London Viola Player, Violinist & Arranger For Hire

Crunching the numbers

Like it or not, being a freelance musician has to be a business and a career as well as a vocation.

And like any business, the startup period was pretty financially fraught. A lot of money went out on setup costs, from business cards to a video showreel, and ventures that didn’t pay off. Income took a while to start coming in, and grew slowly. Unsurprisingly, I cut costs where I could to try and bring the numbers together.

Nonetheless, I ran an unambiguous deficit for the first seven months, pulling successive support packages out of my ever-svelter-looking savings and wondering if it was going to work.

April was a disappointment – I had hoped to turn the financial corner but my chosen measure (money in and out of my bank account, because I can add it up and I’m never going to try and track all my cash spending, even if I need to track cash income for my sense of ethical responsibility even to the taxman) showed I was about ten quid short. May, though, did provide the first point I’d actually saved some money, even if it was only about enough to buy a train ticket to Liverpool.

June was an exceptional month – I don’t expect to maintain being that busy, given I gigged two or three times most weekends and had a few midweek gigs as well, plus getting some money in from transcribing / arranging work. It might be for the best if I don’t have quite that much on alongside my part-time desk job to be honest! However, it is the first time I’ve been really happy about the financials of working as a musician. If I did keep that rate of work up, I could probably have filled the hole in my savings back in by the spring, which would be quite enough to aim at for the moment.

Of course, caution is required. Breaking even is one thing, but it won’t let me save for a deposit (if I thought I could ever get a mortgage without moving to outer small town nowhere and buying a car, meaning – oh yes, more expenses). And the majority of my income is still coming from my desk job. I would like to contemplate going full-time with music; but just because I’m making more than I spend in the part-time arrangement doesn’t prove it would work.

Nonetheless, financial insecurity is apparently one of the leading barriers to freedom from anxiety and stress, and against the odds, I might just be able to cross that one off for the moment.

Diaries can empty as well as fill

One of the odd things about my double life is that hiring and managing freelancers is a substantial (sometimes very large!) part of my desk job. It gives me a certain insight, at least, into the situations of the people who are hiring me as a musician.

I can’t say I had a massive amount of sympathy with the new venue management who decided to only hire pop live music acts from here on, thereby kyboshing my two bookings with an Irish-oriented function rock band over the next few weeks. There may be logic in the decision, but there is a good business case for honouring your agreements rather than cutting people off without a shilling.

I did certainly feel for the band’s frontwoman / manager obliged to tell me the job had gone without any control over the situation though. I’ve often had to announce that the terms – usually formally contractually stipulated in this context – of an editing job have changed (sometimes in such a way that the freelancer has to let the job go as a result, most often because the new start and end dates clash with other work they’re doing), and occasionally that the work simply isn’t going to be done any more, at least in that shape and for the foreseeable future. And I’m far too firmly at the bottom rung of the corporate ladder to have usually had much influence over that taking place (unless I was the one (or one of the ones) that screwed up planning the dates or getting things to the right stage at the right time. That can happen.).

So you apologise cringingly, and genuinely try (as well as promise) to find some other work to send their way by way of compensation – in exactly the way Amanda did to me, though not usually by text message!

I think the important difference is that those venue managers with the radical live music policy won’t, I’m pretty sure, be doing any of that for any of the acts they’ve booted out.

Musicians generally hold each other dear, and endeavour to be businesslike and respectful in their dealings, whether or not they go in for legal formalities of administration. And something similar is true of most of my experience of freelance work in other sectors (certainly including publishing). Unfortunately, from most employers’ points of view, musicians are basically so plentiful, and the stock of willing and naive beginners who will pretty much stab themselves in the chest to get the vital experience and exposure supposedly needed to push-start a musical career so regularly replenished, that there’s no strong motivation to make any compromises. If you upset one lot, there’ll be another you can get to do the same job. Replace the upstarts. Classic non-unionised employment scenario, straight out of Victorian England.

It’s partly a fallacy of course. The MU does do a certain amount of clamping down on bad employers, though it’s very short on teeth, not least because membership is much too far from universal. (Imagine a world where a venue could become unable to book musicians of any seriousness because they were union blacklisted. It did effectively happen in 1940s America, but of course attitudes to unions and corporates have changed a lot since then. Especially closed shops.) And promoters, venues or bandleaders who are genuinely exploitative run increasing risks now that it’s rather easy to publicise the details of their scamming on specialist Facebook groups where they’ll be seen by literally thousands of working musicians (and quite possibly their competitors, members in order to hire people by advert) within 24 hours.

