{"id":478,"date":"2010-09-07T11:25:59","date_gmt":"2010-09-07T16:25:59","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/nashvillemusicianssurvivalmanual.com\/Blog\/?p=478"},"modified":"2010-09-07T11:33:05","modified_gmt":"2010-09-07T16:33:05","slug":"my-name-is-eric-normand-and-welcome-to-%e2%80%98country-concerts%e2%80%99","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/nashvillemusicianssurvivalmanual.com\/Blog\/my-name-is-eric-normand-and-welcome-to-%e2%80%98country-concerts%e2%80%99\/","title":{"rendered":"My name is Eric Normand and welcome to \u2018Country Concerts\u2019!"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>I was talking to a college student a while back who said he  was interested in becoming a tour manager. It turns out that one of his best  friends is an aspiring young artist with a bright future, one who will likely need  a tour manager someday. <em>\u201cWhat does a tour  manager do?\u201d<\/em> he asked. The specific duties can vary depending on the tour,  but in general, the tour manager oversees all aspects of the touring entourage  and coordinates each concert with the event buyer, production company, and all  other pertinent parties. My job as tour manager for Rhett Akins requires me to  wear a lot of hats; tour manager, band leader, lead guitarist \u2013 officially; and  guitar tech, stage manager, assistant merch person, travel agent, part-time  bartender, and occasional guidance counselor &#8211; unofficially. There are eight  members of our entourage &#8211; Rhett, myself, three other band members, a sound  engineer, a merch person, and a bus driver, and it is my job to make sure they are well taken care of when we are touring. To give some perspective, I thought  it might be fun to take you on a recent one off with Rhett and gang. This post  will be a bit long, but then again so is the day of a tour manager.<\/p>\n<h2 style=\"text-align: center;\"><strong>Rhett Akins<\/strong><\/h2>\n<h2 style=\"text-align: center;\"><strong> 09-04-10  &#8211; Clay County Days Festival &#8211; Manchester Kentucky<\/strong><\/h2>\n<p>It was about 11:30 PM on Friday, September 3rd when  Kelly and I arrive to the bus near Opryland in Nashville, TN. Most of the other  guys are already there and our sound engineer, Mike Jaeger, and bassist, Clint  Jacobs, help me load my gear , Rhett\u2019s merch, and some bus stock into the bays underneath  the bus. Assistant tour manager and merch specialist, Kelly Normand, begins  stocking the refrigerator with bottled waters and putting away some of the  other supplies (paper plates, solo cups, etc.). On this run we have a  substitute driver, and after making his acquaintance, I give him some paperwork  and discuss some specifics of the trip. A little while later we pull out, bound  for London, KY, the location of the hotel we would be using for our show at Rawlings  Stinson Park in Manchester Kentucky. My official duties complete for this workday,  I enjoy some chill time in the front lounge with the guys for a bit before  heading to bed (or heading to bunk, rather).<\/p>\n<p>Like most of our weekend runs, our bus arrives to a hotel  parking lot sometime early morning and I awake a few hours later to begin my  day. My first duty is getting checked into our hotel rooms, and this can  require a special skill set (called charm) to get into these rooms at the early  hour of 9 AM (most hotel check-in&#8217;s are between 1 and 3 PM). After offering a  warm greeting to the hotel front desk clerk, I introduce myself \u2013 \u201cMy name is  Eric Normand, I\u2019m the tour manager for Rhett Akins and we&#8217;ve got four rooms  booked with you. I realize it&#8217;s still kind of early, but I was wondering if any  of them are ready.\u201d \u201c<em>We should have a  couple of rooms cleaned and ready in about 20 minutes and the other two in  about an hour\u201d <\/em>she notifies me. \u201cGreat, thanks.\u201d I return to the bus and  eat some breakfast before returning to the hotel lobby for the room keys.