booking shows

Booking Shows – How To Book a Gig

Booking your first gig is hard. Even if you’ve played a few shows before, booking can still be challenging. That’s exactly why we created Gigmor – to make booking shows as quick and easy as possible. Here are our top tips for early-stage artists to book more and higher quality gigs. Follow these tips and you’ll book a gig in no time!

·      APPLY AND MESSAGE TALENT SEEKERS EARLY

         Most venues and talent bookers will plan their schedules many months in advance. If you’re looking for shows this month, you’re probably out of luck. They want to plan well in advance in case anyone cancels or reschedules. That’s why you should reach out at least 4-6 weeks before you want to play. That gives them time to check you out and to begin putting together a full bill of other artists.

Pro Tip: Even though we recommend planning ahead, you can also check out our gigs page for last minute gigs. Talent seekers will often post gigs with short notice to Gigmor because they had a cancellation or change of plans and need to find an artist fast.

·      UPDATE YOUR GIGGING HISTORY

         This is probably the most overlooked but important part of your Gigmor profile. If you don’t have any gigs under your belt, don’t worry! You’ve probably played at house parties, busked or streamed a performance on YouTube. Put that in your gigging history! Talent seekers want to know where you’ve played and how many people you can draw but, more importantly, they want to know that you’re putting in the effort to play live and build an audience.

·      NETWORK, BUT NOT REALLY 

         Networking is not what you think it is. We should really just eliminate the term and change it to “hang out and make friends” because that’s what real networking is. Let’s say you book a gig on Gigmor, you play the show and it goes well. But now what do you do? Don’t talk to anyone and bounce after your set? NO. This is the perfect time to just hang out. Get to know the people working at the bar, have a drink, make friends. That is key to getting repeat bookings in better time slots.

Hope that helps you gigMORE! 

Rock On, 

Team Gigmor

American Idol Back On Gigmor

American Idol Auditions

We’re proud to announce that AMERICAN IDOL® has partnered with Gigmor for a second year in a row! Idol producers are looking for the #NextIdol for their upcoming season. Gigmor artists can apply for a Front of the Line Pass at 22 regional American Idol auditions which begin in just a few weeks!

Check below for the audition closest to you!

July 23: New York, NY

August 20: Mobile, AL

August 23: Macon, GA

August 23: Tallahassee, FL

August 23: Santa Barbara, CA

August 25: Baton Rouge, LA

August 26: Columbia, SC

August 26: Las Vegas, NV

August 27: Waco, TX

August 29: Knoxville, TN 

August 29: Salt Lake City, UT

September 1: Colorado Springs, CO

September 1: Raleigh, NC

September 4: Washington, D.C.

September 4: Wichita, KS

September 6: San Jose, CA

September 7: Pittsburgh, PA

September 7: Springfield, IL

September 8: Spokane, WA

September 10: Detroit, MI

September 18: Nashville, TN

September 21: Chicago, IL

Our mission is to help indie and unsigned artists grow their careers. We are absolutely thrilled to be working with the talent producers at American Idol. Make sure your profile is complete and then head over to the gigs page. Look for the American Idol auditions posts and apply away!

From the archive: Music Marketing for the Independent Artist

the mint la

Booking The Mint LA

The Mint is one of the greatest, most historic clubs in LA. They’re also a Gigmor favorite and have been booking with us for years. Take a look at this feature that Chris Morris wrote back in August of 2007. Also, be sure to check The Mint’s open gigs and apply to get booked!

The Mint: A Look Back
Chris Morris, August 2007 (Indie 103.1 / Rolling Stone / Billboard)

Live music venues manage to keep their doors open for years on the Strip in Hollywood, but the clubs off the main drag in Los Angeles tend to come and go. A post office now stands on the site of the Parisian Room, the great old jazz nightspot that operated for years at La Brea and Washington. The Music Machine, a big room that hosted everything from blues bands to thrash metal during the ’80s at its Pico Boulevard location in West L.A., is an electrical supply wholesaler these days. Club 88, a classic ’80s punk rock dive on Pico near Barrington, is currently a restaurant, as is the nearby, fondly-remembered Alligator Lounge.

Yet The Mint has endured. Located at 6010 W. Pico just east of Crescent Heights Boulevard, it is celebrating its 70th year in business in 2007. The Mint’s early endeavors in music are lost to history. We do know that it played host to live acts as long ago as the 1950s; a vendor who sold janitorial supplies to the club back in the ’80s said one of his relatives, the noted blues guitarist Pee Wee Crayton, performed there.

It wasn’t the joint that would be considered most likely to become a long-running Los Angeles musical institution. When musician Jed Ojeda started renting out the club for party gigs by his blues band the Drive-By Shooters in the mid-1980s, the Mint was a mere 1,000 square feet. It was a long shotgun-style room, with a bar lining the western wall and a narrow ledge on the eastern wall where customers could perch their drinks (and, sometimes, themselves). You had to maneuver around the crowded space in front of the small bandstand to get to the restrooms at the back of the club. For a time, a gigantic portrait of the venerated bluesman Big Joe Turner beamed down at from one wall.

But it was a comfy place, as down-home and funky as the music Ojeda brought in the room, and people dug it. In 1990, he acquired the club, outbidding another prospective owner who wanted to turn it into a lesbian bar. It quickly became a mid-city home for the blues performers who made the majority of their living playing the South Central club circuit. Smokey Wilson (whose band members included Ojeda), the King Brothers, Guitar Shorty, Arthur Adams, Louisiana Red, and the vocal team of Bobby King & Terry Evans (veterans of Ry Cooder’s group) all gigged regularly at the Mint, which booked live music seven nights a week.

Credit: The Mint LA, Chris Morris

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