Tuesday 9 December 2014

Why I don't do competitons, or Battle of the Bands


I saw that Open Mic Uk had posted up a songwriting competition. This apparently was like their regular competition, a kind of X-Factor-lite talent show, but with the onus on the quality of songwriting coming out rather than the overall performance. I approached this cynically as I clicked the link to investigate, and then closed down the web page as soon as I saw that there was a £10 charge to enter. I rarely have a good opinion of these things anyway, and having to pay for the privilege of standing in a queue for eight hours to play two minutes worth of a song only to have the judges tell me to clear off is not something I wanted to be involved in.

It did, however, remind me of how much I don’t like ‘Battle of the Bands’ style competitions and talent shows, and how unlikely I am ever to enter one again. I thought I would share that with you today.

So what is my problem with competitions? Well, even if I could conceivably get a band together that could play its own material good enough to participate in the contest without being laughed off the stage for being fat and old, I don’t like them anyway because of the way they tend to be judged. The competitions I have been involved with in the past almost always decide their winners in one of three ways:

  1. Whoever is the youngest girl, (this tends to happen in acoustic singer-songwriter-style settings,)
  2. Whoever is playing the most indie,
  3. And most commonly, whoever has sold the most tickets.
Now, I’m demonstrably neither young nor a girl. I hate indie.[1] And the only way I can usually get anybody to come to a gig is if I drive them there myself. So, on the basis that this is the standard by which these competitions tend to be judged; I’m knackered before I’ve even applied to take part. There’s very few of them I’ve taken part in that haven’t made me think “What a waste of time.” Judges tend to vote for the bands that have sold the most tickets because the organisers need to be making money. But that doesn’t help me, as my general reward for inviting people to gigs is every version of “I can’t be arsed” under the sun.

And it doesn’t help anyway. The prize for winning tends to be about 4 hours studio time and, if the band is very lucky, some cash - never more than £1000. I was there the night that Junkyard Morning won the Wolverhampton Battle of the Bands in 2008, and where are they now?[2] Even with the high-profile shows like the X-Factor, I couldn’t even name three people who’ve ever won it.

At this point I will give a shout out to a mutual acquaintance Ben Vickers, who runs an open mic at the Copcut Elm in Droitwich. There was a competition held there in 2011 which I took part in, it had a serious panel of judges who were going on the artistic talent of the people involved. The prize for winning that was a slot at a festival later on in the year; there was no pretence, no over-promising. But that was very much the exception, rather than the rule.

The only reason I would take part in a Battle of the Bands now is if I did happen to be in a band that wrote original material good enough to participate in the contest without being laughed off the stage for being fat and old. I would be against it in principle, but if the other guys in the band were intent on putting themselves through this rigmarole under the erroneous belief that something good would come out of it, I wouldn’t ruin it for them by refusing to do it.

I actually entered the Open Mic UK competition in 2011, I think it was. My intention was to do my audition in Birmingham, then drive over to Wolverhampton to play the main stage at Codfest where I had been booked to play. I arrived in plenty of time, and after having waited in an unmoving queue for an hour or so, I decided to get away and play my set at Codfest. As I think I’ve got quite a good working relationship with Sam Draisey, and he’s also a really good friend, I can say with a large amount of confidence that abandoning the talent show and playing my friend’s festival has done more for my career as a musician than not turning up to Codfest and throwing in my lot with a so-called talent contest.

Funnily enough, I have no idea who won Open Mic UK that year, either. I rest my case.


[1] Or rather, I hate what indie became during the last decade when record deals were being handed out on a silver platter to anybody who could mash the top four strings of a Telecaster.
[2] I actually looked at their Facebook page and it looks like they’ve not been active as a band since about 2010. So, how much did winning BOTB really help them?