<\/p>\n<p>By noon, most everyone is up and hanging out in the front  lounge. Were watching \u201cStand by Me\u201d on the flatscreen TV as we head off for the  venue, a 20 mile, 30 minute drive. While enroute I call my contact at the event  to notify him we are almost there. We arrive on site and back the bus into a  fire station parking lot across the street from the park. This is the closest  the bus will be able to get to the stage which is located about an eighth of a  mile away, and I quickly realize I&#8217;m going to get in a fair amount of walking on  this sunny 70\u00b0 day. I walk off the bus and meet, Gene, my go-to guy from this  event for the day. <em>\u201cTell me what you guys  need, and I make it happen.\u201d<\/em> he informs me. \u201cEverybody&#8217;s pretty hungry, so  the bus stock would be great. After that we\u2019ll need a pickup truck and some  stagehands to cart the gear over the stage, and a runner to take our driver  back to the hotel.\u201d A few minutes later our bus stock is arriving, and I began  to coordinate the load in.<\/p>\n<p>After everybody eats, I find the runner who then takes our  driver back to the hotel to sleep, and we begin our set up and sound check. As  I still have a lot of details to tend to, I try to set up my gear as quickly as  possible. Before I can finish, the event buyer requests a brief meeting with  Rhett, as well as the handling of settlement (payment). Gene takes me via golf  cart back to the bus so we can bring Rhett to meet the owner who is down the  street cooking our BBQ dinner on a giant smoker. A little while later I&#8217;m back  to the stage with sound check in full swing. Mike has done a good job of \u2018ringing  out the monitors\u2019 and we are pretty much ready for Rhett. After running through  two songs and making a few minor adjustments everybody&#8217;s pretty happy with the  sound, so we \u2018spike and strike\u2019 our monitors and pedal boards to make room for  the opening act.<img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"\/Blog\/riverwalk.jpg\" alt=\"\" hspace=\"5\" vspace=\"5\" width=\"290\" height=\"254\" align=\"right\" \/><\/p>\n<p>Typically, the conclusion of sound check would mean that we\u2019re  all returning to hotel rooms for showers, but as this day had a late afternoon  sound check with an early show time, there wasn&#8217;t enough time. I told everyone  this in advance, and most of them had already taken a quick shower late morning  at the hotel. So today, it&#8217;s a couple hours of downtime on-site. Some of the  guys go walking around the festival for a bit, others hang out on the bus  watching college football, while Kelly and I explore a walking trail off the  back side of the park. Dinner was served in the firehouse at five o&#8217;clock &#8211; a  massive spread of pulled pork, ribs, potato salad, and some outstanding homemade  creamed corn. In fact, the creamed corn tastes so much like corn, that I  realize how little so many other \u2018corn products\u2019 actually taste like corn.<\/p>\n<p>After dinner it\u2019s time to set up our merch station, so I  accompany Kelly to her tent to make sure she has everything she needs. Upon our  arrival to her side stage location, I see that the event has provided a 10&#215;10 pop-up  tent, table, and a half a dozen folding chairs. While Kelly begins setting up  her merch, I find one of the production company workers and ask him to run some  power over to the tent for lighting. Once the lighting is set I begin preparing  for Rhett&#8217;s meet and greet by texting him to notify him that it&#8217;s 10 minutes  out. I verify with Gene that the meet and greet party has gathered, and deliver  Rhett, sharpie in hand, to the green room. During the middle of this autograph-signing  photo-op I get a text from Kelly stating that she needs more change and that one  of her lights has a burned-out bulb. I locate a spare bulb and $100 worth of 5\u2019s,  \u00a0make another walk to the stage area, and  return to help wrap up the meet and greet.<\/p>\n<p>I escort Rhett back to the bus, put a fresh battery in his in-ear  wireless belt pack, and return to the stage to reset my gear. The opening band  now finished and the stage clear, I place my pedal board, tune my guitar, and check  my rig with a few quick power chords. I continue on to Rhett&#8217;s position, tuning  his acoustic and checking it for signal, checking his vocal mic in the monitors  and in the house, installing a pic clip with guitar pics to his mic stand, and placing  set lists and a beverage on the stage floor by his monitor. The other band  members are all at their stations checking their rigs, and a DJ is selling  himself over the mic in that nonstop annoying ramble that only a DJ can do. The  park is filled to capacity, somewhere around 4000, and we\u2019re ready to go. I  make one more walk back to the bus to shuttle Rhett over via golf cart. A few  minutes later and were off and sailing on our 90 minute \u2018countrified\u2019 rockathon.