Feature / Regular Columns
John Cate: Finding Your Gig Groove

March 7, 2011

John Cate: Finding Your Gig Groove
John Cate: Finding Your Gig Groove

jc_intro.jpgJohn Cate was born in Liverpool, England, to American ex-pats who settled in the Boston area. John formed the van Gogh Brothers with guitarist Paul Candilore in 1995.

The van Gogh Brothers include Paul Candilore on lead guitar, Clayton Young on bass, Steve Latt on fiddle, pedal steel and mandolin and a number of rotating drummers including Andy Plaised (Dennis Brennan), John Sands (Aimee Mann), Mike Levesque (7 Mary 3) and Dave Mattacks (Paul McCartney, George Harrison).

John's songs are featured on network television, film and DVDs, including such projects and programs as “American Idol”, “NCIS”, “Melrose Place”, "Num3ers", “Haunted”, "Dawson's Creek", "Touched by an Angel", "All My Children", "Touching the Game", and many others.

Enough from us - here's John's first column on getting your band's shows moving.

---

So you’ve got your originals-only band going and you sound pretty good. The problem is gigs. You play the multi-band nights at the hippest bar and beg all your friends and family to come down to cheer you on, whether you suck or not, and you wait around until the next time you get to play for free for 25 minutes at the same place. Then you get a gig on a Wednesday night at a great club that books cover bands on weekends, and you beg the same 75 people to come hear you play but only 5 show up. The club doesn’t want you back. How does this ever work out?

Usually, the clubs you know and hear about aren’t the best match— for you or the club. What you want to do is: a) get your band so good it can play anywhere; b) play a club where people show up to hear music, whether it’s your band or someone else; and c) play somewhere that will book you based on how good you are not on how many people you bring in.

Where are these places? They’re usually the places where musicians hang out when they’re not gigging, and where better musicians play on weekday nights. They’re usually tiny bars with no cover charge and small (or no) stages, and very often they are dives in crappy neighborhoods, instead of on “the strip.”

Why play these places? Because you can get good at your game. Since musicians hang in these rooms, you really need to work yourself hard to avoid the eye-rolling. Since you can often book back in, you might even get a residency or a monthly gig and your band can develop consistency, which gives time to really gel. Hey, you might even build up a following as you improve, which is good for you and the club. Since you’re usually not getting paid, or you’re passing the collection bucket, you generally get paid what you’re worth.

After ten years of touring and doing the odd opener, playing multiple gigs at multiple clubs and bars, my band played one bar every week for about a year in a city just west of us. It wasn’t until we did this that we started getting really good as a band. Having had this experience, we started looking in other cities and we now have three or four rooms like this one, where we play every month. The other gigs fit in around these, and we’ve found that having had the experience of weekly gigs to fine tune the band, the other rooms are easier to get into and to keep playing, and the audiences and the clubs are happier with us as a band.

Remember, the Beatles did the Cavern lunchtime shows in Liverpool every day for over a year. There’s nothing that beats playing to make a band great.

— March 7, 2011

John Cate: Finding Your Gig Groove
John Cate: Finding Your Gig Groove

Related features

The Snorts

One Question Interviews • January 15, 2025

Aaron (The Snorts-guitar/vocals) SPB: Other than the new live record, what is your favorite split record, ever? Aaron: My favorite split of all time is: Spark Lights Friction / Ruined in a Day from 2000. That version of “Hearts and Canons” from Spark Lights just rips. --- The Snorts has … Read more

2AMature

One Question Interviews • January 14, 2025

Yanmark Berube (2AMature-drums) SPB: Do you collect physical media? Berube: Absolutely, we collect physical media. It’s the only REAL way to own it. When you buy media digitally, you’re usually just purchasing the rights to access it, which can be revoked at any time. With physical media, it’s yours forever. … Read more

Six Below Zero

One Question Interviews • January 13, 2025

Matthew Brammer (Six Below Zero) SPB: Six Below Zero is both a solo project and you live in Wyoming, so I imagine you have limited live opportunities -- that said, does the project ever play live and does that possibility affect how you approach songwriting? Brammer: Consistently playing live is, … Read more

2024: A Year In Review

Music / Year End 2024 • January 13, 2025

It's a new year – hooray. And things are off to a fine start, too. If the thought of corrupt governments, AI domination, unmoderated social networks and endless war is causing you to retreat into the past, we don't blame you. In fact, we encourage it! Our writers have summed … Read more

Scene Point Blank's Favorites: Year End (2024)

Music / Year End 2024 • January 4, 2025

It's 2025, somehow. When did this happen?! Okay, okay, four days ago. But honestly. It feels like 2012 was only a few months ago. Is it just SPB who's feeling a little, well, timestruck? But don't worry – we've got you. Did 2024 pass you by, too? Still not caught … Read more

Advertisement

DCxPC 2025

More from this section

Table Talk #18 – Preparing For Year End Lists

Regular Columns / Table Talk • November 22, 2024

I’ve talked about having a writer’s block this year. So when I set myself down (after a stern talk to motivate myself) I looked at this blank page thinking: what on earth should I discuss this time around? At first I thought I would put another couple of labels in … Read more

Guest Column: Jon Snodgrass

Regular Columns • November 6, 2024

Jon Snodgrass has been in the music industry and punk scene for the better part of 30 years, playing with bands such as Drag the River, Armchair Martian, Scorpios, and more. He currently performs most frequently under the name Snodgrass + Buddies, where he plays with a backing band of … Read more

Guest Column: Greg Jacobs – The 5 Sketchiest Venues I’ve Ever Been To

Regular Columns • September 27, 2024

Greg Jacobs managed the bands Big DRILL Car, Drive Like Jehu, Rocket from the Crypt, and Supernova and has worked at the record labels Enigma, CRUZ, SST, Cargo, Capitol (for one day), and Trust. He currently manages two of the aforementioned bands (even though they’re inactive), freelances for one of … Read more