I've played my last wedding band gig
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- David DeLoach
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- Location: Tennessee, USA
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I've played my last wedding band gig
For many years I used to lead a 11 piece band that played wedding and corporate events. 3 singers, 2 guitars, bass, drums, keys, and 3 horns. I did all the charts and arrangements for the band, as well as scheduling, interfacing with the event/wedding planner, hiring the sound man, etc., etc., etc.
Here is Nashville you can hire GREAT musicians for these gigs. I hired guys that had recorded and/or toured with Paul McCartney, Elton John, James Taylor, Prince, Paul Simon, etc. BUT, when these guys said, "Yes, I can play that gig" what they really meant was, "Yes, I can play that gig UNLESS I get a better offer for another gig on that same date - even if the better offer comes in the day before your gig." So many times I was scrambling at the last minute to fill in for the guys who bailed.
So even though we had a great band and were getting booked a lot and making good money, because of the massive effort and pain-in-the-A issues that came with it I shelved it and instead focused on music that I absolutely love (which happens to be pretty non-commercial vs. the funk, classic rock, and MoTown we were doing in that band).
Well, I got approached from a former client who had hired our band 10 years ago. He wanted us to play 2 big family weddings - one in September and one in October. I told him I was done being a band leader/musical director, but if one of the other former band members wanted to lead on these 2 gigs, I would show up and play guitar.
Well, one of the singers took that job of MD and put together the band, scheduled rehearsals, etc. I gave her a bunch of my old charts, horn arrangements, etc. and then just got the tunes down and showed up for the rehearsals and the gigs.
I will never play another wedding band gig - ever.
The time and energy just wasn't worth it. It was a huge distraction from the music I love creating and I lost a lot of ground with the time I had to put in learning the guitar parts a on songs I will NEVER play again (e.g. Shania Twain's MAN I FEEL LIKE A WOMAN, Prince's LET'S GO CRAZY, etc.).
I made some good money on these 2 gigs - enough to buy a good guitar - but I've committed to never play another wedding band gig. It's just not my DNA.
Here is Nashville you can hire GREAT musicians for these gigs. I hired guys that had recorded and/or toured with Paul McCartney, Elton John, James Taylor, Prince, Paul Simon, etc. BUT, when these guys said, "Yes, I can play that gig" what they really meant was, "Yes, I can play that gig UNLESS I get a better offer for another gig on that same date - even if the better offer comes in the day before your gig." So many times I was scrambling at the last minute to fill in for the guys who bailed.
So even though we had a great band and were getting booked a lot and making good money, because of the massive effort and pain-in-the-A issues that came with it I shelved it and instead focused on music that I absolutely love (which happens to be pretty non-commercial vs. the funk, classic rock, and MoTown we were doing in that band).
Well, I got approached from a former client who had hired our band 10 years ago. He wanted us to play 2 big family weddings - one in September and one in October. I told him I was done being a band leader/musical director, but if one of the other former band members wanted to lead on these 2 gigs, I would show up and play guitar.
Well, one of the singers took that job of MD and put together the band, scheduled rehearsals, etc. I gave her a bunch of my old charts, horn arrangements, etc. and then just got the tunes down and showed up for the rehearsals and the gigs.
I will never play another wedding band gig - ever.
The time and energy just wasn't worth it. It was a huge distraction from the music I love creating and I lost a lot of ground with the time I had to put in learning the guitar parts a on songs I will NEVER play again (e.g. Shania Twain's MAN I FEEL LIKE A WOMAN, Prince's LET'S GO CRAZY, etc.).
I made some good money on these 2 gigs - enough to buy a good guitar - but I've committed to never play another wedding band gig. It's just not my DNA.
- Jack Hanson
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- Earnest Bovine
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- David DeLoach
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- Location: Tennessee, USA
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- Richard Sinkler
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- Samuel Phillippe
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Got married in 1957 in my mother-in-law's living room, cost around $50.Still together. didn't play at my wedding and I do not play weddings anymore eitherDavid DeLoach wrote:40 years ago my wife and I got married in my parents' living room in Texas. Our budget for the wedding was $900. We had Deli trays from the supermarket down the street for the reception.Earnest Bovine wrote:
Marriage duration is inversely proportional the the cost of the wedding.
Sam
- Brooks Montgomery
- Posts: 1674
- Joined: 5 Feb 2016 1:40 pm
- Location: Idaho, USA
Funerals can be fun.
I played at a friend’s wake. Cancer. Mort, an old bandmate. He organized it.
“I want to be at my own wake” he said.
At the party, he sat in a recliner in his yard in a bathrobe and slippers and smoked. A bunch of us played. We had a few stand up jokes with prizes for best jokes.
Girls came up to Mort, flashed him and he autographed a few breasts with a magic marker.
Mort died a few weeks later. Good gig.
But weddings suck.
I played at a friend’s wake. Cancer. Mort, an old bandmate. He organized it.
“I want to be at my own wake” he said.
