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#2
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"Iowa Recorder" wrote in message
om... Your right, I have had civic organisations use the "per man" standard but it is a rare case. I agree most clubs don't care if your a solo kazoo player. Just as long as you make the cash register ring. Yeah, they usually don't pay per man, but they'll all do the math in their heads when they're talking about pay, and $50 a man is pretty average. I have seen countless talented ensemble players leave music just because the money got too small. (I mean ensemble by large bands 7 to 15 piece.) It's tough to put together a large group. There are so many talented players I would love to hire but I just can't because it wouldn't add anything financially. That's the reason my 6 piece isn't a 15 piece. I want horns, backup singers, a fiddle, a percussionist, and so on, but we would make $1.50 each at the end of the night. And that just won't pay out bar tabs, dammit. However, there are several good horn players around Dallas who know us and and sit in whenever they can, which is pretty much any time they show up to our gigs. Also, our drummer's girlfriend is a pretty damn good fiddle player, so she sits in whenever she's in town. 300$. To them it doesn't matter that they make money as long as they enjoy their music. I have friends in such bands and often advise them We're sort of there, but at the same time, offering us $200 for a 4-5 hour show with at least 6 people performing is kind of insulting. In fact, I would (and do) play free for charities before I'd play a bar for only a couple hundred bucks. I know it's just the reality of intense competition. Bands will do whatever they can to get what they want. To be accurate I should say the undercutting comes at what quality of music is offered at such a cheap price. Well... the real problem is that quality has nothing to do with it. It's sheer beer sales. The venues don't care if you suck, they just care how much beer is sold while you play there. If your band is great but there's no noticable difference in alcohol sales on nights you play, then they're not going to pay you any more than the 3 piece garage band that sucks. To the venue, you are of equal quality. though I think the "something more" is just having gifted vocalists. Actually, there is something to that (and not just because I'm a singer : ). A band with good vocals, which includes strong backup vocals and full harmonies, just comes across as a better band than a band that is actually better but has weaker vocals. If you have a really great guitarist or keyboardist, people will only notice it during the solos. But great vocals, strong 3 or 4 part harmonies, etc, will improve the overall perception of the band as a whole. IME, of course. ryanm |
#3
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#4
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That's the reason my 6 piece isn't a 15 piece. I want horns, backup
singers, a fiddle, a percussionist, and so on, but we would make $1.50 each at the end of the night. We got a quote of like $900 for city sponsored gig and we went back and said "we" needed $1500 and they said "Oh, we would pay that for a 12 piece band but not this 4 piece". --------------------------------------- "I know enough to know I don't know enough" |
#5
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Mike Rivers wrote:
So why do people go to those bars? To try to get laid. |
#6
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Michael R. Kesti wrote:
I've never experienced a club owner negotiating pay based on the number of people in the band. More often pay is based on the number of drinks purchased by the audiences the bands draw. A situation I've seen more often is clubs that will only hire bands of a certain size or a certain instrumentation. Some won't hire a duo. Some won't hire a group without a drummer. A lot of times the places that will hire a duo pay so little that you could make more as a trio in a different club. Hopefully, you can find the critical mass that works in your geographical area. The silliest example I ever ran across was in the mid-80s when a lot of Motel lounges still had bands & dance floors. One lounge manager told me he could only hire "Show Bands" He defined a Show Band as having as least 6 players, at least one male & one female singer, playing current top 40 covers, and wearing some kind of uniform. Some of these bands were actually quite good, but I always thought the Robot-Dancing Horn Section thing was kind of over the top. |
#7
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"EggHd" wrote in message
... We got a quote of like $900 for city sponsored gig and we went back and said "we" needed $1500 and they said "Oh, we would pay that for a 12 piece band but not this 4 piece". Tell 'em you each play 3 instruments, and that makes you a 12 piece. ; ) ryanm |
#8
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ryanm wrote:
"EggHd" wrote in message ... "we" needed $1500 and they said "Oh, we would pay that for a 12 piece band but not this 4 piece". Tell 'em you each play 3 instruments, and that makes you a 12 piece. ; ) Is that actually specified in the union scale rules? If you double on an instrument, you're supposed to collect a doubling fee. Not that I've ever heard of anyone following the union rules... - Logan |
#9
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Not that I've ever heard of anyone following the union rules...
