When is a show a show and when is a show not a show?
ChrisF has alleged that 8/2/03 should not count as a show for stats purposes. I say that it should.
Relevant Deets:
-Private wedding reception
-Setlist = Peace Frog > Fairy, One Big Mob* *w/ Dave Pec on vox
-All 4 members of PB played the entire set
-The performance was planned in advance
Phish.net, who I respect a great deal for setlists, agrees with ChrisF that a wedding show should not count. Phish.net lists a Phish wedding show on 9/6/08 (Setlist= Suzie Greenberg, Julius, Waste) and although it refers to the show as a "performance", there is actually a footnote that says "This Phish performance does not count for stats purposes."
http://phish.net/setlists/2008.htmlI respectfully disagree with ChrisF and Phish.net. These are shows and they should count. I assume that the rationale for not counting these is because they are private parties? That doesn\'t hold up. There are several private parties in Breakfast history and nobody has ever argued that they shouldn\'t count. See:
9/3/01:
http://thebreakfast.info/forum/showthread.php?p=271603#post27160310/13/02 which had 2 full sets and 4 encores:
http://thebreakfast.info/forum/showthread.php?p=271604#post271604How can 10/13/02 not count? The whole band played their usual material for a large crowd for over three hours as part of a planned and paid performance. It has to count. And if 10/13/02 counts, then 8/2/03 has to count. Again, the whole band played their usual material for a large crowd as part of a planned performance.
Another issue becomes what constitutes "private"?
Let\'s hash out some ideas as to what constitutes a show that counts and what would disqualify a show for stats purposes:
Definitely not a show:- Band practice
- A show featuring some but not all band members that is billed as something else where the remaining band members sit in. (So if Jordan and Chris simultaneously sit in with Kung Fu, that is not a Breakfast show.)
- Spontaneous musical moment at a planned or unplanned event. So if the whole band happens to be at a party at the Annex Club, or hanging out at someone\'s house, and they all happen to end up playing instruments at the same time... this is not a show even if they start playing their own original songs.
Might disqualify, might not:- Missing band members. If 8/2/03 were missing band members then I would consider that a strong case for not counting it. At the same time, missing band members often does not disqualify a show. For example, The Disco Biscuits played
3/19/10 at the House of Blues in Boston without their lead guitarist who was injured the night before, but I think we can agree that this was still a Disco Biscuits show.
- Private party. Again, this gets hard to define. 9/3/01, 10/13/02, and 8/2/03 are all private parties. If you want to count 9/3/01 and 10/13/02 and NOT 8/2/03 then you would really need to hash this out.
Things that are either mandatory or definitely help make a show count:- It is planned in advance
- The band is promoted, introduced, or otherwise billed as their group name
- The band gets paid
- The whole band plays the whole time
- The band plays their own originals and/or covers that they have played before
- There is a live audience
- The live audience generally understands that the performance they are witnessing is by said band
Note how a wedding show fits all 7 criteria in this category and none of the disqualifying categories.
Thoughts?