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Hi !
A band is playing, only standards.
The boss is interested by the show but he is only interested by one person in the band for future gigs.
How would you react ?
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06-28-2023 01:21 PM
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So he wants to organize a new band for the concert....?
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Originally Posted by kris
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Originally Posted by Lionelsax
Leader of the band or ...?
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Perhaps the band is too expensive.
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The boss is the restaurant's owner.
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That happens all the time.
It's why I can play solo.
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Originally Posted by mr. beaumont
How would you react ?
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He’s not obliged to like or hire anybody. His offer is his choice.
OTOH - accepting the offer is a choice too. The chosen one could always roll the dice, take the three Musketeers approach and say - “all of us or none of us”.
In the end, a business agreement is a two way street.
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Originally Posted by Lionelsax
You could always ask and see if there was a problem you can fix, like the band being too loud.
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Originally Posted by Lionelsax
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it is what it is, kind of like if you have a steady gig and someone comes by to sit in and the owner winds up liking them better than a person in the house band and wants to hire that person and maybe their band. hasn't happened to me but I've seen it many times. sure it's a drag to lose your gig, but if you were 'good enough' to keep it [at least in the boss's eyes/ears] you'd still be there.
telling the boss it's all or none of us rarely works, there's always someone ready to take your place especially in a biz as cutthroat as music.
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His manager said she couldn't manage all the band.
The leader wasn't very glad to know that but now he is OK.
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If you had more gigs you wouldn't care. This is no big loss unless you are the guy the owner wants in which case congrats.
The venue is probably cheap and doesn't want to pay a whole band. Not really the venue I'd want. They may have a failing business and think not shelling out a couple hundred extra will save it because they are clueless about running a business. About 95 percent of all club owners don't know what they are doing when it comes to running a business or dealing with bands. It's just part of the music business. Bars are often tax write offs, meaning designed to lose money for the owner, or money laundering schemes, or drug dealing operations.
If you want gigs you should ALWAYS be on the hunt for new venues and be consistently reaching out to those places even if you are fully booked. One bar folds and you can go from busy to not busy enough. Being booked up makes other club owners more inclined since you already appear to be in demand. Bands that gig a lot gig more. Bands that gig infrequently tend to stay that way. Might be captain obvious remarks I'm making but it might also do someone some good to hear it.
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If the one player wants the gig I'd wish him well.
I might ask the customer if there was a problem with the band and assure him that he'd be doing me a favor teling me if there was.
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Originally Posted by Lionelsax
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Let me guess, this one guy is the pianist?
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Originally Posted by Jonah
When I first saw this thread my first reaction was: Ok, let the customer hire the drummer as a solo act. Good luck all!
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Originally Posted by jameslovestal
I think, basically, you have to be worth the money to the customer. If he's making more money with your band than with the alternative, and he likes you personally well enough, then you're probably going to keep the gig. If not, then you're going to be out.
Fairness, or who got the gig in the first place, or any other consideration is likely to be secondary.
It is possible that he tried a band and thought his atmosphere was more suited to solo piano or guitar. His taste and his choice. There's nothing to be done in that situation.
You simply have to be worth the money, meaning the owner is selling more of whatever he sells because you're there.
Of course, this is true beyond music.
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Originally Posted by Lionelsax
Many venue owners are like this. Your band mate will also lose his gig when some schlub undercuts him.
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Originally Posted by rpjazzguitar
Of course, it can be difficult to determine the specific 'increased revenue' a band, duo, or solo act brings to a venue, but there are proven ways of doing so.
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Thanks for your answers.
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The leader has got other bands and asked the musician I was talking about to replace a member of one of his bands.
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I’m a software engineer by day. I work as part of a team. But am asked to work on projects for other teams occasionally. It’s not weird or a slight to my team in anyway, I just have skills another team needs. I do the work and then I am back with my team.
is it not the same in the music business?
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Originally Posted by jeremiahzellers
16" 1920s/30s L5
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