I charge $150 for a wedding and $50 more if alcohol is served.
JoLaine
On Mar 26, 2016 5:29 PM, "Dave Casserly via Callers" <
callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
I've only called weddings for good friends, and I
do that for free. But
I've played a lot of weddings, and I generally would not take a wedding gig
unless it paid at least 2-3x what a normal dance would pay.
For a single caller, assuming you're NOT bringing sound or being in charge
of the band, you'll probably have some MC duties, at least. It's been that
way at pretty much all of the weddings where I've played for a dance. As
Alan and Jeff said, it doesn't matter how much time there will be actual
dancing; you'll end up being there for quite a while in any event with
setup, etc. Keeping your time to a minimum isn't going to be a priority;
I've played weddings where the band sets up and finishes sound check
literally three hours before going on.
I recommend getting the couple on the phone immediately so you can gauge
what they're looking for. Generally, I think about it in terms of how long
I need to be there. If it's a local gig, I'd start with something like
$150 for the first hour I'd be there, and $50/hr after that, plus travel.
But I'd ask for more if I had any duties other than playing (or calling),
such as setting up sound, providing recorded music, etc. Typically, you
won't be at a wedding for less than three or four hours, at least, so
you're looking at $250-500. I live in DC, which is not quite as expensive
as NY, so adjust accordingly.
I am generally willing to play or call for dances for community events and
other one night stands at a much lower rate. With weddings, though, the
couple's paying LOTS of money for stuff that isn't as valuable as the
music, and I'm unlikely to move much off the initial ask, unless it's a
very close friend, in which case I'd do it for free.
-Dave
On Sat, Mar 26, 2016 at 4:36 PM, Alan Winston via Callers <
callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
First off, you're not charging for the number
of minutes of dancing.
You're charging for your experience, expertise, and skill, showing up on
time and being ready to do it, waiting around as necessary, traveling if
needed, being mellow if (when) things go over and your time is cut, etc.
What are you being asked to deliver for your fee? Are they booking their
own band and arranging their own sound?
For the wedding dance I just did in Berkeley - probably a comparable
market to NYC - they provided sound, I organized a band for them, each band
member and I were promised $300 for playing for the dance (and then a more
for playing in the ceremony and some incidental music). They actually paid
me more than the agreed-upon amount, so I don't think they thought I was
gouging.,
For a friend's wedding I might work free.
If you want to be paid appropriately, state your price and don't waver.
If you want to get the gig regardless, ask them their budget and quote less
than that.
When asked to arrange musicians I make it clear that I can't quote before
I know who's available but state a range ($1000-$1500) and I also ask their
budget and then adjust the number of musicians (two good ones is fine,
three better) so we all get paid enough within their budget.
-- Alan
On 3/26/16 11:13 AM, Maia McCormick via Callers wrote:
Hey folks,
I've just been asked to call a wedding, and I don't have a good idea for
what the going rate for these things is. What do you all charge for a
wedding (say, 30 mins-an hour of dancing)? (And how might you adjust this
rate for NYC?)
Thanks,
Maia
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