Jerry... you have nothing to lose but time in trying to break into the Assisted Living/Retirement Villages/Nursing Home/Whatever business and I wish you the very best ... BUT, let me tell you that if the competition in your area is anything like here in lil ol Rhode Island, it is NOT going to be easy ...
I had addressed this issue on another thread, and of course got several comments ...
http://www.synthzone.com/forum/ubbthreads.php/topics/396570/The_times_they_are_a_changin#Post396570Here is an excerpt from a post submitted by Stephenm52:
OK, as a rule I don't jump into these discussions but will because the OMB my paesano from RI Tony talked about was me.
First some comments about the entertainer showcase. I was invited by one of the ADs that use me to play their facility for special events. It was a last minute invitation extended to me when I called her to confirm a gig date. Going back 7 years ago I also participated in a showcase sponsored by the same AD Association , a few of us were repeat performers.
The major difference this time only 3 of us used keyboards ( 2 were arranger type) all of us over 62 years of age, 3 were guitarists ( one with a midi set up) the reamaining entertainers all used backing tracks, so out of 20 performers 14 used backing tracks.
As far as talent the backing tracking singers were better vocalists than any of us who played keyboards or guitars. 2 of the vocalists were knock out looking ladies one who seemed to specialize in disco era music the other country music complete with an outfit that looked like something Dale Evans used to wear. The remaining backing track entertainers were men in their 40s. I found that the male backing track vocalists really got involved in audience participation and walked among the tables using wireless mics with the predominantly female AD audience. It was real obvious too which of the male singers impressed the ladies. One guy an old friend of mine Bob is a great entertainer he'll head over to a table of ladies while singing a love song, get down on his knees and hold out his hand to theirs. That melts the ladies, he was the biggest hit there, the line to book him in 2015 was the longest out of any of them.
After everyone entertained ADs got the OK to start booking entertainers and the longest lines were formed by the backing track male vocalists.
............
I'll close with saying a good friend of mine a graduate with a Bachelor of Music degree with a major in vocal studies is now the AD of a very large and upscale facility. He choose not to perform as a career because he's seen the intense competition here. He tells me he gets 20 calls and/or mailings each week of performers who would like to be booked at his facility.
So, what Steve found was that the competition today is much younger than many of us here, and they do not stand/sit behind a KB and play and sing - primarily they use backing tracks and wireless mics and 'roam' through the audience, much like the 'schmoozer' in one of Donny's videos (and from what I've seen and heard of the talent pool here in RI, not ONE of the people in those videos would be getting much -if ANY- work up here) ...
As I also stated in my thread, mentioned above, Donny, Gary, and others have been at this a LONG time, and through their talent have established a good solid base of clients, and now no doubt can 'pick and choose' how many gigs they want to play and where ... BUT, I also say, that if THEY were just starting out today, at their current ages, they too would find the market a LOT different from when THEY first started ...
The work is out there, but as Garth sings "The Competition's Getting Younger", AND they ARE talented ... Fortunately, I do not NEED to perform to put food on the table (40 years of good work in another industry has me in a good financial position), and the only thing I am feeding by playing is my EGO
... but I will continue to 'market' myself, and whatever gigs I get will be fine ...
Good luck to you, and I hope you get enough work to keep you happy ...