House Of Blues Chicago gig
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- bassduke49
- Senior Member
- Posts: 6580
- Joined: Wed May 14, 2003 5:00 am
House Of Blues Chicago gig
Boy, I'm spent. The place was fantastic. I don't know if they spiffed up an old opera house or if it was made new, but the facility was terrific. Big stage, good size dance floor with three bars on the main level, then two more levels above of mezzanine and boxes.
The really neat thing was the sound techies who set up all the mikes for the house PA; they really knew their stuff. The dressing room was two long floors up (pant pant), but they fed us off the menu and the food was fine. Fridges stocked with soda and water, TVs and the wildest Bayou art all over the place.
The crowd was pretty stiff, lots of suits and about 70 percent male. Polite applause after almost every tune, but not much cheering and merriment. All these folks had just done a long day on the convention floor and were facing more on Friday and Saturday. Second to last set, a few started dancing, then we got some requests and the crowd brought one slightly lubricated lady to go on stage to play tambourine to "Wild Night." Last set we had two young ladies come on stage for show on "Mustang Sally" (I know, many of you hate that song -- we do the Commitments arrangement), and they had fun.
Most of the tunes went over well, but our guitarist/vocalist lost his way in the middle of "Soul Man" and he went into the key change waaaaay before the rest of us were ready. Embarrassing.
Load out was quick and efficient. Freight elevator is just at backstage, leading into an underground alley system for delivery trucks, etc. I load the car, then discover the right rear is flat. They guys in the band helped out, but I ended up driving the 110 miles home on the limited service spare at 60mph. Got to bed at 1:30.
Obviously, I have today off.
Upshot: Great experience (good money, too), but lessons learned are to practice more and have everybody take notes on arrangements. I felt I did pretty well, a couple of missed notes with fumble fingers, but I got to dance around and mug the other members of the band, and got the drummer laughing (which isn't easy). The Ricks sounded great, of course.
So, next appearing at the MARC in Winchester Virginia November 5, please welcome . . . .
The really neat thing was the sound techies who set up all the mikes for the house PA; they really knew their stuff. The dressing room was two long floors up (pant pant), but they fed us off the menu and the food was fine. Fridges stocked with soda and water, TVs and the wildest Bayou art all over the place.
The crowd was pretty stiff, lots of suits and about 70 percent male. Polite applause after almost every tune, but not much cheering and merriment. All these folks had just done a long day on the convention floor and were facing more on Friday and Saturday. Second to last set, a few started dancing, then we got some requests and the crowd brought one slightly lubricated lady to go on stage to play tambourine to "Wild Night." Last set we had two young ladies come on stage for show on "Mustang Sally" (I know, many of you hate that song -- we do the Commitments arrangement), and they had fun.
Most of the tunes went over well, but our guitarist/vocalist lost his way in the middle of "Soul Man" and he went into the key change waaaaay before the rest of us were ready. Embarrassing.
Load out was quick and efficient. Freight elevator is just at backstage, leading into an underground alley system for delivery trucks, etc. I load the car, then discover the right rear is flat. They guys in the band helped out, but I ended up driving the 110 miles home on the limited service spare at 60mph. Got to bed at 1:30.
Obviously, I have today off.
Upshot: Great experience (good money, too), but lessons learned are to practice more and have everybody take notes on arrangements. I felt I did pretty well, a couple of missed notes with fumble fingers, but I got to dance around and mug the other members of the band, and got the drummer laughing (which isn't easy). The Ricks sounded great, of course.
So, next appearing at the MARC in Winchester Virginia November 5, please welcome . . . .
Author: "The Rickenbacker Electric Bass - 50 Years As Rock's Bottom"
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rickaddict
- Senior Member
- Posts: 6163
- Joined: Mon Mar 29, 2004 7:46 am
Hey Paul-
That sounds like a blast. I SO wanted to be there, but I knew it was a private party and I know they hire some huge ex-military guys for bouncers.
I was looking at my watch at 9:00 trying to think of how to sneak in: "Maybe if I walk in backwards past the bouncers"..."Maybe if I say I'm with the band and drop Paul's name"..."Maybe if I wear a suit and tell them I'm there for the party!"
Oh, well!
That sounds like a blast. I SO wanted to be there, but I knew it was a private party and I know they hire some huge ex-military guys for bouncers.
I was looking at my watch at 9:00 trying to think of how to sneak in: "Maybe if I walk in backwards past the bouncers"..."Maybe if I say I'm with the band and drop Paul's name"..."Maybe if I wear a suit and tell them I'm there for the party!"
Oh, well!
Play what you love, love what you play!
- incubus2432
- Senior Member
- Posts: 4174
- Joined: Sat Jul 17, 2004 11:26 am
Paul.....glad to hear that things went well. It's also nice to be fed and get refreshments along with an actual dressing room for a change. Too bad about the car trouble but at least you made it home safely!
The little flubs and stumbles are part of the fun....at least you didn't splay an artery open like I did at my 1st HOB appearance
.
The little flubs and stumbles are part of the fun....at least you didn't splay an artery open like I did at my 1st HOB appearance
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jwr2
when I play out the lead singer / guitarist leads the song ... if he changes the structure then the band has to follow ... that becomes the right way to play that song ... if I get locked into the structure of the song and follow that then there is a problem ...
some lead singers change stuff on the fly on purpose and some by accident ... either way the band has to follow ...
so congrats on a fun gig ...
some lead singers change stuff on the fly on purpose and some by accident ... either way the band has to follow ...
so congrats on a fun gig ...
ATTN PAUL :
I tried to send some pics of my shadow to the account you listed in your ebay message to me, but the email bounced. Shall I send them to your addy in your profile? Just let me know. There are a couple of pics up on the Shadow thread on the for sale page.
mike
mikeskiff AT comcast DOT net
I tried to send some pics of my shadow to the account you listed in your ebay message to me, but the email bounced. Shall I send them to your addy in your profile? Just let me know. There are a couple of pics up on the Shadow thread on the for sale page.
mike
mikeskiff AT comcast DOT net
"Where there is beer, there is hope."
- bassduke49
- Senior Member
- Posts: 6580
- Joined: Wed May 14, 2003 5:00 am
- rickenbrother
- RRF Moderator
- Posts: 13222
- Joined: Sun May 26, 2002 5:00 am
The Chicago HOB is in what used to be the movie theater that was part of the original Marina City complex. In the 60's, the (self contained) complex included a bowling alley, grocery store, dry cleaner/taylor, post office, and a restaurant. The theater is the only surviving piece. It is supposed to have great acoustics.
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ken_swearingen
- Advanced Member
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- Joined: Wed Mar 31, 2004 6:00 pm

