Postby circh bustom » Thu Jan 26, 2012 10:45 am
I remember a gallup poll in the mid-90's that showed that jersey, especially from central to south had the highest concentration of cover bands in the WORLD. Geez. I think that still rings true. This weekend I can name 10 cover bands off the top of my head that will be playing alot of the same tunes, at the same time within a 90 minute drive. That does not count the large number of out of town bands passing thru and playing casinos or some of the bigger shore establishments. And that is the last weekend of January. Come summer from Toms River to Cape May, every bar or restaurant has some type of cover music. From a single dude with an acoustic, to a 10 piece horn band with some freak up front. Now here is where I go back to my audience issue about 30 posts ago:) The crowds all say they are tired of hearing the same old songs from cover bands. But if you are in a band that does album cuts, or strays away from the popular bar/club standards, no one shows up. They all say they respect you, and think you are great, but they are at the "other bar" where they can hear the same old songs. You can, of course, find a band that does some songs that surprise you and sound good and the audience digs it, but they are few and far between. The audience is tired of hearing the same old thing, yet they will also go to a dance club to hear the same songs cranked up loud that they have been listening to on the radio all week. The market has dried up for other genres too, not just jazz. The problem around here, maybe not so in LA, but around here, it is the money that has been the downfall of the music scene around here. The bands want more, the clubs want to pay less.
I will say this, my outlook changed on this whole situation around this time in '09. I left a fairly well received cover band to join an original band. The cover band, as much as those guys are still my best friends, had become about pay and who moves this equiptment and blah blah blah. So I joined this original band, and I was having fun, but then THEY started in about the $$. The cost of recording, gas, payment at shows, advertising blah blah blah. The problem was that they didnt have their own songs down so I left. so I started jamming with some guys that Ive played with over the years doing reggae, and Grateful Dead type of stuff. We got a gig every thursday night at a bar/restaurant. They said that they would split the register with us at the end of the night. Needless to say, somenights we got 20$ each, some nights 50$, and a one or two even more. They also gave us food at every gig. Man, I miss that gig. We had freedom to do what we wanted. One huge set that lasted 3 1/2 hours? No problem. Six 20 minute sets? Sure, go for it. I was able to improvise and try things that I'd been working on thru-out the week with out feeling guilty about it. We made some great music, and even though some of us had higher paying gigs through-out the week, this was THE gig that we all looked forward to. I had to drive about 40 minutes each way, so a good chunk of my $ went towards gas, but the experience was great. We always drew some people and it was one of the best periods in my musical existence. Since then, Ive looked at the situatuion differently I guess. Ironically, the single highest paying gig Ive ever done was with a version of this band im speaking of at a wedding a few years before, haha. Now, I only want to play the best that I can play at a gig and sound the way I want to sound. This band has recently reconvened and we are going to go and get some paying gigs, but even if we only play for 50$ a man, it'll be a great night.