My first perfomance
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Sales Dude McBoob
- Posts: 2844
- Joined: Thu Dec 02, 2004 9:34 pm
- Location: Durham, NC. USA
- Contact:
One word:
Redundancy
Have back-up cables for cables you rely on. Have more than one plan for how you're going to hook into the sound system. Go to the club and scope out the sound system. Talk to the sound dude who will be there when you do your set. Tell him what you've got and what you're going to do.
When you practice don't think to yourself, 'okay, this is what it's going to sound like at the club'. It won't sound like that. It'll be weird sounding but you can adapt.
Give yourself a little room with your levels. The thing that caught me most off gaurd when I played my own material the first time was how drastically different some of the levels were of my tracks in my Live set. I'd be playing and I'd trigger a scene, then I'd trigger the next scene and it'd be twice as loud as the last scene, even though the million times I'd done that at home it always sounded even.
Walk in like you own the place.
Have fun!
Redundancy
Have back-up cables for cables you rely on. Have more than one plan for how you're going to hook into the sound system. Go to the club and scope out the sound system. Talk to the sound dude who will be there when you do your set. Tell him what you've got and what you're going to do.
When you practice don't think to yourself, 'okay, this is what it's going to sound like at the club'. It won't sound like that. It'll be weird sounding but you can adapt.
Give yourself a little room with your levels. The thing that caught me most off gaurd when I played my own material the first time was how drastically different some of the levels were of my tracks in my Live set. I'd be playing and I'd trigger a scene, then I'd trigger the next scene and it'd be twice as loud as the last scene, even though the million times I'd done that at home it always sounded even.
Walk in like you own the place.
Have fun!
"if you wanna play drunk/zooded you must practice drunk/zooded"
MBP 2011/i7/10.8/Live 8 Suite/M4L+Launchpad+TF+KorgNano.
http://soundcloud.com/netchaiev
http://www.vimeo.com/user408737
http://soundcloud.com/netchaiev
http://www.vimeo.com/user408737
It can be really dark up on stage and hard to see. I'd be practising in minimal lighting to ensure that you can see your controller and keyboard.
Spare cables are a must, I take combinations of various cables as you never know what inputs you will be faced with. Cable adapters can get you out of trouble. I always try to make balanced connections where possible (XLR, TRS). Stage lighting can work wonders on unbalanced connections. I even take a spare USB cable.
I dont use a mouse, too easy to click on something by accident.
Last but not least, I always take my trusty ironing board...they make great stands for your gear
Spare cables are a must, I take combinations of various cables as you never know what inputs you will be faced with. Cable adapters can get you out of trouble. I always try to make balanced connections where possible (XLR, TRS). Stage lighting can work wonders on unbalanced connections. I even take a spare USB cable.
I dont use a mouse, too easy to click on something by accident.
Last but not least, I always take my trusty ironing board...they make great stands for your gear
thank you very much. Really useful words for both emotionals and practical reasons...Sales Dude McBoob wrote:One word:
Redundancy
Have back-up cables for cables you rely on. Have more than one plan for how you're going to hook into the sound system. Go to the club and scope out the sound system. Talk to the sound dude who will be there when you do your set. Tell him what you've got and what you're going to do.
When you practice don't think to yourself, 'okay, this is what it's going to sound like at the club'. It won't sound like that. It'll be weird sounding but you can adapt.
Give yourself a little room with your levels. The thing that caught me most off gaurd when I played my own material the first time was how drastically different some of the levels were of my tracks in my Live set. I'd be playing and I'd trigger a scene, then I'd trigger the next scene and it'd be twice as loud as the last scene, even though the million times I'd done that at home it always sounded even.
Walk in like you own the place.
Have fun!
I know that the sound will be different. I ll do a 4 hours sound chk before...
I ll let you know how it will be
thanx again
p.s: do you know how can i make the space bar not be as a stop button?
yeaa thank you too...lunabass wrote:It can be really dark up on stage and hard to see. I'd be practising in minimal lighting to ensure that you can see your controller and keyboard.
Spare cables are a must, I take combinations of various cables as you never know what inputs you will be faced with. Cable adapters can get you out of trouble. I always try to make balanced connections where possible (XLR, TRS). Stage lighting can work wonders on unbalanced connections. I even take a spare USB cable.
I dont use a mouse, too easy to click on something by accident.
Last but not least, I always take my trusty ironing board...they make great stands for your gear
i ll not use a mouse and spare cables will surround me as snakes...
thank you!
the best advice, which it sounds like you are doing, is to practice. That said, practice like it is the real gig--no restarting songs, no stopping the set to adjust something--pretend you are live on stage and that anything that goes wrong must be dealt with in a smooth way in real-time--there are no time-outs on stage. Practice your entire set just like you're in the club--if you are supposed to play 2 hours straight, time your practice and practice for 2 hours straight to see how it goes, see if you run out of material or don't get to it all. Try practicing in the dark, to replicate the club conditions, possibly label you controllers if need be. If you are going to drink or anything before the show, practice in the same mental state you plan to be in for the gig.
