Make someone’s day, by writing them a testimonial

I’ve just got in from a meeting and started ploughing my way through the myriad of e-mails offering me every Christmas bargain going, the scam asking me to deposit all my life-savings in some off-shore Bank in Liberia and the obligatory mail, offering me various medical products that will supposedly endear me to my Wife even more than my already successful Marriage could ever imagine!

In amongst all this detritus however, was an e-mail from a Funeral Director that I had recently worked with, where I performed The “Last Post” for an ex-Comrade’s Funeral Service.

It basically went as follows:

“Good afternoon Andrew,

I felt that I should write to you regarding the funeral of Mr. M.  The respect you gave to this service was first class. The family wanted to give their father a day he would be proud of, which included the Royal British Legion and standard bearers, the Union Flag on the coffin and as they said, the icing on the cake you.

He was very proud of his country and his war record and as the family said you brought everything together. They said to pass on their heart-felt thanks to you.

The older men at the service all said the same thing ‘note perfect’ – the only place you hear the Last Post played like that is at the Cenotaph.

You have given the family a wonderful memory which will last a life time.

On behalf of myself and the family and all the staff who had the pleasure to hear you play, I thank you so very much and can’t wait to work with you again.”

This simple gesture took only a matter of minutes to do, but has left me glowing with pride and satisfaction, knowing that I gave my best for that old Soldier, his family and all the other people present and that my services were noted, valued and hopefully will be remembered for future opportunities with that Funeral Director (and others by recommendation).

If you have received good service from someone today, write a short testimonial and put a smile on their face. It will be the best Christmas gift you can give them!

For more details about Andrew Jones please visit www.andrewjonesmusic.com

Photography by Paul Fears

 Christmas-Trumpet

Audience etiquette. Are Musicians being precious, or is this a deeper issue?

Those who know me well, will tell you that I am a very patient and tolerant person. I “go with the flow” on most things in everyday life, but there is one thing I can’t stand and will not tolerate, and that’s rudeness and bad manners.

Each one of us will have a different definition of rudeness, however my attention was drawn to the media reports this week, following the Wales v Australia Rugby International, played at the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff. (I’ll just quickly squeeze in here, that I was in the Regimental Band of The Royal Welsh, that played the Anthems prior to the kick-off!). There was much made about the pockets of bad-mannered fans who were booing the Australians when kicking for goal, despite repeated requests over the public-address system for quiet. This usually takes place in complete silence, out of respect to the kicker! Yes, 60,000+ people, even if the majority want him to miss!

With tickets now being made available to a wider non-rugby based audience – previously the vast majority were sold to rugby clubs – there is now a cross-section of “supporters” attending matches, many of whom now just go for the atmosphere and the “craic” and have no real understanding of the niceties of the game itself, nor the way a fan is expected to conduct themselves throughout the game.

Then, last night, a friend of mine (who is a member of a world-renowned orchestra) posted on social media, that a number of the audience at a performance he was participating in, talked all the way through the entr’acte to an Opera. Now some of you are thinking, “What’s the big deal, the performance doesn’t really start until the curtain goes up and the singers start?” Others, like me are thinking, “How rude and how disrespectful!”

Gethin Liddington is one of the finest Jazz Trumpeters on the UK circuit nowadays – and one of the most placid guys you will ever meet – yet he mentioned to me that he regularly has to contend with people talking through his gigs, often just feet away from him, making it very difficult to concentrate and to enjoy the gig. Should a performer have to get embroiled in a dialogue with a member of the audience and politely ask them to be quiet (because they didn’t know any better), or are they just being downright rude and ignorant?

I have sat in the audience, where someone sat in front of me talked all the way through a Concert, up until their “little precious” took to the stage. Suddenly the ground-rules took a seismic shift and woe-betide anyone who dared to cough or rustle their programme during Hermione’s special solo! That person was just rude and ignorant in my book. Oh, once Hermione finished her slot, said person left the Concert before it finished, upsetting Tabitha’s parents during her special solo – but that didn’t matter of course!

Music has sadly been consigned by many, to be something that goes on in the background of our lives. During Sports results on TV, whilst we’re in the lift or shopping in the Mall, or on hold on the phone waiting to sort out our gas bill query. To talk through any music is the norm now it seems.  So as venues, ensembles and musicians constantly strive to attract new audiences, is it necessary for us to “gently” advise our newer patrons, that a certain “etiquette” is expected of them? Then they won’t inadvertently upset performers and audience alike. As for the established audience members, who continue to talk and leave mid-performance, perhaps they just need a large dose of manners?

