Always looking for the cheapest way out
Posted: Sun Aug 14, 2011 2:37 pm
I have to warn this may sound like a little rant.
My heart and prayers are going out right now to those hurt and killed in the stage collapse in Indiana yesterday.
As you know, I spent a good amount of my years doing staging, lighting and sound in regional, national, and international shows, with well over 1000 shows under my belt as a tech, in addition to the 6 years prior to that learning the trade.
I want to point something out that has bothered me for a while: in this industry, people keep thinking that stage techs should be free (volunteers), or college kids. While many of them can be (pushing road cases from "a" to "b" etc) there has been an increase in staging incidents in the last few years involving faulty staging and non-professional labor.
All I'm trying to point out is the increase in staging accidents involving this scenario, and I'm putting it out there to anyone who plays regularly to realize that hiring someone who knows what they are doing is well worth the price , especially when there is heavy stuff hanging over your head or electricity all around you.
There is a rule of thumb that Bob (my husband who tours constantly) mentions: if it looks scary, it ain't put together right. And this is true when talking about staging. Using the wrong scaffolding, the wrong clamps on lighting, the wrong gauge electrical runs etc can all cost lives.
I'll be posting more about how cost cutting has changed the way outdoor staging has cheeped out and caused situations like what happened this weekend. Hopefully Bob will chime in too.
Excuse this if it seems like a rant, but this is an issue close to my heart. We talk about the business of music, the legality of copyrights, taxes, sound quality etc, but we don't talk about the people who assist us when we play out. I think its good to discuss these issues, and how we can keep each other safe and sound and playing loud.
My heart and prayers are going out right now to those hurt and killed in the stage collapse in Indiana yesterday.
As you know, I spent a good amount of my years doing staging, lighting and sound in regional, national, and international shows, with well over 1000 shows under my belt as a tech, in addition to the 6 years prior to that learning the trade.
I want to point something out that has bothered me for a while: in this industry, people keep thinking that stage techs should be free (volunteers), or college kids. While many of them can be (pushing road cases from "a" to "b" etc) there has been an increase in staging incidents in the last few years involving faulty staging and non-professional labor.
All I'm trying to point out is the increase in staging accidents involving this scenario, and I'm putting it out there to anyone who plays regularly to realize that hiring someone who knows what they are doing is well worth the price , especially when there is heavy stuff hanging over your head or electricity all around you.
There is a rule of thumb that Bob (my husband who tours constantly) mentions: if it looks scary, it ain't put together right. And this is true when talking about staging. Using the wrong scaffolding, the wrong clamps on lighting, the wrong gauge electrical runs etc can all cost lives.
I'll be posting more about how cost cutting has changed the way outdoor staging has cheeped out and caused situations like what happened this weekend. Hopefully Bob will chime in too.
Excuse this if it seems like a rant, but this is an issue close to my heart. We talk about the business of music, the legality of copyrights, taxes, sound quality etc, but we don't talk about the people who assist us when we play out. I think its good to discuss these issues, and how we can keep each other safe and sound and playing loud.