But the numbers of supply and demand, and the essentially unregulated nature of most of the music business, do mean that the average musician has a very weak bargaining position. You can only really change that, as far as I can see, by either acquiring skill-sets that dilettantes with full-time day jobs won’t have the time to achieve (a 500-song repertoire; the technical mastery of a concerto or opera soloist); or seeking out the places where demand and supply are more evenly balanced, for whatever reason (viola players, because not many people dream of playing the instrument as a child; gigging keys players, because you need a lot more equipment than most people, and a car big enough to carry it around in; violinists who can work effectively off chords or by ear, because most of them learn classically or possibly have a very strictly genre-bound traditional folk repertoire and technique). And then stick at it.

After all, if two jobs get cancelled but you still play twelve in a month, that’s going to make you a pretty good income.

Book a return, please

One of the things that makes starting out as a freelance musician tough is having to chase every job – and getting rejected, or just downright ignored, for the majority of them, especially to start with. Any professional musician (including, perhaps, especially, teachers) will tell you the worst part isn’t the work itself, even the bad jobs (and there always are some); it’s the admin, chasing, applying, advertising, hounding people for payment …

My impression is the really successful people (even if they still work as freelancers) aren’t really responding to ads at all. They’re getting all their work by personal contact and word of mouth, and most of it by people asking them to do work, rather than them hearing about an opening and asking to be allowed to fill it.

So it’s been gratifying in the last month or so to get a few repeat and/or proactive bookings to bulk up the work available by endlessly poring over classified ads in Facebook groups. A fellow freelancer asked me to dep for her at one of her regular gigs that she couldn’t make (thank you Judith!) – and as luck would have it the same orchestra were one second fiddle short for their next concert and hired me back for it in principle on the spot. Brighton’s a bit of a trip from Oxford, but I’m growing quite fond of the place.

I have almost a regular gig in the scratch orchestra accompanying a local choral society. It’s not much money and only about a once a term of course, but it keeps me in orchestral playing, varies my repertoire conveniently, lets me roll over items on my CV and has the beauty of incurring no expenses as it’s all within biking distance of home.

Finally, I was particularly pleased to get approached by Celtic-inflected function band Razzberry Jam to reprise my guest fiddle playing with them in July. A projected trio gig with their lead singer and a guitarist came to nothing, and it was only by reapplying that I got a guest slot for a St Patrick’s booking. This time though they had two gigs booked in and came asking to add me to the lineup again.

Do a good job first time round, and if you work for anyone successful, they’ll have a reason to get you again. Pretty much the mantra of my freelance start-out – and now apparently paying off, even it is six months in becoming at all noticeable!

Practising not practising

How much rehearsal do you really need?

I’ve heard statements in my two regular groups along the lines of ‘I’m a bit bothered, we’ve only got four practices till the next gig.’

I’ve sardonically commented on the true differences in preparation time (and, even more, attitudes) between amateurs and pros before. Certainly for an orchestral freelance job, rehearse in the afternoon and perform in the evening is normal.

But, I hear you say, all the notes are written down for you in that case. That’s true. And if I’m really lucky the music will be sent out in advance, or I’ll be able to download a copy off the web. On the other hand, for Saturday’s concert the one piece that I hadn’t been sent a part to was the one I missed rehearsing altogether due to being delayed about half an hour. I sight-read it in the concert. (Luckily, orchestral violin 2 doesn’t have to do too much in The Lark Ascending and the conductor’s beat was very clear!)

And then there are the jobs where the notes aren’t written down. I might not be able to make a rehearsal for a couple of gigs I’m doing with a function band fronted by a great Irish lass, Amanda Murphy (or Ni Mhurchu with some accents I can never place correctly if you want the Gaelic spelling), next month. Which will be interesting since they’re not usually a note-for-note covers band even once I’ve learnt, or made up, fiddle lines from recordings on the web and then transposed them into the singable keys (bluegrass revival in D flat, anyone?).

