Wednesday, September 30, 2020

Booking Agent and Tour Manager

In our last class, we looked at the role of music promoter.
The roles we are looking at today are:

Booking Agent
Tour Manager (for music, not tourism!)


BBC Introducing roles clips

Booking agent resource


You need to consider the following when researching these roles:

What are their main duties?
Who do they work with?
What skills do they need to do their job well?
What previous experience or qualifications might they have?
How much and how do they get paid?

Good places to find this information will be via my blog using websites such as BBC Introducing (Advice) and the Musicians' Union.

ACTIVITY:
In pairs, prepare for a meeting between Booking Agent and Tour Manager. You will need to decide who needs to know what information from the other and what action you will need to take to ensure that the artist's tour can go well.

You need to submit your research copy and paste it into your google document (once for each role) and then add in your information.  Remember to write everything in your own words and list where you found your information at the end.

ROLE:
BOOKING AGENT
What do they actually do all day?

Who would they work with directly and how?

What are their main areas of responsibility?

What skills and characteristics do they need to do their job well and why?

Would you like to do this job and why? What would be enjoyable? What would be difficult?


ROLE:
TOUR MANAGER
What do they actually do all day?

Who would they work with directly and how?

What are their main areas of responsibility?

What skills and characteristics do they need to do their job well and why?

Would you like to do this job and why? What would be enjoyable? What would be difficult?

Examples:
Coda booking agency
Tour Managers
DHP promoters



Live Performance - Any Questions? Any Answers?

A couple of years ago, a class of students asked some questions about working in live performance. 




These were the answers they received:

Val Gwyther - Tour Manager
Well, after some thought, here is my thruppence ha'p'ny. I did this interview with the Guardian about 7 years ago: http://www.theguardian.com/music/2007/apr/13/popandrock.genderI was discussing being a female roadie or TM. Things have moved on considerably more from then even & I have met a lot more female drivers & TMs. Richard Nowell Sound Services (RNSS) fielded the first entirely female only sound crew back in the 70s. The roles were Roadies, Stage Technicians, monitor & FOH engineers. I did my work experience there in 2007. He says he prefers women in crews as they look after the gear well! Lol i.e. On the load out, they're not hurling the gear in the back of the truck due to 'high testosterone levels' - his words not mine. But even in his crews the ratio is still about 6:1 male to female. There's no lack of opportunity if your female, if you're a gear nerd, you'll fit right in! If you refer to everything by its product serial number, then you'll get on just fine. E.g. The new X32 is going to make the overpriced LS9s obsolete! Or should we try a 414 or a U87 etc? It's not a glamorous job though, long tedious hours, early starts/load ins & last to leave exhausted at 1am. Venue house sound engineer is a much easier job because you don't have to build the PA every show of course. So when i was at the Islington Academy, i only had to get there for 1 or 2pm to prep the stage & EQ the monitors before the band got there at 3. I prefer TMing on the road of course, but once again, the bigger the band, the more pressure & longer hours. The sliding scale for money is around the £200/£250+ a day mark if you're working for a signed/profitable band. So that's pretty good. Idiots work for less, but it's a 24/7 job & pro rata that's only about £10 an hour! Anyway, this year i've worked for TMs for The Pogues, the Specials, stone roses, Killing Joke, madness, Björk, modestep, Kaiser Chiefs, Professor Green, Kraftwerk & many more & out of all of that there was just a female TM for The Specials & Pogues at the time. I also know New Model Army's TM Dawn. So I guess the ratio is maybe about 10 or more to 1 from my experience, though that's going up. The reason being that TMing a big band is more like full-on production management & you may or may not know? But production management in theUK festival scene is completely dominated by women. Go figure? Obviously TMing for smaller bands is more about driving & sound engineering, & the weird fact is, it's easy to get into it if you own a van. If you are a good sound engineer that is less important for getting the work but obviously much appreciated & respected! Get a van. That's my top tip for becoming a TM!



