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May 2, 2022Liked by Admired Leadership

TL;DR: situational awareness + decision making + hang + mad skills on the instrument + knowledge of self/group function = rock star performer. I included a video example from Cirque Du Soleil at the bottom with some commentary.

Skills:

Subset of skills: rapport building, developing a "stage persona", empathy, active listening/awareness, adaptability, failure and stress tolerance, decision-making and situational analysis, situational awareness/mindfulness, effective command delivery, and in the "industry" we say the ability to "hang" - be the kind of person that people want to follow/perform with.

In addition to skill, a performer needs to understand the function of what's going on - music is all about function.

Function:

Each chord has a function - it's designed to precede or proceed another type of chord - there are theoretical rules and maxims about this kind of thing.

Each member of a group - orchestra, jazz band, rock band, wedding band, whatever - has a function. The lead singer's function is be the bridge between the audience and the band, the drummer's function is to be the "road manager" and keep everything in line. The band leader's function is to make sure that everyone knows their function and is enabled to be successful.

That said - if a group wants to iterate, a band leader needs to understand the function of the song as it relates to the rest of the show, the function of each element within the song musically and how it relates to one another, and then communicate (in the moment) how the path from where they are now to the iteration.

Fun Example

Cirque Du Soleil band leaders are a great example of what I'm talking about here...

https://youtu.be/p2HhSwA6vuY?t=244 - watch the video until 5:02. (1 minute in total)

Here's what to look out for:

- The performer on stage is like the lead singer - they are bringing the audience into the act and bridging the experience.

- The drummer (unseen) is responding musically to what the performers are doing visually. Listen at 4:17-4:18 and you can hear the drummer is timing some hits with when the performer puts the hats on. The drummer's function is to compliment the visual performance.

- The band leader (seen) is responsible for her part and communicating what comes next. At 4:15 she communicates "okay let's go" which is is communicating that we're starting "this bit of the act" and at 4:24, after the act fails she communicates to the band that they're going to "redo it" - pivot.

- The performer/act then takes a second to regroup, develop some excitement from the audience... (all part of the act).

- Band leader sees that the act is going to start the bit again and then re-pivots the band at 4:38

- You can hear the drummer responding to act at 4:44 similar to what you heard earlier... that's the drummer's function.

- At 4:48 the band leader queues the band to the next section because the act completed the act successfully.

- 5:02 the band leader sees the act is ready to take their final stage pose and ends the section with "1, 2, 3, 4, out."

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Live Music Producers, that's actually a job title, often use a method called "Live Music Method". The idea is that every single element of a performance has a purpose.

When the lead singer is looking and singing to one part of the audience, another musician is directing their energy to towards another part, and perhaps two musicians are engaging with each other... energy is moving around and being directed to different parts of the 4-dimensional - and all of it is intentional.

The other thing we realize in entertainment, is that your audience doesn't really come there for you - the entertainer. They come there to be around other people like them. Great entertainers know how to cultivate a sense of "Tribe" - "people like us are here in this moment and who's like us? Damn few. So here's what you get to do!"

I'm a former live music/entertainment manager for a cruise line, and this post resonated with me.

Thank you!

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