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Danny P

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Posts posted by Danny P

  1. 19 hours ago, dudewheresmybass said:

    I've been full time for 20 years now - there have been fallow times, but I did whatever I was able to do - Van driving, kitchen fitters' labourer, I even did some COVID testing in schools.

    Now my teaching is becoming more and more of my income, I find that I can cover pretty much the whole year.

    Teaching wise, it's taken me a few years, but I found myself working with the child of a local music coordinator, which has opened many many doors for me.

    My schedule is very nicely filled, with plenty of space available for teaching, learning, live and recording work.

     

    That sounds like the dream. Maybe it's time to get a bit more creative with my approach to getting into teaching. Do you teach bass exclusively btw, or another instrument as well?

    • Like 1
  2. 2 minutes ago, casapete said:

    Have you checked all the Facebook pages dedicated to musicians wanted / available? There seem to be

    constant ads on these for deps wanted / available throughout the UK. 

     

    Yeah I had a little phase of plugging myself on those ads but nothing ever materialised. And the pantos sound a bit out of my league tbh. Haven't done any reading in about fifteen years so would be totally lost! Thanks for the tips though. I guess it can't hurt to check out more dep pages on Facebook again. 

  3. 16 hours ago, JapanAxe said:

    I don’t make my living from music but I actively promote myself as a dep that bands can call on in an emergency. This has led to everything from well-paid wedding gigs to one-offs with tribute bands. Along the way I have found some bands who in future will just receive a polite ‘Sorry I’m not available’, and some pubs whose doors I hope never to darken again. Oh, and the occasional space cadet fruit loop.

     

    I used to get asked to dep all the time but my function band was so busy that I was never free, and eventually people stopped asking. Definitely not a situation to complain about, but does unfortunately put depping out of the picture a bit. Plus, the bands I'd be depping for are in the same situation as me anyway i.e. no gigs in the winter. Any they do get would presumably not require any deps. I love your courteous and diplomatic way about talking about some of the chocolate starfish you've played with/for though!

  4. 17 hours ago, Doddy said:

    What other gigs do you usually do besides your function band?

     

    There is plenty of work around over the christmas period with the  christmas party scene or if you can land a panto. Other than that, most of the regular pub, club, and restaurant style gigs are still happening, so if you've got a good repertoire and you're a half decent reader you should be able to find work.  

     

    Over the years I've found that pub gigs aren't really worth the time. They require the same amount of work as a function but pay a fraction of the money. Never done a panto but everyone seems to be mentioning them so might look into it as long as they don't require lots of sight-reading. Tbh though, I don't do any gigs besides functions these days. Was saving for a house for ages, which has just finally happened, so might try to get an originals band together at some point, but yeah it's sadly just functions for me! Great for the money:time ratio, bad for creative fulfilment! 

  5. 17 hours ago, greavesbass said:

    As a cruiser your clearly a top flight reader...how about then the West End? Go knock on doors, agencys? Knew a guy a while back who did the same major panto year in year out...as well as other shows. I think you have to put it about so to speak. Good luck.

     

    I'd love to pretend I'm a great reader but the truth is I only ever got good enough at it to get the degree and then never used it again so it'd be like learning it from scratch now. When I did ships I played in the party bands which are basically just function bands with huge repertoires. Got pretty good at chord charts when prepping hundreds of songs, but never had to read a single dot in all the time I was floating!

     

    But... you're now the third of fourth person to mention pantos. So weird to me as they've never even been on the radar for me! Think I've got some Googling to do...

  6. 17 hours ago, casapete said:

    In my previous band, we played functions all through the year. Christmas gigs started end of 

    November and ran into January! We used to play at a local hotel for all their Christmas parties,

    often maybe up to 20 nights in December. November and February were probably our leanest times,

    (as you say few weddings etc) but company events sometimes turned up along with the 

    odd birthday / retirement party etc. We usually made enough to see us through the quiet

    times, but some of the band did teach to supplement this. I started playing with a friend 

    in an acoustic duo at this time, so any gigs we fitted in always helped out. Function work

    then (90’s / 2000’s) did generally seem more plentiful than now, and a lot of bands round

    here have struggled - most of them semi pro though so not their primary income source.

     

    With my current band, we play mainly theatres. December is always out for us due to the 

    panto season, likewise summer holiday period when not so many punters around. Again,

    we do okay for the rest of the year, but some band members have side gigs they fit in

    around our schedule - our violinist runs a string trio doing weddings, and our keys player

    does deps with other bands. I still do gigs with my acoustic duo, and the occasional 

    dep with pub bands. Not a lot of dosh but it all adds up. 

