![]() 04/26/2020 at 20:11 • Filed to: Quarantine, musiclopnik, guitarlopnik | ![]() | ![]() |
My MK5 GTI living its best life as a fun AND practical car.
The first two and a half months of 2020 were about as good as life has ever been for me. I drove almost 10,000 miles, played over 20 shows across a healthy sliver of the Continental United States and was gearing up for what was slated to be the busiest and most profitable summer of my young life.
I spent the first two weeks of the year on tour with a punk band serving as both guitarist and chauffeur from Detroit to New Orleans and most places in-between.
The Montana enjoying what is probably the only time it has ever been parked inside a garage.
The
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purchased specifically for this trip stunningly didn’t miss a beat, delivering us to every house show, bar, record shop, laundromat/bar hybrid, and bowling alley we had booked on this misadventure.
We arrived back home in Indiana the day before my main band, a psychedelic rock/fusion group called
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, began a string of shows that helped us make important connections and break into more venues.
We were booking shows left and right, but by mid-March it became apparent that all of our upcoming events were going to be postponed or cancelled altogether.
Big bends on my favorite Les Paul
I’m now well into my second month of isolation, and while my cat is very pleased that I’m home so much, I’m left to ponder the same feelings I know millions around the world are also nursing at this time. An uncertainty of the future. Many questions with no real answers. Will things ever go back to the way they were? Should they? Only time will tell.
What is evident to me now is that we really can’t do anything but live in the moment, make the most of the time we have, and try to help out our fellow man if they struggle along the way.
Just down the road from me in Fort Wayne, Indiana a car collector !!!error: Indecipherable SUB-paragraph formatting!!! a portion of his collection to raise almost a million dollars that he put directly into small businesses effected by the shutdown.
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A post shared by
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(@ashcrestcollection) on Apr 12, 2020 at 5:33pm PDT
We are all currently living through some really crazy times, at a scale that no person alive has ever seen, and through it all I really hope to see this trend continue. An increased sense of community and brotherhood among all people. Those in a position to help lending a hand, and everyone else doing our best to stay out of their way until this all slows down.
Then my mind casts back to all the people I met out on the road a couple weeks ago, all of them in the same position as me, many of them with much more at stake. Where do we all go from here?
Online appears to be the best, most obvious answer. While COVID-19 has certainly squashed in person events, we are better equipped to handle isolation today than ever before thanks to the wonders of technology. Hell, even NASCAR is doing iRacing now.
Most artists, !!!error: Indecipherable SUB-paragraph formatting!!! , have been using this time to create new content in the hopes that people will use some of their new-found free time to explore new music. It’s like my old guitar instructor used to say, “There are only two kinds of people in this world: Those who make music and those who listen to it.”
An actual screenshot of my revenue per stream on Spotify.
If you already have a lesser-known or local artist that you know you like, be sure to watch their social media for any live streams or new content they might be putting out to continue supporting them through this time. If you’re in the position you might even consider purchasing merchandise or a physical copy of their art.
As for finding new
smaller artists, there are many resources but probably the best for music would be
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.
While most established groups are on major streaming platforms, their algorithms make it very hard to actually make any money, especially for smaller artists.
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allows the artist to publish their music directly rather than using a distributor, and allows them to set their own price on their music, or set it so people can pay as much or as little as they want. Their genre tagging system also makes it easy to find underground artists making the kind of music you like.
My friend and bassist/lead singer tuning up before one of our last gigs in “the before time.”
In conclusion: S
upport local businesses, artists
and people in general if
you are
able to, stay home
unless you HAVE to be elsewhere, stay safe and healthy and maybe
we’ll all come out the other end of this
thing having learned something, and be
better off because of it.
If you have any favorite smaller or local artists of any medium that you know could use some love, share them in the comments down below.
P.S.
I promise my next post will be all about cars.
![]() 04/26/2020 at 20:22 |
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That’s rough. I play in the Austin Symphony and Austin Opera, and we haven’t turned a wheel since March 7. Fortunately, the symphony is in a position to pay us for our lost concerts, and the opera is paying us a portion. And I’m also fortunate that my wife, who is not a musician, has steady work . But I know plenty of musicians, both classical and pop , who are struggling. Many of the orchestra musicians make it on symphony, gigs, and teaching, all of which are now gone. We may not play again until July, and even that isn’t certain. So we’re all just waiting to see how it comes back, and it may come back looking quite different from the way it did before.
Best wishes for your future gigs. I knew I’d never get rich as a musician, but I can’t think of anything else I’d rather do. There’s no substitute for enjoying going to work.
![]() 04/26/2020 at 20:35 |
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Have you thought about doing private shows? Some people might be willing to pay if you came and performed in their backyard. It’s extra, but some people have expansive property. Think backyard weddings, but smaller scale for social distancing.
![]() 04/26/2020 at 21:15 |
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I’m diggin the Porch Kat stuff! You guys are very talented. Good luck.
![]() 04/27/2020 at 00:23 |
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Thank you so much!
![]() 04/27/2020 at 00:26 |
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We’ve looked into a couple options. A local venue is even talking about doing a “Drive-Thru” concert at some point. Whatever that means
![]() 04/27/2020 at 07:10 |
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Like a d rive-in movie, but people sit on their cars and watch y’all. I know people want to try their best to stay safe and bars are closed (even in GA), but there are still ways to put on shows without people too close together.