Captain Bass Posted June 9, 2010 Share Posted June 9, 2010 On Sunday 13th June I will be playing the gig of my life, opening up for Bon Jovi at the O2 Arena! Here's an article about it- [url="http://www.watfordobserver.co.uk/news/8207306.Carpenders_Park_bassist_to_open_for_Bon_Jovi/"]http://www.watfordobserver.co.uk/news/8207...n_for_Bon_Jovi/[/url] Can't wait!!!!!! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Toddy54 Posted June 9, 2010 Share Posted June 9, 2010 Nice one, best of luck mate. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
xilddx Posted June 9, 2010 Share Posted June 9, 2010 That's fabulous Captain! Great to see you doing so well! Congratulations! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Pkomor Posted June 9, 2010 Share Posted June 9, 2010 Wow, congrats man! Hope it goes well! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
EBS_freak Posted June 9, 2010 Share Posted June 9, 2010 Excellent! Enjoy!! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Fat Rich Posted June 9, 2010 Share Posted June 9, 2010 Bon Jovi must be so old now they probably need to wear some kind of support. Congratulations, that's going to be a fantastic gig to play! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
the_skezz Posted June 9, 2010 Share Posted June 9, 2010 Nice dude, best of luck with it Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
urbanx Posted June 9, 2010 Share Posted June 9, 2010 pfft, is that all? Hardly worth a thread.... Only joking, that's amazing mate. That really is a gig of a life time, one to tell the grand kids about. Hope you get loads of coverage & promo from it too Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
purpleblob Posted June 9, 2010 Share Posted June 9, 2010 Fan-bloody-tastic - congrats and good luck. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Gust0o Posted June 9, 2010 Share Posted June 9, 2010 Awesome work mate! Chuffed for you Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RhysP Posted June 9, 2010 Share Posted June 9, 2010 That's pretty awesome - nice one! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
thisnameistaken Posted June 9, 2010 Share Posted June 9, 2010 Nice one. Don't take any sh*t from Bon Jovi he can be a real dick. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RussFM Posted June 9, 2010 Share Posted June 9, 2010 I didn't know you were the Cry For Silence bassist, probably saw you once, but I can't remember where or supporting who! Enjoy the gig!! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
coasterbass Posted June 9, 2010 Share Posted June 9, 2010 [quote name='RussFM' post='862257' date='Jun 9 2010, 04:09 PM']I didn't know you were the Cry For Silence bassist, probably saw you once, but I can't remember where or supporting who! Enjoy the gig!![/quote] Yeah, likewise. I think I saw you with Gun last year. Great gig. Always nice to see someone local doing well too, being a Pinner/Hatch End boy myself. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Marvin Posted June 9, 2010 Share Posted June 9, 2010 Great news. And another entry in my tenuous claims to fame All the best CB Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Stingray5 Posted June 9, 2010 Share Posted June 9, 2010 Good one. And if you need any extra bass roadies, I'm sure there are a few thousand ready and willing here on Basschat! Enjoy the night! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
El Bajo Posted June 9, 2010 Share Posted June 9, 2010 Nice one! Hope it goes well and leads on to greater things! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
urb Posted June 9, 2010 Share Posted June 9, 2010 Congrats man - I bet you'll be nervous as hell but it'll be one hell of a rush when you're up there - have a great one and well done Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Noisyjon Posted June 9, 2010 Share Posted June 9, 2010 Well done that man and I'm very jealous, what a gig to win! Good luck and show 'em how to do it. Cheers, Jon Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
geoffbyrne Posted June 9, 2010 Share Posted June 9, 2010 Break a leg, Mate. Best of luck. G. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bassicinstinct Posted June 9, 2010 Share Posted June 9, 2010 We are most certainly, not [i][b]remotely[/b][/i], worthy. Enjoy the moment!! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
cetera Posted June 9, 2010 Share Posted June 9, 2010 Superb stuff! Congrats..... and enjoy! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
davidmpires Posted June 9, 2010 Share Posted June 9, 2010 Congrats I'm there on the 23rd to watch the gig Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
51m0n Posted June 9, 2010 Share Posted June 9, 2010 Oh man, enjoy it!!!! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
oldmanrock Posted June 9, 2010 Share Posted June 9, 2010 Fantastic news. I'm slightly envious!!!!!! An unsigned band playing in front of 70,000 people supporting Bon Jovi? Leicester's Vivid did the same thing at Milton Keynes Bowl. Bassist Ike Bradley describes the day as follows: "June 1996, and Jon Bon Jovi, idly day-dreaming at the controls of his private jet, has a brainwave. "Hey," he thinks to himself, "why don't I get an unsigned band to open up each of the shows on the forthcoming tour?" In the UK, a Virgin radio competition is quickly organised. My band Vivid, along side thousands of others, send a tape. As a "bubbling under" band (we'd done a couple of UK supports and were subsequently voted "Best Unsigned Band in Britain" by the readers of Kerrang), we know we've got a chance, but it's still a surprise when Virgin ring and tell us that we've to support Gun, Joan Osbourne and Bon Jovi at Milton Keynes Bowl. [b]TRAVELLING TO THE GIG:[/b] We make our way to the gig having had only three hours sleep after a gig in Birmingham the night before. The enormity of what is about to occur slowly dawns on us as we are overtaken by coach upon coach of ecstatic Bon Jovi fans, their noses pressed to the windows. "Everyone seems to be smiling," I remark, nervously. "Don't worry," replies Greg, our guitarist. "Once we start