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My wife is a schoolteacher. Talk about a profession that is undervalued in this society! (But she's got a great health plan, which means we're not on the streets as a result of her bout with lymphoma five years ago. She won, by the way.) Every one of us in this bidness watches in horror as profoundly unworthy artists prosper while genius and innovation go begging. There is no justice, and it's damn hard to get any. I don't see much point in raging about it. Just yesterday, I put myself into a funk after hearing I was turned down for a gig at a festival that I was sure I'd be perfect for. And the promoter is someone I thought was favorably inclined toward me and my music. I grumbled to my booking agent briefly ("...reminded that if you want a friend in the music business, get a dog. And hope he plays the banjo.') and then went back to work. I make music that doesn't fall neatly into any category. I write songs that don't all sound like this or that, and I intersperse them in performance with loop pieces, composed and improvised. I'm too weird for the singer-songwriter world and not weird enough for the avant-garde or whatever you call it. And on top of that, I'm too fucking old to go to folk/bluegrass festivals in remote locations on my own dime, sleep in the dirt, and work my way up from the campground jams to the mainstage. Plus: damn hard to schlep an Echoplex and pedal board from campfire to campfire. You deal with it. You take the gig. You do the best you can and build your fan base the only way it's done: one at a time. I figure if I sell one CD Im ahead of the game, and if I bring home a few email addresses for the spam list, that's a win too. One of the best pieces of advice I ever got came when I interviewed producer Ted Templeman for BAM Magazine. He described his first encounter with Van Halen, at a grubby club in Hollywood: a dozen people in the room, but they were belting it out like it was a sold-out show at the Forum. I call it the "you-shoulda-been-there" approach: If there are four people in the audience, send 'em all out of there telling their friends they missed something great. -- David Gans - david@trufun.com or david@gdhour.com Truth and Fun, Inc., 484 Lake Park Ave. #102, Oakland CA 94610-2730 Blog: http://cloudsurfing.gdhour.com Web site: http://www.dgans.com