Thursday, June 11
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My Job: The Business of Being in a Band

Monday, June 15th, 2009
by uladmin

Six a.m. comes early, earlier then usual when you were up till 3 a.m. After rushing through a shower and choking down breakfast, I’m out the door by 6:50 a.m. I fight my way through the morning rush hour with the window rolled down and the music turned up. On a typical day, I’m at my desk by 7:30. By 9 a.m. my ears are still ringing from the night before and the day feels like it should be done soon.

Some people can’t reconcile how my two careers – bassist in an up-and-coming band called The Shakedowns and a desk job in financial services – fit together. But the two complement each other, and not just because my day job pays the bills. The success of the band depends on all the things that any business does. Marketing, accounting, finance and leadership make the difference between playing the Royal Canadian Legion on a Tuesday night and scratching together the money to record and promote an album.

The Shakedowns hit the road

[The Shakedowns hit the road]

Band expenses usually outweigh revenue, like many other small businesses in the first few years of operation. The variable and fixed costs a band incurs include instruments and instrument maintenance (if, say, baby needs a brand new bass), fuel and vehicles to get to gigs, recording and distribution, marketing (posters, merchandise, business cards, websites), as well as food and the occasional nerve-settling formula (alcohol in various forms). The A&R talent scouting of the golden era in the music industry is long gone. Without a music label funding us, we’re the ones footing the bill.

The trick, like with any business, is to offer a product or service that no one has heard about and bring it to places frequented by your target market. In our case the music is the service and the target market hangs out at concert halls (which, it should be said, are hard to book and pay poorly).

The band needs to become as efficient as any business, collaborating not just on songs but also on maintaining our website and our MySpace and Facebook pages. Then there’s booking gigs, writing songs, writing blogs, sending out demos and networking.

Late in the day, when we finish a show and I head home, I can hardly call my second job a job. Sure, there’s the mundane worries of any business – in our case these problems typically involve resources (e.g. the van is low on gas and we hope we’ll make it to the venue) and staffing (the soundman didn’t show up again). But when these kinks work themselves out – and they work themselves out in a miraculous way when we all come together minutes before the show – we step foot on stage not knowing exactly what the crowd expects. And remember why we do it.

Music@Work
LISTEN UP
You can also listen to some of theirs songs on their CBC Radio 3 profile page.

READ UP
In Unlimited’s National Magazine Award-winning story, musician Kris Demeanor chronicles his checkered past through all the gigs (landscaper, sandwich maker at the Olympics, construction worker…) while he waited for the big gig.

Weekly Links Round-up: The Music Festival Edition

Friday, May 29th, 2009
by uladmin

Editor’s note: A special links round-up from die-hard music lover Jennifer King who has never played hooky from work to attend a show. That we know of.

In most of Canada, the smell of snow mould is so last month and the grass is green. Which for music lovers mean the start of festival season. At Coachella last month, one person noted that any signs of financial worries were lost somewhere in the crowd. For music lovers and road trippers alike, check out some of these festivals worth playing hooky for. _Jennifer King

North by Northeast (NXNE)
June 17-21 2009 / Toronto
Similar to Austin’s SXSW, NXNE spans over five days in June at various locations throughout Toronto’s club district. In its 15th year, the festival lends a playing ground to over 500 artists, both national and international, as well as hosts a film festival, featuring a handful of music-related films for the cinematic savvy. Performers include Jason Collett, Apostle of Hustle and Black Lips. Don’t miss the screening of the documentary about Wilco, Ashes of American Flags.

Québec City’s Summer Festival
July 9 – 19
You don’t have to like Kiss to want to go see them in concert. So if you’re in Quebec City, the (plainly named) Quebec City’s Summer Festival has Kiss, Beirut, King Sunny Ade and Malajube. Maybe be judicious about sick days with this 10-day event.

Collingwood Elvis Festival
July 23-26, 2009 / Collingwood, Ontario
For those music lovers who have a hunka hunka burnin’ urge for all Elvis, all of the time (or at least for four days). This festival comes complete with a karaoke pub crawl, the latest in Elvis merchandise, and, naturally, a parade. C’mon, you know you want to go. (more…)

Music@Work: Streaming Concerts

Monday, March 16th, 2009
by Craille Maguire Gillies

The meagre selections in my iTunes library have left me with only a fraction of the albums I have on my home computer.

Shameful revelation: How much Dave Matthews Band can you listen to during the work day? Unless I download music on company time – not cool – I’m left with only the ambient noise of the photocopier and stamp machine as a work-day soundtrack.

