Alcohol and The Stage: Dancing with the Devil and Trying Not To Get Burned (My Story)

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  • Опубликовано: 2 окт 2024
  • *Warning: This video's intention is not to promote the use of alcohol in any way. It's my personal story of descending into a world I never thought I'd be in, my struggle to understand it, and my plan to overcome it.
    Thanks for watching.
    Alcohol and The Stage: Dancing with the Devil and Trying Not To Get Burned (My Story)
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Комментарии • 484

  • @jaymantisgaming
    @jaymantisgaming 7 месяцев назад +305

    I think introverts are especially vulnerable to alcohol addiction. it basically fixes you, turns you into an extrovert for a night. i used to hate, absolutely despise playing live because of stage fright. so had to get extremely drunk beforehand. i never screwed up a gig, but it started happening at practises too. used to pass out hugging my bass. I think once a drinker discovers that they can drink more to make the hangover go away, that's when it really goes downhill, fast. I'm so glad that this generation have chosen not to indulge nearly as much as those that came before.
    Anyway. i'm 2 years sober now. thanks for sharing your experience

    • @oldmanwinter63
      @oldmanwinter63 7 месяцев назад +4

      Great point! And keep going!!

    • @ZiggyAndTheSpiderFromMars
      @ZiggyAndTheSpiderFromMars 7 месяцев назад +9

      I did a lot of voice training by going to the open jams and definitely used beer as the remedy for the initial stage fright. Problem is that the pattern sticks and then you feel the need to drink all performances even when the stage fright phase is long over. If you go pro, you necessarily become an alcoholic. I unstuck my connection with performance and drinking by doing tons of busking dry. I no longer feel like booze goes with performance.

    • @slayabouts
      @slayabouts 7 месяцев назад +4

      Yep, I think going for the hair of the dog is what separates drinkers from alcoholics. I sometimes drink a beer or take a shot the next morning to help take a nap, but I have an absolute stop, hard limit at one. But drinking to loosen me up was definitely a crutch and it sucks that the social skills you pick up while drunk don’t extend into when you’re sober
      Happy for your sobriety though!

    • @PlasticCogLiquid
      @PlasticCogLiquid 7 месяцев назад +2

      Yup! When you start drinking the hangovers away that's the beginning of the end. Been there man, I've only drank a couple of times in 5 years

    • @squidcaps4308
      @squidcaps4308 7 месяцев назад +5

      Beta blockers... What they do is that they suppress the effects of adrenaline in your soft muscle tissue: in this case it is your heart that needs to be steady so you don't get into that cycle of being nervous, being nervous of being nervous, panicking because you are nervous and finally.. panicking because you are panicking. The side effects non-existing unless you run a marathon under hot lights, they lower your heart rate and have minor effect on temperature regulation, you have to avoid extremes but are just fine on a gig. A LOT of artists use them, they are especially favored in the classical side. And since they have no effect in your brain, you don't lose any edge, are not lulled into being "comfortably numb"... I haven't found them having any effect on my energy on stage.

  • @corckyromano4187
    @corckyromano4187 7 месяцев назад +211

    I played in a country band (tobogan)for almost a decade. Every bar paid our tab as part of the pay agreement. That's about all I can remember.

    • @robbiegarnz7732
      @robbiegarnz7732 7 месяцев назад +5

      At least you weren’t like the Blues Brothers! Lol! Drinking your pay’ lol!

    • @tyreechiejackstone7379
      @tyreechiejackstone7379 7 месяцев назад +7

      Open bars are absolutely the Devil!

    • @shaunfogarty5744
      @shaunfogarty5744 7 месяцев назад +5

      All my band got was the booze.

    • @Bryan-jd7os
      @Bryan-jd7os 7 месяцев назад +1

      😂😂😂

    • @majorfeelgoodrecords2740
      @majorfeelgoodrecords2740 7 месяцев назад +1

      Same, it was always part of the contract 🎼🤘🏻🤘🏻🤘🏻

  • @Setarcoss
    @Setarcoss 7 месяцев назад +32

    "Did he really wanna kick the guys ass? No. Was the guy even Canadian? I don't think so." My favorite quote!🤣

  • @Krullmatic
    @Krullmatic 7 месяцев назад +52

    Unfortunately for me, I turned into a raging alcoholic/addict, so my dreams died fairly quick. I've now been 3 years clean after 40 years old f boozing and drugging, and finally got me a couple of new guitars and gear. I'm actually surpassing my talent now.

    • @sandman567
      @sandman567 7 месяцев назад +5

      Keep it up!

    • @tommybinson
      @tommybinson 7 месяцев назад

      Thanks for sharing your story. Best wishes.

    • @strummercash5601
      @strummercash5601 7 месяцев назад

      Awesome! Is that your Lester in the thumbnail? Very nice.

    • @MidlifeRenaissanceMan
      @MidlifeRenaissanceMan 3 месяца назад

      When I was young, a recovering addict said to me
      *_Son. The day you say “I need a drink” is the day you don’t drink. It’s the day you have to face unanaesthetised_*

  • @musicmanj1642
    @musicmanj1642 7 месяцев назад +31

    Thanks for another great video, Mike. I had to face my alcohol use that definitely ramped up from all the weekends playing shows at bars and band practice. I'm 41 and now more than 3 years since my last drink of alcohol. I found I couldn't just "cut back"- it had to be completely cut off or I just took it too far almost every time. It's harder to be comfortable on stage and talking to people for sure without it. But the constant hangovers, forgetting songs while performing, driving home half drunk after shows, fighting with my wife, not being there for my kids... I'm done with that. I do live looping now I could never pull off drunk - I'd fall on my ass trying to hit the pedals!

