Band Soap Opera, installment # 35,517
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- incubus2432
- Senior Member
- Posts: 4174
- Joined: Sat Jul 17, 2004 11:26 am
I'm afraid I'd have to classify your band as 'freakishly functional', Brian...
We had a very good guitar player (who was one of the founding members of the band) announce at one point that the band needed a leader, and that he needed for it to be him. He turned out to be fifty percent wrong about that....
No hard feelin's, though.
We had a very good guitar player (who was one of the founding members of the band) announce at one point that the band needed a leader, and that he needed for it to be him. He turned out to be fifty percent wrong about that....
No hard feelin's, though.
I didn't get where I am today by being on time...
This is a great thread, guys. Sorry I've been away from the forum for a few weeks - combination of Day Job travel, family, and hard work with the band ratcheting up our originals for upcoming studio work has zapped my free time lately.
I count my blessings every day that I'm in a pretty good band with very little internal friction. We even just passed our 1-year anniversary with Jessica, our female vocalist, who is working out very well. The 3 rest of us have been together since early 2001.
It all depends so much on your interpersonal relationships. What works well for us is that we seem to all be pulling together toward the same goals - playing great live shows and writing music for our 2nd CD. All 4 of us sing lead and backing (on at least some songs), and we all divvy up the 'other' stuff that enables a band to succeed (I do website and rehearsal hosting & recording, drummer does bookings, etc.). It's just good teamwork, I guess. Having a collective sense of humor and a willingness to balance hard work with fun and down time matters, too.
I've been in a dysfunctional band, once, back when I lived in Oklahoma City. I remember playing our last confirmed gig and looking across the stage and thinking "this is absolutlely the last time I will play with these guys." We had a band meeting after the show and disbanded by consensus, and it was actually a great feeling of relief.
Don't suffer too long in a bad situation. Communicate and give the guys a chance, but if it ain't workin', you might be better off moving on....
I count my blessings every day that I'm in a pretty good band with very little internal friction. We even just passed our 1-year anniversary with Jessica, our female vocalist, who is working out very well. The 3 rest of us have been together since early 2001.
It all depends so much on your interpersonal relationships. What works well for us is that we seem to all be pulling together toward the same goals - playing great live shows and writing music for our 2nd CD. All 4 of us sing lead and backing (on at least some songs), and we all divvy up the 'other' stuff that enables a band to succeed (I do website and rehearsal hosting & recording, drummer does bookings, etc.). It's just good teamwork, I guess. Having a collective sense of humor and a willingness to balance hard work with fun and down time matters, too.
I've been in a dysfunctional band, once, back when I lived in Oklahoma City. I remember playing our last confirmed gig and looking across the stage and thinking "this is absolutlely the last time I will play with these guys." We had a band meeting after the show and disbanded by consensus, and it was actually a great feeling of relief.
Don't suffer too long in a bad situation. Communicate and give the guys a chance, but if it ain't workin', you might be better off moving on....
I've been in bands, like the one I'm in now, where I'm the only one who knows how to sing harmony. The others don't have a clue, and can't seem to grasp the concept, which is a little frustrating for me. Something else that burns me up,and that's lead singers that have to use cheat sheets to remember the words to all the songs! Even ones that they have sung for years! No excuse for that in my book. I have to memorize my bass parts, they should take the time and effort to memorize the words to the songs.
I recently went back to playing a Rickenbacker bass. Its like meeting an old friend again
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loendmaestro
- Intermediate Member
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jwr2
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loendmaestro
- Intermediate Member
- Posts: 1495
- Joined: Mon Dec 22, 2003 12:53 pm
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I used to work with a guy who got his Civil Engineering degree from the Hoboken Institute of Technology...we were all working in the office one day when a story came across on the radio saying that Frank Sinatra had just been given an honorary engineering degree by that very school. We gave this guy a lot of good-humored grief over them obviously giving out degrees to just about anyone...
I didn't get where I am today by being on time...

