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Gig Gab - The Working Musician's Podcast

Dave Hamilton & Friends
Gig Gab - The Working Musician's Podcast
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531 episodes

  • Gig Gab - The Working Musician's Podcast

    Stop Guessing, Start Growing: Fix Your Band’s Biggest Pain Points (with Dan Chantrey)

    27/04/2026 | 1h 1 mins.
    You trace Dan Chantrey’s path from drummer dad influence to choosing music over football, and quickly see the real lesson: the game has flipped. You’re no longer playing gigs to sell music, you’re using music to sell gigs. From record deals fading to booking agents becoming the new gatekeepers, you learn why every band feels like it’s on the brink and how surviving means thinking beyond the stage. GIGNITE emerges as the modern answer, a virtual tour manager that helps you route tours, analyze audiences, and break into new markets with data instead of guesswork. If you want to grow, you stop hoping for “yes” and start building a system that makes it inevitable.

    You rethink what it means to be a working musician: your brand matters as much as your chops, your off-stage work is where the money lives, and yes, it’s okay to get paid for your art. From finding sponsors in your local pizza joint to solving real-world problems like parking the van and booking rooms, you’re shown how to remove friction and scale your gig life intelligently. The stories drive it home: don’t punish the audience that showed up, audition gigs still sting, and your toughest hometown show might teach you the most. The throughline is clear: treat this like a business, leverage the tools, and Always Be Performing.

    00:00:00 Gig Gab 531 – Monday, April 27th, 2026

    April 27th: Morse Code Day

    Guest co-host: Dan Chantrey from GIGNITE

    00:03:36 Dan’s Dad was a drummer and a singer, started him off, then Dan started playing

    00:03:58 Playing live vs. Playing in the studio

    00:04:15 Choosing between (American) football and music

    00:06:09 Getting signed to Frontier Records

    Things worked for a while

    “Every band is on the verge of breaking up at all times”

    00:09:06 Things have turned: you used to do gigs to sell your music, now you do music to sell your gigs

    GIGNITE is a one-stop shop for artists to be able to tour

    Had an events business running pre-COVID

    BREXIT happened, so how can we make things easier to get artists move about through Europe

    00:12:38 Booking agent deals are the new record deal

    00:14:49 Tried to book a festival, booking agents said “no” even though bands said “yes”

    00:16:00 GIGNITE is your virtual tour manager

    00:17:10 Aggregating Audience Analytics is part of the platform, too

    00:18:56 Heading to NAMM to learn what potential customers want

    NAMM is the meeting place of the music industry

    00:20:33 Analytics aggregation for tribute acts and cover bands, too

    Does Dave’s fictitious band sound like Rage Against The Machine? Why not!

    Using analytics to decide which markets

    00:22:55 GIGNITE is free for artists to join and use

    Freemium model allows artists to add additional features like press releases and such

    Primary monetization is from suppliers (aka venues)

    Venue ratings system!

    00:24:22 Gig Unite links artists with sponsors

    Linking headline bands with opening acts (local and otherwise)

    Find sponsors for your local bands, folks:

    Pizza place

    Construction companies

    Cleaning services

    Chiropractor

    It might be easier to get sponsors for your band than gigs for it!

    32:31 SPONSOR: Gusto. Get three months free when you run your first payroll when you start at https://gusto.com/giggab

    00:33:57 GIGNITE takes the heavy lifting and headaches away

    Gives your band the power to look at and consider tours

    “How do you get a gig in a town that’s 200 miles away?”

    You can do it yourself, you can get a booking agent, or you can use a service like GIGNITE

    00:36:00 It’s called the music BUSINESS for a reason

    The brand of your band is as important as your stagecraft

    00:40:49 I don’t get paid to play shows, I get paid to do all the off-stage stuff

    Dave says: “It’s OK to get paid for our art”

    00:43:41 Where are you going to park your van while you play?

    Where are you going to stay?

