How many songs would you need....
- Colton
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How many songs would you need....
to play solo for a night in a small joint. I got 31 I've remembered since I got home from work... I'm sure theres a bunch more I'm just not thinkin about.
But anyways, how many you think's a good idea? I know song length and shit like that will factor in, but any guesses?
I guess one way to find out would be to play them all and time it lol...
Maybe the question here is more along the lines of:
How many do you guys usually play out when you do a solo gig?
But anyways, how many you think's a good idea? I know song length and shit like that will factor in, but any guesses?
I guess one way to find out would be to play them all and time it lol...
Maybe the question here is more along the lines of:
How many do you guys usually play out when you do a solo gig?
Laugh if you want to, really is kinda funny, 'cause the world is a car and you're the crash test dummy.
- bassist_25
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I guess that depends on how long your time slot would be. I know that some solo/acoustic acts play around the two hour mark. If that's so, I think that 31 would be a good start. However, if you were doing three hours, I should shoot for 45, considering they are typical radio-lenght tunes.
"He's the electric horseman, you better back off!" - old sKool making a reference to the culturally relevant 1979 film.
- DirtySanchez
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- REDillon
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I always try to look at the sets and do around 15 songs each set. Again, it depends on song length and how much BS-ing you do between songs. Are you there as acoustic, "background noise" or for entertainment. There's the difference in the song choices.
Gotta have the obligatory:
Jimmy Buffet tune
Beatles tune (Blackbird)
Neil Young
I wish people would learn there are more interesting tunes out there.....
Gotta have the obligatory:
Jimmy Buffet tune
Beatles tune (Blackbird)
Neil Young
I wish people would learn there are more interesting tunes out there.....
If I can't get respect, I'll take fear... or Skittles.
- slackin@dabass
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- DirtySanchez
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- slackin@dabass
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DirtySanchez wrote:This is the only thing that keeps me from being in a cover band in Altoona.REDillon wrote:
I wish people would learn there are more interesting tunes out there.....
come on brian, i'll start a project up with you. we'll call it crazy bitches and play nothing but crazy bitch. i could see you doing it... one condition... i wanna play bagpipes.
Can you identify a genital wart?
That would be freaking hilarious, if only for a set. You could do it punk style, then reggae style, then country style, etc.
When I did the solo thing, I looked at the then-current market, which was basically Steve Summerhill and a few others. He does a crowd-involving entertainment show. Steve's a good friend for many years, and I knew I couldn't beat him at his own game, so I decided to be more background music. I even announced that people were supposed to talk with their friends and hang out, and I'd keep my PA low for that reason. Most nights, they'd get involved whether I wanted them to or not, so it's not as lame as it sounds, I just let them decide.
I usually wound up playing 3-4 hours with one pee-break about 2/3rds of the way through. A 15-minute break usually gave folks a chance to finish their beers and head home, so I avoided that. I generally played about 40-ish songs per night, but I did use a music stand, so I had a few hundred songs at my disposal. Crowd tastes vary wildly around here for different gigs... I had 70's/80's pop stuff, classic rock stuff, singer-songwriter stuff, country stuff, and X-rated stuff. I could cross-pollinate as necessary.
I can tell you that a solo guy seems to make a little more money than 2 or more guys each would make, BUT, it's harder than you think. There's nobody to cover up your clam-notes, if you eff up, it sticks out like a pubic hair in a bowl of rice. And the drunks gang up on you. You're also responsible for dealing with management, the sound system and all it's attendant problems, and the fact that it's your name on the marquee. It's a lot of responsibility, to do it well. Just sayin'.
--->JMS

When I did the solo thing, I looked at the then-current market, which was basically Steve Summerhill and a few others. He does a crowd-involving entertainment show. Steve's a good friend for many years, and I knew I couldn't beat him at his own game, so I decided to be more background music. I even announced that people were supposed to talk with their friends and hang out, and I'd keep my PA low for that reason. Most nights, they'd get involved whether I wanted them to or not, so it's not as lame as it sounds, I just let them decide.
I usually wound up playing 3-4 hours with one pee-break about 2/3rds of the way through. A 15-minute break usually gave folks a chance to finish their beers and head home, so I avoided that. I generally played about 40-ish songs per night, but I did use a music stand, so I had a few hundred songs at my disposal. Crowd tastes vary wildly around here for different gigs... I had 70's/80's pop stuff, classic rock stuff, singer-songwriter stuff, country stuff, and X-rated stuff. I could cross-pollinate as necessary.
I can tell you that a solo guy seems to make a little more money than 2 or more guys each would make, BUT, it's harder than you think. There's nobody to cover up your clam-notes, if you eff up, it sticks out like a pubic hair in a bowl of rice. And the drunks gang up on you. You're also responsible for dealing with management, the sound system and all it's attendant problems, and the fact that it's your name on the marquee. It's a lot of responsibility, to do it well. Just sayin'.
