Live music is a huge industry. In 2006, concert ticket sales totaled $3.6 billion in North America alone! Playing live is an integral part of the success of any musician, band, or artist. There is a huge difference between writing and recording your songs in your home studio or rehearsal space and going out and putting on a show. If you can't cut it live, then you really won't impress any audience, let alone gain a record deal and sell your music. So how do you make sure your show has the maximum impact? How do you appear professional and knowledgeable in an industry that has its own conventions, language, and baffling technical terms? How do you get booked into a venue and get paid? How do you then get bigger and better shows? The Tour Book: How to Get Your Music on the Road answers these questions and many more. It provides practical advice, hints, and tips on every aspect of putting on a live show, including rehearsal, equipment, travel, accommodations, show booking and promotion, sound checks, contracts, taxation, working abroad, and marketing. Featuring interviews and quotes from key industry figures and contemporary artists and musicians, The Tour Book is a must-have for any band or musician who is serious about playing live and making it big.
Andy Reynolds has worked as an international concert tour manager and audio
engineer for 17 years. He has toured permanently during this time, working
on an average of 200 shows a year. Andy has worked for such bands as All
American Rejects, House of Pain, Machine Head, Nightmares On Wax, Pavement,
Roots Manuva, Super Furry Animals, Skunk Anansie, Squarepusher and The
White Stripes and has worked with bands on tours by such acts as U2,
Whitney Houston, Manic Street Preachers and the Foo Fighters. His touring
experience encompasses stadiums, arenas, theatres, pubs, bars, clubs,
outdoor festivals, rooftops, subway stations, cruise ships, mountain sides
and very, very muddy fields.
Andy has taught sound engineering and modern tour management at Red Tape
Studios in Sheffield and appeared as guest lecturer at Liverpool University
and City College Manchester.