I heard an interview recently with Elvis Costello on NPR’s
Weekend
Edition Saturday. He was referring to what he tells parents who ask advice
about their children pursing music and he said for them to be sure they are
pursuing “music and not fame because fame will disappoint you but music rarely
will.” He went on to explain how the emotional commitment to making music is
why you anyone should do it. We’ve certainly seen that play out on American
Idol which promises that with enough ratings, money and buzz they can make
someone a star. But then what? Recently I performed a full-moon house concert
in a wonderful back yard patio that was a magical experience and a reminder to
me on how to ride the emotional and logistical roller coaster of pursing music
as my life. At some times when I’ve sworn off music it has pursued me. Here is
the question that arose after this gig: How do you know if you’ve done a good
job or not?
Leading up to a gig promoters, venue owners and the like
get nervous and will say something about how many of “your” people they are
expecting you to bring, what kind of songs they would like to hear and what
they think you should play. You learn to smile, not get defensive and be
confident and cool. Your thinking of all the press releases, personal fliers,
emails, facebook and MySpace blasts you’ve sent out the favors you called in
and guest list you typed up, the sound system you hauled from the parking lot
two miles away. Not to mention the blogs, videos, hours of rehearsal tailoring
of your outfit and set list and even the banter between songs you’ve worked up.
That is cool though. That is what is expected on my end. I mean I’m the musician/entertainment
and these people coming have spent 40-plus hours at their jobs that week and
are making an investment in me and my goal is to deliver and well-paced set
that will make people feel uplifted in some way. Boredom is a killer so I
remind myself keep it short Randy! Keep the banter short! Push the CD’s. Don’t say “well anyway.”
Thing is that after the show you rarely hear from the
people who booked you. I make it a practice to send a note thanking them for
hosting me etc., and sometimes get a response but often am left with the
feeling of wonderment. CD sales, new mailing list email addresses can somewhat
quantify success and certainly talking with people afterwards and getting their
heartfelt compliments is some real feedback. One phrase that performers rarely
like to hear after a show is the dreaded, “So how did you feel about the show?”
Yikes! Not a door I like to open. Doing shows away from the Native American
flute festival circuit allows me to do my singer-songwriter material. What I
have found is that people want to be moved. When I do a moving or poignant song
they are with me and want more of “that.” People still come up and tell you
which song they liked most and you try not to think—well what about the other
110 minutes? But any compliment is better than striking down my equipment alone
with no one talking to me. That is a clear message. http://i204.photobucket.com/albums/bb148/Lonegranger/houseconcert2.jpg

So as I was playing the other night to a lot of strangers
who paid $20 each to hear me I looked at the full-moon rising and reminded
myself just how absolutely awesome it is that I am playing a concert of music I’ve
written and rehearsed and I am communicating emotions through the vibrations of
my music. I am relaying an experience through this sound system, these instruments
and all of us are sharing this each with our own personal story. This isn’t a
feeling of power but of humility and I couldn’t be any more “in the moment”
than I am. And as I felt all that I knew I was pursuing the music in the purest
sense and not whether I can pay my bills next month. After this concert I met
wonderful people one who was the percussion director at the local university, a
music professor from New York and a dance teacher from the east coast and an
Apache woman (part of my heritage as well.) You never ever know who is there so
you have to give everything, step up and hold nothing back. A woman asked to
take my photo to paint a portrait which leads to a brisk discussion amongst
people as to what ethnicity my facial features resembled most. The painter’s
husband came back to tell me that a man hasn’t made him cry in 12 years until I
sang my song “Hello Daddy” and that man was Puccini. I smiled and thought “Job
well done Randy.”
June 25
th at 7:00 PM I do a requested return
performance at the Hillsboro Community Center in historic Hillsboro, NM. Check
my
calendar for
details. June 27
th I do a short set at the Women’s Club building
across from Pioneer Park in Las Cruces, NM part of the Southern New Mexico
Pride rally. I’m on at 11:00AM. I’m on Facebook at
facebook.com/lonegranger. Here is the
video performance of Hello Daddy from the house concert. Sorry it is a little
dark.
Randy