Sound of Music Dress Rehearsals

Today I have two dress rehearsals for the Sound of Music, and we’re half way through the first act of the first run. It’s pretty interesting as this is the first time I’ve played in a room separate from the pit, and with a headphone mix/video feed. It’s taken a little getting used to, but it’s starting to feel really good. It is a bit odd being in a different place to the rest of the orchestra, and there is a lot of creaking overhead from the performers moving about on stage. It all makes for a very interesting experience, but it does a good job of forcing you to concentrate really hard. One other benefit of being in this room is that there’s quite a lot more space than I’m used to! Real luxury!!

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Sound of Music rehearsals

At the moment I’m getting ready to start rehearsing with the Oxford Operatic Society for their upcoming production of The Sound Of Music. I’m currently running through the pad and making sure there isn’t anything too unexpected in there, and all seems to be plain sailing at the moment.

I’m using a Line6 Variax Acoustic guitar for this show since there are a few mandolin cues that I’ll be covering with the Mandola voice on the guitar. I’ll be playing everything up an octave too, so that should give me a reasonable interpretation of the mandolin sounds the MD is looking for. I’ll be using the Martin OOO voice for the rest of the show which is a nice and focused sound which cuts through nicely.

The Variax is a great instrument and is a real asset in these settings. This will be the first time I’ve used it on a show like this, but I’m already feeling the benefit of not having lug extra kit around, plus the tangling of cables with multiple instruments is always something to contend with. Thankfully I won’t have to worry about that, or any rapid changes to and from instruments. Just a turn of a dial for me!

The show runs at the New Theatre in Oxford from the 28th of May to the 1st of June, with a matinee on the Saturday. I’m looking forward to the show since this will be the first time I playing at the New Theatre, and it wasn’t so long ago I saw Ray LaMontagne and Zappa Plays Zappa there, so it’ll be nice to grace the some venue as those guys!

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Sweet Charity

I’m currently playing on Sweet Charity for the Tring Festival Company at the Court Theatre in Tring.

The score requires me to play a Jazz semi acoustic, and a classical guitar since it’s largely made up of big band and flamenco style parts. It’s quite a challenging pad because a lot of is counted in two which makes reading it a bit tricky at times. There are some uptempo pieces in 3/4 too which are quite exciting!

I’m running my Gibson ES175 and my Manuel Raimundo classical through my AER compact sixty. I’ve got a touch of slap-back delay on the 175 for a 60’s vibe and that’s about it! It’s a nice, practical set up that sounds great and is really easy for the sound guys to work with. Lovely!

Seussical The Musical – Elgiva, Chesham

Tonight will see the first performance of Seussical the Musical at the Elgiva Theatre in Chesham, Bucks. I’m really excited about it because the music in it pretty varied in style, but I’m also covering two guitar parts. It’s really challenging, but great fun.

The show has rock, funk, latin, and blues genres in it, and a handful of lovely ballads too. I have to play electric and acoustic guitar as well as banjo which is a real treat!

There’s a great deal of uptempo stuff in the music – your counting has to be spot on especially because the time signatures change around quite a lot.

Managing both guitar parts isn’t too difficult either – I’ve marked both pads up where I need to swap from one to the other, and any instrument changes as required. I do find myself playing parts from both pads in a single tune, and some changeovers are as short as a couple of bars, but it’s great fun and I wouldn’t want to do it differently.

Gear-wise I’m using my trusty Ibanez RG3120 for the electric stuff. It’s a really versatile humbucker-driven guitar, and I can get some really sweet out of phase single coil tones out of it too. This is plugged into my pedal board, and out into my Blues Junior which does a great job in these settings. My acoustic is the Martin OMC16Aura which sounds lush through my AER Compact 60 acoustic amp – the mic algorithms sound fantastic. I’m also putting my banjo through the AER since I fitted a K&K Banjo Twin transducer pickup to the head. This sounds really good – beyond all my expectations. The banjo is also holding up well in the pit – it’s a Deering Goodtime Special and I’ve tuned it to G D G B E which means my chord shapes on the top four strings are the same as the guitar stuff. I feel a bit ashamed doing it as I’d love to same I can play it as it’s meant to be played, but alas! needs must. It’s doing the job and sounding great.

I’ll keep you posted how it goes!

Sitting-in on Wicked

I’ve just boarded a tube train leaving Victoria Station in Central London having just had the best seat in the house at Wicked The Musical in London. I was in the pit, between Keys 1 and the Guitar player!

It was fantastic. I got to watch one of the top players in London play the part for one of the most exciting shows out at the moment, and it was fascinating. It was really interesting to see how he interpreted the music, and added his own style to the part.

It’s quite a complicated pad – lots of Ebow and ‘seek-wah’ which really help give the magical vibe of the show, and many changes to acoustic and back to electric.

The acoustic guitar parts require some explanation because there isn’t a real acoustic guitar being used! Instead it’s a Line6 Variax, and it’s necessary because it has banjo, jumbo acoustic, and 12-string acoustic sounds available whenever they’re required. It’s an important choice instrument-wise because without it there wouldn’t be enough room for all of the other acoustic instruments that are required – it’s really cramped down there!

This was the second time I’ve had the privilege of sitting in through the show and it was just as fascinating as the first. I really enjoy the music of Wicked, there are passages of real tension, lush heavily distorted lead and rhythm sections, as well as really sensitive acoustic and clean parts. The addition of the Ebow makes for a slightly more complicated experience – you have to be really on the ball to get in position, but also be accurate when sliding up and down one string.

This is the sort of gig I’m working towards. I have been working hard on my reading and putting myself into challenging environments to give me a better chance of hitting these West End heights. I think it’s going well, and I have another show in a couple of weeks which is testing my own banjo playing, only this time it’s a real one! I’ll be playing in Seussical at the Elgiva Theatre in Chesham on 21/4 and 23/4 – come down!