But, covers being covers there is usually a pretty reliable version to be found on Youtube somewhere (I won’t tell your mum if you don’t tell mine). Every once in a while you get the bookings with an originals band …

On Thursday evening I answered an ad for a dep fiddle player. The order information made it through to me was confusingly random, but here’s a more or less chronological version: originals band, playing a string of festivals along the south west and south coast, lost their regular fiddle to a broken collarbone (sustained while jumping off a part-therapised psychotic horse who would otherwise have bolted into a main road – I wish I was making this up, my imagination’s nowhere near this powerful … ), and then had various problems with deps being unavailable, or unwilling to travel to Plymouth to play this particular date. This particular date being the following day, Friday, late afternoon. So I listened to some tracks on their website, requested a set list with keys of the songs for the gig, hunted out the one trad fiddle tune that was mentioned, and set off. Cat, the injured regular player, was tagging along as it was basically a hometown gig, and able to demonstrate bits of melody on mandolin, so I got about half an hour with her trying to master the arrangement of Morrison’s Jig and the exact nature of the fiddle lick on the opening track. Otherwise, I busked it by ear apart from Whiskey in the Jar (broadly the Thin Lizzy version). About half of what they were doing (it was a 45-minute set) was off a currently-in-progress second album, so I hadn’t even heard it before I got on stage. And boy was I grateful for playing an acoustic instrument when the monitor mix turned out to be terrible!

Everyone knows you get better at what you practice. But if your roots are classical, you might have a narrow imagination when it comes to interpreting that. It’s not just vibrato, position changing, flautando, sight reading that benefit from practice. I know very well from my own experience that improvising – both on a particular theme and in general, certainly within a particular style eg from chord changes – gets better or worse, easier or harder to make sound the same amount good while being more or less sophisticated, depending on how much you’ve been doing it lately. And while improvisation was obviously well to the fore at Friday’s gig, it wasn’t the only part of the picture enabling me to get away with it startlingly well (judging by the audience / bandmate feedback anyway). The thing is, you can effectively practise performing without having practised much – and the nature of a freelancer, perhaps especially a getting-started one doing a lot of low-budget, last-minute, one-off jobs, is that you do it a lot. I’m certainly a lot better at it than I used to be!

Etiquette, and other rules of the game

I may be skipping out of order here, I can’t be bothered to check up all the dates. But a post on the Etiquette Orchestra definitely seems called for.

Initially, this was just another freelance playing job. Originals in a roughly orchestral soul style (with definite film noir overtones), a gig in Brighton and adequate money to justify the journey. My usual initial pitch to anything non-classical, however, plugs violin and viola playing and also mentions being able to get involved in transcriptions / part editing / arranging – partly because I actually enjoy that aspect, and might benefit from more experience and CV in it, and partly in the general effort to make myself look as good a catch as possible!

So, on this occasion I got a large bundle of (very polished, and so cool they were almost painful to touch, like frozen steel) demo recordings, MIDI files and audio tracks of individual instrumental parts, and set about pushing the string MIDI files through software conversion to score, and then doing the tidying up involved in making playable parts. Other people were taking care of the piano and wind parts apparently.

This job of tidying up transcripts is at the same time oddly similar to some aspects of my desk job (it adds nothing, creatively, and possesses no real scope for imposing personality or even musical knowledge on the material) and yet vitally necessary. What comes out of the transcription plugin may well be in an inappropriate clef for the instrument in question. It will certainly not be transposed, including octave shifts, where necessary. There will be no key signature, and a more or less arbitrary choice of accidentals where needed. Phrasing there will be none, but if the MIDI file has been worked at to sound good then the note lengths will be messy, full of short ties, rests crudely indicating staccato, and so on. Dynamics and performance markings are also entirely absent.

Anyway, I did my editing job and produced a bundle of files. I went down to Brighton early for the first rehearsal (of two!), stopping off on the way to play Haydn’s Creation with Kent Sinfonia in Hove, so that I could go through the parts with Steve aka Scutty Lee, the apparent musical mastermind of the project (and, as it turned out, Altea, the lead vocalist and general public face). By this point, I had realised that the outsourcing, so to speak, of the transcriptions was not just down to too much work for two people but rather to neither Steve nor Altea (and the musical collaboration turned out to be both closer and more equal than general stereotype would assume) reading music. Going through my parts in detail showed up a few special effects (glissandi, tremolo etc.) that I hadn’t spotted and which hadn’t transcribed, and a couple of errors in the recordings which Steve wanted removed. We also reworked a couple of endings for live performance where the demos had fades. All necessary parts converted to PDF and sent off to the friend who was going to bulk print for the next day’s rehearsal, I crashed on a camp bed.

