Post
by Ms Mutaytor » Tue Feb 21, 2006 1:26 pm
It truly is a hard line to cross. Playing live music at Burning Man is hard on camping & family, hard on instruments and a trick to keep it interactive while being safe. My advice is to not focus your Burn on your concerts - let that be part of your art, your gift to the community. But all your off-stage time, you'll be on the Playa in THAT experience - don't go just to play you music...you should want to experience Burning Man first and foremost.
Since it was brought up (and I can't imagine you've been to a concert of ours lately Ivy), at current shows our performers are interacting in the audience, we arrange for clubs to allow fans' LED poi and hoops and whenever we safely can, the audience is pulled up onstage every set (last week's Fillmore was a doozy).
The Mutaytor proper stopped playing at Burning Man for many reasons, but mainly, we had put on large shows for 5 years, and hoped other bands would step up. Plus, we couldn't keep spending $10,000 every burn while trying to build a business with 35 performers. Instead, the fire team did Cirque Bezerque, Kevin did Skin, and others did their own projects.
I've seen a ton of great live music on the playa, from Spock Mtn Research porch jams, Extra Action Marching Band, the Mermen, Skin, Lost At Last, Soul In The Machine, Rodd Rundgren's camp, the little blues bar in 2003 out in the abyss, Pyrocussion, and countless bands that just set up and play once if you're lucky to happen by.
Personally, I wish more bands, dance troupes etc would step up and play rather than just complain about the lack of live music.
Good luck to your band and hope more and more artists join you in performing!