After years/decades of doing this off and on, I've come to the conclusion that there are two things that are sure to kill my interest in a project.
The second is people showing up at rehearsals not having practiced or even listened to tunes...My main project is incredibly guilty of this, to the point I almost dread when they want to rehearse as I know it means spending in some cases 30-45 minutes discussing the structure of a relatively simple song. In almost every case they haven't listened to the song in awhile so they are going off memory (often incorrect) of how it should go. Even when I suspect (or know for a fact that they are wrong) I just roll with their version as ultimately it's easier than getting them to listen to a recorded version and having them play it the way it should be. In other cases they haven't listened to it at all and rely on others to them how it should go...Amazingly we are able to pull off most of these fairly well live, but in some cases there are absolute train wrecks due to things not being practiced/rehearsed properly.
The first is basically adding more and more tunes on top of tunes that already aren't getting played all that well. Right now Im enrolled in a 10 week jazz workshop with a guitar player and KB player (drummer is the guy running the workshop)...At week four the tunes we already have on the list aren't getting played nearly as well, (and we haven't even played everything thats on the list ) as they could or should be and they keep wanting to add more songs.
One was this one
there isn't even a chart for it other than a piano transcription out there that looks like it has this piece in B sharp...
The other is Giant Steps...Fair enough on that one, but still a challenging piece and I can easily see us spending an entire 2 hour session on this one which means the other stuff on the agenda probably won't get played..
At first I thought it may be me being lazy, but than I thought about other workshops Im taking in Manhattan where the teacher running that imposes a 5 song limit for the eight week sessions that runs. In that one, often times we will just end up focusing on one tune for half the session.
I see this with my rock and roll buddies as well...One of them wanted me to record some bass tracks for some originals he wrote. His goal was eight tunes. In one session..both the recording engineer and I spent a considerable amount of time explaining how that just wasn't realistic and we were finally able to talk him down from 8 to 3.