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Table Manners

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Background

I would like to write a little bit about norms and courtesy that I have encountered in my limited experience within the music industry using the hospitality metaphor of Table Manners. Table manners (manners) come from the ground rules for being hosted by other people as a guest. The counterpoint of table manners is having people over as a host. The goal of both is to make people’s lives easier – both host and guest. Hosting is most enjoyed when your guests behave and the best events are done when the host appropriately accommodates their guests.

Being easy and being excellent are two sides of the same coin: one half is how you bring yourself to situations (being an easy guest) and the other is how you treat others (being an excellent host) so let’s start there using this model.

Table Manners and the Music Industry

Being hosted is pretty much what you’re doing when you are playing out or engaging with other people in the music industry. Conversely, when you are working in the music industry in situations like having someone visit your studio or are working a performance gig as a stage manager, artist relations lead, engineer, and so on, you are hosting other people. You should treat it as such and come as your best self in order to have a good time and to ensure that others do too! At events where our industry hosts and guests are having a bad time, audiences are having a bad time. When your team works well together, your events and performances are more successful. To be successful in this industry, you should learn how to behave around others and avoid adding more stress to an already high tension environment.

Why do this?

You might be saying, “This sounds like doing a lot of work for the benefit of other people and it won’t get me ahead. Why should I do this?”

Maybe we all have to fake it until we make it in this domain. Eventually it becomes fun to try and see what you can do to make things go smoothly through the power you have as an individual. Treat this like a game: we win by having events and sets go smoothly and have the team working like a well oiled machine.

Ground rules for table manners

Nothing here is hard and fast and you’re free to pick and choose what works for you. I’ll apologize ahead of time for breaking my own rules in this post about being concise. My guidance here is not to give you a set of behaviors you must adhere to but to help you create your own internal program for shifting the world to the way you want it to be. There is context behind these strategies and in many cases you may find contradiction between what works for me and doesn’t work for me in a specific situation. There is also a cultural aspect to table manners, these practices are to some degree localized to where I am from in the Pacific Northwest region of the United States and even in the Southern and Eastern regions of the US there may be nuance to expectations of behavior and mannerisms.

Table manners within the context of teams and working with new people

Anytime that you are not working alone, you are working on a team. On the small teams end of the spectrum you could be working on a collab with another producer. On the larger end of the teams spectrum you could be throwing an event involving promotion, production, performance, marketing, and other staff. On the extended definition of the teams spectrum if you are renting CDJs to someone else to play their house party, you’re on a team. All of the team members beyond yourself are out of your control but you as an individual can do your best by setting an example for others to follow. When influencing others on your team you must find the balance that allows you to be assertive while still preserving the autonomy of other team members so try to be aware of yourself in these circumstances.

To have a team that works flawlessly right away is extremely rare. You must be patient while the group dynamics develop. In the Tuckman stages of group development, these phases of productivity and conflict are categorized as forming, storming, norming, performing, and adjourning. Tuckman’s model explains that as the team develops maturity and ability, relationships establish, and leadership style changes to more collaborative or shared leadership. Know where your team is at and maintain realistic expectations so that the team can grow together to effectively share leadership and other responsibilities.

Oftentimes individual abilities are not able to shine in the environment you’re in and it looks like they’re constantly making mistakes. If you assume someone is going to do a terrible job, you will not be surprised. Conversely, if you hold people to high standards, you will also not be surprised at what they’re capable of as they grow and become autonomous.  There are many types of personalities (see also HSP – those with higher emotional and sensory sensitivity) and sometimes the environment, style of team communication, or external tensions can set an individual up for failure.

Finally, let’s talk about being easy to lead and being easy to follow. If you are leading a team, you must be easy to follow and if you’re a team member you must be easy to lead. Having a leader who is difficult to follow or teammates who cannot be led will prevent a team from meeting its potential.

The following characteristics illustrate leaders who are easy to follow:

The following characteristics illustrate team members who are easily led:

A final note for being a charismatic and admired leader: when something goes wrong, say “it was me” and when things go well, say “we did it” – at the end of the day, your team knows how much everyone else did and what they contributed – to even hint at taking credit for the work of others can come across as megalomanical or narcissistic if you are in charge and to blame others when things go wrong can make you look like an egomaniac.

Example Table Manners

With these foundations in mind, I’ll give some general guidance to help you adapt to your own table manners.

Party fouls

This is what to do when things go wrong and I want to start here because it.

Being easy 

When I talk about being easy, I’m referring to being easy to work with, easy to make decisions with, easy to get along with, and easy going. Whatever the opposite of difficult is, you want to be THAT. Easy people are low maintenance.

Something that can really help with attitude is gratitude.

