This man's bottom is the wrong way around. |
“Hi, my name’s Ian and I play Bass in a tribute band….”
Nowadays, it seems that (to
some musicians at least) if you play in a covers, functions or tribute
band you are up there with Hitler, Stalin and Pol Pot and should be
shipped off to some offshore correctional facility and made to play
‘Brown Eyed Girl’ until you chew your own ears off. But to those
musicians, the people that write their own material are bungling,
deluded amateurs who just get in the way of the real talent and make
them look bad.
Erm, aren’t we all on the same side?
If
I see one more post along the lines of ‘it’s all tribute and cover
bands round here and no-one else can get a gig’ I may cry. Speaking as a
humble Bassist who’s done both the covers thing and fought in the
trenches playing original music, I think I have a good idea of how it
works. Guys (that’s the non-gender-specific use of the word) in covers
and tribute bands have an
advantage in the early stages of their career as Joe Public kinda knows
what to expect. If you see Nearvana or Byron Adams or one of the other
imaginatively named combos on the scene advertised on a poster or the
Interweb, you know how your evening’s entertainment will pan out.
Whether they are any good or not is another thing entirely. With a band
that writes their own material, you get people to gigs by sweet talking,
emotional blackmail and low level bullying initially. And then you
graft. And often it’s the quality of grafting and the tenacity and
persistence of the band that are the deciding factors in the success of
the group – more than the quality of the material. I can name a dozen
great songwriters and amazing musicians who have bowed out of the
musical rat race because they lack the stomach for the real hustle. And
who can blame them?
As
a bassist in a covers/tribute band, I have effectively capped my
earnings. With the exception of The Bootleg Beatles, The Australian Pink
Floyd and Oasis (KIDDING!), bands like mine never rise above the
200-300 venue ceiling. If your career takes off in an original band –
“Hello Wembley”… The other gripe is that ‘Every local venue just puts on
tributes’…well, that as we say in Halesowen, is BullPlop. There are a
handful of local venues round these parts which specialise in
cover/tribute bands, but by the same token, there are WAY more that may
turn their noses up at By Jovy or MaltLoaf etc. And if you really are
stuck in a venueless void, find a pub, community centre, leisure centre
etc, hire/buy a vocal PA and put your own damn gig on. Guerrilla gigs
are so 21st century right now.
The
prejudice works both ways, with rather superior trib musos looking down
their noses at the ‘wannabees’ who write their own material. To them I
say that hopefully one of those ‘wannabees’ will hire your band to play
at the celebration party for their quadruple platinum album. Right now,
that band playing original material may not have ‘the chops’ but they
may have something way more useful – potential.
What
we sometimes forget is that we’re all in the entertainment industry.
Some people like to be entertained by something familiar. Some people
like to seek out The Next Big Thing. These people pay our wages and they
deserve something which doesn’t insult them. Rather than wasting time
bitching, I suggest we go back to the rehearsal room, the kitchen table
or wherever the muse may strike and get better at what we do.
Just sayin’…
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