<\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"\/Blog\/manchestershow.jpg\" alt=\"\" hspace=\"5\" vspace=\"5\" width=\"320\" height=\"214\" align=\"left\" \/>In a day so full of endless details, the nightly concert is  by far the high point for me. For these 90 minutes I get to play my guitar with  a great band, behind a great front man, and it&#8217;s all about the music for me.  Rhett, being the quintessential performer, possesses the uncanny ability to  render a crowd in the palm of his hands in about as much time as it takes him  to walk out onto the stage. The concertgoers on this particular night are no  exception to this rule, and Rhett quickly wins them over. For this brief  period, it doesn&#8217;t even seem like I&#8217;m working, after all, this is what I set  out to do in the first place. Aside from our usual repertoire, one standout is  an impromptu performance of Bon Jovi&#8217;s \u2018Wanted Dead or Alive\u2019 (playing in all those early cover bands sure comes in handy every once in a while) and Rhett&#8217;s son, Thomas Rhett, joining us to  sing a great rendition of \u2018Duck Blind\u2019. \u00a090 minutes later our performance is complete,  and the captive audience slowly makes their retreat as Rhett rides back to the  bus via golf cart while the band tears down the gear. I quickly transition from  musician mindset back to road manager and instruct Gene to pull up a truck next  to the stage for load out. We load the gear, ride over to the bus, and load it into  the bays. I send the runner to pickup our driver, they return about an hour  later, and we fire up the bus to ride off into the night. My workday done, I  enjoy a frosty beverage in the front lounge with the gang. I awake on the bus  the next morning back in Nashville, load my car, and get the fuel receipts and  some other paperwork from the bus driver. \u201cGreat job everybody, see you next  week!\u201d<\/p>\n<p>This one-off is typical for a small to midsized tour, such  as ours. On tours of this size and nature, the tour manager advances these  details over the days and weeks preceding the show (quite often it is these advance  phone calls and e-mails that make or break how well each show day and show goes).  In the days after a weekend run, the tour manager addresses payroll, bank  deposits, bus lease payment, and some light accounting duties while advancing  upcoming shows. On a larger more active tour, there would simply be more tour  members, more tour buses, and more equipment, and they would likely be staying  out for longer periods of time. A day similar to the one I just described would  be repeated in succession, kind of like Groundhog Day, each day beginning the  same \u00a0as the last &#8211; the view of an  obscure parking lot from the bus window, somewhere far from home. On one of  these tours, the \u2018TM\u2019 would still be the grand overseer, but would be  delegating many of these roles to others &#8211; stage managers, guitar techs, etc. He  still has to deal with all the same kinds of details, he just doesn&#8217;t have to  wear as many hats. Don&#8217;t get me wrong, I&#8217;m not complaining about wearing so  many hats, <em>he<\/em> probably doesn&#8217;t get to  play guitar during the show.<\/p>\n<p>My name is Eric Normand and welcome to \u2018Country Concerts\u2019!<\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"\/Blog\/Manchester KY 090410 for blog.jpg\" alt=\"\" hspace=\"5\" vspace=\"5\" width=\"700\" height=\"906\" align=\"absmiddle\" \/><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>I was talking to a college student a while back who said he was interested in becoming a tour manager. It turns out that one of his best friends is an aspiring young artist with a bright future, one who will likely need a tour manager someday. \u201cWhat does a tour manager do?\u201d he asked. 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