Examples and Scenarios

Again, being easy and excellent is about being kind, respectful, and positive in your interactions with others. You never know what someone else is going through and should be empathetic to their internal struggle should it be going on. People don’t intentionally make mistakes or behave badly, there is always a larger context for what you see from them so give them the benefit of the doubt.

Privacy and other’s creative works

It’s of paramount importance that you respect the privacy of others in the music space (creative space). This is very familiar territory for me because I came from a background where I was working on secret products and was under NDA to never disclose any information I was not certain was public. Even having my laptop open in the wrong place could result in accidentally leaking something that should not get out. In the same way, you should always error on the side of caution with other people’s plans and art and obtain permission before even hinting at what others are working on to allow them to announce and release on their own schedule.

Teams

When working on teams and in groups, you must have patience with allowing the team dynamic to build. To assume that things are falling apart early in a new team or group because of individual behavior is a recipe for creating a toxic team environment mired with blame. Apply the following strategies to help.

Inclusivity

Inclusivity is about ensuring that everyone on the team has a say. It’s one of the core tenants of being excellent and requires special focus for people who are disadvantaged within the context of groups.

Communication

If someone is volunteering their time to do something on your behalf, respect them enough to clearly communicate what you want done. Take responsibility for clear communication: if other people are consistently failing to correctly execute your instructions, the problem is probably not them.

Letting things go

“I’m at the stage in life where I stay out of arguments. Even if you say 1+1=5, you’re right. Have fun.” ~Keanu Reeves

Sensitive subjects: pets, substances, and romantic encounters

I’ll conclude my table manners spiel with some sensitive subjects that I nearly considered avoiding altogether because opinions on this can get heated and I don’t want people coming after me with pitchforks. Remember these are not rules I judge others by but rules that I have made for myself.

Pets

Your pet’s behavior is a reflection of you. Keep an eye on your pet in social situations and pay attention to their emotional state as much as you are doing this for yourself. The times where things go poorly with a pet in a social situation could be avoided should you notice something is wrong early on.

Substances

Before getting into this, I want to remind you that these are strategies for yourself and not rules to impose on other people. Many of us have experience with programs such as AA, NA, Al-Anon, have ourselves or had someone close been through rehab programs, and are trained in substance abuse counseling. However, individual guidance should be handled professionally and I for one am uncertified to diagnose or assess whether someone should make a change. Nudge, but never force: the affected party has to take the first step and if you’re going to intervene, bring a professional who has an objective perspective.

Disclaimer: Much of the advice here is just adages, I am not a professional and will not pretend to be, so please consult more authoritative sources if you have concerns around substances for yourself and others. Options are available to everyone who needs to talk to a behavioral health professional online and through community clinics, do not take this advice as your only resource in this domain. Dance Safe is a great resource on this subject with resources for responsible consumption and risks.

Romantic Encounters

Most of the industry cancellations that I am aware of were a direct result of romantic encounters at shows and parties. Before engaging in these situations consider the consequences should there be a miscommunication. In general, I avoid these situations altogether and keep to myself regarding such engagements with other folks from industry and event attendees. At the core of what goes wrong in these encounters is consent. I would hardly consider myself an expert on consent so please do what you can to educate yourself with resources such as WeLoveConsent

Scenarios and Strategies

Getting more specific, let’s discuss situations where you can apply your table manners to create strategies to be your best self. I’ll try and illustrate how both being easy and excellent are two sides of the story when thinking about industry scenarios.

Being excellent in cyphers and giving track feedback

Being easy in the studio by protecting your setup against misuse and disaster

Being excellent with other people’s gear

Make sure you’re using other’s gear respectfully and are especially careful with things like making changes to their audio configuration including master volume, treatment, speaker position, and mixing chains. It can be devastating if you clip into someone’s expensive studio monitors or obstruct the calibration that they have done to treat their room for their own ears.

Using other peoples speakers and monitors:

In cable handling, the “natural tendency” refers to a cable’s inclination to revert to the shape it was originally stored or wound in. This can manifest as twists, kinks, or a general reluctance to lie flat if handled improperly. Understanding this natural tendency is essential when coiling cables.
How to “feel” a cable’s natural tendencyRelax the Cable: Allow the cable to hang freely or lie loosely on the floor for a period before installation to help it release any internal stresses from storage.Observe its Natural Set: Notice the direction in which the cable naturally wants to curve or coil, according to Iewc.Gentle Handling: Don’t force the cable into a shape it doesn’t naturally want to take.

Being easy at shows

This is a topic that deserves it’s own section because it’s critical to your music career and live performances to give a positive impression on your stakeholders and peers. I’ll group the scenarios by different phases of the show.

Sound check and performance times

After the show

Being excellent at shows

Resources

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