Support |
My band does a lot of benefit/activism gigs, and they can run the gamut from being great experiences to completely dismal. I like the idea of demanding a fee, and then donating an amount for every 100 audience members :-) I played a show the other night (not a benefit, just a club gig) at a club in Portland, it was my new quartet, and a Portland ambient jazz/breakbeat group. It was a wednesday night in a club that seems generally kind of hard to get peole to go to, maybe it's all the wierd music they book. Anyway, there was virtually nobody there, except the other band had invited a number of great local players to sit in with them. The stage area was large enough that both bands could leave all their gear setup for the whole night, and by the end of the night we were all onstage, 12 players in all, with 6 horns, 2 drummers, keys (me), bass, dj and an MC. The amazing thing was that the whole thing remained pretty musically coherent, which in my experience almost never happens in large ensemble improvs without some sort of a leader/conductor. In this case, everyone was just listening, and seemed to tacitly agree to underplay rather than overplay. I don't know if this is coincidental or not, but there were no guitarists on the gig, that might explain it, though :-). It was an amazing experience. My band made $50, which pretty much covered gas. On a $$$ level, it was a complete wash, but as a musical experience, wonderful. After this, and re-reading the Sun Ra biography, I really want to start an avant big band.