The boys behind the scenes
by JoeThursday, November 22nd, 2007 at 1:38 pm (9 months, 2 weeks ago).
Nowadays, I hump all my gear to shows, set it all up myself, and pack it all up again at the end. I don't have much stuff, so I don't need any help. Besides, I don't make much money off of playing to hire a roadie even if I wanted to.
Back in the old days, when I used to play a lot more frequently and tour regularly, the band I was with had a crew. We had a couple of boys with us to help with the loading, as well as mix the sound, and help maintain our shit during the show so that everything ran smoothly.
I really did consider those guys part of the band. In my mind we were a tight little team. Sometimes it seemed like it was 'us versus the world.'
At our Brokenjoe show at Grossmans last tuesday night, an old pal of mine, Keith, who happened to be part of our little crew came out to the show. Of course, it didn't take long for us to start shooting the shit about the old days.
Keith started working with us almost right out of high school. I don't even know for sure whether he was old enough to legally drink in a bar at that time.
Right from the beginning, he was one big blast of energy. He was always trying to figure out how things worked, and more importantly, trying to figure out how to make things work more efficiently. Hell, he even started teaching himself how to play guitar so that he'd know more about the language of music.
It didn't take me long to realize that 'here's a guy who's going to make it in this fucked up business.' (I've certainly been proven right in that regard.) I knew that if he didn't make it up to the top level with us, he'd make it with some top touring and recording band. He most certainly has -and I'm immensely proud of him.
Anyhow, when you put a couple of old bullshitters like Keith and I together, some pretty funny stories are bound to come up.
Keith reminded me of one of the first gigs we did together. Back then, I used to have three guitars on stage with me. My main work-horse; one for back-up, in case I broke a string; and one that was in a different tuning for certain songs that we did.
If I needed one of them tuned, I'd just toss it over to Keith at the side of the stage -even if he was ten metres away. Keith had fast hands, and would always catch them. Besides, even if he dropped one, I'd just laugh…. I've never been too sentimental about my guitars.
On one of the earliest gigs that Keith did with us, I remember yelling over to Keith to get his attention, and then tossing a guitar at him. As soon as it left my hands, I grabbed number two, and hurled that on at him. Of course, he caught them both. However, as soon as number two was in the air, with a big laugh, and a grin, I tossed number three at him.
……………….he managed to put one and two into one hand, and catch number three! I just about fell over laughing. I'm sure he probably broke out in a cold sweat thinking that it was his job to catch them all, and that if he dropped one, it would be his fault. I guess it was just my way of saying to him: "Hey, they're just guitars. There's very little that I take seriously here!"
Again, at one of our earliest gigs, I remember getting morbidly drunk with him during and after a show, and attempting to help him take down the stage. I just about pissed myself when he was trying to dis-assemble my rig -a towering Marshall stack, with wires and cables attached- and seeing the whole thing come crashing down, almost on top of him, while he drunkenly tried to manage it. Again, back then, getting a good laugh out of something was worth much more than worrying about equipment.
Don't get me wrong here; Keith was not a drunken stooge, forever destroying things. If anything, I was the drunken stooge who encouraged such bad behaviour, got him drunk, and laughed over the consequences.
Keith is one of those guys that is an essential part of why you, who pays hard earned dough for a show, will enjoy yourself. He's one of the fellows that makes things go smoothly, who puts in incredibly long hours, who's wiley enough in an emergency to be able to jerry-rig a drum snare with a guitar pick, and who does it all while cracking some humourous joke!
Keith, and thousands more like him out there, are the reason that us musicians don't look even dumber than we already are.
Next time you're at a show, and you see some of the crew hustling their asses around, or watching the band like a hawk for mis-cues or fuck-ups, offer to buy 'em a drink if you get the chance.
Then, you'll be able to tell who the real good ones are. They're the ones that'll say "Thanks for the offer, but not while I'm working. I will, however take you up on your offer when I'm done."
Considerably different than us drunken musicians waving bottles all over the place, wouldn't you say?









I'm slowly working my way through Anthony Bourdain's 'The Nasty Bits,' which is a collection of essays about food.
We played last tuesday night at 
Once in a while, I'll have an accidental convergance of incidents that'll ignite the lightbulb over my head.
I've noticed a strange occurrence lately. Whenever I write a new song -specifically an instrumental- it always sounds like a fiddle tune, whether I play it on the guitar or banjo.
Having recently spent a bit of time in England, I noticed a few instances of their famed behaviour.
Whilst (I love that word) on holidays I took in many sights, and neighborhoods, etc., etc., but I didn't really get out to see much music. Hell, I don't even do that whilst here at home.
Genevieve on
James Goneaux on 
Big Ben on