Posts Tagged ‘Live’

How To Sing Live On Stage In Public – Pre-Gig Preparation And Onstage Performance Tips

February 13th, 2010

This guide is a follow on from an earlier article I wrote about how to start a career as a professional singer. It helped on a broad level from obtaining the right equipment for you to use at a gig to how to get yourself on the books of an entertainment agency.

In this piece I’m going to tell you about the preparation on the day of a singing performance, it will be you be energised, confident and light on your feet so you can shine like a star. First off, you need to consider your food intake on the day. When it comes to showtime you don’t want to feel sluggish with a stomach full of heavy, starchy food so avoid pizzas, chips, pies and most other types of junk food. You need to eat with a see-saw effect, starting the day with the heaviest of foods then getting lighter with food that is easier to digest. A great example diet on the day could be, toast and a bowl of cereal with a banana for breakfast, for lunch, tuna and pitta bread with mayo and salad, for early evening a healthy thick vegetable soup. This will give your body a chance to digest the heavy carbohydrates early on but the later meals give you sustained energy through the evening time.

The next step is voice preparation, around an hour before you set off to your gig you should do a warm up session. First you should do a full body stretch for every muscle group. This is a time where you can regulate some steady breathing, counting to three slowly whilst you breathe in and again to breathe out. Next you can warm your voice up by running through some scales of notes, a guitar or a piano may help you stay in tune. Quarter of a hour of vocal warm ups should get you ready to try a run through of some of the songs you will be performing in the evening. Once you have completed this you can try some scales just before you go on stage but this is your preference, personally I think the warm up at home is enough to last the rest of the day.

So here we are, 5 minutes to show time but wait a second. You’re not just a singer, you’re an entertainer. In my opinion the gig starts when you enter the venue. So after you have rigged up your equipment, rather than hanging around the dressing room area you could go out to meet and greet the members of your audience. Unless you are Mick Jagger, this is a very simple concept which will make a crowd warm to you as it shows you are down to earth, so even though you will soon morph into a rock god you are showing appreciation to the people who came to see you.

Now you are on the stage and the first song is starting, you are warmed up, energised from healthy nutrition and have the crowd on your side. Now sing…. but when you sing, look up and outwards. There is nothing on the floor that is so interesting you can neglect a room full of people all looking in one direction, at you. Many singers look at the floor for many reasons, they are shy, they are concentrating too hard on staying in pitch but the drawback is you are not connecting with the crowd and unless it is an amazing captivating performance their interest will wane. This brings on another key point and that is smile. When you smile, the world smiles with you. Try it next time you go out to the shops, it works. When I first starting smiling on stage people would react with a great interest and positive feedback which in turn inspired me into more flamboyant performances. At first it felt rather strange smiling when no-one was actually saying or doing something funny. It felt like I was a fake and people would tell. I tried it in front of a mirror and it looked like a minimal, content smile that looked like I was pleased to be there.

The final pointer as hopefully your gig is going well, you are singing good and the crowd are happy. You should talk to them between songs. There is an art to this, as sometimes the crowd will shout something straight back when you say something creating a nice two-way communication. Providing it isn’t heckling you should have a nice time. The other scenario is when it falls on deaf ears and they look back blankly. This probably isn’t a rejection on your part more simply they are the ones afraid of public speaking. To counteract this you could write and rehearse a full interesting monologue you can use that requires no response whatsoever so if you are holding a one way conversation you look like the most confident interesting person in the room. Compile these new thoughts and ideas into your repertoire as an entertainer and you are one step closer to being a professional. Good luck.

The Tradition of Great Chicago Live Music Continues With Gooey

January 2nd, 2010

Chicago Illinois has long been a music epicenter. In the early 1900′s, plantation workers migrated from the south bringing with them jazz and the blues, which lead to the birth of the Chicago blues and Chicago style Jazz. Chicago became very famous for the Blues however the Chicago music scene is not just limited to the Blues. Chicago is full of every kind of music from Symphony to punk rock and everything in between. Any and every kind of music style, Chicago has it all.

During the 1960′s and 1970′s folk music became a focal point from a number of prominent folk singer-songwriters like John Prine and Steve Goodman. The Chicago music scene is also famous for the Chicago house, a style of house music, which led to the birth of the techno style of music. In the 1980′s and 1990′s rock music, especially heavy, punk rock and alternative music were strong in Chicago when bands like The Smashing Pumpkins got their big start. And more recently more hip hop artists like Kanye West are emerging from the Chicago music scene. Despite the different varieties of music, these artists all have one thing in common – they all got their start in Chicago.

The tradition of a great local music continues with Gooey, an energetic band who has hit the Chicago music scene with a number of power pop albums. Gooey is led by songwriter and vocalist Juan Avila and supported by Chris Eudy and Brian Vaughan on the electric guitar, Tom Hickey on the bass and John Noyes on the drums.

Gooey is known in the local Chicago music scene for their jangly power pop albums with catchy, relatable and heartfelt lyrics, toting Matthew Sweet and Beatles influences. From the release of their album Gooey in 2004 to their latest Larger than Large (coming out later in 2010), they have hit the right chord with Chicago music lovers and critics alike. Gooey is Chicago’s Hottest Band with the sticky sweet name and music that is not to miss in the Chicago live music scene. Gooey will have you dancing, singing and feeling great with their fun and funky sounds that grab you and keep you coming back for more.