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Showing posts with label professional. Show all posts
Showing posts with label professional. Show all posts

Saturday, August 29, 2015

Downtime on a Ship

This post comes in response to a request that I received from "miss bliss" and I will happily comply because it is a major issues and topic for any musician or entertainer working onboard a cruise ship.  I was asked to write about what people do with their downtime while working onboard a ship.  How downtime is handled can mean all the difference between a happy contract and a miserable one and also moving forward with professional goals or staying stagnant and stuck in the same cycles.

For almost all musicians and entertainers there is a lot of downtime during a contract.  Even on a busy playing day there is still a lot of time to fill.  Say that on the worst day a musician is scheduled to perform six hours (which for most positions rarely happens), that still leaves 18 hours left to fill.  Consider that on a ship musicians live where they work, there is no commute, there is no cooking as the meals are provided in the mess.  A lot of things on land that take up a person's time away from work aren't really considerations on a ship.  Port days are probably the easiest because there is always the option to go into town for a while.  But there are also sea days, where the ship will not dock while in transition from one port to the next.  Sounds easy, but put a few sea days together and most everyone on the ship starts to go stir crazy.  My personal record was 10 sea days in a row because we were going from the Middle East to Europe.  Seven sea days were already scheduled just for transit time including a day through the Suez Canal (which is still a sea day because the ship is moving and nobody can exit the ship in the Suez Canal), but then the uprisings in Egypt happened and they canceled three ports in Egypt without replacing them with another port, which meant we went 10 days without touching land.  That will test the patience and mental stability of even the most experienced seafarer.

Regular life onboard a ship is not exactly like a free weekend at home on land.  On the ship you only have access to the tv channels that they are able to get, which might be some cable channels but in other parts of the world might only include older movies and a news channel if you are lucky.  And don't think about being connected online 24 hours a day.  As I have mentioned in previous posts, the crew is charged by the minute for internet access.  The speed reminds me of AOL from about 20 years ago.  Most cruise ships use a satellite connection, which means the signal goes from the ship to a satellite in space, then beamed down to a receiving station on land, then sent over to a network, and then all goes back the way it came but in reverse.  You can see why everything from weather to positioning around the globe can make a major impact on the speed and even overall availability of access.  While most people are accustomed to being connected online 24 hours a day on land, it just isn't possible while on the ship.  You can see how much of a premium gets put on a strong wifi connection when the ship is in port.  Any place that has strong wifi will have a group of crew members Skyping, checking email, and updating their Facebook statuses.

Most musicians I know seem to either enjoy ships or hate them (or at least find them a necessary evil at a certain point in their lives) depending on what they get out of the experience.  This all boils down to planning and sticking to the plan.  I've often been asked by younger musicians  about whether they should stick with ships or give up ships and try full time on land.  My advice is always the same: if you are continuing to get something out of working on the ship, then do it while you can.  But if you no longer enjoy it and no longer find it satisfying, then it's time to find something new.  It's my advice for ships, but also my advice for any career, whether on land or at sea.  If you are no longer enjoying what it is you do for a living, then find something else.  Life is too short to spend 30 years or more doing something you hate doing every day.

Finding personal and/or professional satisfaction is key and can be different for each person.  I have worked with a lot of musicians fresh out of college looking to gain playing experience, to have a steady gig, and to have time to practice their instruments.  A cruise ship definitely satisfies those criteria.  Some musicians never traveled much, maybe even went to college just down the road from where they grew up, and want to see the world.  Working on a cruise ship that is in a different city every day is going to be a good fit for them.

But a word of caution in that cruise ships are not for everyone and they aren't usually the right fit for everyone for an entire 30 year career (although I do know some who are perfectly happy after decades in the job).  Cruise ships are full of repetition, from playing the exact same production shows every week for 6 months at a time, to playing the same or similar charts every week at jazz and big band sets, to playing the same rotation of guest entertainers every couple of months.  What might have appeared fulfilling, fun, entertaining, or even challenging at first can become part of the grind.  Same is true for the ports.  My first two contracts were on a ship in the Caribbean and we repeated itineraries every other week (one week was Eastern Caribbean, the next Western Caribbean, then back and forth every week of the year).  At first it was all new and it was nice for someone used to cold and snowy winters to be relaxing on a beach in 80 degree temperatures on Christmas Day.  But a year into it, the same 6 ports started to get old.  While at first I never missed an opportunity to go off the ship, at the end of one year I found myself staying onboard more and more often.  When I went to my second ship (3rd contract), the ship was based out of Dubai and the Middle East for 4 months of the year and doing the same itinerary week after week for those 4 months.  The first year we did 3 days a week in Dubai, then one day each in Abu Dhabi, Muscat, Fujairah, and Bahrain.  The second and third years changed by adding a sea day and eliminating the stop in Bahrain due to the political uprisings that started between our first and second years there.   By the end of my 3rd contract, those cities that seemed to exotic and interesting started to feel mundane.