Aight. AFTRA turns into a powerhouse and AFofM is weak. How the heck did this happen? --------------------------------------- "I know enough to know I don't know enough" |
#10
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In article ,
(EggHd) wrote: Not that I've ever heard of anyone following the union rules... Aight. AFTRA turns into a powerhouse and AFofM is weak. How the heck did this happen? --------------------------------------- "I know enough to know I don't know enough" In the case of the AFofM, they harrassed high-school musicians to the point of revolution. In the '60s, I was "leader" of a rock band that joined the AFofM in order to play real gigs. Our local was run by the brass-band-in-the-park-on-Sunday crowd who insisted on union scale for school dances and parties and followed us around to check. That served to engender a mistrust of the union, who followed up by failing to help us when a club owner reneged on payment. What exactly was the union doing for us for that 2%? Had the union been helpful and made allowances for student musicians, I know my feelings would have been different. I've played clubs on and off for 35 years and have never needed the AFofM. Of course, we're still making about $6/hour... and the local I joined is long gone. In essence, the AFofM convinced me I couldn't expect to make a living playing music. -Jay -- x------- Jay Kadis ------- x---- Jay's Attic Studio ------x x Lecturer, Audio Engineer x Dexter Records x x CCRMA, Stanford University x http://www.offbeats.com/ x x-------- http://ccrma-www.stanford.edu/~jay/ ----------x |
#11
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In essence, the AFofM convinced me I couldn't expect to make a living
playing music. But even in recording they have no pull (except for Symphonies) and AFTRA rules the roost. --------------------------------------- "I know enough to know I don't know enough" |
#12
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In article ,
(EggHd) wrote: In essence, the AFofM convinced me I couldn't expect to make a living playing music. But even in recording they have no pull (except for Symphonies) and AFTRA rules the roost. --------------------------------------- "I know enough to know I don't know enough" I think symphonic players (not just recording) are still influenced by the AFofM, but popular music seems to have side-stepped the union. -Jay -- x------- Jay Kadis ------- x---- Jay's Attic Studio ------x x Lecturer, Audio Engineer x Dexter Records x x CCRMA, Stanford University x http://www.offbeats.com/ x x-------- http://ccrma-www.stanford.edu/~jay/ ----------x |
#13
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"Michael R. Kesti" wrote in message ...
I've never experienced a club owner negotiating pay based on the number of people in the band. More often pay is based on the number of drinks purchased by the audiences the bands draw. Me either. Most places around here charge a cover at the door, and the band gets to take that home. If your crowd won't drink a lot, it's an uphill battle; regardless of your success, skill, or experience. For this reason, my involvement in local weeknight gigs has ended. I can get paid more to teach a few guitar lessons in a day than to gig for peanuts. -dave www.themoodrings.com (green ring = sounds) |
#14
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In article ,
wrote: [snip] I joined the AFM back when I was in high school also. that was the heyday for live music where I grew up, there is no scene now there and wasn't for much longer than a lot of places. tHe AFM in my locale, local 646 in Southeastern IOwa had a program where you could pay your annual and your work dues instead of the 4% rate by just giving them $10 a year. FOr a road band who gigged in the area a lot that option was still available. Sounds like your local was more enlightened than mine (Local 510 San Leandro CA). At the time, there was a great local music scene: I saw bands like the Yardbirds, the Turtles, Buffalo Springfield at the local roller skating arena from 10' away. We often played there, played a gig opening for Muddy Waters, all of this in little Hayward CA. It was truly a golden age as far as local music was concerned. Once Bill Graham started the Filmore, it all died in favor of huge corporate productions. wHat killed it for me was seeing guys with large dixieland bands etc. going to these places and booking the job for under scale and then bitching about it if others did it. I did end up working some gigs where I got paid through the Musicians' performance trust fund. That was one good program I saw that AFM offered. We did some gigs for the California Youth Authority via the AFM Performance Trust Fund. Got to see all the guys that suddenly disappeared from high school. That was probably the only payback we ever got from our union involvement...that and some fun stories. -Jay -- x------- Jay Kadis ------- x---- Jay's Attic Studio ------x x Lecturer, Audio Engineer x Dexter Records x x CCRMA, Stanford University x http://www.offbeats.com/ x x-------- http://ccrma-www.stanford.edu/~jay/ ----------x |