     

    Another mention of panto season. That's fascinating to me as I've never done any panto or even heard of any friends doing any. I feel like I'm hearing about a parallel universe that just springs up during December! Are pantos very much like theatre pit work with huge slabs of dots to read and scarily brief prep times? Or are they more relaxed than that and provide opportunities to learn the material in advance? Definitely interested in this avenue. Enough of those could provide the nuts I need to squirrel away for Jan and Feb. So how do people get into doing pantos? 

  7. 17 hours ago, NHM said:

    If you live in a city with a Uni and/or Conservatoire, approach the Music dept for teaching work.  Most teaching is done during the winter months (Oct-April), it's fairly well paid, pensioned, and can be a stimulating environment to be in. If you can get your foot in the door and do a good job often one thing leads to another.

     

    Tbh although my theory knowledge is reasonable, I only play bass so view the world of music through that limited lens. I'd probably be a bit lost teaching more harmonically complete material, although it would be a kick up the derrière to brush up on things. Thanks for the tip. I'd probably be a bit out of my depth, but I'll think about it. My perfect teaching situation would be one-on-one bass lessons. I'd be able to walk into that room feeling confident and enthusiastic and I think I'd be great at it. Just have no idea how to make it happen!

    • Like 1
  8. 18 hours ago, Linus27 said:

    So just thinking outside of the box as suggested, before I signed my record deal, I needed work for a few months. I signed up to a catering agency who would offer me work each week. The money was half decent and it was actually really good fun. One week I'd work in a fancy kitchen, washing up or loading machines, helping with food prep, then the following week working in the local council making sandwiches and serving, then the week after in an old peoples home helping out the chef with everything and anything and then the week after helping in the kitchen of the local school. Every time I get fed a meal so anything from a school meal to a fancy posh meal and I got to meet loads of lovely people who were super interested in my music etc. The money was half decent as well and I could pick and choose when I wanted to work. 

     

    Like it. Yeah it doesn't necessarily have to be music. Just something I don't hate, that pays well enough, and doesn't require me to get shouted at or bossed around. Ideally it'd be reasonably flexible too. What you're suggesting actually seems like it'd tick those boxes. It's only for the leaner months anyway. Gonna look into it, thanks!

    • Like 1
  9. 15 minutes ago, Burns-bass said:

    Grab a coffee and think outside the box. Consider your impressive experience and see if you could apply it in different ways.

     

    You're a professional musician, which has given you loads of skills:

    • You could work with a music charity (which I do sometimes). In Bristol, where I live, there are sites dedicated to youth work, and I regularly see opportunities. It's not amazing pay, but it's better than nothing.
    • You could move out of just bass, and do some tech work. I'm useless, and I did some work with a PA company. Much was lugging stuff and cable running, but my music knowledge helped.
    • You may not want to go down this route, but I know a successful function band player who became a booker for other bands. He works with venues and arranges for high-quality bands to come in, and he takes a fee.  
    • If you're a good writer, you can apply to some magazines and websites and see if they need expert blogs written. Sounds mad, but this is how I got started (42group.co.uk is what I do now). OK, it was a long time ago, but you never know.

     

    Some solid outside-the-box suggestions there, thanks. I'll mull them over and see if any are workable. None are quite the magic bullet I'm hoping drops in my lap but they're still decent ideas! 

    • Like 1
  10. 7 minutes ago, NancyJohnson said:

    I have a mate who says his NFI for December and New Year gigs (10+) swells his coffers significantly until the next big hit which is Burns Night weekenders.  

     

    What about registering interest with local studios (session rates) or just joining another working band?

     

    Dependent on how you may be from a numeracy basis, you could contact doing office work outside of music three days a week.   

    Weird, in all my years doing functions I've never had a Burn's Night gig. Is your friend based in Scotland? 

     

    We get a few Christmas office party gigs each year which helps for December, but November, January, and February are always dead. We're a well-paid and very in-demand and regularly-booked function band for March-October, so if we don't get any gigs in the winter then it leads me to believe that functions in the winter just don't really exist in the numbers necessary to fund a normal life. 

    • Like 1
  11. Thanks for the suggestion but I probably should have explained that I stopped doing them because the contracts are either short and badly paid or long and well-paid, but I don't want to be away for long periods as I'm pretty settled down now. So cruises are pretty much off the table for me. 

     

    Just kind of hoping someone might suggest something I hadn't thought of. Long shot but may as well ask!

    • Like 2
  12. Did a degree in music, then played on cruise ships for a few years, then came back and have been doing the function thing for about ten years now. 

