by windhorse » Sat May 02, 2009 3:04 pm
Boulder Colorado is predominately white upper middle class hyper educated folk. Among other things they are also well educated in music. So there is a shockingly sizable crowd that knows "good" music when they hear it. It's a town filled with some great musicians that aren't well known, and a few that are. So, it's not uncommon to live next to someone else who you've known for years only to find that your neighbor is a famous musician that travels the world, and just didn't feel the need to bring it up. It's that kind of place.
It's interesting that the town is ethnically diverse, yet definitely not racially. Most of our darker skinned brothers and sisters find themselves in a cast system where they are relegated to menial work, and the higher pay jobs are all for the white guys. They hang with themselves and their families and don't go out on the town, so you generally won't see them at a venue. I make this point since I play Latin music and I am not of Latin descent. It just feels odd and unfair.
The group I'm in has awesome drummers, and in the folkloric context all you need is 3, and sometimes 4 on a drum, so I'm usually relegated to shaker and singing. It's tough and competitive just within my circle, let alone trying to make it onto a nice stage, like the Boulder Theater, the Fox, or St. Julian's where the real money is.
The Fox and Boulder Theater pay about $600-%4,000 depending on how popular the band, and the St. Julian's Hotel pays $1,000-$2,000 also depending your popularity. Just getting a gig at any of those places is a real honor and tribute that you are a professional and you don't "suck". };-D
Our leader has a recording studio, gives private lessons, and plays in 3 or 4 bands that play mostly in mountain towns, another guy gives private lessons, and plays in about 4 bands, and yet another is a college professor of percussion in Denver. So, whenever they play with us all tips and pay go to them, and the rest of us chalk it off to learning from the experience. They generally only get about $100 personally for their respective gigs, and the professor gets more for his classical performances.
The town has a few groups of African musicians who have a stronghold of Guinean, Zimbabwean, and Malian percussion classes and festivals. Most of them teach and perform regularly and the town supports their endeavors quite well it seems.
But, we really don't have AN'Y real Cuban players who actually came from Cuba or from that ethnicity who teach and perform - at least that I'm aware of. Our study group gets it's life blood from a genius guy I've mentioned before who studied for a while with Munequitos a few decades ago, and did everything on his own since then.
So, we're breaking ground here just educating some of the "regular" folk that hover around percussionists. Our leader sees it as a community service, as do I. But, I also see it as a personal learning experience completely invaluable. I'm really glad to be here, but my heart goes out to the professional musicians who really struggle to make it financially.
It's very tough, especially now since the economy is falling like a lead balloon. There are basically no guaranteed gigs, and the public is noticeably declining in its spending.