    • @ellengrace4609
      @ellengrace4609 7 месяцев назад +2

      Congratulations on your three years! ❤

  • @threeleggedman
    @threeleggedman 7 месяцев назад +7

    I played weddings for 25 years and it was always 2-3 drinks per gig. One after setting up, hangign with band mates in the cocktail hour. Second drink would accompany me on stage for the first set. Third drink- I would play the first break alone (solo guitar) and a bandmate would bring it to me. Three drinks in the first 2.5 hours, with another 3 hours before I'm in the car driving home. I was fine, rarely did I ever feel drunk. Most open bars making them a little weak. Sometimes a bar tender would pour my Tequila on the rocks like it was glass of soda. Those were the times I drank a little too much. Oh, forgot to mention. The 25 years of gigs all included plenty of pot smoking behind the venue or in the parking lot. Good times!

  • @bryanmcdermott4204
    @bryanmcdermott4204 7 месяцев назад +4

    Thank you for sharing. I'm old and have seen way too many cautionary tales from family and friends.
    To anyone who doesn't drink, keep avoiding it. You'll get occasional weird looks, but staying sober will save you heartache and pain.

  • @StabilityMan
    @StabilityMan 7 месяцев назад +9

    Telling your story took courage and honesty. Wish you all the best.

  • @Rastard12345
    @Rastard12345 7 месяцев назад +26

    I played in a band called Astradica in Norway, I am a drummer. We played our first gig in a pretty big bar, with literally 5 people watching us. The singer just disappeared 5 minutes before we were going on stage. He had to take a shit, lol. He was very anxious. A few months later we played a place named John Dee, and again the singer went missing shortly before going on stage. Turns out he was drinking himself some courage in his hotel room!

    • @DMSProduktions
      @DMSProduktions 7 месяцев назад +1

      HOLD my Jarlsberg!

    • @Rastard12345
      @Rastard12345 7 месяцев назад +1

      You mean Carlsberg? Lol. Jarlsberg is cheese.

    • @meadish
      @meadish 7 месяцев назад +2

      @@Rastard12345It's somehow funnier with cheese.

  • @anthonycook5238
    @anthonycook5238 7 месяцев назад +2

    I am very fortunate to have gone through my struggles with substance abuse before I started my current band , and I have to say that my level of control and everything definitely helps but it makes it very hard to find other players to help play in the band because so many people are in denial of their substance abuse.

  • @badtripmoses
    @badtripmoses 7 месяцев назад +3

    Playing in bars, clubs, ect & in all kinds of styles of music since i was 13yrs old & free drinks always being included in our contracts, definitely contributed to my alcoholism & drug use!! & after many ups & downs, I am happy to say i am clean from all for 10 yrs now! But what a crazy ride it all was & i chose NOT to go "big" & tour because of all the evil temptation on the road & i would have most likely overdosed or something!! Plus i just couldnt miss out on my children growing up!!

  • @markwarner9471
    @markwarner9471 7 месяцев назад +3

    Hey Mike. I'm a brand new student on your website, trying to learn to play guitar at a stage in life when most people start winding down instead of up. The clock is ticking loudly in my ears, I guess, I don't know. Anyway, I just wanted to say that I appreciate you. You seem like you're a young guy who really has himself together, and brother I'm here to tell you, the booze is a lie. It's a lie that tells itself to those who drink. It whispers in your ear that you're relaxed, and cool, and fun... but that just ain't so. Like I said, you seem to me to really have your life together. You're doing something you love, and earning a living doing it. Who could be more comfortable in his own skin than THAT guy...? You don't need the booze as much as the booze needs you. Who else is going to pay for those gargantuan Jägermeister flags and Super Bowl ads...? I'd wish you luck, but you don't need luck. All that is needed is a decision. I'm looking forward to learning a lot from you, and I'm looking forward even more to watching that next video you mentioned.

    • @TheArtofGuitar
      @TheArtofGuitar  7 месяцев назад +2

      Thanks for the awesome comment. Much appreciated.

  • @A.J.1656
    @A.J.1656 7 месяцев назад +2

    I saw a metal band playing at a bar in college. Someone took the lead singer a beer and he chugged it down super fast. Immediately after that, a second person handed him a beer and he chugged it right down. I thought to myself, "that's so metal, that's why I cold never be the lead singer of a metal band." Right as I was thinking that, the singer turned around and blew chunks all over the drummer. It was fuggin' awesome. lol

  • @Idollisimo
    @Idollisimo 7 месяцев назад +15

    One drink before the gig - that's what I came to in only 3 or 4 shows. I wasn't very good with my instrument and drinking made me play even worse. Everybody was drunk and no one would notice but to me 40 minutes of set thinking "What the hell am I doing?? I always played this part well! What is happening with my fingers?!" was just too much. I wasn't having any fun, so I stopped drinking before the concerts. And then I stopped drinking after them because one time someone stole all equipment from a band who played before us. It was a time when clubs didn't even have guards. I was damn afraid someone would steal my bass and stuff, so I was keeping my eye on everything and everybody :) I could enjoy a beer but nothing too strong.

    • @squidcaps4308
      @squidcaps4308 7 месяцев назад

      1 before, maybe 1 during. Sports drinks are awesome on stage, you lose a lot of stuff when sweating and blood sugar needs to stay between margins.