    GIGNITE answers these questions

    00:47:44 Now it’s Gig Gab time

    Road stories, folks!

    Parthenon Huxley: Don’t punish the people who showed up!

    Audition Gigs… love ‘em and hate ‘em!

    (mostly hate ‘em!)

    00:54:36 The hardest gig I ever played

    “We want to see you in your home town.”

    00:58:00 Gig Gab 531 Outtro

    Follow Dan Chantrey

    GIGNITE.live

    Facebook & Instagram

    Dan_chantrey

    Dan Chan Show on Rock Rage Radio

    Dan Chan Show on YouTube

    Contact Gig Gab!

    @GigGabPodcast on Instagram

    [email protected]

    Sign Up for the Gig Gab Mailing List

    The post Stop Guessing, Start Growing: Fix Your Band’s Biggest Pain Points – Gig Gab 531 with Dan Chantrey appeared first on Gig Gab.
  • Gig Gab - The Working Musician's Podcast

    50 Years of Rush: Howard Ungerleider on Lighting the Lighted Stage

    20/04/2026 | 1h 10 mins.
    Step inside five decades of rock history with lighting legend Howard Ungerleider, the man who’s been designing and directing Rush’s light shows since 1974. Hear how a $75-a-week mailroom gig at American Talent International — where he pulled off a rogue booking of Fleetwood Mac before he was even an agent — turned into a lifetime behind the console. Get the story of Howard landing in Toronto to babysit “a club band called Rush,” sleeping on the floor at the manager’s house with a St. Bernard, freezing his hand to a car door at -40 in Cochrane, Ontario, and later jamming with Neil Peart at his house to Genesis and Supertramp records. Howard also talks designing Roll The Bones (the one Rush tour he couldn’t operate), embedding at See Factor to build custom gear nobody else could get, and how Blue Öyster Cult first put him in front of a laser: the same craft he now brings to Foo Fighters, Tool, and Janet Jackson.

    Then the conversation turns to the upcoming Rush Fifty Something tour — a four-piece now with Anika Nilles on drums and Loren Gold on keys, freeing Geddy to focus on bass and vocals. Learn why Howard still “plays” the lighting console live with two boards and thousands of touch cues, how robotic spots are quietly changing the craft, and why he and Phish’s Chris Kuroda will be swapping rigs at Madison Square Garden. You’ll also hear the Paul McCartney moment in the Taylor Hawkins tribute dressing room that may have sparked the whole tour, and why Howard insists this is a rejuvenation, a celebration, and proof that no matter the rig, the room, or the era, you’ve gotta ALWAYS BE PERFORMING.

    Because it’s what we do.

    Press play and enjoy, folks.

    00:00:00 Gig Gab 530 – Monday, April 20th, 2026

    April 20th: Pizza Delivery Driver Appreciation Day

    Guest co-host: Howard Ungerleider

    00:02:18 Walked into a NYC office to get a recording contract for his band

    “You need to learn about this industry before you come knocking on people’s doors.”

    Introduced him to Action Talent (which became American Talent International)

    00:06:21 For $75/week delivering coffee and working in the mailroom

    After a year and a half he got booted from Monmouth University, then became the ATI gopher

    00:08:17 Hey, do you want Fleetwood Mac to play here?

    00:11:44 Booking agent

    00:13:17 Can you fill in for a week as Blue Oyster Cult’s tour

    00:14:51 Howard and Rush were surprised to have Howard working there

    “I need ten grand” – “no, you can sleep on the floor instead”

    00:18:11 Howard had to show Geddy that New York pizza was better than Toronto pizza

    00:19:01 Howard learns about Canadian cold

    Howard’s driving, Geddy’s riding shotgun, Neil’s reading, Alex is smoking a joint

    00:20:42 Geddy says, “get out and take a breath of fresh air”

    00:22:05 John Rutsey had opted out of touring, Howard moves to Toronto while they’re auditioning drummers

    “Eventually Neil [Peart] walked in…and that was it.”