At the party, he sat in a recliner in his yard in a bathrobe and slippers and smoked. A bunch of us played. We had a few stand up jokes with prizes for best jokes.
Girls came up to Mort, flashed him and he autographed a few breasts with a magic marker.
Mort died a few weeks later. Good gig.
But weddings suck.
A banjo, like a pet monkey, seems like a good idea at first.
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One of my old neighbors had a regular gig with a wedding band. But then he became the bassist with a new musical opening: Mama Mia. he rode that train until it closed, 15 years later.
I used to run into a lot of musicians who had been working the same broadway show for decades, as their sole job.
I used to run into a lot of musicians who had been working the same broadway show for decades, as their sole job.
Check out my latest video: My Biggest Fears Learning Steel at 68: https://youtu.be/F601J515oGc
I played well over 1,000 weddings from the age of 20 to 40. The trick is knowing when to say when. I succeeded in that.
The money (and booze) was top shelf, the musicians superb, but the musical demands were horseshit. The older you get, the greater the divide between what you want to play and the music the people want to hear, and I think no one is really immune to that. I don't miss it, even as I sit here hardly ever gigging anymore.
The money (and booze) was top shelf, the musicians superb, but the musical demands were horseshit. The older you get, the greater the divide between what you want to play and the music the people want to hear, and I think no one is really immune to that. I don't miss it, even as I sit here hardly ever gigging anymore.
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- Location: Glen Burnie, Md. U.S.A.
I used to play in a bluegrass band with a banjo player who at weddings would slip this in and somehow never got caught:
“I just want to say on behalf of the band congratulations to the couple and I sincerely hope that they’ll be as happy as my wife and I thought we’d be.“.
“I just want to say on behalf of the band congratulations to the couple and I sincerely hope that they’ll be as happy as my wife and I thought we’d be.“.
Kevin Maul: Airline, Beard, Clinesmith, Decophonic, Evans, Excel, Fender, Fluger, Gibson, Hilton, Ibanez, Justice, K+K, Live Strings, MOYO, National, Oahu, Peterson, Quilter, Rickenbacher, Sho~Bud, Supro, TC, Ultimate, VHT, Webb, X-otic, Yamaha, ZKing.
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- Location: Portland, Oregon, USA
I couId write a book I have so many insane stories. But I won’t to protect the innocent.K Maul wrote:I used to play in a bluegrass band with a banjo player who at weddings would slip this in and somehow never got caught:
“I just want to say on behalf of the band congratulations to the couple and I sincerely hope that they’ll be as happy as my wife and I thought we’d be.“.
- Craig Stock
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- Bob Hoffnar
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- Joined: 4 Aug 1998 11:00 pm
- Location: Austin, Tx
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I tend to enjoy them because it is a backdoor into other peoples worlds that I would never see. Also if your contract is tight the money is great and conditions tolerable. If the players are good and not too complainey it can be an enjoyable musical experience.
But...... It can be a real soul crushing rut if you don't keep your priorities together. Some of the most miserable humans I encounter are cynical musicians that drink on the gig. Wedding gigs can really screw you up if you are not careful.
But...... It can be a real soul crushing rut if you don't keep your priorities together. Some of the most miserable humans I encounter are cynical musicians that drink on the gig. Wedding gigs can really screw you up if you are not careful.
Bob
Craig, evidently there was still a lot lower of a level to sink to once Black-Eyed Peas and Shakira came along. I got off at the ground floor.Craig Stock wrote:Mike, I'm sure your biggest regret is not being able to play 'Celebrate' any more
Bob, fortunately we were all professionals—professional drinkers, that is—and we didn’t drown our sorrows in booze.
- Erv Niehaus
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- David DeLoach
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- Fred Treece
- Posts: 3920
- Joined: 29 Dec 2015 3:15 pm
- Location: California, USA
I was fortunate enough to avoid the wedding band trap, for the most part. But I did quit the clubs/county fairs/private party circuit for a tribute band thing that I thought might last 6 months. 15 years later I decided the money and the traveling and the pro sound and lighting and big theater stages and nice hotels and gourmet food wasn’t worth it anymore.Bill McCloskey wrote:One of my old neighbors had a regular gig with a wedding band. But then he became the bassist with a new musical opening: Mama Mia. he rode that train until it closed, 15 years later.
This goes hand in hand with Donny’s quote about giving up your artistry to become a contractor. Maybe some are lucky enough to be both, but it ain’t me babe. I did learn a lot about professionalism, and the band mates were great. I just needed to find time to see if there was any art and fire left where it used to be. That’s how taking up pedal steel happened.
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I've never played at a wedding, but if they're anything like company Christmas parties, I can imagine they'd be horrible. Any gig where people feel they have a prerogative to get drunk and start disrespecting the hired entertainers is not a gig I'd want.
Yeah, it seems to be diminishing in significance because, to put it bluntly, most people don't expect it to last like they once did. It's like, "Okay, we'll come to your relationship affirmation party, but we won't hold our breath."Jack Hanson wrote:In my experience, marriage is grossly overrated.