50 – 70% or more of people who go out to the clubs could care less if it is a live band or a DJ. I know most musician’s don’t get this and probably never will. It doesn’t make sense that people want to hear the same songs they just heard on their radio but that is the way it is. I overhead a conversation that pretty much sold me on how most people decide if it is a good band or not:
Dude: Your eyes sparkle like…. Hey, I know that song
Chick: Oh, I love this song
Dude: cool song… really good band
Chick: oh yeah, the singer is cute. I think my roommate is going to hit on him when they take a break.
Dude: (looking up at the band) yeah, these guys are great…. So baby, do you want to dance or do you want to finish that drink and go back to my place?
As Bruce Hornsby said "It's just the way it is"