Postby WildcatOne » Sun Apr 29, 2007 12:27 pm
I started to put this post in the "What's On The Jukebox?" thread, but I'll put it in here because it's a summary of this week's events and happenings in my music trip...thank you for the very kind words for the Citykings, BP. Yesterday the band played at the St. Arnold's Brewery in near Northwest Houston after the brewery tour. An interesting note of the gig was perfectly in line with what I have been thinking as this band goes along. Last year, I was removed from Citykings practice for a couple of months. The last rehearsal I missed with the band was the weekend I went to Eddyville. When I got back and rejoined (I had been out of the band for 2 months, working the open-mic jams at the Cock-Eyed Seagull every Thursday...I quit doing that for a few reasons. First, I was getting $50 every time I played it, and spending $50 on travel, overhead and peripheral expenses, plus I didn't care at all for the music. Open mic nights are almost always a very big step down...most of the players are not fully developed into workably-formatted performers. That's about as nice as I can put it...) Anyway, when I got back and rejoined, I found that the band had started doing cover songs of 70s material, some obscure, some in an R&B vein and some songs that I had been doing at the open-mic nights. In case a Cityking reads this, I want you to know that yesterday, 4 people came up to me at the brewery gig and told me right off the top that they loved our original material and wanted to know about who, how and when we wrote the songs. They also scoffed at the band's playing cover songs (one guy called it "schlock"...I don't disagree), and they asked me why we are doing them when we obviously have superior material to play that we wrote. I could not honestly argue with anything those folks said. In case you didn't notice, CKs, I didn't do any covers yesterday. It wouldn't make sense to me, not just because we don't sound very good doing them, but they are songs everybody's heard thousands of times...that's it for that I have to say about the Citykings. I made $515 this week playing guitar for Pee Wee Bowen. The merry-go-round is spinning faster. A guy asked me last night at a wedding gig, where have you been playing? I went blank...I know where the gigs are and I know how to get home from them, but there are a lot of them (2 yesterday with 2 bands, and I actually had forgotten about the first gig I played that day when I was talking to the guy) and all I really pay attention to is how the stage is set up. That part of it remains pretty much the same and I am focused on that arrangement, but the location of the gigs, well, uh, they're out there...the band wants me to sing more and they're having a rehearsal week after next for me to bring in material that I'll be singing with them. It's cover songs, of course, but they are done extremely well in a show-band format, with a horn section and keyboards that simulate strings, big organ sounds and sophisticated arrangements that make the band marketable in the big-leagues in this region. When I got the gig with this band, I found myself in a very fortunate situation. It's a professional situation at a level I somehow managed to get plopped into. The Citykings know I'm doing it and they understand, but I would really love it if I could do both bands and do them with the CKs going all-original material. Gotta run, I have to go clean the mud off the dolly and my regular gig shoes from the Friday night gig we played at the Galveston County Fairgrounds. I remember that gig because I have to clean the mud up...I'll remember last night's gig because I'm looking at my black bowtie and cumberbun sitting on top of my tuxedo jacket draped over this chair. The management treated us like dirt, and Pee Wee mentioned to me that from now on, he's tripling our wedding gig fees. They gave us a lot of unnecessary trouble and finally the keyboard guy got pissed and told 'em no, I'm carrying my stuff out here instead of all the way around the block like you are telling me...next thing he knew, he had a cop on him, and Pee Wee had to get between them and make peace so we could get out of there...like I say, we were dirt. It sucks to be treated that way, but I went along with it and got my stuff (around 200 lbs of stuff for me...my amp weights 125 lbs) out of there around the other side of the block (instead of right outside the door within a few feet of the stage) and split. Gotta go. Cheers, WC1
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