But I have digressed, so back to the downtime aspect of ship life.  It is really important to have goals while onboard for a contract.  The musicians who are the happiest have something specific they want to achieve during their contract.  It might be practicing a certain number of hours on their instrument, or go through certain books, or improve in specific areas.  It might be more of a side project, something like writing or arranging.  Or it might be to go sightseeing and see new parts of the world.

If you enjoy sightseeing or history, try and do research before you start your contract.  Read up before you visit and it will make your time in a particular port even that much more rewarding.  I would research all of the new places online and save the info on my laptop, then before we would arrive to the port I would read through so I would know what to expect.  In the end it worked for me.  While I was out in the city taking mass transportation and seeing all there was to see, others stayed near the ship in a Starbucks (I still enjoy my Starbucks, I'm just saying) or an Irish bar (every city in the world seems to have its Irish bars).  Imagine what the crew members have to look back at years in the future: "yeah, I went all over the world and saw the inside of a Starbucks in 60 different countries."  I researched admission prices, opening/closing times of places of interest, as well as transportation schedules, routes, and prices so I could use my time as efficiently as possible.  I love the TripAdvisor app, and you can now download city guides for a lot of the major cities and use them offline while you walk around without having to be connected to the internet.  There is another app called Maps.me where maps can be downloaded with turn-by-turn directions and then used offline.  It can be a lifesaver if you get lost on the way back to the ship!

The people who are the most miserable are the ones that come onboard with no plan whatsoever and get bored in their first week.  Or they came with a plan but it went out the window because they either weren't focused or were just plain lazy.  Downtime can either be a blessing or a curse depending on how its used.

One major downfall I have seen time and time again is spending every night in the crew bar.  Cruise ships have a bar (sometimes more than one) specifically for the crew to use at night once they are finished with their work.  Alcohol is cheap and flows easily, which is attractive to many musicians.  One word of caution though, all cruise ships have limits on alcohol consumption, some more strict than others.  Unfortunately as a Musical Director, I have seen several musicians be fired because of drinking too much.  It is never a fun moment to have to appear with the musician in a Captain's hearing where they are fired and sent home at their own expense.  The crew bar can be a cycle, where some crew members go every night until it closes at 2am, then they sleep until Noon or later, wake up for rehearsal, eat dinner, do the shows, and then repeat the process.  One of the saddest cases I saw was an older musician who hated his job.  He spent $500 a week (which was about the average salary for the orchestra members at that time) in the bar and was eventually not re-hired because his drinking led to performance issues on the bandstand. Imagine spending every dollar you earn and then eventually lose you job over it.  I'm not saying that crew should never go to socialize, and isolating yourself in your cabin alone every night is worse, but everything in moderation.

My advice to those about to do a contract, whether it is their first or 50th, is to set concrete goals and stick to them.  Use check points throughout the contract to make sure you are staying on task and staying productive and of course modify if necessary.  If you are planning on arranging 10 charts during a six month contract, then set smaller goals, such as one the first month then two the next month and so on.  In the fourth month, if you haven't hit at least 7 charts, then you haven't been sticking to your routine.   Maybe you got sidetracked by something else productive, which could be OK, but maybe it's a sign that you have been focusing on less productive ways of spending your time.

A sad sequence of events I have seen all too often are with musicians who no longer want to work on ships but find themselves having to.  Ships are great if it is where you want to be.  But it can be a sad, lonely, and sometimes dark place if you feel that it is your only option.  I have seen musicians spend most of their paycheck either in port or in the bar due to boredom.  Then they go home with just enough cash to keep them going during their 6-8 week vacation, then find themselves without any other option financially so they come back to the ship and repeat the process over and over.  My suggestion: not only set goals for using your time, but set goals for saving money.  Make sure to come home with money in the bank.

As far as spending time productively, I mentioned arranging as an example because there are a lot of people that use it to productively fill time and also to make some extra cash during the contract.  Singers, guest entertainers, and sometimes even the ship's entertainment department are sometimes in need of new charts or updating older charts.  The ship's production cast is made up of singers, some of which are required to have their own charts.  As they perform more often, they might decide to pay to expand their personal collection of charts arranged for them, so they oftentimes look for somebody onboard to arrange for them.  In one of my latest contracts, the hotel director and cruise director wanted the orchestra to play some very recent pop music (i.e. "Happy" by Pharrell Williams and "Shake It Off" by Taylor Swift).  Because the orchestra usually uses charts and not whole songs by ear, they paid orchestra musicians to do the arrangements.  Not a bad way to make some spending money.  Plus the skills that a musicians continues to develop in arranging can also pay off on land after the contract is finished.