    00:23:32 Howard and Neil used to jam at Neil’s house

    Genesis and Supertramp

    00:24:19 Road life’s not so bad

    200 gigs a year on the road

    00:26:09 Rush took a break, Howard did Queensryche and Tesla

    Howard designed Roll The Bones, but it’s the only tour he couldn’t operate

    00:27:51 Howard tour-managed and lighting designed and operated every tour up through Presto, after which he dropped tour-managing

    00:28:41 Dave realizes he met Howard on the Presto tour

    00:31:43 Don’t put up with crap

    00:32:03 Howard’s been doing Rush’s lights since 1974

    00:33:05 Moving from clubs and theaters to arenas

    Howard embedded himself into See Factor, the lighting company.

    Lots of custom gear

    00:34:54 SPONSOR: Warby Parker – Right now, buy one prescription pair and get 20% off any additional prescription pairs at https://WarbyParker.com/GIGGAB

    00:36:40 SPONSOR: Claude.ai – Ready to tackle bigger problems? Sign up for Claude today, which includes access to Claude Cowork, too, when you visit https://Claude.ai/giggab

    00:38:10 Howard first saw lasers with Blue Oyster Cult

    Dr. David Infante, Blue Oyster Cult’s laser operator

    Howard’s lasers on on the road with Foo Fighters, Tool, Janet Jackson and more

    00:40:37 RUSH Fifty Something

    Something completely different than Howard has ever done

    Other dimensions

    00:42:04 Mixing the Juno awards

    Howard says Neil would approve of Anika.

    00:44:51 Hey Howard, surprise! RUSH is going to tour again

    00:47:03 Howard did lights for RUSH at Taylor Hawkins tribute

    00:48:46 Howard prefers mixing live

    He “plays” the lighting console live

    Remote spot locations

    00:52:07 RUSH Fifty Something… it’s band of FOUR.

    Geddy is happy… playing less keyboards, more bass and vocal focus

    00:54:42 Howard: “I create lighting choreography”

    This tour is (currently) 2.5 hours (things can change, folks!)

    “I try to enhance the show with lighting that can trigger your emotions. I approach it as an audience member.”

    Loren Gold’s harmonies sound great

    00:58:28 Phish and Rush alternating at Madison Square Garden

    Chris Kuroda also mixes lights live

    01:00:45 Howard’s going to 85 dates

    We’re here to create positivity, have a good time…and Neil Peart is smiling down

    01:05:25 Brian Worthen on FOH

    01:08:30 Gig Gab 530 Outtro <https://giggabpodcast.com/>

    Follow Howard Ungerleider

    Facebook

    Contact Gig Gab!

    @GigGabPodcast on Instagram

    [email protected]

    Sign Up for the Gig Gab Mailing List

    The post 50 Years of Rush: Howard Ungerleider on Lighting the Lighted Stage – Gig Gab 530 appeared first on Gig Gab.
  • Gig Gab - The Working Musician's Podcast

    The Crowd Is the Star: Piano Bar Secrets for Entertaining Any Room with Cliff & Susan Prowse

    13/04/2026 | 1h 2 mins.
    You don’t need a traditional path to build a thriving music career! Just ask Cliff and Susan Prowse, who turned classical piano chops and play-by-ear instincts into a full-blown lifestyle business. Whether you learned to read music first or figured out theory after the fact, what matters is training your ear to hear intervals, stacking up reps, and putting in the practice until harmony feels like second nature. Use your DAW to sharpen your pitch, but don’t psych yourself or your bandmates out: true tone deafness is rare, and confidence is currency on stage. The bottom line: making a real living in music is absolutely possible when you treat your craft like a skill you never stop sharpening.