    • @mmdoof
      @mmdoof 7 месяцев назад

      I'm not a performing musician, but even from my 110% bedroom guitarist perspective, I know gigging would make me crave a drink. And I'm actually sober in my everyday life too. I think there's a few reasons why I'm so temped about the idea.
      1. Getting into a band and on a gig would be a huge accomplishment for me, and I would like to celebrate it. I'm never going on a world tour, so make the few prescious gigs a party
      2. Because I'm both a poor player and a perfectionist, I actually play better slightly tipsy. My tone and my timing may suffer, but I don't get hung up on my mistakes, which is a much bigger problem for me. I get a bit of that 'best player in the world' vibe when I jam after a couple of beer. So I'm pretty much the opposite of you, and that's a huge trap factor
      3. The overall 'alcohol = good time' social norm in western societies. Including all those kool rock stars who played arenas high as a kite
      4. Possible stage fright. I'm an ambivert with some decent stage fright management techniques, and I don't think psychological stress would be a career-threatening problem for me, but narcotics are just such a cheap shortcut!

  • @HannahCope88
    @HannahCope88 7 месяцев назад +24

    Congrats on 864k Subscribers.
    I'm pretty lucky that I've never had any struggles with alcohol. I've grown up seeing friends and others use it and not having complete control over it and their behaviour from drinking it.
    I'm proud to say that I've never been drunk, from a very young age the desire to get drunk never had any appeal. A slight phobia of vomiting did have a little to do with this but the majority of my choice was down to just not wanting to be in that state of drunkenness.

  • @majikmuzik8036
    @majikmuzik8036 7 месяцев назад +4

    Alcohol just causes problems, this career muso no exception. Story: c. 1999 worked 5 days a week about 90 days with a group putting together tight arrangements for a wedding/corporate band. No boose by design during rehearsal, as we were all drinkers. Got great work done, good attitudes to that point. Killer vocal harmonies, great arrangements. One day rehearsing, we got first nice booking, and had a first celebratory drink as a band. Immediately got into a big argument, over stupid shit "Dude you're sposed to sing 3rd. Dude it does that twice there.," Band did well for a couple years, but boose eventually played a prob. Alcohol sucks. Finally learned to stay away from it altogether.

  • @williamcozart8158
    @williamcozart8158 7 месяцев назад +7

    Haha, so drunk you try to marry some chick and the drummer tries to fight a random Canadian...good times.

    • @2760ade
      @2760ade 7 месяцев назад

      Yes! Sounds like an outstanding night to me!🤣

  • @dala5568
    @dala5568 7 месяцев назад +3

    I completely understand where you’re coming from and thanks for your honesty because your admission can get you a lot of criticism. I always associate having a drink with flying and whenever I try to justify that I get labeled an alcoholic. Up to a point I can consume and still have my faculties, having the feeling of relaxation that a moderate amount gives you without it impairing your ability to perform is acceptable in my opinion.

  • @Silas-lc9op
    @Silas-lc9op 7 месяцев назад +9

    The thing I always dislike about headlining.... it takes forever to get on stage...sometimes midnight. And you really have to nurse a beer beforehand. Those gigs I'll show up around nine. But still, that's several hours.

  • @robbiegarnz7732
    @robbiegarnz7732 7 месяцев назад +18

    This is the most informative and concise analysis of most drinker’s’ experience with alcohol. Your account of your first time drinking experience was spot on. You come to associate drinking with having fun and you want to do it again asap. I drank throughout most of my adult life whether during jam sessions or on my off days back when I was in the military. I thought I had earned it and saw it as a way to relax and enjoy your downtime. I haven’t drank in five years but I never did quit. I just kept saying “I’ll have a beer tomorrow.” However since retiring from the army I no longer have gainful employment and thus haven’t felt compelled to drink anymore. Maybe I think that if I drink when I don’t have a career anymore I’ll be a bum? Maybe it’s because money has been tight for so long and frankly there just isn’t anything to celebrate? Either way, I’m sober now and even if my luck changes I won’t go back to drinking. At this point it’s kind of like Eli Manning -I don’t want to break my streak. Whatever the reason my story has got to be the most pathetic “I’m sober now” story!

    • @ellengrace4609
      @ellengrace4609 7 месяцев назад +4

      Any sober story is not pathetic. Congratulations! ❤

    • @robbiegarnz7732
      @robbiegarnz7732 7 месяцев назад

      @@ellengrace4609 thank you so much for your kind words! God bless you!

    • @BuzzBuzzbuzzbuzzcutlight-zy7yv
      @BuzzBuzzbuzzbuzzcutlight-zy7yv 7 месяцев назад +1

      Think better of yourself. Your doing good.

    • @Docsjeff
      @Docsjeff 7 месяцев назад +2

      Nope,not pathetic at all. We all have different circumstances in our lives.People drink or not drink for all kinds of reasons.You are no different or ANY less important.

  • @samwheeler-brown7458
    @samwheeler-brown7458 7 месяцев назад +57

    For the longest time I had to have a drink to get on stage or even be around crowds at gigs. Moved onto to smoking bud to get rid of the hangover. Ended up on MD. Last year I couldn’t stand watching myself in 3rd person not living up to my potential. Went full clean and my playing never felt better or more confident. I can still have a drink, but never do it before I play.

    • @grunge6909
      @grunge6909 7 месяцев назад +5

      What's md

    • @D-Fens_1632
      @D-Fens_1632 7 месяцев назад

      ​@@grunge6909I've been wondering this too. I really hope they come back.

    • @N3gativeR3FLUX
      @N3gativeR3FLUX 7 месяцев назад

      ​@@grunge6909I suspect he's referring to MDMA aka ecstasy.

    • @joshyaks
      @joshyaks 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@grunge6909 Mountain Dew? :)

    • @ryanmalone844
      @ryanmalone844 7 месяцев назад

      Mad Dog?

  • @johnnyfreedom4117
    @johnnyfreedom4117 7 месяцев назад +17

    What a refreshingly honest take. Well done sir. Good luck to all on thier journey and god bless.

