Rayman Posted Saturday at 12:57 Posted Saturday at 12:57 I do it all for us, but unless there’s a joke to be had, usually at the expense of someone in the audience, I keep it to a minimum. I think it’s important to have a bit of chat between songs… but the big no no as far as I’m concerned, is introducing individual bands members. Literally nobody cares. Quote
Mickeyboro Posted Saturday at 13:56 Author Posted Saturday at 13:56 58 minutes ago, Rayman said: the big no no as far as I’m concerned, is introducing individual bands members. Literally nobody cares. I think in non-club/pub venues people like to show appreciation and identify with the band. Important if you have a lineup like ours thats ever changing. 2 Quote
BassTool Posted Saturday at 14:19 Posted Saturday at 14:19 1 hour ago, Rayman said: … but the big no no as far as I’m concerned, is introducing individual bands members. Literally nobody cares. We do it over the end music of the last song, and we've always had a great response for each individual band member. We find that the audience love to show their appreciation for each musician after watching the band play for two hours. 7 Quote
tauzero Posted Saturday at 14:31 Posted Saturday at 14:31 1 hour ago, Rayman said: but the big no no as far as I’m concerned, is introducing individual bands members. Literally nobody cares. We do it (both bands, and the previous band too). Not a huge introduction, just "X on drums, Y on guitar, Ʈ on bass, and I'm Z" while playing the main riff of whatever song it is we're doing. 3 Quote
ricksterphil Posted Saturday at 16:07 Posted Saturday at 16:07 1 hour ago, BassTool said: We do it over the end music of the last song, and we've always had a great response for each individual band member. We find that the audience love to show their appreciation for each musician after watching the band play for two hours. We do the intros somewhere in the 2nd set and generally the audience like it. 2 Quote
NoRhino Posted Saturday at 16:14 Posted Saturday at 16:14 There are lots of great ideas in this topic and I'll nick a few of them. My tuppenceworth is never ever mumble or speak too quietly. Always project and sound confident. It's not a private conversation. 3 Quote
Stub Mandrel Posted Saturday at 16:58 Posted Saturday at 16:58 3 hours ago, Rayman said: but the big no no as far as I’m concerned, is introducing individual bands members. Literally nobody cares. Never found that, audiences always seem to appreciate the chance to show appreciation for the individuals. 4 Quote
Jackroadkill Posted Sunday at 12:20 Posted Sunday at 12:20 In my last band the singer used to introduce me as "the long-haired, soap-dodging, sandal-wearing friend of Jesus on the bass", and despite none of it actually being true it always got a laugh. 3 Quote
Mickeyboro Posted Monday at 08:57 Author Posted Monday at 08:57 20 hours ago, Jackroadkill said: In my last band the singer used to introduce me as "the long-haired, soap-dodging, sandal-wearing friend of Jesus on the bass", and despite none of it actually being true it always got a laugh. Pretty sure its killed the thread too! 😂 Maybe we all fear being described thus… 1 Quote
Wombat Posted Monday at 09:11 Posted Monday at 09:11 That’s gotta be pretty accurate for the average bass player 😂. 2 Quote
Woodinblack Posted Monday at 10:04 Posted Monday at 10:04 On 10/10/2025 at 22:08, Norris said: We've never had a "set" list, more a menu really. Funnily enough it's written on the back of a cereal box Edit: Oh, and I'd better explain that the lady was taking a photo of the "Kipper" sticker on the drum head - she used to follow the band in which the guitarist and drummer played, in the 70s. She used to follow a band in the 70s? Shes looking good on it for her late 60s/70s! 1 Quote
Woodinblack Posted Monday at 10:55 Posted Monday at 10:55 Our singer announces lots of things, who we are, near the beginning and near the end, and where we are from, which as most of our gigs are within 5 minutes is sometimes unnecessay 'we have travelled all the way down the A37 to be here!' (yes, its about 1.5 miles of the a37), he announces songs, but normally by the wrong person, and sometimes the wrong song. He does quite a lot of chatting when something comes up. Sometimes announces the drummer as everyone locally knows him Quote
Supernaut Posted Monday at 12:48 Posted Monday at 12:48 On 25/09/2025 at 16:43, Mickeyboro said: How important/divisive/controversial is stage patter to your band? Do those without microphones comment on those with? Do you share the duties or is it solely the frontperson? Have any disputes resulted from comments made? Were/how were they resolved? I seem to have inherited the between-song duties for my band, but I suspect trouble is brewing…. 😈 Need perspective. Thanks If there is more than ten seconds of silence between songs, you're not doing it right. I don't care about your memories! Quote
MacDaddy Posted Monday at 16:51 Posted Monday at 16:51 On 11/10/2025 at 13:57, Rayman said: but the big no no as far as I’m concerned, is introducing individual bands members. Literally nobody cares. We always get a bit cheer when we do it. Maybe it's just that no-one cares about you? 😜 2 Quote
Fionn Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago In 8 years of touring we never said a single word to the audience that wasn’t integral to the music/ performance. Zero patter since day one Quote
Rich Posted 44 minutes ago Posted 44 minutes ago On 09/10/2025 at 23:54, Stub Mandrel said: Last nightwe got together and spent two hours watching the 49-minute video of the originals band's first gig and critiquing everything from the lighting, what we wore, where we stood to what we played right and wrong and how we can tighten up dome of the arrangements. This is a great idea, and more bands need to do this. Quote
Woodinblack Posted 42 minutes ago Posted 42 minutes ago 1 minute ago, Rich said: This is a great idea, and more bands need to do this. I would love to be in a group where we could do this Quote
Woodinblack Posted 39 minutes ago Posted 39 minutes ago 34 minutes ago, Fionn said: Zero patter since day one Yeh, can work but then you get groups like Fields of the Nephilim, great stage asthetic, kind of boring live because a lack of interaction. I mean you don't have to get to the Steven 'shut up steve and get on with the song' Wilsons in depth discussions about things, but some sort of acknowledgement there are other people in the room can go well! 1 Quote
TimR Posted 16 minutes ago Posted 16 minutes ago 26 minutes ago, Rich said: This is a great idea, and more bands need to do this. Every band should be recording and critiquing arrangements. Preferably before moving on to learning the next tune. Quote
Stub Mandrel Posted 12 minutes ago Posted 12 minutes ago 32 minutes ago, Rich said: This is a great idea, and more bands need to do this. With better spelling, I hope. 1 Quote
Stub Mandrel Posted 11 minutes ago Posted 11 minutes ago 5 minutes ago, TimR said: Every band should be recording and critiquing arrangements. Preferably before moving on to learning the next tune. We work a few songs in parallel... otherwise it would take forever. 1 Quote
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