#15
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![]() "Jay Kadis" wrote ... Our local was run by the brass-band-in-the-park-on-Sunday crowd who insisted on union scale for school dances and parties and followed us around to check. That served to engender a mistrust of the union, who followed up by failing to help us when a club owner reneged on payment. What exactly was the union doing for us for that 2%? Our local was run by the old accordion players. They didn't have much in the way of equipment expenses, and they didn't understand that we did. So they kept the scale _way_ down. To be fair: When I lost a drummer, called the club owner to report what I was doing to remedy the situation and was told that the replacement had better not be black, the local backed me up when I dishonored my contract. Not much later, I moved to [large city] to try my luck. Called the union about finding work. The voice at the other end said I would have to bring my union card in and surrender it, then wait six months, get my card back, then ask again. So much for the "international brotherhood" ****. Ever since, I have resisted institutions of any sort. |
#16
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(Mike Rivers) wrote in message news:znr1077194925k@trad...
In article writes: Some of these bands have great PAs with good roadie and tech support. These bands have the luxury of adding an extra fiddle, steel, horn section, percussion...ect... and they go into a place and play for 300$. To them it doesn't matter that they make money as long as they enjoy their music. NAMM has been doing a promotion called "Weekend Warriors" to sell musical equipment to people with plenty of money. I recall one of their ads showed a band made up of people dressed as a judge, a surgeon, a professor, an engineer . . . with text sort of like "The combined annual income of this band is $1.5 million. Are you getting a share of it?" That's pretty funny. We have a band composed of just doctors in our area. They are touted as the most over educated band in Iowa. With that said, I should point out that what is making money for bars these days is very poor music; Kareoke, terrible cover bands, DJs. So why do people go to those bars? To hear the bad music? Maybe it's just because they don't feel drawn to listen to the music so they can spend more time taking and drinking. Of course that's what the owners like best. Your comments made me think a bit about this. My impression is alot of it is just plain smart marketing. I can make several examples. One band has bumper stickers and regilia of various biker gangs all over thier stage setup. They are terrible but they play music that bikers love and so they market themselves very well. In the summer they have it made playing all the various Harley Davidson oriented festivals. Another band does goofy stuff like handing out free cheese balls. The cheese ball band has promo and marketing material that is very funny. Often thier gigs are advertised as "special" events such as "Free cheese night" ect... It is funny how bad they are and they admit "we suck" but in such a humorous way that it is appealing. Their a funny bunch of guys and crowds like this. Again I'm not gonna whine about this. It's long been known that musical talent alone won't do it. Mostly it is the way a product is marketed that makes it successful. I think anyone getting into music professionally should know some things about marketing. As for kareoke. The marketing is in what I call the "me generation". Through the years I have seen a gradual shift in crowds. People want more attention. People want to steal the lime light more. I remember a time where people didn't have a burning desire to sing with the band. Then it started to change. This change happened LONG before kareoke. It seemed the crowds starting to have more attention seeking behavior. More and more at gigs girls would want to jump on stage to dance (which I kinda like) or worse sing. I guess more and more with the 2 parents working and the kids getting less attention they look else where for it - kareoke. I won't knock DJ's. I like going into these loud rooms just thumping with a beat. As someone who admires recordings, I like hearing some of these dance mixes realise their full potential. Also all the women dancing is a plus I guess. grin The fantastic light shows they install in these places alone are entertaining. The good DJs I have seen in the big clubs keep up on what is hot, fresh and popular. Usually they don't play much of what you hear on the radio. Rare to find a radio DJ who is this well researched. I don't like DJs for weddings because I just know my band can do a much better job. Still there is this automatic protical of getting a DJ for the wedding. one reason I see for this is some of the DJs are very good at running contests, doing the throwing of the boquet, the garter thingy... ect... They can also spin the latest song by rubber bannana for the wedding slow dance. So they have their merits. Another reason is too many bands have botched up. Many bands have no clue of how important the cerimonial part of the wedding reception is and the need to have appropriate repitiore to play weddings. My band does very well at playing weddings simply because we can cover a wider range of music than even a DJ. Again as a performer I can't afford to whine or make excuses. I have to adapt. Still on-going. Anyone know of any good online resources to learn about marketing? ![]() IR |
