Yacht Rock played the Mercy Lounge last night in Nashville, Tennessee. Nick and Mark Bencuya picked me up at my house and we ran up there and knocked it out. The Best Western was pretty old, and the lounge was called "Pick's." It looked like a pretty unhappening place, and we mocked it relentlessly.
Mark Dannells was in LA and Mark Cobb was in NYC, so we had Michael Wilkes and Ganesh Giri Jaya subbing on guitar and drums.
We loaded in and soundchecked, and the soundmen could not have looked less impressed or enthusiastic. I'm guessing they've probably seen everything in Nashville, and a cover band full of freaks was just another night.
Six of us (Pete went out with his family) piled into the Pleaserock van and headed out in search of food. The first place (Mexican) had an hour wait (an hour wait on a Tuesday night?). We went across the street to Ru San's, but after waiting for a waitress at our table for over ten minutes (while I enjoyed some awesome techno music), we bailed in favor of anything quick. Eventually we ended up at an Arby's. On the way back to the Mercy Lounge, we got totally lost, and Greg Lee yelled at me for calling him on the phone from the back of the van.
The gig itself was ok. I think we played pretty well, but there couldn't have been more than seventy-five people in the room, so we got no energy. Maybe next time will be better (I mean, they did like it!), but the attendance made this one a big loser in the money department.
Bencuya pointed out that no band of which he has been a member ever enjoyed each other's mistakes so much. So true! The break between sets and the ride home are full of, "...and then I f***ed that up..." or "what were you doing?" and everybody laughs at it. It's funny, but at the same time, it's noted that everybody's listening. No coasting. You're not getting away with it!
The other interesting thing (listening-wise) is that difference between what the subs and the regulars play (and how they play). I was really aware from the first note of where Ganesh was with the pulse. The way a drummer relates to the groove is a reflection of his personality. Where Mark Cobb is much more on top of the beat, Ganesh is a good bit further back. One is not better than the other--it's just the contrast between hearing the two play the same song.
Wilkes was good, but none of Dannell's Barishnikov-esque footwork. One thing I noticed is that Wilkes really boosts his rhythm guitar parts on songs that seem guitar driven. It got really loud sometimes.
We had planned to crash Pick's, but we got back to the hotel after 2 AM. The van left at 8:15 AM.
Tomorrow night we're playing a private party at Paris on Ponce. It should be pretty easy. I've got to learn Maneater tonight.