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#217938 - 09/22/04 06:03 PM
Re: Having thousands of songs
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Senior Member
Registered: 12/01/99
Posts: 10427
Loc: San Francisco Bay Area, CA, US...
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I don't know about others here, but when utilizing a laptop in my shows in the past, it tended to draw interest away from my performance, and instead the audience's interest in what was going on in behind the laptop screen. This was particularly the case when I was playing an acoustic grand piano (piano bar lounge) and running custom backup sequences or when just using the laptop to view lyrics. The audience always appeared enamoured by the technology and less appreciative about the music, thinking that I was somehow (cheating?) as I was relying on the laptop to make me sound good, even though that of course wasn't always the case at all. Perhaps audiences have changed over the last few years, or that certain audience's have higher traditional musicianship expectations of us than others. I don't know, but this is one of the reasons I've been relunctant to the idea of adding a laptop to my act again. For some reason, because the arranger keyboard has all it's computer technology features built right in to the keyboard itself, this doesn't create the problems I had using a laptop (even just for lyrics) when doing an acoustic keyboard gig. Just my opinion based on my own personal gigging experience of course. - Scott
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#217944 - 09/24/04 07:38 AM
Re: Having thousands of songs
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Senior Member
Registered: 12/08/02
Posts: 15576
Loc: Forest Hill, MD USA
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Scott: Once in a while, someone will come up while I'm performing and take a look at the computer screen just out of curiosity. Most of the time they see the screen saver, which is a scrolling marquee that says "Travlin' Easy."
Regardless of whether you use a laptop or not, the vast majority of the audiences don't a have a clue as to whether you're actually playing, and for that matter, singing. If I had a dollar for every time that someone came up to me to request a song while I was playing and singing I would have as much in the bank as Bill Gates. Some actually come up and begin talking with you as if you were a DJ. This, despite the fact they can see your fingers working the keys and can see you singing into the mic. Then at the end of the night, some will come up and say "Wow! That was really you playing and singing all of those songs--I thought it was the machine."
The other statement that always gets me is the lady that comes up and says "Isn't that cute. I gave my grandson one of those for Christmas last year, only it doesn't sound as good as your."
How many times has someone come up and said "Does you have any Elvis, Sinatra, etc., songs in that thing?" Usually, I'll just smile and say "Yep, just put the dollar in the slot and make your selection."
As for the books, I used to have five of them. They were 3-inch thick, ringed, binders that weighed an average of 10 pounds. That's 50 pounds of excess baggage to haul around, plus a music stand and light. The laptop weighs about 7 pounds, holds more music, easier to see, don't have to fumble through the pages to find the next song, holds the midi and MP3 files, and provides a back-up if my desktop PC fails.
I believe part of this is because the audience cannot see your fingers moving over the keys, therefore, they don't know if you're actually playing the keyboard. When I was using a pair of boards, plus had the vocal processor on the third tier of an Ultimate stand, I sat sideways to the audience, similar to the position piano players often use when performing. Then could see my fingers moving and realized that I was actually playing, and yes, it was me singing. The books were on a music stand directly between me and the audience, but I kept the stand low so I maintained eye contact with the audience. The tip jar filled just as if I were a piano player. When I switched to the single board that sits directly in front of me, the perception was that I was not playing--it was the machine doing all the work and all I did was push a few buttons.
I think the one statement that really used to p*** me off was when at the end of the job someone would come up and say "You're the best DJ we've ever had!" I used to really get upset and reply "I'M NOT A DJ--I'M A MUSICIAN AND SINGER!" Now I just smile, say thanks, and take the check.
Gary
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PSR-S950, TC Helicon Harmony-M, Digitech VR, Samson Q7, Sennheiser E855, Custom Console, and lots of other silly stuff!
K+E=W (Knowledge Plus Experience = Wisdom.)
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