#17
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Iowa Recorder wrote:
That's pretty funny. We have a band composed of just doctors in our area. They are touted as the most over educated band in Iowa. If their music makes me sick, can they take my appendix out on stage? --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#18
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ryanm wrote:
Tell 'em you each play 3 instruments, and that makes you a 12 piece. ; While vacationing on Hilton Head last week, my wife & I stopped into a smallish restaurant/bar & were delighted to see a small PA set up in one corner. WThe bartender told us they had an acoustic guitarist/singer coming in & that he was "really good". We had only stopped in for a couple of beers & appetizers, but decided to stay for dinner. Sitting, at the bar, our backs were towards the stage. The guy starts off with "Sweet Baby James. Nice job, all the right chord voicings. He has a nice voice (reminds me of Lyle Lovett). He's singing in his own voice, not trying to do James Taylors's voice (which is something I admire in a singer). I can't remember what the second song was, but what I do remember was that all of a sudden, they guy is playing lead against a sampled loop of his rhythm part. Next song, he's singing three part harmony with himself. I may just not be getting out enough, but I was really surprised by all this. I know things work a little differently in resort markets, but are there a lot of acts doing this sort of thing? |
#19
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That's pretty funny. We have a band composed of just doctors in our
area. They are touted as the most over educated band in Iowa. I'll bet they have the best drugs too. |
#20
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agent86 wrote:
I can't remember what the second song was, but what I do remember was that all of a sudden, they guy is playing lead against a sampled loop of his rhythm part. Next song, he's singing three part harmony with himself. I may just not be getting out enough, but I was really surprised by all this. I know things work a little differently in resort markets, but are there a lot of acts doing this sort of thing? Yes, in the metro areas of our great nation there is plenty of that action. -- ha |
#21
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Scott Dorsey wrote:
Iowa Recorder wrote: That's pretty funny. We have a band composed of just doctors in our area. They are touted as the most over educated band in Iowa. If their music makes me sick, can they take my appendix out on stage? When the doc with the Tele and the one with the trumpet go into unison, you can receive an appendectomy even while sitting way back in the room. -- ha |
#22
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hank alrich wrote:
I can't remember what the second song was, but what I do remember was that all of a sudden, they guy is playing lead against a sampled loop of his rhythm part. Next song, he's singing three part harmony with himself. I may just not be getting out enough, but I was really surprised by all this. I know things work a little differently in resort markets, but are there a lot of acts doing this sort of thing? Yes, in the metro areas of our great nation there is plenty of that action. In retrospect, I kind of wish I'd hung around & talked to him between sets. I'd be interested in his opinions on whether he has actually been able to book more (or higher paying) gigs because of all that stuff. As it happened, we left, figuring whatever was on HBO would probably be more entertaining. I guess I was "taken by surprise" because I tend to think of live acoustic music as a more grass roots kind of genre. (Although I realize some people find it boring because it usually "doesn't sound like the record". I guess the loops & samples get it a little closer for those folks.) |
#23
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(Although I realize some people
find it boring because it usually "doesn't sound like the record". I guess the loops & samples get it a little closer for those folks.) Damien Rice does this live with his acoutic guitar and voice. It's amazing in the moment, --------------------------------------- "I know enough to know I don't know enough" |
#24
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#25
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hank alrich wrote:
Scott Dorsey wrote: Iowa Recorder wrote: That's pretty funny. We have a band composed of just doctors in our area. They are touted as the most over educated band in Iowa. If their music makes me sick, can they take my appendix out on stage? When the doc with the Tele and the one with the trumpet go into unison, you can receive an appendectomy even while sitting way back in the room. Ouch... |
