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Nov 17, 2024 - 5:27:45 PM
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chuckv97

Canada

73334 posts since 10/5/2013

I was just thinking ,, lots of pop and rock bands have had movement on stage while performing for years,, bluegrass not much at all until recently. Was Nick Forster with Hot Rize the first to do that , or can any of you think of others? I don’t mean crowding up to the mic for harmony singing, but moving/walking back and forth in general for visual effect. Seems it’s the thing for all performing bands these days in other genres. With new audio/amplification technology players aren’t bound to the mic anymore.

Nov 17, 2024 - 5:49:11 PM
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32 posts since 10/3/2018

I like seeing the dynamics of the band walking around, but if I had to do it I'd trip and fall.

Nov 17, 2024 - 7:46:12 PM
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Owen

Canada

16256 posts since 6/5/2011
Online Now

10ish years back we test-drove the snowbird lifestyle in central (?) FL. .  A guy from a neighboring MHP assembled a blues band with some guys he regularly played with, primarily from Tampa, and they put on a v-e-r-y good performance/show. Besides that, it provided me with what became my standard for comparison when it comes to extra (?)  "visual effects."   A youngish looking guitar player frequently was kinda writhing on his tippi-toes with a pained facial expression that had me thinking he surely had a broomstick stuck where his granny couldn't see it.  I didn't know it was "dynamics."  wink 

But don't get me wrong, he/they were good!

Edited by - Owen on 11/17/2024 19:47:13

Nov 17, 2024 - 8:35:23 PM
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HarleyQ

USA

3608 posts since 1/31/2005

quote:
Originally posted by chuckv97

I was just thinking ,, lots of pop and rock bands have had movement on stage while performing for years,, bluegrass not much at all until recently. Was Nick Forster with Hot Rize the first to do that , or can any of you think of others? I don’t mean crowding up to the mic for harmony singing, but moving/walking back and forth in general for visual effect. Seems it’s the thing for all performing bands these days in other genres. With new audio/amplification technology players aren’t bound to the mic anymore.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jAd0BNJ-paYhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jAd0BNJ-paY

Carolina Blue does a little. I like it!!

Nov 17, 2024 - 8:36:51 PM
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1507 posts since 1/26/2011

We had a band with an electric bass player. He was all over the stage dancing around. But because of that he couldn’t keep time to save his life. Drove me crazy. Covid killed that band, but it was probably a good thing. The banjo teacher I had at the time wanted us to change the band name to Electrolux.

Nov 17, 2024 - 9:17:41 PM
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Paul R

Canada

17082 posts since 1/28/2010

Bands been doin' that for decades - just had long enough cords. Bluesman Buddy Guy had an extra long cord and would walk off the club stage and out onto the street. Actually, guitarists been doing more than walking - like Hendrix and the Who (the Beatles were staid by comparison). Hmmm - burn your banjo, anyone?

Nov 17, 2024 - 9:22:46 PM

chuckv97

Canada

73334 posts since 10/5/2013

quote:
Originally posted by HarleyQ
quote:
Originally posted by chuckv97

I was just thinking ,, lots of pop and rock bands have had movement on stage while performing for years,, bluegrass not much at all until recently. Was Nick Forster with Hot Rize the first to do that , or can any of you think of others? I don’t mean crowding up to the mic for harmony singing, but moving/walking back and forth in general for visual effect. Seems it’s the thing for all performing bands these days in other genres. With new audio/amplification technology players aren’t bound to the mic anymore.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jAd0BNJ-paYhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jAd0BNJ-paY

Carolina Blue does a little. I like it!!


They do, Hoyt,, but it's because they work with one mic

Nov 17, 2024 - 9:30:19 PM
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28389 posts since 6/25/2005

quote:
Originally posted by jdeluke137

We had a band with an electric bass player. He was all over the stage dancing around. But because of that he couldn’t keep time to save his life. Drove me crazy. Covid killed that band, but it was probably a good thing. The banjo teacher I had at the time wanted us to change the band name to Electrolux.


Was that because he thought they sucked? 

Edited by - Bill Rogers on 11/17/2024 21:32:29

Nov 17, 2024 - 9:31:17 PM

chuckv97

Canada

73334 posts since 10/5/2013

Well, and then there’s this…..
youtu.be/LeHlvXvG6vA?si=vWMrNNY7oB_GUCiR

Edited by - chuckv97 on 11/17/2024 21:32:11

Nov 17, 2024 - 9:39:51 PM
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jwold

USA

1281 posts since 7/21/2004

Newgrass revival plugged in and moved around the stage.

Nov 17, 2024 - 11:19:43 PM
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149 posts since 7/24/2009

Sammy Shelor for sure is always creepin around on stage, getting in behind others taking solos.

Nov 18, 2024 - 5:01:07 AM
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1507 posts since 1/26/2011

quote:
Originally posted by Bill Rogers
quote:
Originally posted by jdeluke137

We had a band with an electric bass player. He was all over the stage dancing around. But because of that he couldn’t keep time to save his life. Drove me crazy. Covid killed that band, but it was probably a good thing. The banjo teacher I had at the time wanted us to change the band name to Electrolux.


Was that because he thought they sucked? 