All in all, ships can be a great experience.  I have been able to visit over 60 countries.  I have been able to play with some great musicians from all parts of the world, who have all taught me as much or more than I could in a classroom.  And from playing every night, I have been able to greatly expand my repertoire.  This past contract I wrote a music textbook/workbook because my wife and I will be opening up a music school.  And speaking of my wife, I met her through ships which would have to be the best result of them all.  Had it not been for ships I am sure our paths would have never crossed.

Saturday, August 15, 2015

Building a Repertoire, Part 1

One of the most difficult parts of being an entertainer is building and expanding your personal repertoire to make sure you are continuing to play songs that people like to hear.  It is especially hard whenever your audience comes from from a variety of countries and cultures.  This is true for both solo entertainers as well as ensembles.

My first bit of advice is to not try too hard to please every single person.  You can never please them all.  Remember the saying, "you can please some of the people all of the time, you can please all of the people some of the time, but you can't please all of the people all of the time."  That saying is true when it comes to picking the music to play.  Instead of focusing your energy on that one person that leaves your lounge, focus on all the people staying and having a great time.  Most musicians I know are perfectionists so it goes against our mold to let it go, but there's no reason to ruin the good vibe you are setting just because you lost one person.  People have different musical tastes and don't take it personally if what you are playing doesn't mesh with one particular person's taste.  I've seen it happen, though.  An entertainer sees the people in their room and sometimes they notice that a small group of people is more involved in their own conversation than in listening to the music.  So what does the entertainer try to do?  They start to focus their attention on the small group and neglect the rest of the audience, making the much larger group want to leave.

Now although you may not be able to please all of the passengers all of the time, there is nothing wrong with playing music that the passengers actually enjoy.  Surprising, right?  In some of my previous posts I mentioned the typical cruise demographics.  If you can figure out the average guest (if that really exists) on your upcoming contract or gig, then you can start to personalize your repertoire.  Try to keep in mind the cultures and ages of most of the passengers that will be coming to listen to you night after night.  It will always be a balance of what you as a musician want to play and what the audience wants to hear.  Somewhere in the middle lies a happy balance.  I've seen guys playing in jazz sets around the ship and they refuse to take requests of standards because they would rather play bebop or something that they personally find more musically fulfilling.  One passenger asked the band if they could play "Take the A Train."  Simple enough request.  The band knew the tune, the passengers knew it and would have enjoyed listening to it.  Did the band play it?  No.  And why, might you ask?  Because the members of the band thought it was too basic and not challenging enough.  They would rather play 20 choruses each of "Spain" to an empty room than fulfill a simple request from a passenger.  While you can't please all of the people, just make sure that it's not just the people on the bandstand enjoying the music.

This next bit might sound a little contradictory to my first suggestions, but my second piece of advice is not to lose yourself in that process.  You were hired because of what you do best.  There will be some genres you feel more comfortable with and others not as much, and that is OK.  It is good to expand what you can offer, but at the same time make sure not forget your own strengths.  Think about it like branding, because as an entertainer or band you are your own brand.  When people see your name or the band's name, there should be something that comes to mind.  When people hear The Beatles, they expect rock and roll, when they hear John Coltrane, they expect jazz.  If you start going off in a million directions you will lose the power of your brand.  You could imagine the confusion if The Rolling Stones would come out on stage after decades of doing rock and roll and then started doing nothing but waltzes.  It would destroy all the work they put in to build their brand and their image.  The same is true in if the band isn't playing in Madison Square Gardens or the Hollywood Bowl.  For instance, if a band was put together to be a "Latin band" that performs on ships, they should focus their attention to playing different Latin styles.  They should also learn some other styles, such as some ballads, pop, ballroom, and jazz because there will probably be a time when it is useful.  But if the one band hired to play Latin styles then they should play mostly Latin styles.  If that band starts playing more rock than anything else, you can see where it would become a problem with the onboard management.

I would recommend asking the hiring person at the cruise line or your agent if you are not directly hired, and ask what need they are trying to fill with entertainment onboard.  The person in charge of hiring entertainers should know and can help you out.  Try and get an email address for the Musical Director/Bandmaster on your next ship and try and find out what they have been experiencing and ask for suggestions.  I have always been more willing to work with somebody being proactive, rather than playing to an empty lounge and not caring.  Yes, you will receive your pay no matter what, but it might be your last gig with that cruise line if the Hotel Director, Cruise Director, and Musical Director aren't happy with you job performance.