  • @zaturnneo
    @zaturnneo 7 месяцев назад +33

    Man, the more you tell stories, the more I realize just how similar our music journey has been.

  • @johnross5722
    @johnross5722 7 месяцев назад +6

    Incredible you played with The Replacements . Your a legend

  • @t-shutts
    @t-shutts 6 месяцев назад

    It can be incredibly difficult to detach from certain vices especially in the environments that the music career puts us in. I went a decent amount of years ruining myself with drugs and alcohol. I had to move to another state to get myself away from the people and places I associated with those vices. I've been sober for 6 years now and I'm happy for it, but I still think I would struggle if I was in the same situations I put myself in back then. Thank you for this video it helps to have such a real story instead of an after school special like you referenced in the beginning thank you.

  • @NateButlerFresnoCA
    @NateButlerFresnoCA 7 месяцев назад +10

    This was a great video, man. I’ve been following you for a couple months now, and enjoying your approach to all the various aspects of being a pro musician, but this video was different. I really appreciate you speaking honestly about your experiences, and I hope that your story will influence your young viewers and the choices that they make.
    I’ve been performing professionally for some 40+ years now, and I’ve gone up and down with the alcohol onstage many times over the years, including embarrassing myself with over-indulgence on more than one occasion! But I learned from a few tough experiences that to get too f**ked up on the gig is to let my band mates down, not to mention myself. So I’ve gotten my act together and know my own limits. Like yourself, nowadays I mostly use it to take the edge off my performance anxiety (which, even after decades of performing, I still have). The key is to know your own limits, and to not exceed them! For me, it's about 2 shots of whiskey, and then maybe a beer later in the set--any more than that and I get into diminishing returns.
    Keep up the great work, good sir!

  • @leaharrington4472
    @leaharrington4472 7 месяцев назад +4

    I wound up on the "max one drink per set" rule after hearing a recording of a show. Everyone else was drunk, so they said we were great... but the recording did not lie. 😬 But, you know, there's a reason introverts call the stuff Liquid Courage.

  • @LongStrangeTrip3
    @LongStrangeTrip3 7 месяцев назад +8

    I think like a lot of people, for me, hanging out and jamming was nearly always linked with drinking or sparking up. Starting from teenage years onward. Even when that jamming turned into a band, band practices, gigs, it was always a “good time”. And it was, but it was a tough connection to break apart.

  • @tombate9105
    @tombate9105 7 месяцев назад +5

    I'll allow myself 1 beer before or during the 1st set. Non-alcoholic beers & water for the rest. Discipline isn't easy but I always thank myself for it later.

  • @mijlaid
    @mijlaid 7 месяцев назад +2

    Your story is highly relatable to a lot of people. Well done.

  • @kilgoretrout321
    @kilgoretrout321 7 месяцев назад +1

    It's hard to convince young people of anything. But if they're lucky enough to safely get through learning the hard way, they get it.

  • @WayneBarroncffcs
    @WayneBarroncffcs 7 месяцев назад +4

    A band here in NC, damn good band.
    Every time we saw them the lead guitarist was always glad i was there.
    The reason why.
    I was the only person in his life that cared enough to tell him.
    "You need to stop drinking before it kills you "
    By the end of every show he was hammered. But never messed up the gig, therefore the band mates never complained about his alcohol abuse.
    Look through the history of music.
    Fellow band mates never stop their mate from slowly killing themselves.
    Joe Elliot from Def Leppard said it best.
    We never told Steve to stop or to get help, because if we did, we would have to look at our own addiction's.
    Band members in most cases will eventually stop on their own. Then you have the cases like Steve from Def Leppard. He drank himself to death.
    My advice to you.
    Stop now before your 40 and look 60.
    My niece and nephew's aunt is like that.
    I look younger than my age. She looks like she is about 20 years older.
    Stay safe and be careful and stop begore it's too late.

  • @timo6830
    @timo6830 7 месяцев назад +5

    Was the "quite legendary band" you mentioned The Replacements?

  • @Rastard12345
    @Rastard12345 7 месяцев назад +26

    I also played drums for another band for less than a year, here in Norway. They were pretty beer happy. But at the last concert we played, they did some stripes of cocaine before going on the stage. That made me want to rage quit, I have never been a drinker or a drug man, I just show up and play and go home. Which is what I did, and shortly after I quit the band. Never been happier.

    • @DMSProduktions
      @DMSProduktions 7 месяцев назад +1

      You SHOULD have walked out BEFORE that gig! Would have taught them a lesson!

    • @Rastard12345
      @Rastard12345 7 месяцев назад

      I have no idea if that was ironic or not, but thanks!

    • @Rastard12345
      @Rastard12345 7 месяцев назад +1

      I agree. But they took the shit just before entering the stage. If they did earlier that night I'd might just leave. I am very happy I left the band (he focking left the band, hello??).

  • @brianrowland55
    @brianrowland55 7 месяцев назад +1

    Your stories were great and fun to listen to. I hope you make it to your goal to zero drinks. I'd love to hear the follow up when you make it, and I know you will. Good luck!

  • @CorbCorbin
    @CorbCorbin 7 месяцев назад +1

    That snare hit, right when he hits, was perfect.
    I have a traditional beer, when I gig, because it’s usually part of the payment, whether one wants it or not.
    I only have a second, if I’m doing a three hour show.
    When I was younger, it was easy to play, and still be precise and fully focused. Sometimes more so.
    That changed at a certain age, at least when performing actual paid gigs. I don’t smoke before a show, but I’ll have a puff or two during a set break, unless we’re having a problem.