    Once you hit the stage, remember that the crowd is the star and you’re the emcee who just happens to sing and play. Take your audience on a journey: open at mid-energy, build it up, let it breathe, then hit them again. Mix genres, swap instruments, toss in some comedy, and never leave dead air between songs; keep every second purposeful. Think of your set like a video game where you’re always leveling up the room. Manage your breaks with music that matches the vibe so the party never stalls. Playing covers isn’t just a gig — it’s a masterclass in entertainment, and entertainment is its own art form. Always Be Performing.

    00:00:00 Gig Gab 529 – Monday, April 13th, 2026

    April 13th: National Silly Earring Day

    Guest co-hosts: Susan Erwin Prowse & Cliff Prowse

    00:03:02 The Ultimate Lifestyle Business

    00:03:33 Starting with a Pure Mathematics Degree to Piano Bars

    Classical Piano at the base of it all

    00:05:04 Bumble Boogie piqued Susan’s ears

    Make sure your kids see that inspiration

    00:07:16 Cliff started with music from the day he was born

    Always treated instruments delicately, even as a toddler

    Learned to play by ear, but never learned to read

    00:09:44 Reading vs. hearing and Music Theory

    School band director thought he was reading music, when Cliff was just playing by ear and remembering what the band director

    Susan learned to hear intervals

    Cliff decided to learn theory after-the-fact

    00:14:28 Learning to play before you learn WHY the notes work

    00:18:18 Breaking down vocal harmonies

    Both Susan and Cliff picks out harmony by ear

    Singing harmonies with the mixolydian scale with the flat 7

    Really, just practice. Repetition is the key to it all!

    00:27:20 Using your DAW to help improve your singing

    Being actually tone deaf is rare

    Beware of shaking your bandmates’ confidence…or your own

    00:33:21 Making a living in the music business is possible!

    00:34:26 The science of the show: Piano Bar strategies

    Top 40, any genre, any decade

    Learning the skills of doing the singalong concept

    Susan and Cliff met on-stage at Willy D’s piano bar in Little Rock

    From piano bars in Little Rock to Los Angeles to Las Vegas and beyond

    00:38:31 Taking the crowd on a journey

    When you’re there to entertain and throw the party

    The crowd is the star, you AREN’T

    You’re the emcee, the DJ, you just happen to know how to sing and play piano

    Keep it interesting by changing the genre, the groove, the style

    It’s like playing a video game!

    Mid energy, at first, then bring it up, then let it ease, then maybe repeat

    Add variety: different instruments, different singers, different styles

    Add a little comedy to give them a break from the music

    00:45:44 Manage your breaks

    One school: NEVER stop playing

    Have good break music, make sure the energy matches

    00:49:48 Managing your dead air

    Don’t allow breaks between songs. Always avoid dead air.

    “Purposeful Talking”

    00:52:44 Entertainers Academy

    5-Day Gig Amplifier Challenge

    Susan and Cliff love to teach!

    00:56:44 Being in a cover band is a masterclass of learning entertainment skills

    Entertaining is an art in and of itself

    01:00:17 Gig Gab 528 Outtro

    Follow Cliff & Susan

    Facebook & Instagram

    Contact Gig Gab!

    @GigGabPodcast on Instagram

    [email protected]

    Sign Up for the Gig Gab Mailing List

    The post The Crowd Is the Star: Piano Bar Secrets for Entertaining Any Room – Gig Gab Podcast 529 with Cliff & Susan Prowse appeared first on Gig Gab.
  • Gig Gab - The Working Musician's Podcast

    Monitoring the Artists' Monitors: IEM Wisdom from Kevin Glendinning

    06/04/2026 | 1h 19 mins.
    In this episode of Gig Gab, you get the full story of how Kevin “KG” Glendinning cold-emailed his way from a Chicago suburb into a 25-year career mixing monitors for Alicia Keys, Maroon 5, Justin Timberlake, Miley Cyrus, Lorde, and more. You hear how a kid sweeping floors at dB Sound ended up on a Metallica tour bus with one piece of advice ringing in his ears: ask questions, stay late, and get a second job because you’re gonna need it. Kevin walks you through migrating artists to in-ear monitors, managing talkback culture for everyone from Eddie Vedder wanting baseball scores to Lorde’s tight production team, and what it takes to help reluctant guitar players finally ditch the wedges. If you’ve ever wondered what separates a good monitor engineer from a great one, this conversation lays it out.