There are other factors to take into consideration as well, and some of them will be the subject of my next post.

Tuesday, August 11, 2015

Long Overdue Update

So it has been a while since I last wrote a post... a long, long while.  I wish I could have a really good excuse, but it was just a matter of things got busy once I was on the ship and continued for the next 8 months and then got home and was busy there as well.

Being back on land really reminds us how much technology and communication plays a part of our every day life.  On the ship, phone calls are pretty much for emergencies and internet access is a commodity that is charged by the minute.  On my last 3 contracts, we were able to buy an internet package of $30 for just over 6 hours of access.  And the signal is a satellite connection that makes 1997 AOL dial up speed seem fast.  So next time you complain that you are paying $20 a month for high speed data on your phone, just know it could be much worse.  At our best rate, unlimited internet on the ship would be over $2,500 a month.  Even worse, the rate for passengers would work out somewhere around $25,000 (this is no exaggeration, their rate is somewhere around 60 cents per minute, just do the math from there).

So what were we up to for the last 8 months?  I started my contract in November in Athens, Greece at the start of the crossing, meaning that the ship was moving locations around the world, this time from Europe to Asia.  We spent about 4 and a half months throughout Asia until returning to Europe where we finished the contract on July 4 in Southampton, the port for London, England.

All in all we visited over 40 countries on three continents (Europe, Asia, Africa).  I added seven new countries to my travel list, bringing it 65 countries visited while working on a ship and 68 visited in my lifetime.  Some of the new ones were fun and exciting and a couple of new ones were major disappointments... more on those in a separate post.

During this past contract a lot happened with different opportunities and things that will be happening for us in the future.  I will give a full update later, but this past contract will be our last where my wife was in the production cast and I was a member of the ship's orchestra.  We have learned to never say never, but this is the right time to head in a different direction.  Everyone on a ship laughs when a crew member says it will be their last contract.  For many, they say it every time and make their way back to the ship contract after contract.  But right now we have several opportunities to continue doing what we love in different venues so we will take it.

My goal is now being back on land will give me the chance to continue writing right here.  We will continue to travel and perform and we will also be working on land so I will surely have plenty to write about.  At least it will be easy to improve from the amount of time from my last post to this one.


Tuesday, November 4, 2014

Sting Worked on a Cruise Ship

Yesterday I was reading an article about the launch of Sting's new album, "The Last Ship."  He performed some of the album material for the press onboard the Queen Mary 2 because Cunard has partnered with Sting to promote his new album.  In the interview, Sting revealed that at one point early in his career he did a contract on a ship, the P&O Oriana.  He played bass in a band and also sang, until they received complaints that his singing was "bothering the female passengers."  I guess it goes to show that you can't please every passenger.  Since his contract on P&O, Sting has released 5 studio albums with The Police, 11 solo studio albums, and in total between his former band and his solo career has sold over 275 million albums.  That's 275,000,000!  Throw in 16 Grammy Awards and I think it's safe to say he is most likely the most successful former ship musician of all time.

One of the best quotes was when he mentioned that performing in a band on a cruise ship gave him valuable experience.  "You had to do all kinds of music.  You had to play ballroom dancing, you had to play cabaret, pop music, disco, anything... It was a very good education for a young musician."  That coming from an icon in rock/pop music.  For anyone who has ever performed onboard a ship, they can relate to what he is talking about.

There are other performers who got their start working on a cruise ship.  Academy Award-winning actress and singer Jennifer Hudson at one point performed in the Hercules show onboard the Disney Wonder.  Actress Taraji Henson, who was in the movies Hustle and Flow, Baby Boy, Curious Case of Benjamin Button, Think Like a Man, and the television series Person of Interest, worked on Odyseey cruise lines while attending school at Howard University.  There are also numerous singers and dancers on Broadway and West End who have spent time performing onboard cruise ships.  It provides a great opportunity to paid as well as perform, see the world, and gain valuable experience.

Reading the article about Sting led me to an important point and that is a point I have made previously on this blog, and is you must set goals to make sure that you get something out of the experience.  If Sting honed his craft decades ago by playing on a ship, then any musician can, if they have the right mindset.  Did most musicians on a cruise ship set out with this as a career goal?  No.  But they can learn from their time if they choose to do so.