  • @JawTooth
    @JawTooth 6 месяцев назад

    I did the same stuff. Sounds like you are talking about me. My hair was down to my waist and I thought I was becoming a rock star. Lol. I got really drunk on beer one time and a large girl helped me out of a bush. I told her how pretty she was and I wanted to marry her. I felt sick for three days and never touched beer again but then there was the other stuff. We would fight over the guitar volumes and one time I met a girl at a show and fell for her. She went with me to another show and left me for another girl. Lol

  • @bryanbrewer4272
    @bryanbrewer4272 7 месяцев назад +5

    Country music has that effect on everyone involved

  • @cindercyan
    @cindercyan 7 месяцев назад +9

    I just woke up from a similar night so thank ya for sharing Mike!

  • @DeanoHCGuitar
    @DeanoHCGuitar 7 месяцев назад +1

    Approaching 16 months sober myself. Best decision I’ve ever made for the long run and my playing on stage has really benefited from it

  • @lanechasek5560
    @lanechasek5560 7 месяцев назад +4

    I never realized “half in the bag” had anything to do with drinking. I only ever thought of it as a series by Red Letter Media, lol.

  • @greg.shred83
    @greg.shred83 7 месяцев назад +5

    I just thought I’d add my own experience to your great video. I drank heavily for 20 years during and after working on full-time band even when music became a hobby. My energy and motivation for playing increased so much when I quit drinking last year. Also, I had to humble up to the fact that am getting older and cannot handle the same amount as when so was 20. The guitar looks better on my body playing live because I have no beer gut lol. Also, alcohol causes inflammation which is very bad for your hands synchronization and playing fast. Not only for sloppiness but the amount of stress you are putting on your left or right hands during heavy intense playing during inebriation. Love your channel keep up the great work.

  • @DavidEJacob
    @DavidEJacob 7 месяцев назад

    Your first story with alcohol was how I felt with opiates. I couldn’t drink…it tasted awful, but that H, omg…HEAVEN!

  • @rickfeith6372
    @rickfeith6372 7 месяцев назад +3

    “When you’re young and so inexperienced with drinking, you just don’t know what is gonna come out your mouth.”
    I know exactly what’s coming: Tastykakes, whole peanuts, and slightly used alcohol. To be young and invincible, good times!!

  • @waltjames407
    @waltjames407 7 месяцев назад +1

    Booze is a big piece of the "Why I don't perform any more" pie chart. You end up in situations that you never would have gotten into otherwise. Like your only way home from a gig a hundred miles away is by riding with a drunk driver. Or I'm the driver and suddenly my bandmate in the back seat cracks open a beer and I'd better be cool with it, even though I'm the one gonna get arrested for open container if we get pulled over. That kind of thing. And that's only brushing the surface.

  • @Hallow334
    @Hallow334 7 месяцев назад +3

    I'm a Captain Morgan Silver Spiced guy. I think one, maybe two, beers was the most I ever drank during a show. Never drank before shows. Never drank after shows either, because we had to load out and leave. I was too scared to drink very much because I didn't want to mess up my parts.

  • @PabloTrick
    @PabloTrick 7 месяцев назад +3

    It's a vicious cycle to get out of. I used to play in a party band where the shots flowed freely. I didn't realize how much it affected my playing until I saw some video playback. That's where all that crazy drinking stopped.

  • @slayabouts
    @slayabouts 7 месяцев назад +1

    I have some friends that started a “party” country cover band mostly playing 90s country that played at bars around town. I lived in a different city otherwise I probably would have played with them. One night, I had had a lot to drink but the guitarist motioned for me to get up on stage and play a couple songs. We played Sweet Home Alabama first and I blacked out halfway through the set after the first solo, which I somehow pulled off. Usually if I play while I get drunk I can still play, but if I try to play after getting drunk then it’s like I’ve never picked up a guitar and this was the latter case, so luckily that didn’t happen. Anyway, I came to and the song was over and everyone was cheering saying that I absolutely killed the main solo, so they kept me on for the second song which was Tennessee Whiskey. I butchered it somewhat as I’m pretty sure I was playing in the wrong key, but luckily I think it was just a matter of sounding a little off and only something a musician would really notice
    Of course, the only thing any friends in the crowd got a video of was the second song, not the first. Oh well, lesson learned

  • @pat2717
    @pat2717 7 месяцев назад

    I appreciate your story and I salute your courage for telling it so honestly. I'm also an introvert so I rarely comment. Thank you.

  • @damonsdeliberatedetour492
    @damonsdeliberatedetour492 7 месяцев назад +2

    I have had good times and bad times. I have done some shows lit and others stone cold sober and I think the best I got out of myself was when I decided to take a 4 year hiatus and the band tripped out on it but understood. After the 4 year hiatus I only drank a little here and there but had moments when I would let loose but whenever I watched video of those moments I played terrible. So I guess my take away was do the shows as close to sober as you can then enjoy the night after your in your room or back home. Oh and as of right now I haven't had a drink since October so I guess the older you get the less attractive it is at least for me anyway!

  • @brandinlea7137
    @brandinlea7137 7 месяцев назад

    I sing for the band Flickerstick. Played Minneapolis many times. Good advice! Lol

  • @JACKPAVAL
    @JACKPAVAL 7 месяцев назад

    I cracked me up when you said your drummer wanted to kick the Canadians ass!
    Lmao!!!

  • @mikedr1549
    @mikedr1549 7 месяцев назад

    I like how the drummer just keeps going even when the guitar player falls over. A true Pro that guy.

  • @flapjack413
    @flapjack413 7 месяцев назад +1

    Man, listening to this reminded me of how little I miss drinking, lol.

  • @RaspySquares
    @RaspySquares 7 месяцев назад +2

    I've yet to find one redeeming quality of alcoholic beverages.