Thursday 4 December 2014

November: Rehearsing, Reflecting, Jamming and getting Crashpoint back together


November’s been an interesting one…

Back when I was thinner. Anyone seen the bass player lately?
I’ve been talking to Cj about the possibility of getting Crashpoint back together. I’ve been against this for a while, but we’ve been away long enough for me to not mind too much about my previous misgivings about it. It won’t happen this side of Christmas; I’m committed to gigs almost every weekend up to that point, and with Cj now living in Crewe it would be a logistical nightmare to even get as far as one gig. And it’s unlikely that you’ll see the definitive line-up; we’ve spoken to Emma and she doesn’t think she’ll can do it, and nobody’s seen or heard from Jay since he originally left the band. But it’s on the radar for next year, so we’ll see what happens.

Sam Draisey is producing another Christmas album; it should be on sale soon at his gigs so look out for it. Sadly I’ve made the decision to sit out of it for this year. I remember doing The First Footprint for the Christmas album four years ago in 2010, and I was as surprised as anybody that it was actually quite good. I wrote what I felt the most strongly about Christmas – the entire song could be summed up with “Stop trying so hard to get it right, and actually enjoy it” – and somehow it’s never been as good when I’ve tried to write a Christmas song since then. For the last two years, nothing has come, so rather than force one out for its own sake and it almost certainly being rubbish, I’ll leave the album to the other guys.
 
It’s been a quiet month for gigs with No Questions Asked, but as expected we did manage to use the time to learn some new songs. As ever, most of them are by Queen, but there are some others as well so if you’ve seen us before chances are we’ll be playing something new for you!

We do a number of jam nights around the area; at the Old Bush in Wombourne and the River Rooms in Stourbridge. I usually enjoy these, in fact I reckon it’s at least partly because I turned up to them that I remained on Dave and Richard’s radar long enough to be in the band now. However, the last couple have felt flat in terms of their attendance. No one turned up to the last time we did the Bush and it was basically the band playing to ourselves. The last one at the River Rooms, the only people to turn up to play other than the band was the people depping for various members who will be missing in the coming weeks (myself included) due to other commitments.

I try not to take it too hard; it’s not like we wasted the time. We practiced some of the newer songs and it’s always a pleasure to play with the band. Also this is a very tricky time of year; around Christmas people tend to be so busy that it’s hard to be bothered with things like jam nights when you can just catch the next one. But I remember going to the jam nights at the much-missed Broadway with Jack’s Legacy. We’d get there at 8pm, and often at 10:30 we’d still be waiting to go on because there were so many people there. I know it was nine years ago, but I do wonder what happened to that music scene!

Ending on a positive note, the last gig we did in November at the Lamp Tavern was absolutely brilliant; the best one I think we’ve done with this line-up. A lot of it was because around 40 minutes into it we ignored the set list and just played whatever we thought the night needed. And what that particular night needed was high-energy popular songs. I think we did a fine job of making sure everybody was having a good time, all of the time. This is why I do gigs!

So, some things to learn, some to consider and some to reflect upon. I really hope that both the band and I can build on these experiences and make ourselves better.
I couldn't find a 'definitive line-up' picture with CJ in it
so here he is at our first gig. How young does he look?

Sunday 2 November 2014

October: Gigging with No Questions Asked and Singing Lessons


Well it’s been quite a busy month for me!

I’ve had a good run of gigs with No Questions Asked, the band I was depping with and now a semi-permanent member. We’ve done a few gigs around the area, and I have a feeling it’s going to be one of those bands that is conducive to my development as a musician. It’s certainly the busiest one I’ve been in for a while in terms of gigs; not since Crashpoint have I managed for than three gigs a month with a band! While I still feel there is potential in the band yet to be realised, we’re having fun playing live and making a bit of money off it as well.

One thing I did realise during my first gig with No Questions Asked is not to be a dick about my gear. Specifically, my multi-effects pedal. It’s a Digitech BP50, not amazingly brilliant but does a good job for the money I paid for it (£80, eight years ago.) I tend to use it as a stage tuner, but most of the effects on there are amp simulations and compression/noise gate, and most of them do quite a decent job. There are a few modulation effects there, including a phaser which I wanted to use on the bands rendition of Dancing in the Moonlight by Thin Lizzy.