There are 5 parts to how to accomplish this:

1) Set concrete practice goals for each contract.  Set minimum amounts of time to spend practicing and hold yourself accountable to it.  There will still be time to get off the ship and explore the ports, have other hobbies, and log practice time.  And the practice time should not just be shedding the music to play on the ship, which is a good thing to make sure you are prepared and keep your ship job.  But make sure to include general technique and expand on your fundamentals because this is what will make you a better musician in the future.  Determine your weaknesses and go after them.  Unfortunately I see a lot of musicians log practice hours going through things that they already do well.  Maybe it's because they want to walk away feeling good.  Practice should be uncomfortable, it should push you as a musician and as a person.  Don't play through the same things over and over, especially when you can already do it well.  Instead, find your areas of weakness and spend quality time trying to improve them.  But you have to set aside the time.  Because it is easy, I see a lot of musicians stay out late at the crew bar, then sleep until the afternoon when rehearsal starts, then repeat the process.  I find it kind of funny that it is usually those musicians who hate ships and complain about working on them.  It's all how you look at it.

2) Learn from the music you have to play.  There is a lot of music to be played on a ship.  Sting said it well in that you will play so many different styles of music every day.  It's your choice how you want to look at it.  Some people dislike the job because they are playing a lot of music, but not necessarily the stuff they want to play.  No offense, but I see that attitude most with the hardcore jazz guys.  They want to play nothing but burning, up-tempo bebop tunes to show off their chops and have some stupid showdown with other musicians on tunes like "Donna Lee" or "Giant Steps" or "Cherokee."  When solos come around, they usually play fifteen choruses of some completely unlistenable garbage full of crazy extensions and then when finished, they stand off to the side with a smug look while criticizing everyone else's solo and saying how much better his own was.  Ok, rant over.  But back to the music, there are a lot of styles I studied in school but hardly used on a regular basis  On almost every single cruise, the orchestra will play samba, bossa nova, mambo, rhumba, waltzes (English and Viennese), swing, funk, rock, etc.  Now it is up to me if I want to care about what I'm playing or go on autopilot.  Use that experience to really dig into the different styles and learn how to play them authentically.  Same it true with guest entertainer shows.  I have vastly expanded my musical knowledge by performing with the different guest entertainers, the acts who come for just a few days at a time.   I have played everything from music theater to classical to Motown and everything in between and I know I am a better musician for it.

3) Learn from the people you are working with.  I have been so fortunate to work with some really talented people from all over the world.  While I might have studied a lot of world music while in school, it was totally different seeing it up close and personal every day with people who grew up with it.  I have worked with steel drummers from Trinidad, salsa musicians from Latin and South America, and dance bands from all over the globe.  They all grew up with different perspectives on music than I did, and sometimes learning from them caused a breakthrough in my own playing.  And it's not just true with the performing side, I have also worked with some excellent production team members (stage managers, sound techs, light techs, riggers, stagehands, etc.) who have gone on to work with major touring acts such as Aerosmith and The Rolling Stones, or with shows such as Cirque du Soleil and Dragone, and have worked at incredible permanent venues such as Brevard Music Center and major universities throughout the country.  Everyone working onboard is a resource if you choose to learn from them.

4) Learn how to perform.  This might seem silly, but this is an area that many musicians might lack.  They don't understand what it means to be on stage or on the bandstand and actually perform for people.  I don't mean twirling my drumsticks above my head during a show, I mean playing in an ensemble using listening skills.  I like to communicate with the other musicians, particularly the other members of the rhythm section while I perform along with them.  Because we are playing and producing sound, this usually means using non-verbal communication through eye contact.  I once worked with a bass player who  never looked up out of his stand... ever.  It was frustrating because it gave off a vibe that he just didn't care about anyone but himself.  In actuality he was inexperienced and was just trying to keep his head above water reading while the charts, but it made the playing situation more difficult than it could have been.  Learn how to listen to the ensemble and take musical cues from your colleagues, it can make a world of difference.  Musical interaction is the name of the game.

5) Develop your professional skills.  I've said it before and I will say it again and again, being a musician, singer, dancer, entertainer, etc. is still a job.  It might be a fun job, but it is still a job, meaning that it is a profession, meaning that you need to be professional.  There are parts of the job that are not enjoyable, but are necessary.  Things like paperwork or training or punching a time clock (this is required of all crew members on all cruise lines in order to comply with international maritime labor laws).  But you take the bad with the good and in the end you must weigh them all to see if the job is personally worth it.  Some people know how to be professional without ever thinking about it, but for some it is more of an acquired skill.  I see a lot of younger musicians who don't see the professional side as important because it is "just a ship."  As a musical director I try to advise them that whatever habits they are developing now will follow them in the future.  It's not like they can show up late for 6 months of a ship contract, then get a job on land and magically start showing up on time.  Habits are hard to break, for better or worse.  Might as well start good habits sooner than later.