Steve Gurney - TM & FoH Engineer (Uncle Acid & The Deadbeats, The Subways, Cathedral)
Approximately how many days in the year would an average tour manager work?
Average of 200 days a year is good. Really all depends on the band / bands you are working with ……… if it’s a world album tour the cycle of work could last 18 months long with two or three weeks off here or there. If the record is selling the tours are often extended.
What happens if the tour manager doesn’t show up?
Somebody else would have to step up to the plate. Part of the TM job is to have every scenario covered and if you knew  you couldn’t attend you would have somebody organised to step in and cover.
What happens when everything goes wrong with a tour manager?
The Tour Manager would be sacked and another brought in asap.
What happens if the TM doesn’t do their job?
The show would suffer drastically. Everything depends on planning in advance. Travel , parking for trucks / busses ,  Load in times , sound check  time , door time , stage time , hotel bookings , catering etc  If none of these are organised in advance then the day would be a shambles.
How would you get in touch with [gain contacts for] people with these roles?  Would it be easier if you were signed?
Once a band is signed they normally have an agent and management. These people tend to be in contact with various tour managers with various levels of experience.
What is a TM’s rate?
All depends on your experience and the level the band work at. If it’s a pub gig and the band have no money you may work for free hoping that one day they may play arenas and reward you handsomely with time.
What is the relationship between a FoH engineer and TM?
It’s an important one as the F.O.H engineer often controls the sound check times which is oh so important in having a smooth running show. As a tour manager you do not want a sound engineer who often runs late and checks up until door time. 
How many women are TMs?
30% and rising

Kunal Singhal- Promoter (Chaos Theory)
How many women are tour managers?
I've met lots. As long as you're very organised it doesn't matter what gender you are.

What's the relationship between the FOH engineer and tour manager?
The engineer knows the acoustics of the venue they work at and, if they're good at their job, will do their best to get the sound that the band want in the venue. The tour manager would know exactly what the band that they're looking after wants to sound like, so will advise the sound engineer as to what they need. The sound engineer will use their knowledge of the venue's equipment and acoustics to get the results that the band are after.

How would you get in touch with all of the people who work in these roles? Would it be easier if you signed?
It's incredibly easy to get in touch with people these days. As long as they have a website, email and phone number, you can send your information and requests to anyone. They can let you know if there's someone else you should be speaking to instead of them. You don't need a label to do that.

What percentage does a promoter get?
Every promoter has different ways of working, so just make sure you get all of the terms and conditions in writing in advance and make sure that you're happy with with them. Some promoters have a fee, some take a percentage, it really depends on a lot of variables. As long as you keep an open conversation with them you should be able to get all of the information that you need. I vary the percentage I get paid depending on the costs of each concert and how many bands and team members there are to pay.

What does a booking agent do?
They organise all of the concerts on a band's tour, dealing with all the different promoters, venues and organisers for each one. They make sure that the band gets all of the tour dates filled and they get everything that they need (being paid enough, accommodation, food, drinks etc). They will usually send a contract over to the organisers once they've agreed on all of the terms.

What would happen if a booking agent doesn't show up on tour?
I've worked with several booking agents who can't always make every gig on the tour. That's never a problem, providing that they have made all of the arrangements with the promoter and organisers in advance. The tour manager usually follows the band around on tour to every gig and makes sure that the band's needs are met.

I would like to know the experience of a promoter.
The promoter is the one who will make sure that as many people as possible know about the event. This means selling tickets and advertising them in every way that they can think of. The usual ways are getting posters and flyers made and getting them out all over the city/country of the event, making online events on social media sites like Facebook, listing the event in all the websites which show music events or general things to do, contacting the media and trying to get newspaper, radio and TV coverage of the concert beforehand. They will organise competitions offering free tickets and merchandise to help promote the gig. They may spend a lot of money on advertising if they're sure that it will help to sell the tickets. Sometimes they get very creative. I once hid download codes for a band's songs around the area of the concert a month before, for people to find. For smaller concerts and some large-scale ones, the promoter is often the organiser of the event as well.