The solution: I’ve long been a fan of NPR, or National Public Radio (I’ve also been accused of being “little old lady-ish,” but that’s another blog post.) Like CBC Radio, NPR has its share of cloying hosts, but I go for gold and download podcasts for Fresh Air, for its great interviews, and All Songs Considered, for its wide array of new music. Fresh Air is something I listen to while I’m jogging, and the commentary in All Songs Considered was a distracting while I’m working on stories. Looking for something a bit more ambient, I started streaming concerts and songs on NPR’s handy little audio player, which you can find by clicking the “+ to playlist” option on a particular story or program. The player lets you customize your playlist song-by-song, story-by-story or with entire programs. The player remembers your playlist— even if you close your browser. I listen to everything from live gigs by Neko Case (solo, New Pornographers) to songs by the excellent film composer Gustavo Santaolalla (The Motorcycle Diaries; Babel). Santaolalla is great for writing. Pretty, but not saccharine and not obtrusive.

Also: It would be remiss not to give kudos to CBC. Anyone with a penchant for big C Canadian music will like the diverse, cutting-edge offerings at CBC Radio 3.

One Day in the Life of Music@Work

Wednesday, February 18th, 2009
by uladmin

In the Mar/Apr issue of unlimited, which is going to hit stores and mailboxes soon, we debut a new feature in the review section: music@work. In that space we will be recommending music for you to listen to while you plow through your work day. The idea comes from a place close to home: the Venture offices are a semi-openconcept,  so if you walk down the hallways you will see half a dozen or more people in headphones; sound tracking their work life in way that allows them to block out the sound of all the others in our shared space and still concentrate. So it’s important that a music@work pick be both a great headphone record, and one that you can fall in and out of throughout the day (there are always interruptions). So, in that spirit, what follows is a  stab at a full day’s music line-up, built for you to navigate through the working day.

1. (Early morning).  Miles Davis – Kind of Blue.  An album so perfect, and so perfectly suited to listening to while you start work that it seems silly to try and explain it with words: a good morning record, with no lyrics to distract while you comb through your inbox and plot out how to spend your day. Oh, and John Coltrane plays the sax on the record. What else do you need to know? (Run Time – 55:24) 

2. (Mid Morning – Early Afternoon).The WrensSecaucus/The Meadowlands  Though they have been around for 20 years, the Wrens have only produced  two full length albums since 1996. But it’s  cool that you can listen to the two of them – released 7 years apart – in one morning/afternoon and actually hear their entire body of work in one setting.  Will take you through the early morning doldrums and fire you up enough to get some real stuff done before, during and after lunch. (Run Time – Secaucus: 54:28 / The Meadowlands: 1:02.45) 

3. (Early Afternoon). Nirvana – MTV Unplugged.  I used to think that the dissonance and angular scratchy guitars of their first releases were what made Nirvana so great. But now, as time has passed, I see this album as the perfect way to listen to the great songs of the band without having to worry about the damage done to your ears – or to your co-workers ability to concentrate. As the day shifts into the afternoon, it will keep you thinking of new ways to look at things, and how to communicate complicated messages in more palatable forms. (Run Time – 53:51) 

4. (Late Afternoon). Bob Dylan – Time Out of Mind. The first of Dylan’s mighty trilogy of albums where he meditates on mortality and growing old. Time Out of Mind is exactly the kind of record that sounds best on headphones and does not need to be heard all in one sitting to reward the listener. Dylan’s voice is at its best: plaintive and reassuring.  The perfect late afternoon record when your mind begins to wonder out your door, down the hallway and away from your job. Wrestle your concentration back with this soothing  album that has so much gravitas within, you can borrow some to get your head back in the right space to close your day in style. (Run Time – 1:12:44) 

5. (Late Afternoon – End of Day). GZA/Genius – Liquid Swords. By now you are thinking at least as much about going home as you are about finishing your day with a bang. Listening to the GZA’s first solo release, and with apologies to Ghostface, maybe the best solo album from any of the Wu-Tang Clan, will remind you to finish up strong, and then send you bouncing out the door to resume your non-working life. From the beautifully weird opening (“My father was the greatest Samurai in the empire…”) to the Method Man’s star turn in the joyful and cocky “Shadowboxin’” this record forms the perfect book end to Kind of Blue, and your day. Here the words are the stars, with the RZA’s beats forming the kind of backing that makes the transition from work to life easier to find and navigate. This is how you bounce. (Run Time – 55:07)

Do you want to curate a day’s music@work for us? If you are interested, holla at your boy: kbruyneel@unlimitedmagazine.com