    You also dive deep into the art and science of making IEMs sound right in every room, every night. Kevin shares his process of minimal reduction: fixing a bad mix by figuring out what to take away, not what to add, and explains why tuning for in-ears is just as critical as tuning a PA. You learn why he flies 4,700 miles for a single gig, why the best mixes sometimes come from a throw-and-go, and how setting up dummy channels lets you experiment without wrecking the artist’s mix. He and Dave talk hearing health, audiograms, the DPA capsule as the only open mic on the Lorde stage, and why knowing your own ears matters more than knowing your gear. Whether you’re mixing monitors at an arena or running sound at a club gig, this episode is packed with wisdom you can use tonight. Always Be Performing, folks!

    00:00:00 Gig Gab 528 – Monday, April 6th, 2026

    April 6th: National Siamese Cat Day

    Guest co-host: Kevin Glendinning

    00:02:25 Hotmailing his way into a career

    Watched the credits of a Metallica documentary, realized DB Sound was near the house, emailed Harry… “Hi, I’m Kevin, and I’m interested in audio…” and the rest is history!

    00:07:58 Got put on the road as an audio team assistant

    Trial by fire

    Advice from the team:

    Here’s what to do

    Here’s what not to do

    Ask questions, stay late, and get a second job because you’re gonna need it

    00:11:22 Learning the personal touch parts of being on tour

    00:12:52 Being the stage left PA tech, Kevin gravitated towards monitors

    00:13:50 Talkback Culture

    Eddie Vedder wanted baseball scores in his talkback

    SOMBR for Coachella 2026 (Chris Rabold at FOH)

    00:16:18 Managing multiple talkback channels

    00:18:08 LORDE on Talkback

    Phil Harvey on FOH

    Sarah Parker is LD

    00:19:00 Talkback stories

    Jaret Reddick’s use of talkback mics in Bowling For Soup

    00:20:51 Migrating to in-ears

    IEMs can preserve your hearing, if done right

    Future Sonics uses dynamic drivers

    00:25:09 Helping guitar players to IEMs

    Mike Dias on Gig Gab

    Sensaphonics 3MAX IEMs on LORDE tour

    00:32:08 SPONSOR: Gusto. Get three months free when you run your first payroll when you start at https://gusto.com/giggab

    00:33:44 Back to helping guitar players with IEMs

    Problem: when a vocal mic is downstage from a guitar amp

    Ian Beveridge with Foo Fighters

    Paul Simon prefers wedges

    Always be learning

    First: Learn the human being you’re going to be mixing for

    00:41:27 The differences between mixing monitors for Miley Cyrus and Ella LORDE

    00:42:48 Monitoring the Artists Monitors

    TX1 Wireless Transmitters

    REMI with Brad Madix on Gig Gab

    00:47:50 Different rooms sound different on IEMs

    AFAS Live (formerly Heineken Music Hall) in Amsterdam sounds great

    Dave says Alamodome in San Antonio is one of the worst-sounding

    To fix IEMs in a bad-sounding room: what can we reduce to make it sound better?

    Last night it was a bongo mic that was making the drumset sound too washy in the IEM mix

    “The process of minimal reduction”

    Ella’s DPA capsule is the only open mic on-stage on the LORDE tour

    Tune for the IEMs, too: listen to something you know, and EQ it

    Tuning the podcast for JH Audio Laylas

    01:04:06 Learn your own ears (not your IEMs, your human ears) first

    Take a hearing test with your phone if you can

    Kevin and Alicia Keys would go and get their hearing tested together, getting audiograms to compare

    01:07:09 IEMs are the most personal audio interaction

    You have to be psychic!