I try not to dwell on the following day too much. It was a study in frustration.

Late the previous night, the bloke doing the wind transcriptions had texted Steve to ask for the transpositions of the various instruments – which I had duly dictated. This sounded ominous but I wasn’t yet expecting the worst.

A (big) rehearsal room was booked for 6 hours. For the first few of those it remained largely empty, while the pianist showed up, bass and drums (travelling together) kept postponing their arrival time, and I sat around. (In general the plan was for the rhythm section and vocals to rehearse first, then add the strings and brass later.) A couple of hours were killed trying to walk the pianist through her parts, which had stayed in ‘raw’ form, not just making them nearly unreadable but also meaning that they had unpredictable numbers of silent bars on the front and timing the first entry was virtually impossible – more so as she clearly hadn’t listened particularly closely to the demo recordings.

Besides bass and drums, the other notable late arrival was the print-outs of orchestral parts (Steve had got to about two days previous, apparently, before realising he didn’t possess a printer; but the friend in question was ‘just round the corner’ from the rehearsal rooms). When the sax player / wind transcriber showed up this turned out to be less of a handicap than it might have been, as he still needed to transpose the parts. And didn’t own a laptop. Cue downloading and installing software (a package I’ve never used and now never intend to!) to my laptop over rehearsal room WiFi, much intermittent conferring over transpositions, and uploading to Dropbox.

The string parts hadn’t required any heavy rearranging. There were basically violin, viola, cello and double bass parts to each track; the only slight challenge had been covering some of the double bass parts further up the orchestration, as they would only be played when the bassist wasn’t busy with ‘rhythm’ bass lines.

I realised as this hasty finishing-off of wind parts was going on that they were a totally different matter. The available forces (still not quite finalised at this rehearsal) were tenor sax, two trumpets and two trombones. However, various of the MIDI files involved up to three French horns, euphonium, baritone sax, flugelhorn, piccolo trumpet and a mysterious instrument, of whose real-life nature I am uncertain, called a cimbasso.

When my fellow ‘orchestral’ musicians started to trickle in (there were a couple who couldn’t make this date, but most were there), we had string parts (a first printing batch having eventually arrived), but no bassist or drummer, and the last of the brass parts were still being transposed and exported. It took a little longer to get a bundle of almost ‘raw’ wind parts, only very vaguely corresponding to any of the available instruments and with some highly suspect-looking pitches and key signatures. At around the same point, the drummer decided (3 hours after he had been due) that he wasn’t going to be able to come; which did at least finally free up the bassist to set off.

We managed to get through 5 out of the 6 numbers at least once. There was a vague sense of the right structure, mostly held together by Altea and Steve (on guitar), but it was little short of a washout. I was massively frustrated, felt unjustly treated by the whole situation (I had done my job, as far as my ego saw it; but here I was in the muck through various failings around me [stands in saddle of high horse]) and had to rapidly back-pedal from losing my temper in proper teenage style at one moment. (Trust me, I was a startlingly volatile teenager.)

Crisis management kicked in afterwards, of course. Chiefly, for me, in the train journey from Brighton to London which Altea and I both had to take, in which tough but necessary decisions were made and a certain amount of overruling done.

Over the following couple of weeks, I redid all the wind parts. Not just transcribing and editing but doing some fairly hefty rearranging to make sure as many of the notes as possible were covered by the available players; and, as far as my knowledge of the area would go, that the parts were playable and would actually function on real instruments. I sent the whole lot out to their players for review and found I had mostly got away with it, bar a couple of missed accidentals and getting very sick of apologising for the software I was using being incapable of producing short-notation multiple bars’ rest. Steve tactfully replaced the pianist, and had a private chat with the drummer. I produced full scores of the orchestral parts, and obsessively marked in instruments to cue in my own parts.

I had a prior commitment clashing with the second rehearsal, also the last rehearsal bar an extended get-in / soundcheck on the day. I sent off everything for printing, to two different people in most cases, including the full scores for reference, and tried not to fret about what might be happening in Brighton.

When I got rehearsal tapes, they were a very pleasant surprise. There had been no unexpected no-shows this time (though still a couple of bodies short, including me). The performances weren’t perfect, and there were still points where counting was clearly a difficulty (67 bars’ rest, anyone?), but the spirit seemed to be there and the sound seemed to be broadly right. I was vastly encouraged.