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Andrew Jones (far left) and Gethin Liddington (2nd from left) in action with the Phil Dando Big Band

For more details about Andrew Jones and Music for You, please visit the following website.

Money, Get Away, Get a Good Job With More Pay and Your O.K.

PhillCourtMusic's avatarPhill Court Music

I picked up the bass to initially impress a girl. Fast forward many years and I have a bass guitar strap wrapped around my neck and no girl. I never envisioned becoming a professional musician, not at least getting paid! I was having fun running around pubs, clubs and any venue that would have our little group. Our payment was either £20 behind the bar (mines a guiness please) or a free meal voucher. Now that’s all well and good, but then it hit me. During a charity concert I was thinking. The bar staff are getting paid, the stage crew are getting paid, the security, the various stalls. They were all getting paid apart from us! I thought it was wrong then and I think it is wrong now. As a musician I am providing a service to the person/persons who booked me. I expect to get paid. Why shouldn’t…

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Spare a thought for the Bugler performing the “Last Post” on Remembrance Sunday

Last Post - 5RW Memorial

This Sunday will once again see many of us commemorating Remembrance Day at Parades and Memorial Services up and down the country.

One of the integral parts of that Service, will be the playing of the Last Post preceding the 2 minute Silence. For many, this is the most poignant part of the proceedings, bringing all sorts of emotions to the surface, from even the most robust and stiff-upper-lipped of characters, as memories of loved ones and fallen Comrades, as well as thoughts of current serving personnel in the Armed Forces are given heightened awareness.

I have been honoured and privileged to have been asked to play the Last Post at numerous Parades, Memorial Services and Funerals during the last 30+ years and since joining the Regimental Band of The Royal Welsh, have a heightened awareness of its relevance and meaning to members of the Armed Forces and civilians alike.

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For those who understand music theory and a little about brass instruments, the Last Post is merely a C Major Arpeggio (consisting of 5 different notes) usually played on either a Bugle, a Cornet or Trumpet. There are no valves (buttons) required and the music is such, that it can be performed by a player of around Grade 5/6 standard or above.

Understandably, the Last Post is something which is sorely missed if not performed, however can become the target of all kinds of criticism and at its worst, ridicule, if not played absolutely perfectly. “But it should be played, perfectly!” I instantly hear you cry.

Trust me when I say that anyone who is tasked with playing this short, simple piece of music, wants to play it to the best of their ability and get it note-perfect. The onus of representing your Village, Town, Royal British Legion Branch, local brass band, school band etc. is one which will have given many a Bugler sleepless nights this week, knowing that every note represents so much, to so many people and is the “ultimate tribute” to those who have fallen in conflicts.

Many of these Buglers however, are not professional musicians and are volunteers who are “doing their bit” for their local community. There may be instances where they have been “volunteered”, owing to nobody else being available, someone being taken ill at the last-minute, or nobody was brave enough to stand up and be counted and do it in the first place.

One hopes that the weather will be kind on Sunday, but even then, putting a freezing cold metal mouthpiece – some use plastic, but it never feels the same for the player – on lips that are tight from the cold and from hanging about waiting to play, doesn’t make for ideal preparation. Miss just one note and you can sense everyone wince and start inwardly tutting about it.

For a variety of reasons, there are less Buglers being available each and every year to perform at parades and the demand, sadly far exceeds the supply. Please be assured that your Bugler will try their damnedest to give as fitting and respectful a tribute as they can, but if it’s not quite note perfect, don’t be quick to criticize, but be thankful that you had a  Bugler there at all, to add that something special to the Memorial Service. Buglers, we salute you!

“We will remember them”.

