Archive for November, 2007

Nov 24 2007

Opening for Sara

Published by adrian_nye under Thoughts

Well, it’s thanksgiving and I’m thankful, among many other blessings, for the opportunity to open for Sara Hickman last weekend.My first real solo gig turned out to be pretty fun, not too stressful, and eye opening in some ways.

Adrian squinting with Sara

A couple things made me nervous in the weeks prior to the show.  One was the $15 cover.  I felt like for that kind of money, the audience would be expecting a lot.  One of my friends told me to think of it as $3 for you, $12 for Sara, and that helped!  (Also, ¼ of the cover charge went to HAMM, a homeless charity.)  The other thing that worried me was my voice, which has been hurting.  I practiced at most 30 minutes a day and I even decided to cut down on talking to save my voice, because I was afraid of it breaking down in the middle of my show.

But at the actual event I wasn’t really nervous.  John and Sara seemed confident in me which helped.  Also there were fewer people than I expected, maybe about 35, including about 7 friends who drove down from Austin. The show went well, people told me they enjoyed my set.  I even got them chuckling a couple times between songs.  The homemade cookies they serve there at the Walden are really awesome!

I really appreciate the effort my friends from Austin and San Antonio made to come out.

I wonder why I’m not more nervous performing, since when I was younger I had terrible stage fright, even when standing up to ask a question in front of people.  I once taught a computer class to a crowd of about 300, and to calm myself down I tried drinking a beer, at 8 am!  I was still nervous.

I guess I feel I have more to offer now, because of all the time I spent writing and preparing.  I try to let the songs speak for themselves and get out of the way.  I also learned from Freebo, a great bass player who played with Bonnie Raitt, to stay in the present, don’t think about what’s about to happen or the mistake you just made.  And remember that you and the audience are all in it together.  And he said you’ll only be 80% as good as you are in practice.  I played a lot of open mics to be ready. 

Performing is like juggling.  Playing the guitar, remembering the words, and singing, those are the basics and hard enough.  Whenever you have that under control, you can put a little thought into remembering the little singing tricks that make things sound better or more understandable, moving at the right moments, and keeping eye contact.  I’ve gotten much better at least at eye contact.   When juggling 3 balls gets easy, try 4, or 5.   But when you drop them, it’s all at once, not just the last one!

What was eye opening about the show was that Sara is well known in the folk/acoustic circuit and yet the turnout was fairly small.  She made some money, but if you consider all the benefits she does, and that she can’t perform 5 days a week, it’s tough to make a decent living.  It was also eye opening to watch her work her magic on the crowd, wake them up and get them into it.  I love her commitment to the causes she works into her music and shows, and I hope to do likewise.  I wish I could be as infectious a spirit as she is, but that’s just not me.

I’m learning a great new song by Kathy Hart, someone I met at a songwriting retreat last summer.  Hope to have it ready for the show on Dec. 1.  Hope to see you there!

Adrian

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Nov 01 2007

Welcome to my world

Published by adrian_nye under Thoughts

Hmmm, I wonder, is the word Musing related to the word Music?
There’s something in common in the feeling sometimes.

Well, welcome to my brand new website.  I hope it gives you a good window into my music.

This website is part of my attempt to become a real musician.  You have to have a website and CDs to be a musician, right?

Why do I want to be a real musician?  It isn’t to make money.  That seems so far down the road.  First of all I know I don’t sing that well.  I bet I can improve but I’m unlikely to ever be Chris Isaak.  Second, at least here in Austin, there are a lot of musicians who are extremely good playing for free. They travel to make money.  I’m not even sure I want to do that.  I’ve spent so much time travelling for kayaking, I’d rather just stay here at the moment.

One reason I want to be a real musician is I like my songs, and I want them to be heard. I get enjoyment out of them and I think others will too.  I know that I have to record them well and get out and play them.  Once I do that, other musicians may take a liking to my songs and perform them.

That has already happened once and it is a cool feeling.  I’ve been going to a song circle sporadically for a couple years, the Second Sunday Song Circle at Al and Cea Evans’ house.  Cea likes my song Wind River, and she’s learned it and plays it.  That’s no small task, it’s a  ong song!  I had a hard time learning it!

Another reason I want to be a real musician is that I want to have the comradeship and respect of other skilled musicians.  Songwriting is a solitary game, and I’d like to have more interaction with others, perhaps have more collaborators, co-writers, perform in duos with good singers etc.  I feel to do that, I need to establish myself a bit.

Right now I’m preparing for the gig opening for Sara Hickman.  My main problem is that my throat is sore and I can’t practice as much I would like.  I’ve had this voice problem on and off for more than a year now and still haven’t found exactly what’s going on and what to do about it.

It’s funny, but the more I should be doing other things (like practicing), the more inspired I seem to be with songwriting.  I’m still fine-tuning the two newest songs I’ll be performing in 2 weeks. I think I’ve finally got them over the hill from good to very good.

Adrian

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