The gig itself was a closing performance at what I can best call the hair equivalent of a fashion show, though it wasn’t quite that either. There was, unsurprisingly, a LOT of waiting around at various points, and some last-minute panics (the event organisers seemed to be characterised more by urgency and enthusiasm than thoroughness or good communication – I am trying not to stereotype the Spanish nationality here!). Some things proved more difficult on stage – monitor mixes were unsurprisingly a challenge, and the strings and brass were on opposite sides of the stage, too far apart for me to cue any wind entries in practice.

But come the eventual moment, I would say we triumphed. Alti sounded and looked like a million dollars, sassy, cool and in control. Steve, roaming around on a long guitar lead, was clearly loving every moment. I was only aware of one noticeable musical slip. And the whole thing became cool, consummately understated and measuredly relaxed as it should have been. I had said all along (with some real doggedness, in a spirit that if I said it often enough I might believe it, and it might even become true) that the material was superb, that what it needed was simply to be able to shine through without mistakes getting in the way. I don’t think it fully seemed a realised truth until performing though.

It would be unfair of me not to mention, and applaud, both the appreciation of many of the players and friends / family / general entourage for my work and Steve and Altea’s touching gratefulness for ‘making it happen’. I think the episode constitutes an epitome of what I call the craft (as opposed to art) of music. I did put the hours and the effort in, I certainly won’t deny that! But there is no ‘Ash orchestral sound’; I haven’t learned much about arranging (except what the bottom note of a trombone is, and how low you can really write for trumpet!); my really creative input was confined to sixteen bars of string trio linking one song to another. But to produce the kind of result that it did required someone, or ones, with that technical set of knowledge around sheet music, multipart scoring, transposing instruments – and also the ability to work with musicians who may be geniuses in their sphere but that sphere is guitar chords, MIDI files, multitracking and demo recordings, not stave lines and ink. It’s the foot in either camp, however much it may feel like doing uncomfortable splits sometimes, that enables a breaking through the conventional (because to some extent real) boundaries.

The positive flipside

So, how about some challenges successfully risen to?

At university I had a real problem with the word ‘however’ littering my essays. Sometimes in the first drafts there would be two in the same sentence. The problem with trying to counterbalance a rather negative post about failing to overcome challenges is the other challenges are still caused by bad stuff happening …

So, about three weeks ago the String Project’s excellent female lead singer and pianist Harry (Angharad) got rushed into hospital with unknown causes of flu-like symptoms, extreme fatigue and then seizures. She turned out to have a partially ruptured cyst in her brain. (To cut out the unnecessary suspense and because it’s kind of a separate story, or at least another plot, she was successfully operated on a few days later, has been discharged from hospital and is now recuperating quite satisfactorily at home.)

This meant losing her for the Bristol leg of our gig exchange with Eko Collective, a well-paid and important gig at the Cherwell Boathouse earlier this week, and possibly more. Which is unfortunate given a lot of recently-written material had been at least partly written around Angharad’s singing, and some very successful covers revived or undertaken with her doing lead vox as well. There inevitably followed a flurry of shuffling parts around and digging older items of the back catalogue, initially to enable us to do the 40-minute set in Bristol with the available people. This we managed, and while we would all rather have had Harry, I think it went well. Particular credit to Jo Rubery for learning her first lead vocal with the group and one of Ben’s more technical piano parts in under two weeks flat!

However, the bigger mountain to climb followed when several inconvenient truths were brought back to our attention concerning the Cherwell Boathouse gig, namely:

  1. It was ten days after the Bristol gig, leaving little time to prepare.
  2. We were expected to provide two hours of music in total.
  3. Harry was (is) still unavailable.
  4. Jo was going to be in the process of leaving the country, to teach English in Cambodia.
  5. Our other lead vocalist (and synth / electronics / occasional guitar man) Justin was going to be out of the country.

There’s nothing like pressure to bring on creativity though. We did hire a dep pianist for the job, who conveniently turned out to sing and play blues guitar as well (thanks Dan Clark, you were awesome!). But the rest of the band also contrived to pull lots of material out of the cupboard. Ben finished scoring a new collaboration with Pieman (who also stole the show with a short solo set), trawled out a published string quartet arrangement with a cello line that could be moved to double bass, and put together some folk sets with harmony viola lines that Wulf, Pieman on stripped-down kit and me on guitar backed up. I rereworked my string quartet arrangement of The Arrival of the Queen of Sheba to be playable with double bass instead of cello and persuaded Pieman to beatbox on it. We learnt some straight arrangements / bits of light classical, and jammed together passable versions (with Dan on keys) of a couple of jazz standards. I led most of the group through a rough-and-ready but enthusiastic version of St James Infirmary Blues.