Unfortunately there wasn’t a lot of room in the Mitre where we were playing that night, and due to the length of the power lead that comes with it, there’s no way I could have plugged it in without getting in everybody’s way. Dave said to me something like “Just manage without it; you can play the Thin Lizzy song without it and it will sound as good,” and that’s when I realised: There’s no need to be a dick about it. The effect would have been nice, but not essential. And remembering some people in my past that would have refused to play without their effects made me think: Don’t be that guy. I used my clip-on tuner, managed without my effects and it didn’t make the slightest bit of difference to the show. So there you go!

As for the money I’m making, well, not much is happening with that at the moment. The actual amount I get depends on the venue and how the money is paid, but I’m savvy enough to know that to rely on a band as a source of income is a dangerous game indeed, as work goes up and down. So I’m doing what I do with all the money I get outside of my job, and saving it. It’s of little use to me for day-to-day spending, but if I save it, the money will add up – and it’s there if I need it.


In other news, I’ve now started having singing lessons with my friend and colleague Vie Watson. After singing for 10-12 years, including studio recordings, live performances with various bands and the many solo performances I’ve done, I’m finally getting someone to teach me how to do it. It’s so far had the effect of increasing the range I can comfortably hit – and how to hit those high notes I sometimes struggle with. But more than increasing my level of skill, I’d love to be able to teach singing as well. That will increase the skills I can bring to my work with Dudley Performing Arts, and also increase the amount of skills I can bring to any future jobs. At this time I’m still looking for work in Swindon, and I’m hoping my chances of finding it will increase if I have more to offer!

I’ve not visited an open mic this month as I was busy on the one night I could attend, but that didn’t stop me doing some acoustic slots for NQA on their gig in Tividale when the support pulled out, and playing at the Jam Night they organise! Some people who haven’t seen me play for a while have noticed an improvement in my playing and delivery, so that’s always good to hear!

Next month will be a bit quieter for me in terms of gigs because of some cancellations and a generally lighter schedule, but I’m hoping to use the time for a little rehearsal with NQA.

Saturday 18 October 2014

Matt's Songwriting - Stripping it Down


What makes a good song?

Many things, and taking it back to basics and delivering it with one instrument and/or one voice is a good place to start. This isn’t my idea, and I can’t remember who said it, but for me, the acid test for any song is: If you strip it down and have one guitar or piano and one voice, do you still have a good song?

This came up when I was talking to Dave from No Questions Asked a few days ago. I’d posted on Facebook that I was practicing a Queen song for my solo slot; Dave asked what it was and if I would like some accompaniment. I told him privately that it is Who Wants To Live Forever, and I’d rather see how it sounded with one guitar and one voice.[1] That’s how I’ve been doing my acoustic show for years; only rarely do I have someone else playing on stage with me. I try to capture the essence of the song in this format; if it does, then I include it in my set. If not, I move it on.

I love the full-on rock production, but in most cases if you stripped rock songs down to they would still be good. Some of my favourite songs to cover are: Thick as Thieves by Kasabian, Closer To The Edge by 30 Seconds To Mars, A Little Respect by Erasure/Wheatus, and The Boys of Summer by Don Henley. They all sound great in a stripped-down format. And it comes across in my own songs. Bitterness would be a Crashpoint song if we hadn’t broken up soon after I wrote it; originally it was a punk-style rock song and I remember Cj doing a good job on the drums. Get Out Of My Head began in Perception, jamming a Led Zepplin-style riff on my guitar with John on the drums. It didn’t sound anything like how it eventually ended up – but I used the chord progressions from what we jammed out.