#26
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EggHd wrote:
(Although I realize some people find it boring because it usually "doesn't sound like the record". I guess the loops & samples get it a little closer for those folks.) Damien Rice does this live with his acoutic guitar and voice. It's amazing in the moment, I haven't heard Damien Rice, I'll be on t he look out for him. The guy I heard was a good player & singer, & he was good enough with the technology that the parts all fell into place in time, but somehow, it just didn't sound convincingly "real" (even sitting with my back to the stage through SRM 450s). I do know a lot of electric guitarist do this sort of thig to very good effect, but that's a different ball game. |
#27
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In retrospect, I kind of wish I'd hung around & talked to him between
sets. I'd be interested in his opinions on whether he has actually been able to book more (or higher paying) gigs because of all that stuff. I doubt it. I'll bet the management doesn't even have any idea of what he's doing. All they see is how much they pay him and how many drinks people buy. You probably did your share. Not so much worried about "doing my share". Just wanting to satisfy my own curiosity. I guess I was "taken by surprise" because I tend to think of live acoustic music as a more grass roots kind of genre. 20 years ago, I defined "folk singer" as someone with a plugged-in acoustic guitar singing songs he or another contemporary songwriter wrote. The other day I heard an interview with Pete Seeger on an NPR program and he said essentially the same thing. It's wierd, ya know. as much as I admire Pete Seeger, Bob Dylan & Woody & Arlo Guthrie (among many others), I've always cringed when the term "folk singer was applied to my own music. I guess it's because a lot of people expect any folk music to have a certain "Kum-ba-ya factor". I've come to consider "Acoustic Music" to be a genre unto itself. The gig I have going now is an acoustic duet. We have some originals, and the cover's we do range from Doc Watson to the Stones to Gershwin to J.F. Wagner to Hendrix. On all the covers, we try to interpret the SONG in it's best light (considering our instrumentation), regardless of the genre of the original. (screw what the record sounds like, IOW) Imagine if John Coltrane had tried to make his version of "My Favorite Things" sound like Julie Andrews. |
#28
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agent86 wrote in message . ..
On all the covers, we try to interpret the SONG in it's best light (considering our instrumentation), regardless of the genre of the original. (screw what the record sounds like, IOW) Imagine if John Coltrane had tried to make his version of "My Favorite Things" sound like Julie Andrews. I get really irritated when I go see some band that is obsessed on doing everything like the record. Some of these bands won't even change the key of the tune even when it's obvious the singer is struggling. Even if the bands is really good I see these bands being distracted and handicapped by this mentalitity. It gets to the point that they sound so much like the record they might as well just play CDs all night. I think if a tune is well written you can play it in any fashion. The song won't lose much of it's appeal unless your version of the song sounds like a train wreck. A good song can stand on it's own without alot of production. There are a few tunes however I feel it would be a shame to not handle with care. Versions that from radio play and extended hours of dorm room listening get imprinted on most listeners. I'm always a bit leary of doing Steely Dan covers. The reason I'm leary is I have heard many bands do Steely Dan covers. Whether they do it exactly like the record or have a clever way of covering it I always walk away dissapointed. I'd rather just heard the origional recording. Also I couldn't think of doing "Basket Case" by Green Day in any other style. Again this is a song people are just too familiar with. It's got alot of energy in the recording. We go playing it as a ballad, someone is gonna go - wha? Don't they know the song? Sure you can cover the tune on acoustic. I think part of the appeal however is in the energy. So I probably wouldn't do this one fingerstyle. Unless I like fingers bleeding.... hehehe Those are just exceptions. For the most part I'd rather adapt songs to fit our intrumentation and vocal range. It's alot more fun. It gets the band into a more origional and creative mode. You can work your vocals without having to effect you natural voice to sound like; Garth Brooks, Willie Nelson, Steve Perry, Mick Jagger... ect... You can create your own solos or even do some ambitious arrangements. IR |
#29
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#31
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Michael wrote in message news:MPG.1aa55c1cea508efa9896ba@newshost...
