It's been derailed to high hell but damned if I'm not going to try to get it back on track. I should start a separate "BonsaiK everything you say sucks cock" thread for people who want to troll me so they don't clutter existing threads.MaxerJ said:Hi BonsaiK. I'm not sure if you're still on this thread now it has derailed. I'm in a progressive funk band (yes, progressive dream funk) in Australia. I read what you wrote to the other prog muso in Aus, but I was wondering if you had any more advice for a less heavy band.
This is our heaviest song, I think it encompasses a lot of what we do. It's from a while back, and it was played was too fast, but it's still the best live recording we have.
The problem with most "funk bands", especially in Australia, is that they're actually not very funky at all. Add "progressive" into the mix and there's a unique problem - progressive music is all about going through changes as the song progresses (hence the name) whereas funk music is all about laying down a funky rhythm and keeping it there. As a result, people who actually like both progressive music and funk music in the same song are as rare as hen's teeth. The only bands who ever got away with that stuff didn't really play funk music.
The way I see it you've got two choices if you want this band to gain a wider audience:
1. Ditch the funk part of what you do and become a progressive rock band. Progressive rock isn't super-popular in Australia either, but it's a better shot than where you're at now. You practically are progressive rock anyway, it won't take much effort, all you'd have to do is chill out on the 7th chords a bit, and break the bass player's thumbs so he can't do that doink-doink stuff.
2. Go completely funk and ditch the rock influences. This means, above all else, confiscate the double-kick from your drummer and make him learn how to do actual funk beats. Your drummer plays like a rock guy and this is why you don't sound remotely funky at the moment, regardless of what the guitar and bass are doing. Without funky drums it's just not funk - it's rock with funk guitar over the top. Then you'd have to make him do the same tempo for an entire song too. It's probably a bit of a tall order, because you want to be progressive obviously and this advice is probably against everything you stand for, but if you can do funk well without the progessive rock influences, there's a real market there for this right now. And break your bass player's thumbs. What makes a bass line funky is note choice and placement, not that doink-doink stuff. The time for that playing was 1990.
I'd be interested to hear some slightly less-heavy stuff if you have anything, just to see if the same issues exist there.