Hello Dazart,
Your night spot hotel sounds very 'happening' especially if the musical interludes are fillers for the bingo
Kind of put's me in mind of Pheonix Nights
(For the benefit of you peeps not in the UK Pheonix Nights is a very funny TV comedy over here.)
I do not intend to sound snobby or rude but it is a little unfair to categorise arrangers as not cutting it for the younger generation when the venue given as an example was obviously not geared to that generation at all. At least I know very few people of my age and below who would contemplate an evening out anywhere where the music (or anything else for that matter) was interupted for Bingo!
I am not having a pop at Bingo enthusiasts either......my point is that it is horses for courses. You gear the show to the audience. How many of the 150 were there just for the Bingo? Believe me I know that you could have had Dean Martin, Frank Sinatra, Sammy Davis Jr and Judy Garland booked to appear but if the hotel next door was offering £2 a line with a Tenner full house half those pensioners would be out that door quicker than whippet s*** and spending next weeks pension.
I can't imagine that any of the Pro's on this board would make much of a living if the top end arrangers were not up to scratch and much of what an arranger sounds like has a lot to do with who plays it, and how they set it up.
Then again your analogy of the Mavericks song is a little unfair also. I doubt even the Mavericks can sound 'like the cd' when they perform live.
A friend of mine plays keyboards in a live band (as opposed to a dead one?)
and uses a Triton. I think I mentioned on here once before that he always scoffed at my 9000pro until he borrowed it when his board met with an accident. He was amazed. Of course he did not use the arranger but he was suitably impressed wit the standard of voices (at least the Synth and organ voices he uses when performing.)The band members are all under 25 and the other guys did not even look twice at the keyboard....It was just a board as far as they were concerned. As long as Dean could do his thing on it!
As far as I know, when they started their spot the audience did not as a group let out a gasp of disgust. People were not whispering that there was an arranger on stage and to make for the nearest exit without causing a panic. People were not lining up to request New York New York and NME did not run an article on this cool indie group crossing musical boundaries. (At least I think he might have mentioned it if any of that had happened!)
Tony W
[This message has been edited by Tony W (edited 10-26-2003).]