The surprising result of this (and the audience taking well over the scheduled half hour to help themselves to buffet food) was we actually had substantial repertoire to spare – as well as the real possibility of building / maintaining an accessible but stylish and distinctive ‘function’ repertoire for a less creative but better-paid strand of gigs that might make it easier for the band to at least break even.

Come back to future posts for orchestral soul-noir, the benefits of a good conductor and Filthy stretching …

Been away so long I hardly knew the place

Yep, I did it. Referenced a Beatles lyric. Not so keen to project a creative-alternative image after all apparently …

But it has been a while, just over a month actually I found when I went and checked the date of my last post. Which is not how one gets and keeps an online visibility, I am assured.

And it has been busy, and mostly because of doing a ton of music. There seems to be a trend recently of late-in-the-day seriously stretching challenges, either risen to with unexpectedly successful results or causing a comprehensive stoppage.

The function string quartet idea is back dead in the water again – after losing two members for diametrically opposite reasons on the eve of starting to get promo material together and not having the time, energy or emotional resilience to immediately start trying to build another, better-functioning lineup. I think there are various reasons for the failure of this bid. One is the surprising paucity of nearby musicians; various tensions over travel, rehearsal space and expenses mean the idea would function a lot better with everyone roughly between London and Birmingham. In practice, almost everyone I could find was either in one or other of those two, or a student splitting their time, or a couple of people well out to the east. There are obvious problems with being only within travelling distance of some of your bandmates for half of the year, besides the fluidity of most students’ lives; I also got twice burnt on recent graduate cellists who seemed fairly stably committed until they both picked up full-time playing jobs far away (one overseas) and disappeared.

One of those, incidentally, said he had to take up the job offer as the only way he could keep his current cello was to repay £18,000 (if I remember rightly) over the following six months. (I’m trying not to think about that being significantly more than my desk job pays in a year now I’m part-time.) This must presumably be the sort of thing that ‘proper’ classical musicians with conservatoire training, terrifying technique and a relentless drive to do music and nothing else do – my violin is worth about £400, viola maybe a grand at most (hard to estimate for complex historical reasons), and both have always belonged to me outright. Granted, I don’t play recitals or concerti, and would probably want somewhat better kit to do so, but still there’s something about buying on credit I like less the less money I have.

Anyway, other problems with quartet formation: function playing is a lot of musicians’ bread and butter, but standards, desires and boundaries vary hugely. Many people (including me) will be put off by the idea of weekly rehearsals for a function group – I understand the need to have very polished promo, but in general one rehearsal per gig seems perfectly adequate even with a fair bit of changing repertoire over. Others will feel they need it to really nail the parts and fit them together (generally the ones who don’t seem to be learning the parts at home in advance as requested!) But conversely there are people for whom a rehearsal before every gig is an unjustifiable expense and waste of time. Evidently you can’t have too much of that spectrum in the same group; they will just pull apart, as pretty much happened here with cellist #3 and violin 2 who would have rather played viola. In effect, then, it’s not enough to rely on people not biting off things they can’t chew; it’s necessary to audition or at least request recorded demos, and to consider the serious possibility that someone is too good to try and keep as a permanent member, as well as too bad.

Further, I think experience as a freelance / dep / one-off player had led me to underestimate the need for an ongoing group to really gel personally. You can do a run-through and a couple of hours of performance with someone without getting on with them or even really caring whether you do or not, provided you can gel musically. If all the music is printed it should be even easier. But when you have to correspond, match diaries, discuss ideas, negotiate, then the situation can be different. You need to get on, and preferably want fairly similar things (at least on a run a business and make an income versus have a quiet life level!). The perpetually stressed 20-something freelancer who decided he had to have a smartphone (yes, that’s me) may really struggle with the nearly a generation older colleague who gets a steady income from teaching and might not reply to straightforward yes-or-no emails for a couple of days or even remember if she has replied to them. Equally, the player who seems more interested in pushing forward his own arrangements and even compositions, of dubious suitability for the context, than settling on a well balanced and appropriate demo track list, is a problem to handle diplomatically in a group but not particularly as a hired hand.

