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Squirrely Musicians

Started by skeelsd, January 16, 2008, 09:10 AM

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skeelsd

seems i've had a run of dealing with nutjobs lately. i'm knee deep into this project and looks like spring before i'm sprung. glamourous business this is...carry on.

Dave Heim

Quote from: skeelsd on January 16, 2008, 09:10 AM
seems i've had a run of dealing with nutjobs lately. i'm knee deep into this project and looks like spring before i'm sprung. glamourous business this is...carry on.

Good luck.  I haven't had to deal with many nutjobs.  But I do cross paths with my fair share of whackadoos, wingnuts, and dipschitz. 

Care to elaborate?

skeelsd

last three gigs:

live gig-band leader steroid user. likes to look buff on stage. brain-fried crazy eyed. fortunate for me one and done.

session(s)-bass player apparently forgets to take meds on occassion for bi-polar disorder. one should never forget medication when suffering from this malady.

current-band leader brilliant, mental. substance abuse. locked in until record is done. gave him my word i would complete the project. awesome talent. a lot like bi-polar experience (see above). this one is my fault. i was warned. had some local heavies involved that promised to keep said behavior in check. they quit.

next gig drum room

Jim Martin (cavanman)

Gigs with the mentally unbalanced seem agonizing at the time you are doing them.

But take good notes as the stories you can tell at parties will pay off. LOL!  ;D

I'm only half joking. The majority of players I know have great stories about maniacs or just bizarre circumstances.

Last good one I heard on New Year's Day:

Couple'a buddies of mine, percussionist and drummer and both great players, did a gig together here in Los Angeles at the Kodak Theater for a Greek singer. It was a total lip-sync gig.

NO LIVE PLAYING.

They had a REHEARSAL for the gig (remember ....NO LIVE PLAYING...only faking it while canned stuff played).

After the gig the singer was very pleased with the band. He said that this band sounded better than any band he'd used on the tour.

They hadn't played a note.

They cashed their checks and were able to have 'best story' at the party.

See? Keep your sanity and their will be bennies'  8)

Jim


Chip Donaho

Cavanman, now that has to be one of the weirdest gigs I've hear of....  ;D  I've played many gigs over the years where there's been a few singers or players who have escaped from the nuthouse. I must admit, that's got to be a 1st on the list.  :o

chilledbongo

actually, being bipolar can be a help to being a great musician. it's the manic side that fuels the creativity. of course, they also tend to be arseholes as human beings. 8)
some famed bipolar musicians:
Ludwig van Beethoven, composer
Alohe Jean Burke, musician, vocalist
Rosemary Clooney, singer
DMX Earl Simmons, rapper and actor
Ray Davies
Lenny Dee
Gaetano Donizetti, opera singer
Peter Gabriel
Jimi Hendrix
Kristen Hersh (Throwing Muses)
Phyllis Hyman
Jack Irons
Daniel Johnston
Otto Klemperer, musician, conductor
Oscar Levant, pianist, composer, television
Phil Ochs, musician, political activist, poet
John Ogden, composer, musician
Jaco Pastorius
Charley Pride
Mac Rebennack (Dr. John)
Jeannie C. Riley
Alys Robi, vocalist in Canada
Axl Rose
Nick Traina
Del Shannon
Phil Spector, musician and producer
Sting, Gordon Sumner, musician, composer
Tom Waits, musician, composer
Brian Wilson, musician, composer, arranger
Townes Van Zandt, musician, composer

Mark Counts

OZZY had some issues too.
I am just Nutz and proud of it.  My band says the I am too intense and I say that if it wasn't for that intensity, we would never get out of the basement.

Modify: Last night my Worship Leader told me I was really intense.  I told him that I was sorry.  He said NO, it is a very good characteristic to be intense as a drummer. Outside the music world, most would say that it is NUTZ!! Therefore, I just go with it.
                          Nutty

Anthony Manning-Franklin

For a while my band had a cellist who was kinda nuts....

When I first introduced her to my band members as a potential member we were at a party, she'd had a few to drink and started making out with our then-singer's knee. We thought she'd be fun to have around haha, and she was. However on one occasion at a party she nearly mistook me for a toilet. Well, she did, I was just lucky my girlfriend at the time woke up to drag her off me milliseconds from disaster. It wasn't just when she was drunk, it's hard to explain, she was just really intense. All the time. But that's more of a fun story haha. Turned out she was a pretty awesome singer too, but confidence issues got the best of her and she quit.

skinbeatergreg

I'm only bi-polar half the time.
:-\

Dave Heim

Quote from: skinbeatergreg on January 17, 2008, 12:04 AM
I'm only bi-polar half the time.
:-\

My psychiatrist says I have multiple personalities.  But we don't believe him.

NY Frank


Louis Russell

Quote from: Dave From Chicago on January 17, 2008, 09:23 AM
My psychiatrist says ........

Anyone who goes to a shrink should have their head examined!   ;D

Mark Counts

Quote from: Louis on January 17, 2008, 09:31 AM
Anyone who goes to a shrink should have their head examined!   ;D
Yea, Most shrinks need their head examined :-\.
                        Nutty

Dave Heim

OK, I didn't mean to derail the thread. . .   :-\

Louis Russell

Quote from: Dave From Chicago on January 17, 2008, 09:39 AM
OK, I didn't mean to derail the thread. . .   :-\

Which one of you is talking now?   ;D

Dave Heim

I played with, rehearsed with, endured a jam band a couple of summers ago.  The guy who "ran" the thing is a pro sports photographer/ex-hippie and pretty well off financially.  He had a wing of his house set up for jamming.  Nice stuff: full drum set, PA, recording gear, quality keyboards, gutiars, bass guitars, all sorts of amps - including the obligatory Marshall stack - mint condition Hammond B3. . .

Problem is the guy couldn't play (called himself a "rhythm keyboardist"), couldn't read (music), had the personality of a catcher's mitt, and the attention span of a gnat.  He learned everything by rote and took copious notes, which were always missing at the next get-together.  So, he had to learn all over again.  And when he got frustrated or bored or tired, he would just get up and walk out - leaving the rest of us there alone.  We'd notice he was missing only because the band suddenly sounded better and we would find him on the patio or in the [built-in] pool or hot tub.

Beautiful home.  Nice set up.  Nice gear.

The only good thing to come from it was meeting the bass player, George, who quit the same time I did.  George and I now perform with James Curley and Radio Fade (www.myspace.com/jamesfcurley).

Dave Heim


Chip Donaho

Now if I just knew what bi-polar means, just maybe I would know where I stood in this thread.   :-\

Louis Russell

Quote from: Chip71 on January 17, 2008, 10:44 AM
Now if I just knew what bi-polar means

From high to low. From mania to depression. From recklessness to listlessness. These are the extremes associated with bipolar disorder, a mental illness characterized by mood instability that can be serious and disabling. Bipolar disorder is also known as manic-depression or manic-depressive illness — manic behavior is one extreme of this disorder, and depression is the other.

The deep mood swings of bipolar disorder may last for weeks or months, causing great disturbances in the lives of those affected.

Chip Donaho

That explains when people say to me, "Your Nuts!"   ;D