     

    The problem with functions is that they're 95% weddings and people don't get married in the winter. I used to just save up during the summer to basically stash some nuts for the winter, but I got tired of struggling for those four months or so, so I started doing Deliveroo on the side, which I'm positively bored of and don't wanna do this year. 

     

    How are you full-timers getting through the winter? I need ideas. I'd happily teach but demand for bass lessons seems so low that I've never figured how to get students. 

     

    What's your go-to? Teaching? Ships? Hotel gigs? Overseas residencies? Weekday hotel dinner jazz? Trade crypto? Happy-ending massages? Retrain in IT?

     

    There are no wrong answers. Hit me...

  13. On 13/03/2023 at 08:33, HMX said:

     

    Yeah, looking for an extra bedroom ideally so we can keep our home office 😅 Where are you looking? Worthing is a possibility for us.

    Yeah Worthing's on our radar too. Anything within about a 30 minute drive of Brighton. Fingers crossed we both get accepted for mortgages given the total flustercluck the government's made of everything!

     

    Anyway, congrats on the sale, hopefully. Gutted it's to someone else but hey ho!

  14. On 10/03/2023 at 11:14, HMX said:

    Ah, man – that's unfortunate but I totally understand. We're trying to move house this year too! Crazy, crazy prices around here, right? Good luck with the search!


    Definitely can’t afford Brighton, that’s for sure! We’ll probably end up about a 30-60 minute drive from here, which is cool. And then I can resume spending my money on things I want like fretless Jazz basses 😄

     

    You moving to scale up for the youngling? 

  15. 1 hour ago, dutchwife said:

    Keep coming back to this but unfortunately half a world away. Lovely playing on a lovely sounding bass Dan, top notch. 

    Stupid world, being in the way! 
     

    I’m really surprised a Roscoe Century priced at a grand isn’t selling. Wherever you are in the world, I hope the economy is doing better for people than ours is in the UK! Slow clap, British government, slow clap…

  16. On 15/11/2022 at 09:34, nobodysprefect said:

    As TAFKAV -- the addict formerly known as Ville -- I'll say that I was never disappointed by a Roscoe bass, and I think I had something like 5-7 of those. The basic design and dimensions are solid and super ergonomical, the tone and attack envelope are supremely real-world-worthy. The only thing you might not get, depending on the woods, is a tone that's very pretty when you're making vids for YouTube. You know the tone. Sparkly highs, even, long envelope and the bottom is like a big foam mattress or a sponge cake. And then you get buried by 1 guitar before the amp is on and just the left half of a drum set and God help you if there's a keyboardist. I like to call that tone the 'small, BIG tone'. 

     

    No, every single Roscoe I've played or heard samples of has both a satisfying girth to give authority and the penetrating thick mids with highs that rub you just right with a good timing of the in-out-curve of the attack that pounds through even thick mixes and leaves you very satisfied! ❤️

    Oh, and as someone who's had sixes with scales from 33,5" to 36", the Century body design does an absolutely stellar job of making the 35" feel like 34". Which you usually wouldn't want to handle an inch less, but in this one case, not feeling every inch is often a plus.


    Yeah I’ve never felt like it’s too long. Whatever they’re doing, I’ve compared it to Dingwalls and others and Roscoe really do have the best B-strings in the business. Even Dingwall’s fanned fret system can’t come close. 
     

    And that high-C is amazing for doing little gospel-style pops here and there that poke right through the mix. 
     

    I can’t imagine this is the last Roscoe I’ll ever have, of the last 6er. I’m gonna miss it but it’s one-in-one-out at the moment and I recently succumbed to the GAS!

  17. Wow what a bargain. Can't believe this hasn't sold since July. If I'd seen this a month ago I definitely would have taken this off your hands but I bought a new Jazz without checking on here first. Anyway, good luck with the sale!

    • Like 1
  18. 23 hours ago, CookPassBabtridge said:


    Cheers! I’ve gone for a purple SKB 4 string. Spanish cedar, quilt maple top. Ebony fretboard. I follow Keith on Instagram and saw a purple quilt maple body pop up on his feed the other day - for a second I got excited and thought it was mine as it’s quite a specific spec but alas, no 😂

     

    Ooh quilted maple. That's gonna be gorgeous! Hope it doesn't take too long to get to you!

    • Thanks 1
  19. 23 hours ago, bigthumb said:

    Two too many strings for me I'm afraid. I'd love a second Roscoe as they're so darn good and this is a great price for one. Pity my limited talent is limited to 4 strings only! 

     

    To each their own! For me, I actually went from a 4 to a 5 to a 6 then, after about 5 years, back to a 4 and I have to say it was much harder losing two strings than gaining two strings! With 6ers you kind of play across the fretboard a lot instead of up it. 

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