Performing on a cruise ship offers a lot both professionally and personally.  I cannot complain with my own experience.  First, I met my wife while working on a ship.  Without the ship, we most likely never would have met.  Then there is the travel, sightseeing, and learning about other cultures.  After my next contract I will have traveled to 161 different cities in 63 countries on 5 different continents (still have Australia and Antarctica to go).  Yes, it makes picking a place for a personal vacation a little different than most people, but it has given me insight into many cultures and has broadened my own perspective, showing me how small the world is and how interconnected we all are.  I have met some incredible people from all over the world and keep in touch with a lot of them.  And I have made a living performing music and doing what I love.

Sting onboard the Queen Mary 2 (Photo from Cunard)

Thursday, October 23, 2014

The Darkness

This post will focus on one of the not-so-nice parts of working on cruise ships; it can affect all areas of the crew, but for some reason there seems to be a higher concentration amongst musicians.  While the job is really nice, I have found this darkness that can come out at time.  There is even a Facebook page dedicated to it called "Dark Showband Musicians."  I think at times we all experience it to a certain degree.  It is when people aren't happy with their jobs and it starts to take them over.

I have found specific times when "the darkness" tends to show itself.  The most common is at the end of a contract.  Spending 6-8 months onboard the same ship, seeing the same people, eating the same food, playing the same shows, this can lead to some burnout.  There is also a unique element to living where you work.  That nice meal in the mess (dining room) at the beginning of the contract starts to look inedible after so many months.  Even that nice crew member who always smiles when you pass by starts to get on that last nerve.

The other time can be more calendar related and that is around the holidays.  The holidays can be fun while working on a ship, but it can also be a reminder that you aren't around your family and friends at that time of year.  Many crew members call home or Skype home, ending the conversation with tears in their eyes, then have to go work with a smile on their face.  They sacrifice time with their own family to serve other families who are on their vacation.  Holidays are also the highest fares for a cruise, so there are a lot of added expectations for the crew and oftentimes extra work which can lead to more darkness.

Then there are other times that the darkness can come out at any random time.  While it can signal other problems in a person's life, I have found five common reasons for everyday darkness with ship musicians.

1) Playing on a cruise ship often has a lot of included downtime.  Even on a busy day, there are still hours to fill.  The problem lies with the people who don't have a healthy way to spend their downtime.  The happiest musicians I've seen have something else to do during their contract.  That can be sightseeing, photography, working out, arranging songs, working on a course, etc.  The people who don't enjoy their time usually sit in their cabin bored out of their mind, or spend every hour in the evening drinking at the crew bar.  If you are about to do a contract, make of list of things you want to accomplish during the time and stick to it.  And don't count on the internet for a way to spend time because first, it's extremely slow on a ship because it is a satellite based system, and second, crew pay for internet on the ship by the minute so the cost adds up quickly.

2) The musician isn't playing the music that they want to play.  Not to generalize, but I've seen this the most with the jazz guys.  Their ideal gig would be living in NYC and playing jazz all day, every day.  On a cruise ship there is jazz, but also many other genres from classical to rock to Broadway.  A side to this is not landing the gig that they want.  In their minds, some musicians believe that they are dumbing themselves down and lowering their standards by performing on a ship.  They are unhappy that they aren't working in NYC or LA.  Truth be told, I have performed with a lot of great musicians, performers, and sound techs who have had amazing gigs both before and after cruise ships.  I played with a lead trumpet from Maynard Ferguson's band, a trombone player who toured with Tom Jones, a sound tech who is now touring with the Rolling Stones, a singer who won the NBC show "The Sing Off" ... you get my point.  The gig is what you make it.

3) They are caught in a money trap with ships and don't know how to get out.  I have met so many people (not just musicians) who have said they are doing "one last contract" and then I see them a few months later signing back on the ship.  Some people are just really irresponsible with money.  While they work on ships to save money, but they spend too much (either too much shopping, drinking, or eating off the ship) and aren't left with enough savings to support themselves when they go back to land.  When they go home for a 6-8 vacation and don't work and only spend, they go back to their next contract with no money left in their bank account.  It's a viscous cycle that they just don't know how to break so working on a ship becomes a necessary evil to them.  Set savings goals and stick to them.  It's easy so save money by working on a ship; there is no rent, basic meals are paid for

4) Some people are just not meant for ship life.  It's not a bad thing, it's just a fact.  Ships are full of rules and schedules and some musicians aren't used to it and don't want that kind of structure.  There are rules for everything and all cruise lines have a strict, zero tolerance policy on drugs and abuse of alcohol.  Crew members must wear a uniform and name tag in a public areaI'm more of a rule follower myself, so I never had an issue in this regard, but I've seen a lot of "rebel" people that just can't cope with a lot of rules.  Another aspect of ship life that is not for everyone is having to leave family and friends behind for 6-8 months at a time.  It is a very big sacrifice, especially for parents who miss out on the major milestones of their children.