What happens when one of these people is not going to do his/her job?
Most people in the creative industries are paid for each project they do, whether it's organising a tour, playing a concert, making up the artwork etc. There are no salaries. If someone didn't do what they had promised to do, then they would not be asked to work with that group of people again. If they kept doing it, they'd get a bad reputation and wouldn't be asked to work again with many people, which means that they wouldn't get paid. Your reputation is your money, so be honest, treat people with respect and do what you say you are going to do.



Tuesday, September 29, 2020

Music Promoter

BBC Introducing industry roles clip -What are the roles in the music industry

The role of a music promoter is primarily to put on and promote live shows. The scale of these varies dramatically - you could book an acoustic solo act to play in a local cafe, put on a monthly local bands night in the upstairs room of a bar, run shows booking national acts at various venues or work for  a large promotion company booking arena shows for major international touring acts.


Here is a link to an article about working as a promoter: https://www.independent.co.uk/student/career-planning/getting-job/i-want-your-job-music-promoter-880947.html

Who would a promoter work with directly?

How do they earn a living?

What skills would they need to have?

TASK:

Please create a google doc and call it 'Performance Roles'. Copy this table and paste it into your doc. Please complete the table for Music Promoter and keep in in your drive as we will be adding to it tomorrow.


ROLE:
MUSIC PROMOTER
What do they actually do all day?

Who would they work with directly and how?

What are their main areas of responsibility?

What skills and characteristics do they need to do their job well and why?

Would you like to do this job and why? What would be enjoyable? What would be difficult?


Further resources-


Here is a link to a blog post about a really bad promoter: https://wkcchloe.blogspot.com/2020/09/promotion-how-to-and-how-not-to.html

Some promoters to look at are here:

Chaos Theory

Baba Yaga's Hut

Eat Your Own Ears

Live Nation

Promotion: how to and how NOT to!

When you are promoting a live event, the ultimate aim of this is to get people to come to the event.  In order to do that there are some vital things to ensure you do properly.  There are also things that can go horribly wrong if you get them wrong.

What are you promoting?
  • Will the act bring people in?
  • Is the venue a suitable size?
  • What about location?

How will you fund it?
  • Can you get help with advertising through sponsorship?
  • Do you need to put a deposit down at the venue?
  • Are you offering guarantees to the act or a door split?

Dealing with the band.
  • Do you have their tech spec and have to definitely sent it to the engineer?
  • Do they require unusually high ceiling clearance?
  • What is the line-up and do they know how much space there is on stage?
  • Is there somewhere for them to change/store gear?
  • Will you be providing them with a rider?
  • If there is more than one act, have you arranged sharing of backline with them to minimise changeover times?
  • Have you set aside enough time for soundcheck?

Promoting the event.
  • Have you crated a facebook event and encouraged the acts to spread the word?
  • Local listings?
  • Can you print posters/fliers and put them up in the venue before hand?
  • Have you planned a marketing strategy? i.e What info will you put out and how often?
A while ago, I did a show that was 'promoted' by possibly the worse promoter in the world.  Disaster from start to finish.  To begin with, he was very communicative by email, so we were quite confident that he was well organised.  When we got there at 4pm to load in however, no one was at the venue and the bar staff didn't seem to know what was going on.  When he finally showed up (6:30pm?) he didn't even introduce himself to us - I figured out that it was him from his photo on facebook and had to go over and make myself known to him.  We waited around for the sound engineer but he wasn't booked to come in until 7pm.  That meant we had to wait for 3 hours.  Also, doors were at 7:30pm.  It is completely impossible to soundcheck 4 bands in half and hour.  The sound engineer hadn't been sent out specs and said he would have come in earlier if he'd been asked to.  When I gave him our channel list he was quite panicked - the venue didn't have enough mics or channels and he'd have been able to get more in if he'd have known in advance! There was also no where for us to store our instruments.  When I asked him about it, he actually asked me to ask at the bar!