    01:09:46 Flying 4,700 miles to save the day

    Sometimes the throw-and-go results in the best mix because you’re not overthinking it

    Tip from Kevin: set up dummy channels to experiment without messing with the actual mix for the IEMs

    01:15:57 Gig Gab 528 Outtro

    Follow Kevin Glendinning

    IG: @kev_chitown

    LinkedIn: Kevin ‘KG’ Glendinning

    Contact Gig Gab!

    @GigGabPodcast on Instagram

    [email protected]

    Sign Up for the Gig Gab Mailing List



    The post Monitoring the Artists’ Monitors: IEM Wisdom from Kevin Glendinning – Gig Gab 528 appeared first on Gig Gab.
  • Gig Gab - The Working Musician's Podcast

    Stop Winging It: Dial In Your Show with Clicks, Setlists, Insurance, and Gig Prep

    30/03/2026 | 58 mins.
    You tighten your gig prep by treating every show like a pro mission: build rock-solid routines, line-check your gear and apps, and know your insurance, splitter snake, setlist, click, and IEM plan before you ever hit the stage. You walk into a wedding or club already covered with proper liability, routing, charts, and monitoring so you can stop worrying about logistics and start playing the room. Always Be Performing.

    Onstage, you think like a storyteller, not just a musician: you record full shows to review your banter and flow, you decide when the click helps and when to ditch it, and you refine what makes your band distinctive so people remember your name and feel the FOMO.

    Offstage, you act like a lab: you binge showcases at events like SXSW, steal the best ideas, use AI to critique rehearsals, and keep your gig bag dialed so every performance gets sharper, louder, and more undeniable.

    00:00:00 Gig Gab 527 – Monday, March 30th, 2026

    March 30th: Take a Walk in the Park Day

    00:01:29 What is your gig prep process?

    00:06:55 Skylar-How does a band get a certificate of insurance for a wedding gig?

    Insurance Canopy

    Special Event Insurance

    00:11:15 n-Brian from Durham-Do we need a splitter snake?

    Mixing Station

    Proreck Splitter Snake

    00:16:57 Bill-What Setlist App do you use?

    forScore

    00:19:39 Dan-What click track do you use live?

    PolyNome

    00:21:51 Dan-What about IEMs with ambient filters?

    Ultimate Ears Ambient Option

    00:24:20 SPONSOR: Claude.ai – Ready to tackle bigger problems? Sign up for Claude today, which includes access to Claude Cowork, too, when you visit Claude.ai/giggab

    00:27:05 I’m a band guy…how about you?

    00:30:15 SXSW 2026 — bands seen and lessons learned:

    38 showcases in 2026

    Family Battenberg

    Thelma And James

    Timmy Skelly

    00:39:43 Record yourself live, not just for the music, but for the whole show, including your banter.

    Lainey Wilson vs. John Popper and band

    00:43:24 The stiffness of a click, vs not.

    Soultone vs. Lainey

    00:45:56 PODCAST: Rock Talk Studio Podcast

    00:47:29 Tell people who you are, and make it distinctive.

    Leverage FOMO

    00:51:54 Olight OClip Pro in your Gig Bag

    00:54:25 Moskowizard-Use AI to evaluate your rehearsals (critical listening)

    00:57:00 Andy-CSF-Supertone Clear

    00:58:16 Gig Gab 527 Outtro

    Contact Gig Gab!

    @GigGabPodcast on Instagram

    [email protected]

    Sign Up for the Gig Gab Mailing List

    The post Stop Winging It: Dial In Your Show with Clicks, Setlists, Insurance, and Gig Prep – Gig Gab 527 appeared first on Gig Gab.

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About Gig Gab - The Working Musician's Podcast

Welcome to Gig Gab—the podcast sanctuary for working musicians and anyone fascinated by the vibrant, often unseen world behind every note played on stage. Whether you’re a musician, a member of the crew, or just someone who loves peeking behind the curtain to discover the secrets of live performances, you’ve found your tribe.
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