In Leicester, it’s not about playing at a particular venue, that bookings are about, but finding the right line-up to play in.
All the main venues have their good nights and their bad nights. A good night is when a reasonable number of people attend (40+). That can happen at any venue on any day of the week, but only when the line-up is right. A bad night is where a set of bands fails to draw a crowd and they end up playing to each other. That happens a lot and the sad thing is that it keeps on happening.
Someone is making the same mistake over again. It could be the promoter, the venue or the bands or all of them together. But when it does happen everyone looses. So why don’t they get it sorted and stop putting on nights that are bound to fail?
It would be better if there were less gigs but more good gigs. Music producers fail to co-ordinate their shows with each other. They all work in isolation. They do what they want to do – when they want to do it. In my view, everybody looses in this scenario.
At the root of this problem is the fact that there are just not enough ticket-buying fans to go round. We live in hard times. People do not have enough disposable income to allow them to go out to live music events that often. Too many shows chasing too few people. It’s a problem that everyone recognises but which there is an in-built reluctance to do anything about.
Many people around here have commented that some kind of live music coordinating forum just might help the local scene to plan its programmes more effectively. What would help to move this forward is a few music producers getting it and giving some thought to how to make it happen.
One last word: if you must put on a live gig, choose the right line up! Don’t book bands willy-nilly just because they say they are available. Well constructed line ups will attract a better crowd than a random selection of bands playing a hotchpotch of musical styles. It seems so obvious. Why then does this still happen?
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