After all this faffing about, we were pretty hungry as we'd been up since 5am and had driven a massive 8 hours from Glasgow to Norwich.  The promoter had said he'd order us pizza in but didn't do this until 8pm, by which time, the first band had almost set up and, as the doors were open, we had to eat it outside in the freezing cold because it wasn't bought from the venue.

Everything was running late and there was a curfew of 11pm so we all had to change our sets to make them shorter at the last minute.  The promoter seemed unable to work out timings either. When we finally did get to line check before our set, we couldn't actually fit on the stage properly because he hadn't realised how much space 8 people take up with so many instruments.  Doh!

All of these things were easily avoidable.  Ok, so he was obviously inexperienced but didn't even try to appear like he knew what he was doing.  Shaking hands with him was like someone dangling a limp mackerel at you.  We each made a point of 'bone crushing' him as we said goodbye!

Proof that Norwich is exactly as Alan Partridge portrays it, if ever there was.

Chord progressions

 



Monday, September 28, 2020

Solo Performance workshop 2- Tempo

We looked at the use of tempo to change the overall impact of a song. Tracks we listened to were:

Jolene - original


Jolene - slowed down



Jolene slow cover by the White Stripes





What effect does changing the tempo have?


Jack Cheshire - SWEET YELLOW MOON</
 - Does the tempo change or is it something else?







What happens at the break here?


TASK: work out what he bpm is of your track and then take it in turns to conduct each other with dramatic tempo changes. How does this affect your track?

Weekly independent task: Experiment with overall tempo and perhaps variations in sections and post to classroom and your blog, noting what you discovered.

In preparation for next week, please see Charles Hayward's solo performance exploring drums:


Friday, September 25, 2020

Context - 1960s

You are currently looking at the music of the 1960s. To understand how and why that music came about, it is important for you to understand what came before and what was happening in society to affect and shape the development of music.


Introductory presentation resource


Please click on your allocated group to access your breakout meet. Keep your main meet tab open so I can call you back. I will pop into your group meets to see how you're doing. If you have any questions during the group activity, please post in the chat of the main meet.


In your groups, you need to research and discuss the developments in the 1960s relating to your topic. For example, what was youth culture like in the 60s and what was new? How did war affect society int he 60s? What major civil rights developments happened in the decade? What technological advances affected music and culture?

Try to keep your points relevant to music and post them to the jamboard as post it notes and links. Add your initials to any posts. You can scroll across the pages of the board to find the one for your group.




 JAMBOARD

Applying to Conservatoires

 If you are thinking of applying to a Conservatoire, then you need to act now!


About the process - https://www.ucas.com/conservatoires


How to register for 'Apply' - https://2021.conservatoires.apply.ucas.com/apply/registrationcontroller

Thursday, September 24, 2020

INDUSTRY - Publishing



SENTRIC are a good publishing option if you don't have a deal with a traditional publisher.  they work in a similar way to AWAL (record company, who also deal with publishing to an extent) and specialise in offering sync opportunities.



You can download an article from Sound On Sound here





Wednesday, September 23, 2020

Plotting Your Personal Statement


Use this grid to plan the points you want to make for each section.  This will make it easier to write up and ensure that you don’t miss anything vital out!

WHY have you chosen to study/train in this subject area further?







WHAT have you done in and out of college to demonstrate your interest in the course subject?






How does your UAL COURSE relate to your chosen university course/apprenticeship?







What have you learned from your INTERESTS & ACTIVITIES that is relevant to your chosen progression path?






CONCLUSION – What personal experience or ambition can you link to your chosen course to give the statement a sense of completion?








Alternatively, use the UCAS tool - https://www.ucasdigital.com/widgets/personalstatement/index.html#/main

It is also worth registering for UNIFROG if you didn't do this in the first year.

