Miguel de Maria -> RE: how much for dance class ? $ (Dec. 15 2004 15:45:41)
|
Anthony, most gigging musicians do exactly what you said. In Phoenix, almost all of the agencies are run by ex-gigging musicians. I played a couple of gigs in October where the musicians I played with skimmed some money off the top. I could tell because of the unusual $ they gave me. It doesn't matter to me. Rainmaking is where it's at--people who have the ability to get gigs can do whatever they want, because gigs are gold. It doesn't matter how good of a player you are if you don't get paid. I actually get double booked sometimes, and I had some friends I would refer the gigs to. But you know what? These friends never returned the favor. So now I don't refer them anymore gigs. I refer the gigs to people that refer gigs to me--that's business, amigo! Remember that I do this guitar thing for a living, and I have to think opportunity cost and things like that. Although I don't know much about accompanying, I don't know much about weddings, either, that doens't mean I expect to pay the bride and groom when I play the processional march. Anthony, I wouldn't take two gigs and send someone else on the other gig. That's a good way to ruin your reputation. If, as a musician, you establish a reputation for punctuality, a good look, good sound and playing, and high professionalism, and you send some "dude" to your gig, you are probably going to lose that customer. I agree with you here. When a musician treats the service he provides as a commodity then he becomes a commodity--in other words, interchangeable, replaceable, disposable.
|
|
|
|