In article , says... agent86 wrote in message . .. I think if a tune is well written you can play it in any fashion. The song won't lose much of it's appeal unless your version of the song sounds like a train wreck. A good song can stand on it's own without alot of production. I used to be in a good cover band, one with a bit of a following. Interestingly enough, most of the audience followed us because "you guys sound just like the record" (which of course we didn't). When I was 19, yes I would go WOW you sound just like the record. It was fairly tough in those days to have that kind of sound. So it was novel to me. But all five of us sang, and could sing leads, and the lead vocalist was female, so we simply assigned the lead vocal to whoever's style/range it suited best. I think that, and the fact that we gave the audience a very hi-fidelity sound (triamped mains with everyone run DI including the drums), gave the *illusion* of being like the record. Yes, the last couple decades with the technology and the DI setups I hear more good cover bands sounding pretty much like the record. My opinion is it's become a bit old. I don't see large followings for these groups as I did back about 15 years ago. Of course I can't see every band out there. So I'm sure there are bands out there like yours that are doing well. I mostly play duos and trios. Always everyone in these group sang well but I usually short of some types of vocalists. So we'd change the key and adapt. Right now there is quite a glut of good female singers and good tenor males out there. Many bands just can't afford the extra personel in todays sucky music climate. I wish I had the server space to post some MP3s of some singers I've recorded and who I would love to hire in my band. I just can't afford to hire them. Some people didn't care for a close replication, but most did. There were a few songs we went WAY off the beaten path on, but most were close. We stayed employed steady for ten years straight with VERY few breaks, and after about two years, word-of-mouth kept us busy for the rest of the decade. I haven't seen this around here. The best cover band I know of in this area plays about 4 times a month. I go see them and I just shake my head. There is nothing they do that makes me go... WOW!!! I don't see any following at these gigs either. Also I see alot of cover bands form up and break up after a year. Playing a 5 peice for 300$. Spending lots of hard work busting ass setting up large PA systems. All the damn rehearsing... It's alot of hard work for little return. I don't see many of these bands last long. This is just *MY* experiance however. I'm sure your experiance is accurate. I haven't seen it around here....yet! The point I'm trying to make is that the reason you or I would go see a band is not the same reason Average Joe Nonmusician goes, and there are bands that service both ends of that spectrum. Well said. IR |
#32
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Message-ID: X-Trace: ldjgbllpbapjglppdbdpiflmbcekedmfhojhikkbagflhcboeb jchgeneipcmeondekajmggfglicjiicephdelonkncmbkgdipo ccifmainhjgpginhkjnfhgmldbflobfegpniajdbdfegfecbbb folimgoilk NNTP-Posting-Date: Fri, 20 Feb 2004 16:05:51 EST Date: Fri, 20 Feb 2004 21:05:51 GMT Xref: intern1.nntp.aus1.giganews.com rec.audio.pro:1042662 On 2004-02-20 said: (EggHd) wrote: Not that I've ever heard of anyone following the union rules... Aight. AFTRA turns into a powerhouse and AFofM is weak. How the heck did this happen? In the case of the AFofM, they harrassed high-school musicians to the point of revolution. In the '60s, I was "leader" of a rock band that joined the AFofM in order to play real gigs. Our local was run by the brass-band-in-the-park-on-Sunday crowd who insisted on union scale for school dances and parties and followed us around to check. That served to engender a mistrust of the union snip What exactly was the union doing for us for that 2%? Had the union been helpful and made allowances for student musicians, I know my feelings would have been different. I joined the AFM back when I was in high school also. that was the heyday for live music where I grew up, there is no scene now there and wasn't for much longer than a lot of places. tHe AFM in my locale, local 646 in Southeastern IOwa had a program where you could pay your annual and your work dues instead of the 4% rate by just giving them $10 a year. FOr a road band who gigged in the area a lot that option was still available. wHat killed it for me was seeing guys with large dixieland bands etc. going to these places and booking the job for under scale and then bitching about it if others did it. I did end up working some gigs where I got paid through the Musicians' performance trust fund. That was one good program I saw that AFM offered. Richard Webb Electric Spider Productions REplace anything before the @ symbol with elspider for real email -- Amazing how much tape is on a 10" reel, when it's not, isn't it? |