I am in a couple of bands, both of which were established when I joined with regular gig bookings so I never had to think about how to get gigs as a new band.
A few musician friends and I put a band together essentially to play at a mates wedding. To be honest it was actually pretty decent and we enjoyed it so thought we would actually have a go as a proper band. We have done a couple of other parties for mutual friends and the odd pub gig at the singers local.
Would really like to get say a gig per month ish, just pub covers for fun. I have put ads out on local Facebook groups and replied to hundreds of ‘band wanted’ posts again on local Facebook groups but not even had a thanks but no thanks.
Any suggestions where I could do a bit more to get a better return?
Comments
Check all local listings of gigs to get venues and contacts and fire away. Always say available to cover cancellations, venues are likely to stick with what has worked in the past and you need that short notice chance to prove yourselves.
you need determination and thick skin. Dozens of chancers chasing the same few gigs, sometimes the personal visit to introduce yourself is enough to break into a venue.
As @ESBlonde has indicated, a showreel (or any kind of footage) is a good idea. It shows the potential venue what kind of performance they’re getting.
For contact as an unknown quantity, there’s nothing like the personal touch. Go round the local venues, find out who books the bands and when they’ll be in, and talk to them in person.
1. How long you can play.
2. Set list.
3. Expected fee.
4. Link to social media profile for the band.
5. Date availability for the band.
A good start for a social media profile should include decent footage (preferably live, with an enthusiastic audience and good audio), photos, and something about previous gigs. Invite your friends to follow it so there’s evidence that someone might come to the pub to watch the band play (and hopefully spend lots of money on drink).
In short - you need to get yourself under the nose of whoever books bands, and once you’re there be in a position to present yourself as a competent, reliable band who are going to attract more paying customers.
We were invited to do twenty minutes at an open mic night once which was at least the bunch of us hitting the stage together and that pub then booked us for two paid gigs. After a couple of years we were gigging a couple of times per month and one would be via an agency and one would be self found/repeat business.