I see it in other people’s covers as well. Steve who comes to Sam Draisey’s open mic sometimes does a finger-picked acoustic rendition of Sweet Child ‘o Mine. I think that, in many respects, his version works better than the original. Granted, I will almost always say that about anyone who sounds different to Axl Rose; (I can’t stand his voice,) but the lighter finger-picking and the gently-delivered vocals capture the essence of that song more than the rock song that everybody recognises. I love Slash’s guitar playing, and the riff to Sweet Child ‘o Mine is fantastic. But Axl could have been singing toothpaste; his voice would have sounded just as bad, and the guitars just as good.

So what about bands where this doesn’t work? Two examples: Pendulum and The Prodigy. The latter, as far as I know, haven’t written anything resembling a ‘song’ in the usual sense. And Pendulum relies on the drum and bass sound with the keyboard riffs; without that, the band wouldn’t work. I’m not saying either of those bands bad. I enjoy listening to Pendulum, and I wish I’d seen The Prodigy at Download Festival in 2006. But I will say that those bands have a good sound – not necessarily good songs.

The problem, of course, is with those songs that are great but have extra parts to them that I can’t strip away. I’ve only played Motorcycle Emptiness by the Manic Street Preachers live once, and it functioned – but without the lead guitar, it’s nowhere near as good. I’d love to play Waterfall and This Is The One by the Stone Roses, and Marvellous by the Lightning Seeds, but I think those songs lose something without their backing vocals.

But I don’t think that with Who Wants To Live Forever, despite the arrangement of the original. Taking it down to one guitar and one voice – as long as both are properly managed – can make it as good as the huge amount of production that went into the record. I’m hoping that comes across if I play it at the gig.

What do you guys think? Is this a good benchmark for whether a song is any good or not? Or is the way the record sounds more important? The answer, I suspect, lies somewhere in between, depending on the context of the band. Just remember, the vast majority of songs that we listened to when they first came out and are still sounding good decades later could all be stripped back to their rawest form, and sound every bit as good.


[1] At the time of writing I haven’t actually done the gig yet so I have no idea what’s going to happen when I do.

Sunday 5 October 2014

September: Social Media, and Depping in NQA


Back again! As blogging can be more work than fun if I try to do too much of it, I’m trying to limit my posts to 700 words or thereabouts. Thinking about it, I’m not convinced people would want to read much more than that in one sitting anyway…

 
September was a little quiet for me on the gigs front. I did a couple of Sam Draisey’s open mics, which went reasonably well and I’m becoming very fond of The Rainbow Inn as a place to play. I also did a short set at Codfest on their Open Mic stage; this didn’t go too well, largely due to me forgetting my capo and my hands being freezing cold. I’ve added Wetsuit by The Vaccines to my repertoire of acoustic songs; it’s a challenge for me to sing but I’m getting used to it.

However, two major things happened in September that I want to tell you about:

The first is that I’m now doing a run of dep gigs for the band No Questions Asked that’s going to take me up until the end of the year. Dave from the band asked me to come and play bass for an ‘audition’ for the singer they’re currently using, Mike. I knew Dave at school and we’ve kept in semi-regular contact since, mainly at jam nights he helps to run, some of which I’ve played bass at. Though it rarely takes me long to learn simple songs for my acoustic set, I’ve got an affinity with bass that I just don’t have with guitar; I can watch what Luke on guitar is doing to know what notes to play, and sometimes even the keyboards as well. I can lock in to Fred’s drums and keep the rhythm going, and provided I’m not concentrating too hard, I can put on a show with it as well.

The upshot is that Dave seemed really pleased with what I was bringing to the band, as I played all the songs he’d asked me to do and many more besides, and Mike was pro-active in establishing his involvement with them. Dave asked me to play the gigs they’ve got booked up to the end of the year, and as I can play all but three of them, that is what I’m going to be doing for most of the weekends between now and then! I’m not a permanent member of the band yet; I’m going to see how it pans out over the next few months and how much investment I have in the band before I commit to it entirely.

At the time of writing I’ve done my first gig with them and it went quite well. Watch this space for more!