For further details regarding the Last Post, please visit my website

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Happy Birthday to a Pioneer

When talking about Pioneers who have been notable in developing and advancing a particular movement or industry, one thinks of names such as  Louis Pasteur, the Wright Brothers and Thomas Edison. In the world of music, names such as Bach (Fugue) and Haydn (Symphony) spring to mind, when discussing composition, but there are other figure-heads, or “movers and shakers” as we now like to call them, that are maybe not as well-known, but no less influential in their respective fields. On this day in 1935, saw the birth of trumpeter, conductor, composer and arranger Elgar Howarth. Howarth was brought up in a traditional brass band background (his Father was a conductor) and went on to study music at Manchester University and the Royal Manchester College of Music, alongside the likes of Harrison Birtwistle and Peter Maxwell Davies. This collective would be later known as  New Music Manchester, promoting the composition and performance of new music. Howarth was a key figure in bringing brass band and symphonic (orchestral) brass ensemble repertoire in to the 20th Century and to a whole new audience. This audience however, included both performer and listener alike. Through his pioneering work with the Grimethorpe Colliery Band and the Philip Jones Brass Ensemble, he succeeded in composing and arranging repertoire that brought these genres in front a whole new audience, making massive advancements in terms of instrumental combinations and blends of sounds. Within the brass band movement, Concerts and Entertainment Contests would now never be the same, following Grimethorpe’s ground-breaking performance in 1972, at the Granada Band of the Year Competition, where Howarth compiled a programme that would completely revolutionise how conductors would approach programming and presentation from therein. As for the PJBE, along with Philip Jones himself, the “standard” Brass Quintet format was born, consisting of 2 Trumpets, a French, Trombone and Tuba, plus the 10-piece Ensemble of 4 Trumpets, French Horn, 4 Trombones and Tuba. Repertoire using larger forces were to follow, making brass chamber music a vibrant and exciting genre, which would stimulate new works from composers such as Malcolm Arnold, Ray Premru, Stephen Dogson and many more. Many of his compositions were initially shunned by the brass band movement, being regarded as too avant-garde, but in time, works such as “Fireworks” and “In Memoriam RK” have been accepted in to the hearts of players and listeners alike. He also appeared under the pseudonym of W. Hogarth Lear, showing a much lighter and humorous side to his personality. Happy Birthday Mr. Howarth and thank you for your pioneering work and legacy! 220px-Elgar_Howarth%2C_Halesworth%2C_Suffolk%2C_December_2012

Why do musicians always need to practice?

I am one of those lucky people who is extremely fortunate to be living the dream and working in a job, which I enjoy immensely, hopefully bring pleasure to many, giving opportunities to travel the world (Hamburg, Germany this week with the Regimental Band of The Royal Welsh!), meet lots of interesting people and see some wonderful sights and ultimately get paid for the privilege.

Those are the perks. The downside features are the long, unsociable hours, particularly working evenings and weekends, the endless hours travelling to and from jobs and the volatility of work “feast or famine”. One minute not knowing what day it is and where you are meant to be next, followed by “Diary drought”, not knowing where the next job is going to come from. Despite all that, I know that there are many other trades and professions who share these issues and have much greater hardships to endure, so I’ll stop moaning. I wouldn’t change a thing, as I know I am extremely blessed to be doing what I do.

You would think though, that having now played the Trumpet and Cornet for just over 40 years (gulp!), that the need to practice was long gone and one could just get on with it, until finally deciding to “hang up one’s mouthpiece”. Alas, no!

“He’s not practicing again?” is the usual comment when someone pops round or rings the house, as the obligatory scales, lip-flexibility and technical exercises are rolled out, with religious necessity. Why? Well, put simply, being a brass player is just like being an athlete. Ok so we haven’t got the physique of Usain Bolt or George North (I wish!), but one must not only maintain and strive to improve standards, but ensure that lips muscles are kept strong and flexible to ensure good stamina and accuracy.

Co-ordination skills (fingers and tongue) and lung capacity when not breathing/blowing so intensely also go out of the window after any significant time off.

“So what is a significant period?” I hear you ask.

For me, I work on the old saying “Miss a day and you know about it. Miss 2 days and your friends know about it. Miss 3 days and every bugger knows about it!”. Sad but true I’m afraid. everything goes out of the window if I go more than a few days without putting the “hooter on my chops” for at least 20-30 minutes each day. I do have friends and colleagues however, who I know can go weeks without blowing a note and get away with it, with no apparent lack of quality or consistency. I hate them all for their good fortune!!!

Apart from athletes, how many other professions require that level of application I wonder? Do carpenters go down the shed every day to do a dovetail joint, or a chef pop in to the kitchen to work on a Beef Wellington ?

In the meantime, I will continue to count my lucky stars that I’m in a profession that I’m passionate about and hope that my “necessary” daily practise, allows me to stay in that role for many, many years to come.

For more information about Music for You, please visit my Web-site

Needs must! Martini practise session - "Any time, any place, anywhere"

Needs must! Martini practise session – “Any time, any place, anywhere”

Do you get value for money at the Box Office nowadays?