Tuesday, September 22, 2020

Songwriting - what makes a song?

This week we looked at the concept of music and songwriting and defined and discussed the elements that go into it. 

Some elements were:
Verse
Chorus
Intro
Outro
Bridge
Break/solo
Pre-chorus


We also looked at how these are organised ie AB, ABA, AABB, ABC and strophic (AAA).

Your task was to have n initial discussions and just playing together. You will be working as a band to experience the process of writing collectively in a room, building on what you are learning in Olly and Keith's classes. 

The examples we listened to were:



  • folk song:


 


  • blues:


 


  •  anthems:


 


  •  composed and field recorded religious music combined to create music as 'art':


Monday, September 21, 2020

Solo Performance workshop 1 - dynamics

These are the tracks we listened to:








TASK: for next week, please work on your workshop song, developing your use of dynamics and submitting a video. You will perform your track to the class at the start of next week's workshop.

Further info Italian terms can be found HERE

Solo Performance - introduction

This week we looked at what makes a good solo performance and listened to some tracks to illustrate various factors.


Yeah Yeah Yeahs - one song can have an entirely different focus and effect depending on the situation and delivery...



A performance can be intensely powerful when dynamics and tempo are thought about...




Instrumentation can change the feel...




Technology can help you minimise people on stage..









Thursday, September 17, 2020

Getting started with UCAS

This week we are focusing the following:

Register with ucas.com - your year of entry will be 21/22 (you can defer later if you want), the buzzword is westking2021 and you need to specify me as your tutor when that option comes up. I will guide you through the sections like finance and education in tutorials. If you are unsure then leave it out! I will help you. There are also little question marks next to most bits that will give you help.

When you are asked for your ULN (unique learner number), you can probably find it on ProPortal and the new system but I can give it to you later if you can't find it now.

I advise taking the ucas buzz quiz to gain some insight into what may work well for you. Do not take the results literally - it is simply an activity to help you think.

NB - please only register and complete the Personal Details, Additional info and Employment sections until we do the rest in tutorial.

In your free time, have a look at courses - in your tutorial, I will show you how to navigate the UCAS course search but you must also look at the course page on the university website. Try these universities to get going:


https://www.acm.ac.uk/campus-acm-london/
https://www.icmp.ac.uk/
https://www.gold.ac.uk/
https://www.herts.ac.uk/
https://www.bimm.co.uk/
https://www.mdx.ac.uk/
https://www.lcm.ac.uk/
https://www.canterbury.ac.uk/
https://www.hud.ac.uk
https://www.uel.ac.uk/
https://www.uwl.ac.uk/

For now, don't think too much about the location but see what the modules they offer are. Once you know what's out there then you can search more specifically by location.

Make notes about courses and what the entry requirements are - please also submit this on classroom (there is an assignment question).  If I know what you want to do and what you need in order to be able to do it, I can help you more.


4) Potentially, book careers meeting - if you also want to look at alternatives to university, or even studying abroad, they can help you. http://www.careerswkc.com


If you want to study at a conservatoire then please read this guide and let me know ASAPhttps://www.ucas.com/conservatoires

COVID and the music industry

The music industry has been massively affected by COVID. Festivals, gigs, recording sessions, rehearsals and video shoots all had to be cancelled. For freelance musicians/promoters and small venues, this meant that they had no way to earn a living or progress what they do. Some events were postponed. Some people managed to record and release at home. But many couldn't. Every aspect of the industry has been affected and had to adapt.

What have you noticed about how industry has been affected? How have you been affected? 

Please do some research and read these articles to start you off:  





You have 30 minutes to think, research and add your ideas to the jamboard before we reconvene to discuss.

Tuesday, September 15, 2020

Bandlab

 Whilst some fo your classes will be online, we will be using Bandlab so that you can work from home if you don't have access to Logic. Your individual class teachers will give you links to access specific classes but it's worth having a look around in advance.


BANDLAB