Re: [Harp-L] How Musical Theater differs from Blues gigs and jams
I did this same show at a local small college. The production was pretty good, considering how small the school is. Rob Papparozi was gracious and helpful with some tips. Must admit that I improvised much of the stuff I played...did so because I couldn't make many of the rehearsals; they were during the day, at the college, and I have a full-time day job. Also I'm a weak sight reader :-)
It was challenging and fun for sure.
WVa Bob
Sent from my iPhone
On Apr 6, 2014, at 9:19 AM, "Robert Hale" <robert@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> Working Harmonica this month in a Mesa, Arizona (Phoenix) production of
> "Big River, the story of Huckleberry Finn" (11 songs by Roger Miller - Dang
> me)
>
> 1. Lotsa rehearsal! Three 3-hour weekly rehearsals preceding show open,
> plus tech-week run throughs with full cast and dialog
> 2. Lots of sitting quietly and waiting for your cues. Lots.
> 3. Helps to be a treble clef reader (Gotta count those measures when
> laying out!)
> 4. Read it, play it correctly, and do it every night
> 5. Try not to sneeze or cough (we are not in an orchestra pit, but
> visible to the audience throughout, and mic'd)
> 6. Be agreeable to frequent changes right before each show - "play
> more, play less, improvise" where there is no score to read
> 7. Bring sticky tabs and pencils - Directors will add repeats or cut
> sections out of your book. Then you must erase it all when you return the
> rental books
> 8. Sight read and sing tenor to a four part hymn, reinforcing the
> on-stage singers (finger-in-ear to keep the pitch - no monitors)
> 9. Buy a Trump (jew's harp) in the right key, although no one else
> thinks that would matter
> 10. Bring all your diatonics, because they may ask you play on a tune
> that did NOT call for harp in your score, or change the key for a singer
>
> So yes, it's all very different, and still very fun and challenging.
> Meet lots of great new friends in cast, crew, and band/orchestra.
> In Mesa theater, the pay is not stunning when looking at your hourly rate,
> but you get to update your resume and and website.
>
> If you get the opportunity, do it!
> I would love to hear what others have encountered in Musical Theater.
>
> Robert Hale
> Spiral Advocate (Fanatic!)
> Learn Harmonica by Webcam
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