So, I look to be booking a singer/songwriter series at the New Deal Café shortly. I have no desire to EVER take over Richard’s job of booking there, as there always seems to be a little bit more co-op type chaos there than I’d ever desire to inherit, but I’d really like to have some sort of repeating THING that can get a little bit of a ball of some sort rolling.
It’s interesting, though, thinking about booking from that perspective. Certainly, I want to make sure there are people coming that will draw an audience, if only because I want the New Deal to do well enough from the even to want to continue having it… but I’d also like for it to be an opportunity for the artist, and beyond that, I want to book artists that I want to see.
Recently, playing Café Diem in Richmond , we had the experience of a talent buyer rearranging his schedule because he wanted to watch our show. He’d booked us because HE wanted to see us, and beyond that, wants to help us build an audience there in Richmond . I’m wondering how much that should effect our thinking – like, it’d be NICE to only play places where the person who booked you is enthusiastic enough to want to come watch you play. It’s sort of like, beyond the business side of it, shouldn’t the talent buyer be so enthusiastic that they’re telling THEIR friends “you’ve got to come see these guys I’ve got coming to town, you should come with me!”
I know, I know – what a Lovely, perfect world THAT would be, but I can dream, can’t I? Le sigh.