PHIL-DANDO-IFORD08 I’ve just been trying to catch up on my 122 hours of recorded programmes on my TV Digi-box and watched Paloma Faith performing at the Royal Albert Hall, from the Late Night Prom – yes that’s how far behind I am with my TV viewing!

Paloma was accompanied by the brilliant Guy Barker Orchestra (approximately 40 musicians) and a sizeable Choir and vocal backing group and I was immediately struck, not only with the quality and musicianship of the performers, but with the sheer visual spectacle on display. As the Arts get financially squeezed more and more, it was refreshing to see that we had “real” “live” musicians on stage to deliver the performance and lots of them at that – well let’s face it, if the Proms can’t manage to provide live entertainment, then we’re really in the mire! My point is that the paying public is all too often being short-changed at the box-office, with reduced bands/orchestras and worst of all, the dreaded backing track, replacing live musicians. This is certainly not a new phenomenon, but is becoming the norm nowadays and audiences are becoming acclimatised to seeing less musicians on stage or in the orchestra pit. I went to see the much-acclaimed show “Riverdance” in Cardiff some 5 years ago and was really looking forward to not only seeing the dancers in action, but to hear and watch the wide and eclectic range of musical instruments used by the Band for the performance. To say I was underwhelmed is a monumental understatement, as my expectations were shattered when I saw that the total number in the Band was …… 4!!!! The bizarre and ridiculous sight of the Flamenco Dancer, performing her solo to a backing track will haunt me for many a year to come. Back to the present day and I was performing at a Corporate Event, where a very famous male vocal group had been hired to perform a set during the evening. They were accompanied by a substantial orchestra and the noise, sorry sound was deafening, however, there was not an instrumentalist in sight. I would also question, whether there was an “actual” note sung in anger too. Post match analysis: Backing Track 2 – Live Music 0. So, not only are venues giving us less than value for money – substantial money at that – but, performers (ahem!) are just as culpable for peddling fake “musak”, all in the name of entertainment. Next time you attend a performance, check that you are paying for “live” music and if not, WHY NOT??? Hopefully sights such as the Phil Dando Big Band (pictured above) performing live, will not be a thing of the past. In the words of the Musicians’ Union slogan, please help “Keep Music Live“. For more details about Music for You, providing LIVE Musicians for your event, contact Andrew on 07973 869621 or visit my Website

Brave New World

Welcome to the Music for You blog and to paraphrase Auldous Huxley’s book title, I’m being “Brave” by venturing in to this very “New World” of technology and social media, not having the foggiest idea what I’m really doing! Having said that, I have had my hand held by various experts, including Mr. Content – Chris Bown, who has been “instrumental” in getting this Blog up and running – many thanks Chris. The good bits will be because of Chris and the rest is down to me I’m afraid.

I hope, through this Blog, to share some thoughts and experiences – some funny, some sad – of life as a freelance musician and hope that you enjoy reading these posts. I’ll be teaming up with a wide range of people over the coming weeks and months, giving you the chance to experience not music-related articles, but much, much more.

Each month, I’ll be featuring a colleague who I have worked with, in order to promote and develop my business, including a photographer, a social media expert, a cartoonist and a wedding planner, just to name a few.

Please feel free to share my blog address with all who have a love of music and any comments you post will be much appreciated and I will endeavour to reply to each one individually.

A brass quintet for your wedding day

When you are looking for music for your wedding, then why not consider how a brass quintet could add a wonderful range of musical accompaniment to your wedding day?

From the wedding march, to incidental music during the wedding ceremony and signing of the register, accompaniment to any hymns during the wedding service, and some soft background music during the reception after the marriage, a brass quintet is highly versatile. After all, we can help you choose from more than 700 years of music: classical to soft pop, Elizabethan to Victorian, music from films, whatever the era you choose. A wide range of classical wedding music was written for the trumpet, with celebratory fanfares being an ideal backdrop for the processional at the end of the wedding service.

A brass quintet typically includes two trumpets, french horn,  a trombone and tuba. And, if you’ve not seen a quintet perform before, you will be amazed by the range of music the group can perform, as well as the variety of sounds, from loud fanfares to quiet, subtle soft music that provides an ideal welcoming atmosphere for visitors to the wedding ceremony.

As a quick example of how your wedding can sound really special, here’s some stirring wedding music:

Thinking of music for your wedding? Then get in touch, and discover how a brass quintet could make your big day even more special.