So personality is important as well. And if you have to be that much more selective on various fronts, then you need a large pool to draw from unless you get very lucky with who you happen to know. Which pulls back to the question of density of musicians. Is it worth considering starting a group based in London, even though I’d need to travel in at £12 per trip minimum (probably more like 16 to 17 with a Tube fare on top of coach from Oxford)? These are the sort of guesstimating exercises that have put me off renewing the effort.

Together with the presence of quite a lot of work and, on paper, pay (most of it awaiting transfer / me paying in cheques / arrival / something), lately. But that had better be written about another time, since many short posts are better than fewer long ones according to the aforementioned web gurus, and this already counts as a long post for digital native attention spans apparently (having just topped 1 000 words). See you a bit sooner this time …

Festivities

May and June are months of much play and … well, actually, a load of work as well, for me this year apparently.

The last two weekends have already seen one wedding where I was playing and one where I was a guest (congratulations Mike and Asha!).

Tonight I’m off to Islington with the Filthy Spectacula for a sort of overnight indoor festival / massive crazed uninhibited party thing called Rumpus – and I really do mean night not evening; our set starts at half past midnight and the event wraps up at 6am. Then I’ll be getting on a coach to my school mate Danny’s wedding in Monmouth tomorrow.

Next weekend, the Filthy crew play a bona fide festival (cider and music) down in fairly central pirate territory – Exmouth’s Scrumpstock. In slightly more functional mode (though we will be heavily targeting weddings as clients!) the Finezza String Quartet demo recordings will be either the second or third week of May.

I scrape one weekend of May off before fitting in the Bristol half of the String Project – Eko Collective gig exchange (very excited about that! Get tickets here before they all sell out!) and another wedding gig in the very end of this month. June so far features Haydn’s Creation in Kent, original orchestral soul-spaghetti western out of Brighton, a London Filthy Spectacula gig, a festival with the String Project, and Finezza Quartet photo shooting.

See you at something, there seems to be plenty to celebrate despite the election results, and hopefully I’ll come out having made more than I’ve spent on National Express tickets and cider …

Life lessons learned of late

Never, ever, read the comments on an online article. Ever. They will always tear your faith in humanity into little tiny shreds.

Sadly, your friends’ weddings will not make you feel better about being single.

Less surprisingly, nor will Facebook stalking your colleagues of the opposite gender.

Never assume in a large project, particularly one which requires substantial involvement and goodwill from others or which is based in so volatile a sphere as performing arts, that the worst of the work is over and the slope gets shallower from here on.

It is only possible to keep going on caffeine, inadequate sleep and emotional quick fixes for so long.

If you start something up, the odds of anyone else really taking an equal share of running it, practically or creatively, are slim, regardless of how objectively well placed you are to do it yourself.

Watching bad telly is still easier and more relaxing than reading intellectual books.

Going to bed early is easier than getting to sleep quickly.

How music responds to sustained practice is almost as enigmatic as how cream changes with continued whipping.

Entitlement and pragmatism

My generation, the millennials (and half a dozen other equally unmemorable labels with vague and contested definitions – no one’s had a really good handle since Generation X), are often accused of an inflated sense of entitlement. Ironic really, since those making the accusation are very often of the generations that either brought us up or, as energetic and culturally hyperactive young adults, shaped the world we received our formational impressions from.

There are certainly a few widespread myths repeatedly sold to us, and which have all too frequently rubbed off on my contemporaries. I’d like to draw attention to three:

  • If you want anything enough, you can achieve it. Nothing is impossible.
  • Everyone has the inalienable right to be special, in a rather supposedly-objective sense of being better than average (any average – mode, mean, median … ) in some way.
  • (kind of deriving from the other two) If you are not lazy or criminal, you can pick something you can enjoy and have the inalienable right to be paid a living wage for doing it.

It doesn’t take much understanding of mathematics to appreciate #2 can’t work. It’s not possible for half of any group to be above the mean or median value of any given measure; and it would require some very odd distributions for an absolute majority to be above the mode value, though it’s perfectly possible.

For number 1, I simply refer you to the teenage son in Little Miss Sunshine. If you haven’t seen it (sorry for plot spoiler if you ever do but it’s a thoroughly weird film anyway), he has his heart set on becoming a jet fighter pilot, has taken some kind of ninja vow of silence until he gets into training and directs all his conscious efforts to that end. Until he finds out he’s colour-blind. You can’t, unsurprisingly, be a US air force pilot without 20/20 vision.