5) Finally, some people are just miserable no matter what and need something to complain about.  Call them grumpy curmudgeons or whatever you like, but unfortunately these people can be detrimental to an ensemble.  Darkness just breeds more darkness.  Give them $10,000 in cash and they will complain it's not $20,000.  I've worked with several of those people.  One time we were doing 7-day cruises with an overnight in Dubai every single cruise for almost 3 months.  One day I had to call a rehearsal in the late afternoon because of the theater schedule and we were doing a show with an entertainer at night.  The keyboard player stood up and cursed at me because I was taking away some of his port time.  He didn't figure it out that 1) he is working and work does come first, and 2) we were in Dubai for two days every week for three months, it's not like asking him to come back a couple of hours early was taking that much away from his Dubai experience.


To be honest, every single ship I have worked on has had people like this, but life is short and not worth wasting time on them.  The good news is that not everyone is like that.  I was usually lucky and could find people who were happy people.  Life is what you make of it and you have the choice in your own attitude.

Friday, September 26, 2014

Advice to Future Musicians and Music Majors

Now that I am on vacation, I was asked to speak to a group of high school students about life as a professional musician and also what it took be to a music major in college.  It made me reflect back on my own experience and also the last several years of being a musical director and working with musicians from all over the world.  Here ten pieces of advice for anyone thinking about majoring in music or pursuing music as a career:

