bloke wrote:
All of that being said, I've been considering playing the baritone in one of the local community bands on a more semi-regular (maybe most last two rehearsals/performances
Here, it gets twisty-turny.
Believe it or not, *some* "community bands" are not really about "the performance". They are about the rehearsals. There is a very wide variety of motivations at work.
Some bands are "level 0" : there is a bunch of regulars who show up to rehearse - but they have serious deficiencies in instrumentation. They *need* ringers to come in and cover the parts.
Others are "level 1" : the regulars cover the parts OK, but the performance can be improved by some ringers.
And then there are a few "level 2" : the regulars are more than competent and don't need ringers.
The problem occurs when "level 1" bands slip back to "level 0" BECAUSE OF THE RINGERS. When enough of the good players catch on to the idea that some people can show up for "the last two rehearsals/performance" (or, worse, get paid to show up *only* for the performance), they start to think "Hmmm...maybe *I* should show up for "the last two rehearsals/performance" (or, better, get paid to show up *only* for the performance). Attendance at early rehearsals drops, until only the very worst players show up for the first rehearsal or three - which accelerates the trend. Pretty soon you end up with a group of semi-pros who have the tee-shirt and hat for the local community band, but who only get together to play the gig. There is essentially no band, and no community - just a contractor who makes the phone calls the week before the performance.
Perhaps this is a slight exaggeration - but it's the truth.
UNLESS you have been specifically invited (on *their* initiative, not yours), please don't make a plan to "join" the local community band (but only for the last two rehearsals and the performance). You might (marginally) improve the quality of the performance, but you may trigger a collapse (or at least, a degradation) of the COMMUNITY band.
Notice that this is a bit different from "I'd like to play occasionally, but I'm so busy that I can't make *every* rehearsal". That's the norm for community bands where most of the members have day jobs and lives outside music. What's offensive is the plan to attend *every* performance, but *none* of the early rehearsals. If you are a quality player, the community band needs you *more* at the early rehearsals than they do at the performance!
JOIN the community and participate. Often, what holds a community band together is the *constant* and *consistent* presence of members who know how to behave professionally and teach by example. It may well be that it would be better (for you, and for the band) if you showed up for the *first* two rehearsals, and skipped the last two rehearsals and the performance.
After all, if your missing the performance leaves a hole in the band, they can always call for a pro to show up and sight-read the concert.
Note that the above assumes you are doing this on *your* initiative. If the music director ASKS you to show up for 2 rehearsals and a performance (I hope he's paying) then you are off the hook.
Also, note that the biggest danger is not that *you* will do these things, but that you will influence someone else in the band to follow your example.
To address Rick's point: the last time one of my community bands had a tuba soloist, it happened because the guest star poked me and said "Gee, I really miss playing in a BAND for a holiday performance. Is there some way I could sit in with you guys? Maybe play a solo, or something?" Our price for allowing him to sit in the section was that he had to go out front and play a couple of solos. A good time was had by all.
Before that, we once had someone come in to play *only* the performance at a nursing home gig because our conductor was retiring and our guest star was a "blast from the past" surprise for the conductor.
Notice that in both of the above cases, the key word was "community" and not "band".