Last evening I finally tried myself as a street musician. Two hours of playing on my Gen Bb in a pedestrian subway yesterday, one hour and a half this morning near a metro station.
450 rubles ($18) for 3.5 hours, $5.2 per hour. McDonald’s in Moscow pays $4.5 (at least that is what they write on their billboards), so now I’m sure I have a way to survive if I lose my job, and it is much more fun than making french fries.
But it was not money I wanted when I went there. I wanted… Well, just to play some tunes for people. Alas, I failed.
Due to stereotypes which are very strong in our society, people did not perceive me that way. A guy who is playing in the subway for money is not musician here - he is a beggar asking for alms. Old man with an accordion, disabled serviceman in shabby uniform singing songs about Chechen and Afgan wars, poor-looking kid playing Vivaldi on his/her violin - that is how it usually looks like here…
I did my best not to look like that. I’m 6.1 feet tall, aged 21, with no disabilities and such, wearing clothes which show to any who wants to see: no, I’m not poor. And I play Kesh or Scarce O’Tatties better than Carolan’s Welcome. But only people who give money are 50+ women, and tunes which make them do that are Carolan’s Welcome, Crested Hens, Foggy Dew, An Dro…
Damn! These old women need their money much, much more than I do. And I’m pretty sure it was not music (not only music) which made them give. Giving alms, yes…
I feel very shamed at that.
How to break that wall, I wonder? Easy way is to move to some place where people expect to meet a street musician - there are streets of that sort in any city, in Moscow these are Arbat and Kuznetsky Most. But I don’t want to go there. Another way is to add a guitar - a band is something that looks more respectable than a lone musician, and tinwhistle does really need an accompaniment. I know one](http://ru.youtube.com/watch?v=gLDNNnrlFko%22%3Eone) guitar player who wants to join me, but she is busy now, and in 1-2 months it will become too cold for outdoor playing.
Any other advice or ideas?