The second thing is that because of some of the training I’m getting working for DY3 Solutions, I’m now making a much more structured use of social media. I now have a dedicated Facebook page for my music: https://www.facebook.com/mattdoonermusic and I’ve been making much more use of my Twitter page as well. I’m advertising the gigs on there, trying to pace out my content and keep people engaged with what I’m doing musically. This is where all my regular updates will be posted. I know it is a folly for musicians to rely on social media entirely – but when it can be done from the comfort of my bedroom, it shouldn’t be ignored.

The Rainbow Inn, Coven: 24/9/2014. There's Sam and Kayla.
As a part of this, I’ve also started making use of the hash tag function on both, uploading pictures I’ve taken from the stage. I’m hoping people will find these photos, tag themselves in them if they were there, comment on them if they weren’t, and generally increase the level of engagement when I’m not actually doing gigs – which as this is at the very most a few hours a week, is actually not that much. So, watch out for the #viewfromthestage tag – if you were at one of my gigs, chances are you were in one of the photos too!

Some big news coming up for next month, but I’d like to see how that pans out before I announce it. I’ll try and get these blogs out on the first weekend of the month after the one I’m taking about, if that makes any sense.

See you at the next gig!

Matt

Thursday 29 May 2014

Open Mic Douchebags

It's been a long time...

I’m rarely one to criticise anybody’s performance at an open mic night. If it’s reasonably well-attended, you’ll have a wide range of skills, talents and musical taste that can make for a varied and entertaining mix. Some people are better than others, of course, and this is usually due to experience, commitment to developing their performance, or the quality of their songs; probably a combination of those three factors. I don’t do gig reviews any more, but even when I did, I was rarely nasty about bands. I made no secret of it if I thought their performance was below the standard I would expect from a gigging band, but it was not usually the band’s fault and I would always try to write my reviews in a way that came across as constructive criticism, rather than slating them. I don’t review open mic nights (apart from assessing my own performance) because there aren’t really any standards by which to judge such a varied group of performers. Experienced singer-songwriters are always going to perform better than a 14 year-old kid with a guitar just starting out and it would be unfair for me to compare the two when they both appear at the same open mic. So, apart from a not-always-kind reflection of my own performance,[1] I tend to keep my thoughts on everybody else’s performance away from the tender mercies of the internet.

Until now.

The other night (Tuesday 27th) I was at the open mic night at The Victoria Inn in Swindon, commonly referred to as The Vic, with my girlfriend Amy and our friend Tom. I’d been there once before in October, and the standard was actually quite high; as ever some people were better than others but the overall there were some very good performances that night. I expected much of the same but I was a little more relaxed about it tonight as I had a better idea of what to expect. I was third on, and up until that point, the standard had been pretty good.

The fifth guy to go on was a tall guy in a ‘night out’ kind of suit, a Les Paul-style electric guitar and a haircut that reminded me of Phil from The Thick Of It (google it.) I say that just so you can picture him. I’m not going to give him any dignity by using his name; he will hereafter be referred to as ‘The Douchebag.’ Alarm bells started ringing when one of the lads he’d bought with him shouted at him to fuck off as soon as he was announced. Things didn’t get much better when he got on the stage, where he was clearly drunk, every second word was ‘fuck’ and he made far too big a business of turning the distortion off the amplifier he was using and announcing his songs.

Oh dear, his songs. People can write songs about what they like and I haven’t usually got a problem with it, but this Douchebag appeared to have written them to sound as much like a pillock as possible. In so far as I actually listened to the lyrics he was spewing over clattering open chords, his first song appeared to be about having sex in a taxi, and his second was about a young wannabe porn star being told to lean on a sofa, take her pants down and spread her arse cheeks. I only know the latter in so much detail because in between the two songs, he horrendously over-explained it amid several more ‘fucks,’ during which his microphone cut out several times. Now, I would be prepared to believe that this was down to a technical fault. But as the sound guy was obviously familiar with this Douchebag, and this happened to absolutely NO ONE ELSE, I’m making an educated guess here that the sound guy was deliberately cutting him off to make him sound like even more of a plonker than he already did.[2]

