The 8 Nights of Hanukah with Yo La Tengo

A holiday tradition at the Bowery Ballroom has returned once again. Signaling that maybe, just maybe, we have returned to normal.

It was 2017 when I found out Yo La Tengo would be reinstating their holiday tradition at the Bowery Ballroom, after a 5-year hiatus due to the closing of the original venue host, Maxwells. I was beyond excited to have them, but I was green in knowing what it would take to host an 8-night residency when most of my job involved turning the club over each night.  Over the 4 years that followed, fond friendships grew to give me deep, nostalgic feelings of the tour, and the joy and pride that comes with seeing an artist grow, and seeing your skills grow in the process.

When the 2021 holiday residency was announced, a warm smile fell over everyone at the venue. If Yo La Tengo believes we can do this safely, maybe live music can finally return to normal. All 8 nights follow a similar format. Doors open to a playlist made by someone near and dear to the band, a supporting artist takes the stage, followed by a comedian, and finally Yo La Tengo- with a 2-hour set featuring many special guests.

Load In always happens on the night before the first show. Then the production schedule always follows something similar to the following:

3:00 pm- Crew Arrives, preps gear

4:00 pm- Band arrives, rehearsals start

6:00 pm- Support Soundcheck

7:00 pm- Doors

8:00 pm- Support

9:00 pm- Comedian

10:00 pm- Yo La Tengo

The band comes with a Tour Manager, Backline Tech, Monitor Engineer, and FOH Engineer. And I always staff a Stage Manager, Monitor tech, FOH Tech, and Lighting Designer. Ideally, I keep the same crew for all 8 nights, strangely easier said than done.

The bands’ engineers use our house consoles and their mic package (mostly all Electrovoice). Our lighting designer lights the whole show. The band is all on wedges. With all of the special guests, we quickly use up all our 10 d&b M6 wedges. Most nights also use up all 48 of our inputs from stage, and I found myself grateful for our new digital console at Front Of House, and the importance of snapshots. The stage always starts exceptionally organized with every XLR being labeled, every sub snake box labeled and color-coded, and maintaining proper cable lengths. Stage speaker management is equally detailed, and the use of Layouts and console views on the Avid desk really helps FOH to stay on top of any last-minute surprises. Additional house equipment is stored off-stage, but still accessible, to create as much performance space as possible

Organizing FOH as a newly appointed Avid console tech, was a challenge for me. We loaded a show file that had passed from a Profile to another S6L, before coming to our desk. While Avid does boast a unified platform and ease of show file transfers, it does take a careful engineer a bit of time to prep the file for each new desk. Currently, I am taking the winter season to learn and understand session structures and system preferences. This has helped me achieve the workflow I was always used to on the Avid desk, and now I have the understanding as to why it behaves that way. I am also coming to understand that sometimes, the things engineers enjoy about their files/workflow, are things that might be better reproduced as a snapshot or User Preset, rather than a whole Session file. It is humbling, gratifying, challenging, and fun to poke through this new desk in a room I know and love, and with a band, I know and love.  By the end of Hanukah, I felt like I could speak the desks’ language much better than when we started.

Unlike the 300 other shows I advance with throughout the year, the support band, comedian, and special guests are kept top secret. Over the years, I have gone from feeling extreme anxiety over the anticipation to feeling excited and actually enjoying the unknown. I have arrived to work greeted with hugs from artists I used to tour with, had my jaw drop when seeing my idols take the stage, and of course, had my “grey hair moments” when figuring out how to fit all 14 members of the Sun Ra Arkestra on our stage. This year we were lucky to see their return, along with personal favorites Low, whose FOH engineer patched some analog effect pedals into the desk, including a real Moogerfooger that sounded heavenly.

Yo La Tengo has always been an important band for me. Having found them on a mixtape from a friend over a decade before I knew I even wanted to pursue live sound as a career.  I never could have thought I’d come to love and appreciate their crew as much as I do. It is a joy to hear Marks’ mixes, and how authentically he reproduces the bands’ sound.  It is inspiring to absorb Dutch’s patience and organization of wedge mixes on such a small stage. And always, always a joy to see the way Kevin works with Ira’s army of guitars. Magically fitting and tuning more guitars than nights of Hanukah to mate with the tube amps that defined such a genre of music. Joe, their TM holds them together, keeping everyone well fed, well caffeinated, and as prepared as possible.

With all on their crew, it always feels like genuine work together, rather than house vs. tour. What makes this, and any crew so great and effective is their ability to work together towards the whole. To understand that FOH is not just sitting in front of a desk. That mixing monitors is also balancing the stage volume. It is understanding volume and tone, and how the space is affecting what you are doing, as well as who you have on stage with you. I was always taught and always appreciated that FOH is something you work up towards, not simply something that you are trained for in books or videos. It comes when you can understand all of the parts of the stage, and when you understand your artist, and how they make their sound. To date, the most successful mixes I have heard are from engineers that understand those concepts completely.

These shows wrapped just as we learned of Omicron. All on the house staff, artist, and crew remained healthy, and each show was a success. Just a week later, we were shook with increased case numbers, and NYC saw its nightlife begin to dim once more. Broadway canceled shows, New Year’s Eve got a little more intimate, and Artists’ postponed their tours. January had 2-weeks worth of shows canceled, leaving only 4 dates with 3 artists, and a tightening of our protocols. In the strange, and all too common downtime, I have taken to education and practical training in our space. I cannot help but feel sad and exhausted. We have wasted years that could have been spent really understanding the needs of the industry in order to tour in a healthy manner. I feel safe and proud of the protocols we as a venue have put in place, which now feels somewhat fraught. If improved health, safety, production equipment, and training are not the reasons why an artist would choose to play your room over another, what are they? Is it possible to see something more than a guarantee?

I should leave it here by saying that all the Hanukah shows are put on in support of a different charity every night, and not only speak to organizations I feel proud to support, but also a sign of the times. I found this tradition the most heartwarming and meaningful of all. In a year when the band, [and the whole industry] performed a small fraction of the shows we thought we would when many artists suffered and put that aside for a moment, with the understanding that there is so much more out there, and so much to continue to fight for.

If you get lucky enough, I encourage everyone to check out one of these celebratory nights, and please come back to Bowery soon. We miss ya!

 

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