  • Learn to read music as fluently as possible.  Music is a language and it is impossible to communicate professionally if you are not fluent in that language.   I know professional musicians who are able to earn a living and they don't read, but they admit they have been limited because of that fact.  In certain situations, like becoming a music major or certain professional settings such as an orchestra, learning to read is simply not an option, it is a fundamental requirement.  The most successful musicians I have worked with are great readers.  Having good ears is important as well, but being able to read sheet music gives common ground to all the musicians in the room.  I have worked with musicians who could not speak English and I could not speak their native language and we got by without a problem through the language of music.
  • Play as much as you can and gain experience in as many genres as possible.  Audition for bands, find other musicians and play together.  Look for community groups (theater, orchestra, etc.) because those will help as well in the future.  When I was studying classical percussion, I was taught to be very particular about the sound I was creating; that drive continues to help me whenever I play drumset because I am more aware of the sound I am producing around the set.  When I was in high school I joined a reading band (meaning a band that rehearses but doesn't gig) that met once a week in the basement of an orthodontist's house.  For most of the time I was the youngest person there and one of the few that was pursuing music as a profession.  I didn't make any money from it since we didn't gig, but I did gain a lot of experience.  We read through 10-15 different charts each week and there are still times, 20 years later, that I am familiar with a song because of that band.
  • Actively listen to as much music as possible. I hate when people ask me what is my favorite kind of music or who is my favorite artist because I don't really have an answer.  They assume that because I am a musician that it is easy to name one, but I think it is because I am a musician that it becomes impossible to chose one.  When I was in 8th grade, my band director gave me recordings of great drummers and that completely changed the way I looked at a drumset.  The first recording she gave me was Dave Weckl's solo album, "Masterplan," and I literally wore out the cassette tape from playing it so much.  That one little effort from my band director pushed me to find more good music.  I went from being a passive listener to being an active listener trying to break down the playing styles of world-class drummers.  Don't just throw on music in the background; instead, listen and analyze what it is you are hearing.  Listening to music kind of fills up this musical reserve that we all have and then we draw from it every time we play.  Learning to transcribe is a valuable skill.  I don't mean playing it back note for note, but I am a better funk drummer because I listened to David Garibaldi and Tower of Power and I am a better rock drummer because I listened to John Bonham and Led Zeppelin and so on.
  • Learn how to practice.  Ok, this sound obvious, but it isn't always a skill that advanced younger musicians develop.  The problem lies in the fact that natural talent can only take a musician so far; eventually they will hit a wall.  Now when they hit that wall is different for each individual, some in high school, some in college, and some out in the working world.  But it will happen and if the musician hasn't learned how to practice at an earlier age then it will spell disaster.  Even if the music you are currently playing is easy for you, continue to develop the skills of how to practice because at some point they will be needed.
  • Find information.  We live in a world inundated with information.  It's both a blessing and curse.   I wish I had access to so much information when I first started learning to play drums.  Must be nice to be able to pull up any drummer through a YouTube video.  But all of that information is nothing if we don't know how to use it.  I can't read a medical textbook and call myself a doctor just like I can't read a drum method book and call myself a professional drummer.  Find a private teacher, somebody who can guide you through books.  Plus, unless you are recording every single practice session, you need somebody to listen to and evaluate your progress.  Seek out people who are experts at what they do and have more experience than you.  I have been incredibly fortunate to be able to watch a lot of amazing drummers perform at shows, clinics, and conventions.  9 times out of 10, those famous musicians that younger musicians idolize are actually really nice people who remember what it was like to be starting out.  Chances are they will take a moment to answer questions.  Find professionally gigging musicians in your hometown and find out how they do what they do.
  • Don't be afraid to try something new.  I remember being absolutely terrified of Latin styles when I was younger.  The independence required made me not even want to try.  It just seemed like something I wasn't meant to do!  Same goes when I enrolled in a basic jazz improvisation class and I had to play piano, an instrument I never had played before.  But I learned so much in both of those experiences and I am so glad I didn't let my fear stop me.  When I was in high school, I broke my foot which meant I couldn't play drumset, even though I was enrolled in my school's jazz band.  I took the opportunity to learn more about hand drums and starting playing congas when it fit.  Again, that drive to create a good tone made me think more critically about the sound I created on the set with sticks.
  • Push Yourself.  You never know your true potential until you push yourself to your limits.  This is true about music and life in general.  How far can you run?  You never know until you run until you can't run any more.  I remember growing up in Cincinnati and thinking I would attend a local college because it was close to home and it was familiar.  But luckily my band director encouraged me to visit other programs and it turned out that I found a great music school at the University of North Texas.  The music school and percussion program greatly shaped me to what I am as a musician and I am so thankful that I made the decision to go there.  The program is demanding and it was never easy.  There are so many excellent musicians and it takes constant practice for lessons and rehearsals, but it all made me a better musician and a better person.
  • Set goals and know what it is you are working towards.  This can always change as you are growing and developing as a musician, but continue to set goals and go after them.  Imagine just getting into your car and driving without any particular destination in mind.  Doesn't sound very efficient, right?  Same thing for wanting a particular career path but not setting goals on how to get there.  Goals don't have to be these lofty things that sound great but are next to impossible to reach.  You can have those as well, but make sure you have goals that you can reach; they can even be on the way to those bigger goals.  Going back to the driving metaphor, if you are taking a cross-country road trip from New York to Los Angeles, those aren't the only points on the map.  Instead, there are place in between, the points along the drive to make sure you are going to end up exactly where you want in the end.
  • Learn when to take a break.  It is easy to get burnt out in music or in any career really.  Set aside time for other things.  Take up a hobby, and it is better if that hobby is something completely unrelated.  If you are a performance major and your hobbies include arranging music, listening to music, and attending music concerts, that's not really ever taking a break from music.  Instead, learn how to paint or write, watch a movie, attend a sporting event, or spend time with friends discussing things that aren't music.  Make friends that are outside of your professional or college major.  For me, my break is in getting out and visiting places, especially with my wife.  I like to take photos.  I also enjoy keeping up with my favorite sports teams and watching in person when I can.  Knowing when to get away is important.  There are times when spending more time practicing or more time writing starts to become counterproductive and a waste of your time and energy.  Instead, know when to walk away for a bit and take a breather.  That way when you go back to it, you come back refreshed and maybe with a different perspective.
  • Always remember that music is a business.  Yes, it can be a fun and rewarding business, but it is still a business.  Return phone calls, emails, and texts and be professional.  Do not be late and have a good attitude while you are there.  The music world is a small one and word travels fast, both good and bad, so just because you think you will never play with a particular musician again, you never know who that person knows.  And just as with any other kind of job, there are probably little parts that you may not enjoy (paperwork, driving, setting up and tearing down equipment), but don't blow them off just because you don't enjoy it because it will come back to bite you later.  Whenever a bandleader is hiring, they will chose people they enjoy playing with, which may or may not be the most talented people.  Music is about interaction and collaboration on stage, in the studio, or wherever the music is happening, so don't make it a miserable experience for the other musicians.

This list is not meant to be an all-inclusive list, but just as a bit of advice.  Feel free to comment at the bottom and add your own pieces of advice!