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When performing a wedding ceremony gig, do you play at the rehearsal too?

8K views 37 replies 21 participants last post by  doublereeds 
#1 ·
Hello all-

I get the occasional wedding ceremony gig, sometimes alone with backing tracks for budget weddings, or more commonly with my pianist.

Lately, I've had to gently fend off a couple bride requests that I come down to the timbuktu wedding venue the friday before or whatever to play down the processional, etc.

Now, I can understand how they want everything perfect, but when I gave them my quote for doing the performance, I never budgeted time and expense to drive down and do a separate run-thru. On Fridays, I would have to arrange and pay for child care to boot.

What is the "industry standard" for wedding musicians? Do wedding musicians typically do the rehearsal too and budget/quote a higher price accordingly? Maybe I should track down a couple string players I know and ask them.

Just thought I'd ask here what the general understanding is about covering the rehearsal ceremony for live wedding instrumentalist performers.

Jim
 
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#2 ·
Call your local wedding planner(s) - see the Yellow Pages.

I recall paying for rehearsal music for my wedding. I would suggest that you budget it in and describe the services you include in your contract. If they balk at the charge for a rehearsal and don't require your presence, have an alternate contract in your brief case reflecting the costs for wedding day performance only.

Or just tell them there's no option.
 
#3 ·
No, I've never played a wedding where the band had to be there for the rehearsal. I guess we'd do it if we got paid, but it would come close to doubling the price for the band. But then we don't do many weddings, since we aren't a traditional 'wedding band.' We've done weddings for people who have heard us, knew exactly what we sound like and want the type of music we play. That means no (or at most one or two) special tunes beyond our usual fare.

You really have to set the guidelines and be up front about what you will or will not be able to do.
 
#4 ·
I am not a wedding pro, but my sax quartet has played for 3 wedding ceremonies to-date. If you are part of the ceremony (prelude, wedding march, playing during ceremony, recessional), as opposed to just playing the reception), I think it only makes sense to be represented (not play) at the rehearsal so that you know how things are to flow and when you are to play, especially in the event something does not go as expected. Spoiling someone's incredibly special day is not a good idea for repeat business.
 
#5 ·
...my sax quartet has played for 3 wedding ceremonies to-date. If you are part of the ceremony (prelude, wedding march, playing during ceremony, recessional), as opposed to just playing the reception), I think it only makes sense to be represented.
Good point, and that makes total sense. Like I said we have always played the reception, the party, nothing to do with the actual ceremony. However, on one occasion, they asked me to play "Here Comes the Bride" solo on the sax (not the whole band) at a wedding where the ceremony was held right in the same room as the party (great idea, imo--it was a 'secular' wedding). No rehearsal needed; I just played the melody as the bride walked in and they were very happy with it. Then we went on to playing our usual party fare--jump blues & funk, etc.
 
#6 ·
I've done MANY weddings, and I can't recall ever having the entire group there for a rehearsal. The bride and whomever she brought along have come to quartet rehearsals to choose music, but it is not the norm to have the full group at the wedding rehearsal. Of course with money, anything is possible.
 
#7 ·
This is one of those situations that the term "bridezilla" was invented for (IMO). Band at the rehearsal? That's completely bonkers. But (equally obviously) the paying customer is always right.
 
#11 ·
No she's not right, and its insensitive, narcissistic an insulting all in one, but typical of the disrespect shown to (professional) musicians in our society. Try to be polite, and explain your contract is to do the WEDDING, on a certain day at a certain time for a certain price, and maybe explain that you are a pro and you will do a very fine job. Don't even offer the service of doing the rehearsal, it should be beneath you unless they are willing to throw real $$$$ to make it really worth your while.
 
#8 ·
This is interesting. I was playing last Saturday for a casual get together on an outside side deck at a local Inn. During warmup and sound testing I was running through Unchained Melody as I had heard it playing on the back deck where a wedding was to take place. It seems I was to start my venue after the wedding but they were running late. As I was going through it the second time the preacher ran around to where I was, came up to me and ask me to keep playing. Unknown to me they were about to start the wedding finally and someone decided I sounded better than their recording. So I continued until finished and then just hung out until the wedding was over. About 30 minutes later I started my scheduled gig. I am scheduled to play at the same location this Saturday for another after wedding reception before starting my regular venue. It seems the parents of the upcoming bride were on the deck listening to me and decided to ask the owner of the Inn if she could get me for this coming weekend. They do a lot of weddings at this place. Maybe I have found a new side job..... :)
 
#9 ·
I've played close to a bazillion weddings and never once was asked to play for the rehearsal. And yeah, I've played at the ceremony many times as well, and I don't recall having to be there because of that, either. But, with the level of ridiculous expectations nowadays that probably means we'll all have to start throwing that in for free. Glad I don't make a living doing the wedding circuits anymore.
 
#10 ·
I guess my more focused question is: "Is it the COMMON understanding in the live music biz that in the absence of specific language, a quote/bid for a ceremony performance includes the same performer coming out on a separate date to attend or play for a rehearsal?"

The answer from here on SOTW and from a couple other queries I made seems to be a clear NO, but that I could conceivably drive out to do a ceremony rehearsal for an additional charge, framed either as a discrete modular "add-on" or built into a larger initial bid as the "default" procedure, where the bride can opt out to save costs.

I live in a huge sprawling metro area with the nation's second-worst rated traffic. Road-tripping for a rehearsal, especially early on a Friday evening, is NOT trivial.

