LaZy wrote:
Perhaps your friends and you could stay open minded. We only have 3 or 4 local ska bands so we need to have some bands of other genres to mix it up. Mike Park has a huge history that someone will probably tell you about so I won't bothter. As for Hobo Slobo they brought a different crowd of kids and I think most people thought they were at least entertaining.
And I disagree totally about anything slowing down. There have been at least two shows every month with more than 100 people at all of them for the last six months. We don't need any more than that and we couldn't handle more without overdoing it.
I'm not yelling at you I'm just explaining this to you. This is why we had a meeting awhile back to explain how the scene in Syracuse works with all the local bands. But I suppose some people outside of bands need to have this stuff explained to them as well.
Thanks Johanna. We're really gonna miss you when you run off to Buff State this fall.

Yeah, the Too Short Notice show was crazy. But we were majorly hassled about exceeding the 100 person limit (which includes band members, btw) by the Westcott staff. Its right on the contract they make you sign. They can turn away kid #101 or they can shut the show down and keep your $100 security deposit. We simply
MUST hold bigger shows somewhere else, like Tundra, for example.
Plus, let's be honest ... the Too Short Notice show blew up in part because we hadn't had a "bigger" ska show in awhile. Like Johanna noted, we've been running more shows lately, each with 100+ kids each, which is awesome (even if the Westcott staff keeps threatening to count heads again). And we keep accidentally doing them very close together (thats just how scheduling works sometimes,
sigh).
As for mixing up the non-ska and ska in the same show, we'll never make everyone happy on that account. But again, as Johanna noted, we don't have enough local ska bands right now to keep from endlessly repeating the same exact lineups every month. We fell into that trap a few years back ("Straighter Than Pete, Section 8 and Cletus Doesn't Care AGAIN!?!? This is getting boring!!"). When we get a few more bands together, we can either do some all-ska local shows with different lineups each month, like they do in Connecticut or Chicago or LA, for example, or simply put on more shows with mixed lineups. Or some combination thereof.
Its no secret I'm dying for The Benefits to get playing shows again, and for some more local ska bands to form, albeit playing more varied styles than we already have. And I'm hoping to start a college ska monthly series this fall with The Benefits and RazSum. And maybe even a 21+ monthly series down the road. There are far more ska fans locally than most realize, but many aren't too interested in what we already have, which is mostly high school shows.
There's a definite need for the high school shows, but we need shows for an older audience too, like the people who suddenly appear whenever The Toasters or The Slackers or The Pietasters are in town. They're legit ska fans too. But they feel goofy (as they've often informed me), when they attend a high school ska show, the same as some high school kids felt when they crashed the college ska show at the Westcott awhile back with The Benefits/PartyInYourPants/MrsSkanotto. 100 college kids with what, like maybe 12 high school kids that night? It really does make a difference.
I miss Happy Endings, where we actually mixed up all the ages and styles in one place and in the same show. We really need a place like that again.
I'm biased, no question, but I think our little ska scene in Syracuse is doing pretty well at the moment. It's still growing, but its growing in good ways.