EXACTLY!!! laugh

Nov 18, 2024 - 6:29:18 AM
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4964 posts since 10/13/2005

Heard one guy say his band was so bad no one would ask them back again. Solution: They changed their name after each gig and their one time gig cycle started all over again. Masks, costumes, and antics are there to replace musicianship, don't you know? banjered

Nov 18, 2024 - 8:04:56 AM
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KCJones

USA

3353 posts since 8/30/2012

Hartford was moving around on stage from the start.

Nov 18, 2024 - 8:10:01 AM
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193 posts since 6/22/2016

quote:
Originally posted by jwold

Newgrass revival plugged in and moved around the stage.


I seem to recall a strolling bass player in your family...

Nov 18, 2024 - 9:05:54 AM
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15933 posts since 10/30/2008

Well, he didn't precede Hot Rize by much, but Joe Val's upright bass player Eric Levenson used to move around behind the 3 "front" men especially during their breaks and solos to point out to the audience where their attention should be directed for the moment.

It doesn't take many viewings of the Flatt & Scruggs Martha White tv programs/DVDs to appreciate just how mobile bluegrass band members "used to be". Single mic or two mics required movement by band members, while yet staying close enough to the mics to be heard at some level.

Personally I am TURNED OFF by bluegrassers with pick ups or portable mics on their instruments, who swan around on the stage like rock and rollers, picking head to head or back to back, or looking for the literal spotlight. BAHHH!!! Get off my lawn!!!!

Nov 18, 2024 - 1:13:58 PM
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6140 posts since 5/29/2011

quote:
Originally posted by Bill Rogers
quote:
Originally posted by jdeluke137

We had a band with an electric bass player. He was all over the stage dancing around. But because of that he couldn’t keep time to save his life. Drove me crazy. Covid killed that band, but it was probably a good thing. The banjo teacher I had at the time wanted us to change the band name to Electrolux.


Was that because he thought they sucked? 


Like the old slogan goes, "Nothing sucks like an Electrolux."

Nov 18, 2024 - 2:15:43 PM
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108 posts since 8/2/2014

Remember The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band’s epic album “Will The Circle Be Unbroken”? On their recording of Soldiers’ Joy they start off with Earl saying that Uncle Dave Macon had to be followed around by someone carrying the mic as Uncle Dave danced all around when playing.

Nov 18, 2024 - 2:16:05 PM
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1917 posts since 11/10/2022

As a rock musician I move less with my banjo but still move. Keeps the wood dry.

Edited by - NotABanjoYoda on 11/18/2024 14:16:26

Nov 18, 2024 - 2:37:36 PM
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62766 posts since 12/14/2005

As long as the audience isn't moving toward the exits, I'm fine with standing still.

Nov 18, 2024 - 3:35:40 PM
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chuckv97

Canada

73334 posts since 10/5/2013

I busk with a clip-on mic at an indoor farmers market ,,, but for the life of me I can’t see me strutting around like Mick Jagger……

Nov 18, 2024 - 4:55:01 PM

Owen

Canada

16256 posts since 6/5/2011
Online Now

And just like magic (?), this appeared on my Facebook page .... the legendary Bluegrasser Janis Joplin talking about her early career and Chet Helms:

Chet Helms, who passed away in 2005, holds the honorable legacy of launching Janis Joplin’s singing career. As the first manager of Big Brother & the Holding Company, Helms not only suggested that Joplin join the band but also personally drove to Texas to bring her to California.

Janis Joplin, in 1968: “Chet Helms told me Big Brother was looking for a chick singer, so I thought I’d give it a try. I don’t know what happened. I just exploded. I’d never sung like that before. I stood still, and I sang simple. But you can’t sing like that in front of a rock band, all that rhythm and volume going. [my bold]

You have to sing loud and move wild with all that in back of you. It happened the first time, but then I got turned on to Otis Redding, and I just got into it more than ever. Now, I don’t know how to perform any other way. I’ve tried cooling myself and not screaming, and I’ve walked off feeling like nothing.”




 

Edited by - Owen on 11/18/2024 16:55:51

Nov 19, 2024 - 8:25:44 AM
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RB3

USA

2219 posts since 4/12/2004

If you're playing Bluegrass, you need to wipe the smile off your face, stand still, and play your instrument in the stoic manner that God and Bill Monroe intended.

Nov 19, 2024 - 5:16:15 PM
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62766 posts since 12/14/2005

^^^
Name dropper!


Nov 20, 2024 - 8:32:26 AM
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853 posts since 11/9/2003

Since you brought up moving around while playing , what about the the pickers at open jam sessions waltzing around the jam circle wanting to get closer to the person picking their break ? I have seen this several times at different bluegrass jams. Some people just can't sit or stand in one spot and pick. They just wander around from place to place. The only reason I can think of as to why they do this is, they think a better picker will make them sound good. LOL

Nov 22, 2024 - 5:10:11 AM
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38 posts since 3/18/2015

This may seem out of place, but if you're doing concert sets, where you plan things out ahead, you might consider deliberately planning things like changing your stage positions for different songs. Most headliners do it. In fact, a fellow named Tom Jackson has made a living out of coaching working bands in such things. (onstagesuccess.com/).

Wandering aimlessly around the stage is always perceived as such by audiences, so if you're going to do it, be purposeful. :-)

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