Rules for Playing in a Band

in music •  8 years ago 

Wisdom can be found anywhere, we have a 6 month old puppy , that when she hears the word "Naughty" disappears like she was never there!
I have had some of the most enjoyable social events in my life when playing in a band of equals ,and vice versa.
These Rules certainly have a lot of wisdom in them.

8 Unwritten Laws of being a good Band Mate!

  1. In an open jam,

share solos equally with anybody who wants one.

You know that player who takes his 12-bar solo ... and then takes your 12 bars as well? That guy is a douche bag. Even if this person plays great, no others onstage will hear what this solo hog actually plays over the sound of their inner voices loudly repeating “What a doucher. Seriously, what a complete, solo-stealing doucher.”

Help load and unload the gear.

You know that guy who disappears when all the heavy lifting needs to be done, and then shows up after the van is unloaded or reloaded? We all hate that guy. Unless you have serious health issues, man-up and hump some gear. (If you’re female, carry a few little things in rotation with guys. It’s cute, it helps, and the boys will love you for it.)

  1. Be on time whenever possible.
    Of course you’re busy—we all are. But when you’re habitually late, you send a message to your bandmates that says,

“I’m more important than you.”

They will despise you for this. Hell, I despise you for this and I probably don’t even know you.

  1. If the soundman and your bandmates ask you to turn down, turn down.
    We all want to hear ourselves, but a good mix never comes from a volume war.

Learn to compromise or be ostracized.

  1. Do your homework.
    Even when we know the material, we all occasionally make mistakes, but we make a whole lot more when we don’t practice. Bands work interdependently like a rowing team, professional tag-team wrestlers, or people conducting a good orgy (I imagine).

When you’re bad, you make everybody else look and sound bad.

Don’t be the weakest link when all it takes is a bit of practice to get you hitting the right notes.

  1. If you have long road trips or share hotel rooms,

avoid food that turns your stomach into a toxic waste dump.

Not only do your noxious methane leaks increase the size of the hole in our ozone layer, they can do some real damage to your bandmates’ morale and olfactory system.

  1. Music is fun, so have fun.
    I’ve worked briefly with people who are the equivalent of a human storm cloud. Just as laughter is contagious, so is grumpiness.

One sad sack can make an onstage party feel like a funeral.

  1. Be loyal to your bandmates. We all have a family member who drives us mad.* Amongst family, we can discuss a black sheep’s shortcomings, but if somebody outside the family insults our siblings, parents, uncle, etcetera,

most of us want to beat the insulter like they owe us money.

That’s the way a band should be. Argue amongst yourselves, work out your problems, but stick up for your bandmates to the rest of the world. There’s the family you’re born with and there’s the family you choose. Be loyal to both.

Found on the Internet (written by John Bohlinger)

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Hi! I am a robot. I just upvoted you! I found similar content that readers might be interested in:
http://www.premierguitar.com/articles/8_unwritten_laws_of_being_a_good_bandmate

nice music

Thank You, appreciate your comment.

Excellent post dear friend @awgbibb congratulations

Thank You for reading and your comment , My Friend

Learn new material on your own time, not on band's practice time.

Too True, I used to cancel rehearsals if they had not learned their parts . Thank You for your comment.