Not that the Douchebag needed any assistance with this. Even if the songs weren’t appalling, his delivery was; the guitar work seemed to consist entirely of whacking open chords as hard as possible, and the singing, well, I would barely even call it singing. If it wasn’t for the fact that it was slightly more rhythmic than regular speech, I wouldn’t know what to call it. The best part of his performance was the part where after trying out loud to decide whether to play a cover or not, punctuated with his usual colourful language, he made a start on in then appeared to decide it wasn’t worth it and left the stage. He got a raucous applause from the four or five lads he’d bought with him, and a grudgingly polite applause from everybody else.

Well, that is quite honestly the worst performance I’ve ever seen at an open mic in my entire life. Amy found it insulting and degrading towards women, and I just thought it was pathetic. Tom made an accurate and concise summary of the Douchebag: “A talentless, pretentious, ego centric ****bag[3] trying to be funny.” We’ve finally found somebody more ridiculous than those two lads at the Yardbird a few years ago whose two songs were about running over a cat and threesomes, because at least those guys could play. With this Douchebag, it would have been less of a mistake for him to contract laryngitis and try to get through the set with the guitar still in its case.

 
‘But hang on Matt,’ I hear you cry. ‘What gives you the right to say all this? You make jokes in your set as well, don’t you? And you certainly swear; I’ve heard you. You swear in Bitterness, that’s your most popular song! And you use the f-word loads of times in A Lonely Night, that one that sounds so much like Dani California by the Red Hot Chili Peppers you actually sing the chorus to it during your own song sometimes. Not to mention I Don’t Care, that one you wrote about Blast Off in Wolverhampton, you swear loads in that one as well.’

Yes, yes, alright. My hands aren’t entirely clean here, but let me explain:

First, and this might sound counter-intuitive but bear with me, I don’t make jokes lightly when I’m on stage. Being funny is hard. Even trying to be funny is hard. Look at Will Ferrel. I do make snarky and usually self-deprecating comments between my songs, but always in context, and always with a decent-enough song to back it up. And if it looks spontaneous, it isn’t; it takes me ages to think through how I’m going to deliver a joke in a way that won’t derail the entire thing. I try to say at least something in between my songs to keep the audience engaged. I am very well aware that using humour is a common way of deflecting nervousness, and I’m not so confident when I haven’t got a guitar to hide behind That’s why I plan out a set list before I go on stage, that’s why I take so long to decide what I’m going to say when I get there.

Second, with regard to swearing in my songs, I don’t do that lightly either. Sometimes it adds to the song, sometimes it makes people roll their eyes, sometimes it makes people feel uncomfortable, and it appears to depend entirely on who I’m playing to. I Don’t Care, for example, went down very well when I played it at Sam Draisey’s open mic at The Rainbow in Coven, because Sam and his friends live in and around Wolverhampton and knew exactly what I was singing about. I’ve not played it live anywhere else so I don’t know if I’d get even close to the same reaction. And I do not swear when I’m playing live, unless I know it’s OK for me to do so. How do I know? Well, often if it’s an unfamiliar crowd – as was the case on Tuesday Night, for example – I’ll see if anybody else is swearing first. Other times I ask the promoter; it’s not hard. I always try to introduce myself if I can, or say hello if I already know them, and ask them how we are with Ps and Qs. They’ll either tell me to play what I like, or keep it civil, but they do appreciate being asked. And I absolutely never swear if I know there are kids around. I was originally thinking of playing A Lonely Night on Tuesday but I chose not to because I didn’t want to play a too-offensive song in front of a largely unfamiliar audience. Turns out I needn’t have worried after all, because I could have gone up there and played Twinkle Twinkle Little Star and done a better job than the Douchebag. And that’s a guarantee.

