Jimmy Tingle's All-American Torture Cabaret: A Musical Frolick Through the War-On-Terror Jimmy Tingle's Off Broadway 255 Elm Street, Davis Sq., Somerville, MA By T - Red Line to Davis Square. Take a right out of the station on to Elm Street and walk 2 blocks. We are on the left at 255 Elm Street. Look for Marquis with flashing arrow.
Headlining at the Cape Cod Folk Festival Information for the entire weekend including our children's musical games workshop and camping is available on the festival website. South Shore YMCA Camp Burgess, Sandwich, MA (ext 107 or 109)
You think you have a lot of picnics in your life. You think of yourself as the kind of person who goes for lazy picnics on beautiful Spring afternoons. But then if you think back and really try to count them up, there's only a few. Only a few such picnics that you can really recall. And well, this was one of ours.
Matthias Finke had flown all the way from from Germany to visit Stephanie Holmes, our lovely bassoonist and singer, and to see her play. I guess she sang well, since we are delighted that now they are husband and wife! He wandered off and took these photographs while we took a nap."
By T - Red Line to Davis Square. Take a right out of the station on to Elm Street and walk 2 blocks. We are on the left at 255 Elm Street. Look for Marquis with flashing arrow.
Offshore Ale Company Kennebec Ave. Oak Bluffs, MA. on the island of Martha's Vineyard. (508) 693-2626
Martha's Vineyard was blanketed in 2 and half feet of snow that weekend. It's beautiful in the Winter there. We played for mostly locals. We also recorded at a local cottage. Here are a few tracks from the show and from recording that weekend.
Find a place for us to play: We can happily play at your house or other available public space if there is enough room for the people you intend to invite and if it is comfortable for all. You can also investigate a space where you think it would be great for us to play:
1. Find out who decides if/when/how music happens there. 2. Tell them you like us and our music and ask if we can play there. 3. Point them to our website or get their address and contact us to send them a press kit. 4. You might have to check back with them a few times to help the process along.
It's really pretty easy and it's a great way to meet new folks!
Get a bunch of folks to come: Think of it as throwing a party with The Mustn't Grumble as your entertainment! Invite 10 or 20 of your closest friends :). Invite them by email a week or two in advance and then talk to them on the phone a few days before the show to see if they are definitely coming.
Publicize it: We have a publicist whose job it is to post our shows on radio and newspapers, but it would still be really awesome if you wanted to do something like make a poster for the event (There are also posters for download in .pdf format here) and put it up at the place where we will play, at the local library, local coffee shops, or where-ever. Then we all have a cool souvenir of the show. Or you could stage a Performance Art Happening and stop traffic in a busy intersection to announce the second coming of the Mustn't Grumble!
Set up the space: - Make sure there is a place for us to park when we arrive. - Make sure there is a place for us to unpack and (safely) store our instrument cases. - If possible, clear venue at least 2 hours in advance for setup and sound check. - Arrange for food for the musicians. - Help arrange for a place for the musicians to sleep.
Play Host: Food, drink, take tickets (if venue requires it), give directions to people trying to come, deal with the police when they come to shut us down for lighting our instruments on fire, stuff like that.
Mistress or Master of Ceremonies: You get to get up on stage to kick off the show in some way that suits you. Like, "these are my friends, they never complain, and I like their music," or, LADIES AND GENTS, Spiders and Salamanders, all the way from New England, The Mustn't Grumble Rockin' Old-Timey Gypsy Jazz Folk Swing Band!!!!!"
Invite other musicians, if you want to: We love to jam and meet other local musicians. So if you have friends who are good players, have them share the night with us or maybe we can arrange to have them join us on some tunes. Or we could all play games for song or such.
- Stage area should be adequate for the number of musicians (usually 5) playing the show.
- Coffee House: The MG doesn't own our own PA system. We have instrument amplifiers (including for Ben's singing) for small venues.
-House Concert: A house concert up to 20 audience members generally requires no amplification. More audience members will require "coffee house" style amplification as described above.
- Outdoors: We have an FM radio transmitter system that can work well for outdoor performances if the venue can provide a number of "boom boxes" to distribute around the area. For an outdoor show, we require at least 2 monitor speakers, with at least 1 monitor mix.
- Other venues:
For clubs, ballrooms, theaters, etc. we require at least 2 monitor speakers, with at least 1 monitor mix.
- Outputs from our microphones and direct boxes:
Guitar - 1 XLR output from L.R. Baggs direct box. Trumpet - 1 XLR microphone output from our bell-mounted trumpet mic. Bass - 1 balanced direct line out from bass amp (or you can mic the amp's speaker). Saxophone or Fiddle - 1 sm57 with boom stand. Vocals - 3 Sure SM58 microphones with boom stands.