
Originally Posted by
tlbonehead
Of course, playing in time together, playing in tune (without tuning live between every song) not having dead time between songs, etc, is also very important.
It all depends on the level at which you're playing. One of my projects has horrendous amounts of dead time between songs ... we finish a tune, we stop and high five one another, switch guitars, strum to check that they're still in tune, look at the set list, then look at one another as if to ask is that
really what we're gonna play next? ... then everybody takes a drink, looks at one another
again to see if everybody is ready ...
finally, the drummer counts us into the next tune. The dead time between tunes is maddening to me!
However, we've got a lead vocalist who totally
owns every tune that he sings - and the crowd LOVES him because of it. He simply commands the attention of the crowd - and belts it out like there's no tomorrow. We gig 1-2 a month (because that's how much
we want to work) ... we fill our calendar by telling the bar owner what dates
we want to play. Every table in the joint is reserved a week before we play.
All of this is because of our vocalist. All of the things you mentioned (playing in tune, dead time between songs, etc.) are important - and take whatever you have and helps you make the most of it. However, a crowd will overlook alot of the little stuff
if there's a great vocalist involved.
Mind you, I'm NOT advocating anybody play out of tune, waste time between tunes constantly tuning or put lots of dead time between songs .... I'm simply saying that in my experience, crowds will "forgive lots of sins" if there's a great vocalist involved.
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