At the very least, henceforth, I will be VERY CLEAR in my quote/bid to a prospective wedding couple what my fee will and will not cover!
 
#18 ·
I guess my more focused question is: "Is it the COMMON understanding in the live music biz that in the absence of specific language, a quote/bid for a ceremony performance includes the same performer coming out on a separate date to attend or play for a rehearsal?"
Not to beat a dead horse, but the answer to your specific question here is NO. It's not common. I'd go so far as to say there is never such an 'understanding.'
 
#17 ·
In the future, quote extra for a rehearsal DINNER. This should be in your contract.

I photographed a lot of weddings, and the most stressful of the lot involved control-freak wedding directresses. Sometimes they're inexperienced,and they think that you are too, so they believe that everyone needs to be present. Explain that you are the entertainment and are not part of the wedding party. You've done hundreds of weddings, so you know the drill. The B&G (one assumes) have never made that traipse down the aisle toward wedded bliss before, so THEY need to rehearse, not you.

The guys who need a run-through more than anyone are the florists. They're never present at rehearsals; the cake maker is never there, and Uncle Johnny the Drunk never shows up either (unless there's a rehearsal dinner).
 
#20 ·
If they want to rehearse the ceremony with the music, you could offer to provide them a recording of the music you will play (doesn't have to be you playing, you could give them versions of others' performance of the required music). Of course, this would be for an additional fee.
 
#30 ·
+1
As for weddings in general (ceremony or reception)
Go through an agent. Get a deposit. Get EVERYTHING you can in writing. Provide a song list. Ive done deals where I would include 2 or 3 special requests for songs not on the list, over that charge extra per song. One wedding I remember the band learned like a dozen extra songs. Get specific times. Load in, start stop. Basically be as detailed as you can. Get in writing how you should dress. When should you play instrumentals, when to start rockin. Overbid. Be as detailed and specific as you can without turning off the agent. Then when the actual ceremony happens, you can give and take a little with the bride/family and they will think you are the nicest guy in the world because they've been working out all these details of the contract with the agent and here you are going above and beyond the contract to make their day that more special. Then you get word of mouth. Then you get more gigs. Then you can quit your day job. Then you HAVE to take those gigs just to pay the bills. Then after youve played Brick House 2700 times you finally lose it, get a bad habit or get in a bad fight with someone and you quit doing these stupid cheesy gigs and vow to only play for the love of music-to make art. Then you have no money. Then you get a day job.....
 
#24 ·
Most wedding bands do not play the wedding itself, but the festivities which follow the service. I have played in professional string quartets since the early 80's and have only once ever played the rehearsal. It was a high profile high dollar shindig (Daughter of a tv sports anchor) and they had no problem paying our regular wedding rate for the rehearsal - we were in essence paid for 2 weddings. Most brides - or at least the people footing the bill - cannot afford this kind of expense. If the thing is going to be that complicated, we have sent the member who lives closest to attend the rehearsal and take notes and communicate with all those involved, but they were paid for the time they were there and mileage too, not just the time they were playing - the whole time they were there @$150/hr, min .5 hr and .5 hr increments. We charge more per person for the full quartet when performing.

Special requests are $50 each, if they aren't in our library. One party spent $800 on requests - they had money to burn, but they did not have us there for the rehearsal.
 
#26 ·
Hey,

When doing wedding ceremonies, I've been requested to do the rehearsal the night before 2-3 times in the last 20 years. I think I charged them extra, but I don't remember how much extra. This has not been requested of me in the last 10-12 years.

No, it's not standard. You should charge for two weddings if they want you to do it, because it effectively blocks you from taking another gig that night.
 
#35 ·
Just had a call from a lady whom booked me for a wedding ceremony/reception/dance 10 hours i'll be there. she's decided to change the songs for the ceremony. From stevie Wonder to nat King Cole L.O.V.E. 4 songs in total I got to get the singer to relearn. I swear i'm not answering the phone again till the day before te wedding. She did call me last week to say there is a rehersal that day!!! No Way.

Just make sure you charge enough for all the headaches that comes with weddings.
 
#36 ·
My other favorite Bullmoose Jackson title is "Get Off The Table, Mabel, the Two Dollars Is For The Beer." I don't suppose that's appropriate at wedding receptions either.
 
#37 ·
Hi folks, as I alluded in my OP, I'm referring to gigs where I am the music the bride is walking to the aisle by. So, I can see where the wedding party might want me there at rehearsal.

Henceforth, I will simply clarify in my bid offer/quote that my fee does NOT include a separate visit to a rehearsal, but that this can be arranged for an extra fee. As a matter of routine, I also typically give myself wiggle room in the quote to charge extra for a special tune or two if it's unusually hard to find, and if they want me alone with tracks, there will have to be a backing (karaoke) track available.

I guess like a lot of things- SPELL IT OUT UP FRONT-- IN WRITING.
 
#38 ·
I played in hundreds of weddings in my youth (flute player). I played with a regular organist/pianist and he would get me a lot of the gigs. I only played in a few rehearsals out of those hundreds. This is because the organist attended the rehearsal and practiced with the bride in the processional and recessional. I played a few weddings where I was the only music. I recall rehearsing once--it was at a playground--and I remember I wasn't very happy about it because, like you, I'd given the bride a price and it was for the wedding only. but because I knew her (friend of a friend) I went along with it and didn't charge more. Had she been a stranger, I would have charged double.
 
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