georgejungle Posted January 25, 2011 Share Posted January 25, 2011 I joined a band last august. I really wanted to get out and play shows again as a musician after having my child and becoming a Dad and taking a break from Music. It's very therapeutic for me. Long story short, it's turned out to be more of a hinderance than fun. I found a band that's decent, not totally my cup of tea but decent enough and the guys were somewhat cool, so i went for it on the basis that, they were gonna play a lot of shows. 5 months later, still no shows. Just rehearsals. Turns out there is some tension in the band with certain members. I happened to join a band that's been having trouble getting off the ground for quite a while now and some issues with members getting along. Anyway, its a lot more than i signed up for. The band is now looking to replace a rotten member and then move forward towards shows but I don't feel like i'm into it anymore....into the music, into playing shows with them, just into being in a band. I'd like to be an independent player...not tied down. BUT, i don't know how to tell them because if I leave, it's REALLY going to set them back even further. So far i've been mr Positive around them and have been going along with everything trying to help, but I'm over it now. I'd hate to pull a 180 on them and quit but I want to. Link to post Share on other sites
freestyle Posted January 25, 2011 Share Posted January 25, 2011 I don't think you should feel guilty about leaving...if you're still only rehearsing since you joined in August.... At this point it's costing you money, instead of putting some on your pocket. And if they're going to replace someone--there will have to be that much more rehearsing waiting for the new member to get up to speed. (and waiting to see if they will be reliable or not) Plus, if you're not that into the kind of music they're doing-why not save your energy for another band that suits you better? and just a little helpful hint-with the next band, find out how many gigs they've played recently, and verify it by checking online, if you can. Link to post Share on other sites
folieadeux Posted January 26, 2011 Share Posted January 26, 2011 Go solo; it's not worth staying and putting in all the money, time, effort, etc. Chances are, your unhappiness is showing through the music anyway. Link to post Share on other sites
Owz600 Posted January 26, 2011 Share Posted January 26, 2011 I am a musician myself played in many bands and many have failed and now I am starting a new one. Music is one of those areas you must keep trying or you never break it. Two choices in my opinion. 1. Stick with the band and get rid of the rotten member and find a good committed member not any average guy, this will give the band it's spark back, I know after a while of rehearsing the same songs and not playing shows it gets bland and boring but stick at it. 2. Drop out of the band and find a serious band with committed members. Keep faith. Link to post Share on other sites
biancanics Posted January 26, 2011 Share Posted January 26, 2011 I agree with Owz600 and may I add If you choose music as a career then it is necessary for you to quit a band like that with no hard feelings cause you need to earn money and the band you're now in ain't helping you with your financial matters. If it's just a past time/part time gigs just so you can go out and enjoy that you're playing in a band then I guess you have to stick to them and help your band get back to it's glory days where you have a lot of shows. Link to post Share on other sites
O'Malley Posted January 26, 2011 Share Posted January 26, 2011 Let them know before they line up any shows. Just be honest: you're no longer interested in the music that the band plays, and you don't want to play gigs. Offer to help find another musician to fill your slot. The important thing is to be integral about it and try to make your departure as drama free as possible. You might meet up with or want to collaborate with one of these guys in the future, so don't allow yourself to get embroiled in a argument. If one of the band members gets confrontational, just walk away. Link to post Share on other sites
sumdude Posted January 26, 2011 Share Posted January 26, 2011 You don't really owe them anything. You gave it a good shot and aren't getting what you want out of it. I've been in bands for 25+ years. Sounds like this one may never actually gig. Link to post Share on other sites
freestyle Posted January 26, 2011 Share Posted January 26, 2011 You don't really owe them anything. You gave it a good shot and aren't getting what you want out of it. I've been in bands for 25+ years. Sounds like this one may never actually gig. That's what I was thinking. I've been around the scene for years myself. Wannabee bands are a penny a dozen. That's why I recommend verifying their gig history before joining, and getting enmeshed. I've seen a lot of fabulous players get stuck in "going-nowhere" situations because they have a misguided sense of loyalty. It all depends on what you're in it for--if it's just for fun and giggles, cool. Nothing wrong with that at all. If you're hoping to make a little dough, well then a different approach is a good idea.Then you gotta watch out for the black-hole time-sucking bands. Link to post Share on other sites
Author georgejungle Posted February 1, 2011 Author Share Posted February 1, 2011 hardest part is that the guys in the band have been telling me that i'm the best thing that's happened to the band, best musician they've ever had, etc. makes it harder to quit on them and there is a potential show that they now want to take but maybe want to replace the "rotten" member before it and cram in a bunch of rehearsals to get him up to speed. Also, them trying to include me in on the band drama and wanting me to be there when then kick the "rotten" member out doesn't sit well with me. ...I'm in this to have fun but make a little money. I'm a busy guy with a family that comes first. If i'm gonna be away, i better really enjoy the band or be making some extra spending money. I didn't sign up to help them audition new members or not play shows because of the drama. Link to post Share on other sites
freestyle Posted February 1, 2011 Share Posted February 1, 2011 George, was this band gigging when you joined them? Also, it sounds like they're trying to lay a guilt trip on you, and manipulate you with flattery......... Link to post Share on other sites
Author georgejungle Posted February 1, 2011 Author Share Posted February 1, 2011 (edited) George, was this band gigging when you joined them? Also, it sounds like they're trying to lay a guilt trip on you, and manipulate you with flattery......... The band was gearing up to play shows when i joined. I was told they wanted to gig, gig, gig once I was up to speed. then some band drama reared it's ugly head and the excuses came, then they want to try out new guitar players to replace one that can't commit but the guys they've found are second rate to the one they want to replace I agree with you on the guilt trip. They have had a hard time in the last year (i learned after the fact) trying to get going as a band. I did my research on them and believed we would be gigging. At this point i'm sure the comments are there to keep me around. If i left right now, they would be screwed and would have to start from scratch since they want to replace the guitar. Edited February 1, 2011 by georgejungle Link to post Share on other sites
sumdude Posted February 1, 2011 Share Posted February 1, 2011 What's your instrument? Link to post Share on other sites
LeaningIntoTheMuse Posted February 1, 2011 Share Posted February 1, 2011 You shouldn't feel guilty for it. Bands break up for similar reasons all the time. They just don't 'feel part of the band anymore.' Link to post Share on other sites
elemental1 Posted February 14, 2011 Share Posted February 14, 2011 are they actually trying to make money or just have fun? which are you trying to do? the reason i ask is that from what i have learned in my 10+ years of being in bands is that either you want to do it for fun, or you want to do it for money... both can happen, but if you are trying to make money, then it becomes work...not fun. - so that is how you have to treat it regardless of any sort of guilt and/or obligations you might feel. treat it like a job. how close are you with these guys anyway? does your band do covers or originals? if you do originals, have you written any of the songs? if not, then try to - it might treat your boredom a little. when i joined bands in the past, i always became 'the guy that holds it all together' - basically they all told me that without me, the band would fall apart. i wrote all the music and basically provided all the creative material to work with so i understand that sort of pressure. i have also been to a point where i wanted to quit and i had to tell them that i couldnt do it anymore. it isnt easy. i have always noticed that having a band is like having multiple girlfriends. you have to deal with attitudes and egos and schedules and differences from not just one person, but 3 or 4 or 5. all in all, if you arent crazy about it, and you arent making money, chances are it isnt going anywhere. Link to post Share on other sites
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