At a jazz jam: - Showing what you can do is primary - Pleasing the audience is secondary - Selected by the title, the audience is there to hear and play jazz. - The atmosphere is relaxed. - Listeners can drop in and leave without giving offense
- Many performers with varying styles play briefly.
At a stage show with a mixed audience:
- Performers should know the audience.
- The performer has an obligation to please the audience.
Stubbornly continuing to do what is bombing doesn't make any sense.
- A very few unfamiliar pieces to stretch the musical horizons of the listeners are OK but you can't do it relentlessly. When I came to hear Mozart and Beethoven, one Hindemith is enough!
- Pieces should be 3 or 4 minutes max. - There should be a variety of performers and styles.
- Don't confuse polite applause with real approval.
I would never leave while a performer is playing. However, a quiet departure between songs should be OK. The audience does not have an obligation to be there.
I don't recall an audience being rude to Toots, but on one occasion I recalled that the audience thinned out noticeably toward the end of one of Mauricio's sets. Mauricio was not blameless.
- His pieces quickly abandoned and never revisited the heads. It was all "way out." Only the most determined jazz sophisticates understood and appreciated this style.
- To the unsophisticated listener, this made every piece sound the same. There was a perceived lack of variety.
- Ten-minute plus pieces seemed relentless and interminable.
- The audience didn't start leaving until it became apparent that the remainder of the evening was going to be exactly the same.
I posit that a show should not persist with one performer and one genre for a long period of time. I suggest that variety is the way to avoid recurrences. Although you can't please everyone, you can avoid displeasing anyone for a long period of time.
Vern