playing they'll soon stop." Our entrance to the Milton Keynes "Artistes" gate is barred by a police roadblock. "We're here to play with Bon Jovi," we tell a stern faced police Sergeant. He glances at our 20 year old, ex-Leicester City Council van and then, bursting out laughing, waves us through. The headline act's arrival differed from our own in only a few minor respects. Choppered in, the main band touched down on a backstage Heli-pad before being whisked the two hundred yards to their dressing room in a sleek black limo, replete with mirrored glass and a four motorbike, siren wailing, police escort. Swerving spectacularily around a dangerously parked Leicester City Council van, the entourage came to a screaming halt, and out jumped Jon Bon Jovi and Richie Sambora. Good to see that success doesn't change people. [b]THE ROADIES:[/b] Bon Jovi's roadies are soundchecking the backline as we make our first tentative steps onto the stage, two hours before the doors open. Reassuringly, these roadies seem no different than usual; male, unshaven and better at playing drums, bass, guitar or keyboards than any of the musicians who'll actually be performing. All the American crew tend to look like bronzed soap stars. All the British crew look like Marty Feldman. [b]THE SOUNDCHECK:[/b] We soundcheck in front of the crew and the security staff, thus ensuring that even while soundchecking we have played to one of our biggest audiences ever. The sound on stage is brilliant, predominantly due to the monitor rig being bigger than most front of house systems and because the crew are, quite simply, the best. The doors open as we finish. Funnily enough I'm not really nervous about playing a stadium gig at this point. No. Instead, I'm shitting myself. [b]DRESSING ROOMS:[/b] The backstage of a stadium gig is both glamorous and exclusive, yeah? Well, if your idea of glamour is sitting in a grey Port-a-Kabin watching Joan Osbourne painting her toe nails then, yes it is glamorous. Fuelled by the stories of the rock legends of old, I was disappointed not to discover Heather Locklear slumped unconscious in our dressing room, ankle deep in cocaine. No such luck. Still, someone had left us a bowl of salted peanuts, so all wasn't lost. The dressing room was spacious, airy and furnished with two black leather sofas and a freezer full of beer. All in all, it was nicer than my flat, and a considerable improvement on the average support band dressing room, which in my experience, tends to be either a broom cupboard or an out of order disabled toilet. (Both of which are also an improvement on my flat, unfortunately.) [b]BACKSTAGE TOILETS:[/b] They've got five star hotel style toilets backstage at a stadium gig, right? I wish. The backstage toilet provisions instead consisted of two, rather rickety chemical toilets with the slogan "Super Loo" stencilled on the sides. Still, the one comfort with using a backstage loo as opposed to a front of house toilet is that you can at least play "Spot the Deposits of the Stars" as you gaze into the chemical goo below. Did a member of Gun blow his nose on that sodden tissue? Could that large object floating past have once belonged to Joan Osbourne? Just as every cloud has a silver lining, so every backstage toilet has a celebrity turd. [b]THE GIG:[/b] Seventy thousand people. Just think about it. Seventy thousand people. That's one hundred and forty thousand hands. Hands that will either applaud you if you perform well, or bombard the stage with beer bottles filled with luke warm urine if you perform poorly. Stadium stagefright. It's the worst kind. All too soon it was four o'clock and time for us to go on. As I huddled in the wings, waiting for the word to walk out, I felt my body succumb to a sickening wave of pins and needles. Christ, this wasn't nerves. I was having a premature stroke. Despite this, I was still unable to prevent an emotional lump forming in my throat as, "Please welcome Vivid!" was announced to the crowd. Believe me, the roar as seventy thousand people simultaneously punched their fists in the air and mumbled, "Who?" will remain one of the high points of my life. Earlier in the day I had been surprised to discover Jon Bon Jovi waiting to use the backstage toilet after I had finished. Now, as I walked on stage, I couldn't help but reflect that I would be going on first and warming up for Bon Jovi twice in one day. "Are we going to have a good day tonight, or what?" announced our ashen faced singer to the crowd. Obviously I wasn't the only one suffering from nerves. So, I hear you cry, what's it like to play in front of 70,000 people? It's brilliant. It's amazing. It's better than sex. (Mind you, I'm a crap shag so that doesn't mean all that much, I suppose.) The stage is so enormous you do feel kind of cut off at times, but the awesome monitoring easily helps to make up for this. Second song in and our singer throws his arms in the air. Thirty thousand people raise their arms in response. Wow. This is slightly better than playing the Axe and Cleaver. Inspired by the singer I sling my bass to one side and throw my arms in the air. Four people in the audience respond. Oh well. That's the difference between a singer and a bassist, I guess. After half an hour, the tour manager appears in the wings and beckons us off. It's over. [b]POST GIG:[/b] Leaving the stage, the singer from Gun describes our band as "tight", which is secret musician code for "sh*t". I briefly consider indulging in a traditional Rock God, post gig, wind-down involving cocaine, Jack Daniels and a tussle with a couple of 14 year-old females, but eventually settle for a cup of tea in the backstage marquee instead. Jack Daniels makes me feel queasy anyway, and the only 14 year old females I know are my parents' Labradors. The next thing I'm in a poky, backstreet Glasgow club, supporting a U.S. band so little known that several of the members of the band haven't even heard of themselves. "I supported Bon Jovi yesterday," I tell a bouncer. "Yeah, right," he replies, sarcastically." Hope you have a really great gig mate. Nice one! 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