And in case anybody who hasn’t yet seen me live, or is on Spotted: Dudley,[4] is thinking of suggesting that I should have called the Douchebag on his performance on the night, rather than waiting two days and ranting about it on the internet, I’d like to pre-emptively put a stop to that right away. And here’s why: In the open mics that I’ve been to, and there have been a fair few, there is kind of an unwritten rule. That rule is: Don’t heckle people, and if you do, keep it in context and good-natured. I’ve never heckled anyone on stage in my life. I’ve taken some good-natured heckling and responded in kind. But there’s nothing good-natured about anything I’ve got to say about the Douchebag, or his entourage of friends he had with him. Plus, as it was an unfamiliar crowd in an unfamiliar town (Yes, I know Swindon quite well now, but not it’s gigging scene) I couldn’t really count on anyone for support if it got ugly. It might have done; the Douchebag was clearly wasted, as were some of his friends. It was not hard to imagine them kicking off some trouble with the right kind of provocation. And it was certainly nothing I wanted to instigate.

But the worst thing about it is that I’m struggling to think of the point to all of this, or even if there is one. It’s not going to change anything. The Douchebag might have been, well, a Douchebag, but he bought by far the largest number of people with him that night. He was definitely familiar to the promoter. Plus, it’s an open mic; short of deliberately damaging the venue’s equipment he can go up there and play what he likes without fear of reprisal. It’s not like anybody’s going to turn around to him and say ‘Sorry mate, you’re rubbish. I don’t want you back here.’ It’s also ironic, of course, that in my first blog in months, it’s the Douchebag I’ve chosen to write about, rather than the people who actually did really well that night. They include Sunita, whose piano-based quirky songs were nothing if not enthralling, Rob, whose finger-style guitar with a powerful voice to back it up was excellent and, well, me I suppose.

So to close, a quick summary of my own performance:

I began with continuing my quest to play a Feeder song in every venue I play, because Feeder are the best band in the world and everybody should listen to them. I played High, simply because the last time Amy came to see me I played Yesterday Went Too Soon and I can’t really sing any of the others that well. It went down OK, but not amazingly so.

I then played We Will Survive, a song I haven’t played since Vagabonds in 2012. Mark that: I haven’t even played the song since then, never mind playing it live. I’d certainly never played it on my electro-acoustic before, so I really had to concentrate for this one. Funnily enough I made it all the way through without any glaring errors, Amy was happy to hear it again and Tom enjoyed it as well.

The song everybody else remembered was the one I played at the end: The Mingulay Boat Song. I’m really enjoying playing this at the moment. It was a bit of a risk because one thing I hadn’t heard at The Vic so far was any kind of traditional folk music, but I had some of the other performers ask me about it afterwards and it seemed to go down the best judging by the applause.

I chose those three songs because they all have the capo at the third fret, but I think one thing I am very good at is dynamics. I’ve got better at playing moderately when I’m carrying most of the song. I can go loud when I need to lift it, and I can reduce the volume almost to a whisper which, contrary to what you might expect, has the effect of making everybody in the room go quiet when used sparingly. It certainly helped during Mingulay – you could have heard a pin drop.

So, I was pleased with my own performance – my first in a couple of months – and was certainly pleased that I did better than The Douchebag. To be fair, that wouldn’t have been difficult. But it’s nice to, if not set the bar, at least be able to play to a good standard. It’s taken me a long time to feel confident enough about my own performance to say that without irony. That’s got to be a good thing, right?

See you next time.



[1] When I can be bothered, which is not often these days,
[2] That is a GUESS, not an accusation. I can’t prove a thing. I’m just saying what I saw.
[3] Oh yeah, it’s that bad. Not on my blog.
[4] An absolute cesspit of nastiness where the slightest complaint about anything or anyone is followed up by seven or eight comments suggesting they should take their complaints to the person concerned, rather than posting it online. I don’t know why I’m on it, to tell you the truth.