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The first time I listened to Peter Gabriel’s eponymous third album, nicknamed “Melt,” something struck me.
I couldn’t quite put my finger on what, but there was something odd going on. Odd in a good way, but still odd.
(This was, for the record, back in the day when you’d actually listen to albums. You’d listen start-to-finish, and not just ADHD across a Spotify playlist.)
Years later, I read an interview with the man himself, Peter Gabriel. He explained, “There are no cymbals on that album.”
My mind was blown. It was so obvious, and yet so subtle.
The move was Peter being the innovator, the artist. He wanted to challenge his drummer, so he took all his cymbals away. Where the drummer might normally do a fill and end with a splash or crash, suddenly he had to find something else to do. Where he’d usually ride the ride cymbal or tap out a normal bass/snare combo while powering along on the high-hat, he had to keep the beat more creatively.
Peter was examining muscle memory.
Musicians, like any artist, can fall into traps. Drummers can repeat fills; they can fall into an artistic rut. In the absence of cymbals, a new challenge arrived. It kept the drummer sharp.
It’s how I feel about the different venues in which comedy is performed: the elimination of an automatic go-to keeps you engaged. There are comedy club audiences, bar crowds, and everyone’s least favorite gathering: the corporate party.
There is a challenge to performing for a corporate audience.
Mostly in December and January, you get Christma… er, “Holiday” parties. Businesses treat their employees to food, drink, and entertainment.
As a comedian, you are under severe restrictions when performing. Corporations have HR departments and are adverse to any sort of controversy. They don’t want a single employee to complain about anything, and you are given a laundry list of rules and regulations involving what to do or say while on stage in front of them.
I used to avoid corporate shows like the plague.
I didn’t like the idea of my “art” being put in a box; I wanted to say what I wanted to say, Goddammit.
But over time, the more I developed as a comedian, the more I challenged myself to be able to perform in front of a diverse swath of audiences. How do you grab the attention of people who showed up at a bar and didn’t know it was comedy night? What do you do when faced with a corporate crowd that might not be interested in comedy? How do you perform for a comedy club audience in Colorado Springs, Cedar Rapids, and then Chattanooga?
The trick to any show is to bring the people where you want to take them; draw them into your world. In a bar, that might involve being aggressive. You’re going to have to overpower the televisions that have been left on and be more interesting than the game of pool going on in the corner.
At a corporate event, you’ll probably want to learn a little about the company so that you can reference it.
My last few corporate shows have been fun, with the last one having earned me a $100 tip from the company owner, and numerous handshakes and backslaps from his employees. I was told “Thanks for not being vulgar” over and over.
Well, the contract said “Be clean,” so I was clean.
Hence the idea of challenging yourself. Do you really need to swear during a comedy show? Can you be funny and original without four-letter words? Can you pull a Peter Gabriel and make four-letter words your cymbals?
Don’t get me wrong; a well-placed “fuck” can add applause to what would normally be a laugh. All language deserves consideration when crafting a joke, and being clean for the sake of being clean is as dull as swearing for the sake of swearing.
It’s all in the delivery.
Challenging yourself in any art form invites creativity. If you’re a painter, take red, or blue out of the equation. If you’re a musician, change the tuning on your guitar.
Challenge yourself to be better, and you’ll actually be better.
Did you enjoy those 700 words? I’ve thousands more of them on my Amazon Author Page.
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Photo by Joshua Sorenson on Unsplash
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