  • @skeletontime
    @skeletontime 7 месяцев назад +6

    Hey Mike, just want to let you I'm super grateful for the stories you share with us. You're a legend man!

  • @rebilacx
    @rebilacx 7 месяцев назад +2

    I used to drink bottom shelf vodka and coke. Hard liquor and pop can be dangerous lol. I'm glad I don't drink anymore but I miss it sometimes.

  • @jonathoncurle9981
    @jonathoncurle9981 7 месяцев назад +2

    Back in the 90s I was a very heavy drinker but my terrible stage fright prevented me from playing live drunk. I was so paranoid about screwing up, so I would only have a few drinks before a show and then about 10 after we were finished playing. On stage was the only time some of my friends ever saw me sober.

  • @kengyang1908
    @kengyang1908 7 месяцев назад +1

    Nobody does drunk playing better than Minnesota bands,,The replacements, husker du, soul asylum,slave raider, the regime,,alright alright alright there's no way lm gonna let the audience do all the drinking n partying

  • @captainsouth4460
    @captainsouth4460 7 месяцев назад

    Even in the throes of alcoholism I never drank while performing as I had to drive. My band mates however made up for what I didn’t drink. The second guitar player often passed out prior to the last set. I waiting until home and sat on porch in the wee hours drinking whiskey until I passed out after dawn. After a few heart attacks put the bottle and cigs down forever. It was worth the withdrawl and couldn’t be happier after 9 years! Due to lack of interest to bands in bars in our area I have stopped wasting my time gigging. Life is great!

  • @Docsjeff
    @Docsjeff 7 месяцев назад

    Yep.Ive been a country music frontman for 45 years ……since age 15.I thought I had it under control.I finally quit drinking on 12.01.2020 with the help of God,My Wife,& my daughter….all of whom I turned away from the majority of my life.

  • @cantcoact4412
    @cantcoact4412 7 месяцев назад +1

    I stopped drinking, but when I did and I played out, I never drank at gigs. I can't hit a lick if I even have just a couple of drinks. Kept me out of trouble.

  • @tonedowne
    @tonedowne 7 месяцев назад

    I stopped drinking when I was playing covers full time, it just wasn’t worth it. The load out at the end of the night was that much harder and I wouldn’t sleep as well so I didn’t feel so great for the next night.
    I learned to take that nervous energy and awkwardness, and put it into the performance. Just goof off a bit with the physical performance and lighten the mood. One of my fondest memories was falling arse over tit failing to jump onto a podium. The other guys were laughing so hard they could barely play. None of us had drunk anything stronger than fruit juice.
    Ow I don’t gig for a living, I will always have a couple of beers at a gig because it’s more of a night out.

  • @GuitarMAXMusic
    @GuitarMAXMusic 7 месяцев назад

    Thanks for the reminder! I need to renew my Easyrider subscription.

  • @christianboddum8783
    @christianboddum8783 7 месяцев назад +1

    If you get the idea that you play better buzzed, record your shows. The recordings speak for themselves.

  • @johnmackenzie5136
    @johnmackenzie5136 7 месяцев назад

    Good on you for sharing this ! I'm sure this will help other musicians.

  • @musicmann1967
    @musicmann1967 7 месяцев назад +2

    Back when i was playing out with my band in the late 70s-80s, I tried to never drink because I just didn't want to make mistakes or forget how songs went etc. I only broke that rule once on a gig where we had two sets. (we usually had only one) After the first set, which went really well, various cutomers in the club started buying me drinks and giving me drugs as a sign of appreciation! lol When I stepped onstage for the second set, I felt like I was floating a foot above the stage and I couldn't feel my body very well. Everything was pretty numb. I remember thinking, "Oh no, I'm too high right now!" But lucky for me, I wasn't completely gone, and I actually played fine. But still, I never repeated that mistake again!

  • @scottmatthews172
    @scottmatthews172 7 месяцев назад +1

    Shit man! The more we played the better we drank. It's the Saturday night gig that was harder because we'd be hung over. Ugh!

  • @TooSlamToGiveADamn
    @TooSlamToGiveADamn 7 месяцев назад

    Without having strong opinions about alcohol, I do think there is something exciting and reinventing about musicians who get sober. 🤘

  • @bulkvanderhuge9006
    @bulkvanderhuge9006 7 месяцев назад

    The problem really gets bad when audience members start pushing drinks on you too, and the audience seems to always buy the drinks that are easy to drink and really get you hammered.

  • @jakubzmek7307
    @jakubzmek7307 7 месяцев назад +6

    I am from eastern Europe, so there is no way, that me and my band would ever play sober on stage :DDD

  • @DeviantmindOG
    @DeviantmindOG 7 месяцев назад +1

    AlcoholicA, I remember them, but do you remember Spastik Children?

  • @Fullmoonhowl101
    @Fullmoonhowl101 7 месяцев назад +1

    Personally i dont think there is anything wrong with drinking on stage, three or four beers is more than reasonable

  • @MarcMercier1971
    @MarcMercier1971 7 месяцев назад +2

    Regarding country music bands. I used to be a doorman at the famous (Late 1980's-early 2000's) Rynborn Blues Club back when it was in it's original home. I refused to work Country & Western Night (Thursday PMs IIRC). People let WAY too loose. That's the night they put out their chipped glassware, because it was almost a guarantee to have a patron destroy it for them. Big brawls, etc. I stuck to the blues nights (Fri/Sat). People were decent on those nights.
    I was in a blues band with some buddies. We were about to sign up with the Rynborn to play. I had to back down. Stage fright and my hands lock up and I can't play. Add alcohol and I'm fine... but then... I can't play. Ended up dissolving the band because of it. The drummer for Blood Brothers was in the band as well. Buddy who played drums went on to drumming school... pro drummer. Me? Can't play without some alcohol, can't play public without it. So I don't play to anyone else but me. :)

  • @FireballsOdoom
    @FireballsOdoom 7 месяцев назад

    oh my god I didn't expect to see the Filthy's video here! Crazy seeing a piece of my scene on your channel!