Number 3 sounds ridiculous, but was the premise on which all advice and information about careers at my school and university was given: that you would decide ‘what you wanted to do’, work out what hoops you needed to jump through to get there, and then work through the process. Of course, this was in the fabled innocent days of the early Noughties, before the financial crisis, global recession, austerity, record levels of unwilling part-time working and self-employment, suddenly rising retirement ages … etc. etc. For those possessed of A-levels, let alone degrees, a job seemed basically a viable assumption rather than a goal, it was a question of which not whether. All of which had changed a lot by, say, 2009, when I was 23 and had been out of university two years. I hung on to a job I hated for probably a year longer than I should have because I knew (as someone with an Oxford First!) I was lucky to be in a job at all.

But I have to say that the elements of work entitlement I’ve come across from my own generation are swept away entirely by the attitudes betrayed, usually in fact by people rather older, among professional musicians. Almost the default stance is that because they are professional musicians, they are owed a level of pay for the working schedule to which they are accustomed which will equate to a living wage.

Now I understand that it is painful to find oneself in possession of slipping income amid changing circumstances. But it is also the very frequent, almost common, lot of workers and indeed businessmen and freelancers from the Industrial Revolution onwards. There was a great deal of griping among the frame-weavers when power looms started popping up, doing the work several times quicker in a more controlled factory environment and being operated by unskilled young women who were a lot cheaper to hire than paterfamilias craftsmen. It went as far as medium-scale destruction of the new machinery. But ultimately the only solution was to find alternative employment that would pay well enough within the new system, and those who refused to do so simply starved. I’m not describing that as a positive in any way, just as a realistic historical point of view.

The professional musician seems to me to have a similar large-scale choice. There is a great deal of griping about low (or no) payment, and amateurs, part-timers, starry-eyed newbies etc. who accept those deals and so break the market for the rest of ‘us’. And it is possible to resolve the problem from this end; but only by one of two means:

  1. An equivalent of minimum wage for freelance ‘by the job’ work which nonetheless requires inherent minimum amounts of hours (and perhaps expenses). Theoretically conceivable, but an immense legal problem to draw up satisfactorily, vastly opposed to the current centre-right consensus of all parties likely to form the backbone of any near-future UK government, and not something I’ve seen anyone even calling for.
  2. A really strong union, such that minimum pay levels could be set and adhered to and non-members would be effectively frozen out like strike-breakers. It can be done: the US musicians’ unions managed to successfully boycott the recording industry for a few years in the mid-40s (successfully at least in the sense that there really was very little recording done; I can’t be bothered right now to go and research how fully the demands were met). But it requires a more or less closed shop, mass membership of the MU and genuine commitment to the organisation; all of which are currently lacking – and curiously the same demographic of people complaining about money usually cry down the MU, perhaps because they feel (maybe rightly) it only does anything practically for classical musicians and teachers, and so isn’t ‘on their side’.

So if this end isn’t practical, I must be setting the stage for an alternative that is.

Well, yes. And it’s fairly simple really: if you can’t sell what you’ve been doing dear enough, change market. Most of the US big-band musicians of the 30s and 40s went over to running sextets or smaller after the second world war as small jump-jive combos and bebop groups started providing similar levels of excitement with the much reduced overheads of less than half the personnel. There are equivalent options today. Or, if you can’t get the money for what you used to, what else can or could you do that would? Sadly, I don’t think you can claim to be a professional and an artist equally. One has to yield to another. So either take a day job (part time? in publishing perhaps? ;-p) to let you keep playing originals and interesting music and pub / venue gigs – or swallow your pride and play dancefloor-filling covers at wedding receptions. There aren’t enough jobs for violin soloists? Shame, you’d better take up the viola / form a function string quartet (yes, and stomach playing more Beatles and Broadway arrangements than actual string quartets) / learn folk fiddle and join a ceilidh band / teach questionably motivated or talented seven-year-olds with pushy parents. And so on to the end of the chapter

Because in general it’s difficult and uncertain to change the world, and whether or not it happens usually depends on a lot of someone elses. Changing your own strategy may be a lot less pleasant, but it’s more dependable. And by definition of being a professional, you need work to be dependable whether or not it’s pleasant.