The other best advice I can give from playing in a bunch of bands and doing scores of gigs is to record your practice sessions--set up a live track and resample the master out. Throw this track on a cd or you ipod or whatever, and listen to it a few times--see what sounds good and what needs work. It is hard to be discerning and remember all the ins and outs of a show//practice while you are in the moment. By recording it and listening to it a few times, you can better judge what needs work. Good luck.
The other best advice I can give from playing in a bunch of bands and doing scores of gigs is to record your practice sessions--set up a live track and resample the master out. Throw this track on a cd or you ipod or whatever, and listen to it a few times--see what sounds good and what needs work. It is hard to be discerning and remember all the ins and outs of a show//practice while you are in the moment. By recording it and listening to it a few times, you can better judge what needs work. Good luck.
Dell Studio XPS 8100 Windows 7 64-bit, 10 GB RAM. RME Multiface, Avalon U5 & M5, Distressor, Filter Factory, UC33e, BCR-2000, FCB1010, K-Station, Hr 824 & H120 sub, EZ Bus, V-Drums, DrumKat EZ, basses, guitars, pedals... http://www.ryan-hughes.net
I do it almost every day...And yes, i ll burn a disk with the whole set but i am worrying cos it might sounds good and then i get dissapointed with what i ll listen from the gig recording...Anyways , i ll see.quandry wrote:the best advice, which it sounds like you are doing, is to practice. That said, practice like it is the real gig--no restarting songs, no stopping the set to adjust something--pretend you are live on stage and that anything that goes wrong must be dealt with in a smooth way in real-time--there are no time-outs on stage. Practice your entire set just like you're in the club--if you are supposed to play 2 hours straight, time your practice and practice for 2 hours straight to see how it goes, see if you run out of material or don't get to it all. Try practicing in the dark, to replicate the club conditions, possibly label you controllers if need be. If you are going to drink or anything before the show, practice in the same mental state you plan to be in for the gig.
The other best advice I can give from playing in a bunch of bands and doing scores of gigs is to record your practice sessions--set up a live track and resample the master out. Throw this track on a cd or you ipod or whatever, and listen to it a few times--see what sounds good and what needs work. It is hard to be discerning and remember all the ins and outs of a show//practice while you are in the moment. By recording it and listening to it a few times, you can better judge what needs work. Good luck.
Does anybody know how can i turn off dashborad to have some more cpu available and in general what else i could do to feel more safe ?
thanx all for the replies, they r really important for me!
I think you might be misunderstanding me--I'm not saying just render your set, I'm saying record what you are doing in real time (using the resampling of the master out on a new track in Live). That way, you can listen back to exactly what you did, not just what is pre-loaded in the set. Thus you can hear and evaluate any mixing, effect usage, crossfading, manipulation, and general flow that you are doing in real time--i.e. your "performance".sadmac wrote: I do it almost every day...And yes, i ll burn a disk with the whole set but i am worrying cos it might sounds good and then i get dissapointed with what i ll listen from the gig recording...Anyways , i ll see.
Does anybody know how can i turn off dashborad to have some more cpu available and in general what else i could do to feel more safe ?
thanx all for the replies, they r really important for me!
Dell Studio XPS 8100 Windows 7 64-bit, 10 GB RAM. RME Multiface, Avalon U5 & M5, Distressor, Filter Factory, UC33e, BCR-2000, FCB1010, K-Station, Hr 824 & H120 sub, EZ Bus, V-Drums, DrumKat EZ, basses, guitars, pedals... http://www.ryan-hughes.net
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mike holiday
- Posts: 2433
- Joined: Mon Jun 28, 2004 8:52 pm
- Location: NOW
yea this is it! Thank you.mike holiday wrote:is this how to fix the spacebar?
http://www.ableton.com/forum/viewtopic. ... highlight=
One question: did you pay for those stickers on your speakers?
If you have done something wrong then offending to others is not the best way to defend yourself, you little idiot.
i got it. Will do it also. Thanx in advance for thw words. Really thank you.quandry wrote:I think you might be misunderstanding me--I'm not saying just render your set, I'm saying record what you are doing in real time (using the resampling of the master out on a new track in Live). That way, you can listen back to exactly what you did, not just what is pre-loaded in the set. Thus you can hear and evaluate any mixing, effect usage, crossfading, manipulation, and general flow that you are doing in real time--i.e. your "performance".sadmac wrote: I do it almost every day...And yes, i ll burn a disk with the whole set but i am worrying cos it might sounds good and then i get dissapointed with what i ll listen from the gig recording...Anyways , i ll see.
Does anybody know how can i turn off dashborad to have some more cpu available and in general what else i could do to feel more safe ?
thanx all for the replies, they r really important for me!
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elektrovert
- Posts: 452
- Joined: Wed Oct 13, 2004 10:51 am
- Location: Dublin
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