  • @frantikfueled
    @frantikfueled 7 месяцев назад +3

    Was the guy even Canadian 😄

  • @ragnadrabinowitz7629
    @ragnadrabinowitz7629 7 месяцев назад +15

    the replacements?

    • @cnilecnile6748
      @cnilecnile6748 7 месяцев назад

      "I'll be you", lol.

    • @perfectlygoodslouch5212
      @perfectlygoodslouch5212 7 месяцев назад

      I was starting a band with Tommy ,he ODed 3 weeks after we met him sad as hell, he was supposed to have quit

  • @Ok_Computer_98
    @Ok_Computer_98 7 месяцев назад +2

    I have a decent amount of experience gigging. I usually have a beer before a gig because I think it helps loosen me up a bit on stage and gets me out of my head from worrying too much about mistakes. Alcohol also relaxes your muscles which helps because the adrenaline can cause you to tense up. In longer shows that last 2-3 hours I sometimes have a second one an hour or so into it and sip on it throughout the rest of the gig. To me that amount is a healthy balance since it doesn’t impair me or worsen my playing. Once I get a noticeable buzz on that’s when I start getting sloppy. I also make sure to do some shows without a drop of alcohol to remind myself that I don’t need it.

  • @R3TR0R4V3
    @R3TR0R4V3 7 месяцев назад +2

    Man hearing this brought back so many memories.. I've been in so many similar situations, drinking/partying before the gig to get my nerves calm, drinking/partying way too much while on stage, during breaks, then trying to drive home afterwards, etc, but luckily never any major disasters. I've been extremely lucky. Lol. It was fun though, but I can't say I recommend it, or that I'd do it all over again. I still like to have a couple drinks to calm my nerves before or while playing, but I have a lot more self control than I did when I was younger & dumber. Remember, "all things in moderation". 👍

  • @danmacmillan5114
    @danmacmillan5114 7 месяцев назад

    Great stories and i am glad you made this video. Stars touch on it, but really stop before showing themselves being compromised.
    The structure of the music scene inherently ties alcohol to music and you have to conciously be aware of the pitfall and stay in control.
    We all have our stories, ruined gigs, relationships, bands falling apart, and outright embarassmemt.
    Self control is an important skill to learn and i hope this conversation spreads though other You Tube channels as well.

  • @sjk254
    @sjk254 7 месяцев назад

    I don’t drink at all, especially at gigs. I did for just a bit, but I discovered that my hands would cramp up and I couldn’t play so I quit drinking at work, and then soon after all together. I got very sick of feeling like car all of the time. I don’t smoke either and even to this day I do 100+ gigs a year.

  • @CorbenEdward
    @CorbenEdward 7 месяцев назад

    I have the shakes, or essential tremors or whatever you call it. Been playing since I was 13 and now I am in my 30s. It does get worse with age and even if I know the material and am practicing alone in my room my hands will shake a bit, it really effects my picking hand. Before going up on stage with any band or alone at an open mic I will have a few drinks. Doing it sober is also fun too! I love the thrill and the raw feeling, but my playing is worse without the sauce lol. In Canada, Weed on stage is another story, sure I get into the music, but into it a bit too much haha.

  • @MattGranz
    @MattGranz 7 месяцев назад +1

    there was the time my band headlined a gig, and while waiting for our turn on stage friends were buying me beers and shots. When we finally hit the stage I came to the realization I was loaded. After stumbling through the first song, I forced myself back into sobriety, and make it through the performance... Definitely compromised. Never again!

  • @Driessens_Peter
    @Driessens_Peter 7 месяцев назад +1

    crazy story's, now we go over to Ozzy, Ozzy what story's do you have partying after a gig? Ozzy even 40 years later : 👁👄👁 what?

  • @BellsCuriosityShop
    @BellsCuriosityShop 7 месяцев назад

    I've only.ever gigged as a bassist and I can't play in time.when I'm drunk. I only ever drank before or during a set with two bands. I nipped it in the bid after half dozen shows with each band. I'm surprised we got rebooted for some of the venues!

  • @vermontvermont9292
    @vermontvermont9292 6 месяцев назад

    Rum and I dont mix well at all. Same with wine for some reason 😂. I kinda miss those nights out. Problem was soon the weekends became every night. Stopped thank the gods.

  • @mattg082
    @mattg082 7 месяцев назад

    I’ve had a few of those. I quit a band because it was really bad for my health. It wasn’t just booze either, that was the least part. If we played opening or middle we were ok. But put us on last and it got crazy. We were already known as one of those crazy punk bands…so people showed up to see the crazy.
    But there was a LOT of Benzos, adderal, opiates and all that stuff going on as well. After 3 years of that I just had to get out of it. It was just there for free. Alcohol, drugs, women after shows and partying. This was early 2000s for me, so opiates were a big thing back then as we’ve come to see the many documentaries about OxyContin and all that back then.
    Today I find I may have 2-3 beers at a practice. Sometimes only 1, because when I play practice time goes by very fast! So it’s kind of turned into a less drinking thing as I’m too focused.
    But yeah that one band we drill the songs so hard, we could play them in our sleep. So the alcohol and drug use didn’t hurt the performance much. But the behavior from my singer would get out of hand. Stuff getting set on fire, the way he handled hecklers, tables getting flipped…it was wild.
    Now if I went back to it, I’d prob not drink at all or just have 2 beers before stage and keep water and maybe a redbull on stage. But it’s very easy to associate anything with alcohol or substance. I really hate that, because then you feel every time I play I need a joint or a 6 pack…which you really don’t. Some people that play video games do the same…like they won’t play without weed or having alcohol.
    You have to push yourself to do it without, and eventually you’ll dissociate it. It’s crazy to read other stories because a lot of it’s the same. I’m just glad I survived my 20s through all that! Now 41

  • @snomad2248
    @snomad2248 7 месяцев назад +1

    If anyone has trouble with alcohol, get to the doctor and get a script for naltrexone. It's an opioid blocker, you won't feel like drinking as much as you usually do.

    • @doctorbarber1
      @doctorbarber1 7 месяцев назад

      Second this. They might want to do a CMP first to make sure your liver is functioning correctly but it's worth it.

  • @patrickgregory4
    @patrickgregory4 7 месяцев назад +6

    Thanks Mike!

  • @bloocas2
    @bloocas2 4 месяца назад

    i just get baked as hell before shows takes the edge right off

  • @fretboy33
    @fretboy33 7 месяцев назад +5

    OK, so this happened way back in 1980 when I was about 13 or 14 years old. A friend of mine asked me to come over on a Friday night and bring my acoustic guitar and come hang out with some friends of his. His parents were gone, and he had a four pack of Henry Weinhart’s. I was already getting a reputation around the neighborhood as a pretty good guitar player, so I was playing stuff like Led Zeppelin and Black Sabbath in my friends garage. I had drank half a bottle of the beer, and since my drinking experience was almost nothing, I started to fumble my way through some of the songs. I started playing the intro to Over The Hills And Far Away, which I knew backwards and forwards, but my fingers were not working, and it literally scared the crap out of me. So after our little get together, I went home and went to sleep, and the first thing I did when I woke up the next morning is play that same Zeppelin song, and I was able to do it. So I personally made a vow to myself to never drink before going on stage, because the thought of not being able to play like my guitar heroes, scared the living daylights out of me. 😅

  • @rebelcat420
    @rebelcat420 7 месяцев назад +2

    This has quickly become my favorite guitar channel!
    Thank you for sharing your story.
    I was one who, also playing in a country band, would limit myself to a drink before, a drink between sets, and one after end of night, and of course the drink between sets turned into shots when we had a regular group who followed us would buy them for us, and them giving us drinks during the set, which I normally declined or passed off to the keyboard player. But I always kept it sober, while other members would drink all through the set, ok usually…I had a few buzzed sets, and it affected my playing so that toned back. It was when we had to let our bass player go, because his drinking and toking got to affect his performance and attendance to practices. He was lifelong buddies with the other guitar player (we were around 40 at the time), and he had to fire him.. not only lost a band member, but saw a lifelong friendship strained at the same time.
    It was at that moment, I immediately went to the practice of NEVER drinking when performing, and started treating it more professionally.
    Ps. And yes, Easyriders magazine also helped me through my adolescent years lol

  • @YourFather311
    @YourFather311 7 месяцев назад +1

    I’m the same way except I smoke three joints before I get on stage

  • @kenmauge8032
    @kenmauge8032 7 месяцев назад +1

    Good vid. A lot of non musicians have no idea how being in a band can sway you. I have been a drummer for bands since i was 15 yo ,and it's been a crazy life. I've seen so much crazy that im jaded.you have to love the life or it will ruin you. Been able to pull myself out of the gutter more than once . It's so much better now that i quit drinking. I have more fun ,and the memories are clear and vivid now. Your stories are hilarious. Good work

  • @alexandercardoso8216
    @alexandercardoso8216 7 месяцев назад +1

    Lol that's me just trying to learn guitar at home

  • @chopperocker
    @chopperocker 2 месяца назад +1

    3:57 Would this band be, The Regime ?

  • @PadawanIan
    @PadawanIan 7 месяцев назад +1

    Page is putting it DOWN in the thumbnail

  • @haggismcmutton4702
    @haggismcmutton4702 7 месяцев назад

    Best ever drunken antics I saw on stage was this guy who thought it would be cool if he stood on this combo amp. Well he must have stepped up on it awkwardly, because the amp flipped over, sending him crashing into a 4x12 cab with another combo amp on to. He and his nice Gretsch guitar became the filling in a cab and combo sandwich.
    Best drunken antics I was ever part of was when my idiot bandmate insisted on showing up to a fifty person venue with 2 4x12 cabs and his brand new dual rectifier head. Problem is, this guy wasn’t strong enough or tall enough to stack everything up, and the stage was too small to just have the cabs sit next to each other, so it had to be done.
    Anyway, he enlisted me and the drummer to lift the top cab and the head up on top of the bottom cab. This guy had showed up so late that we didn’t have time to do a sound check and we had an audience waiting for us to finish up and start the gig. Myself and the drummer grabbed the angled cab with the head on top and hoisted it up above the bottom cab, except none of us had noticed the low ceiling and the amp head came crashing down to the floor below. We were lucky it never hit anyone.
    The other guitarist looked miserable during the gig, while using the venue’s Marshall mg combo that was apparently not good enough for him.
    The best part of it is that that guy got his sound exclusively from a modeling pedal, so his brand new dual rectifier wouldn’t have improved his sound anyway. Those modeling pedals were terrible. Still are if you ask me.

  • @mykneeshurt8393
    @mykneeshurt8393 7 месяцев назад +1

    Dangerous Toys reference .. I caught it.

  • @birchsongsltd.6831
    @birchsongsltd.6831 7 месяцев назад

    Mickey's Big Mouths got me in too much trouble. 😅 Unfortunately I grew up thinking music needed a drug lube.