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Gigging in Alaska

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If you're considering touring Alaska and you are a solo/duo acoustic singer-songwriter, this page is for you. It is a growing collection of thoughts, venues, experiences, links, etc. to help. If you are a musician who can help round this page out, please help us by editing the page!

Whole Wheat Radio House Concerts

What is a Whole Wheat Radio house concert like?

Here are various photos to give you an idea what it's like here at Whole Wheat Radio:

The sound boards / webcast console in the back of the room.  Your house sound and all webcast audio is controlled from here.  We do everything we can to give you a monitor sound that works for you, but during the show you may have to make minor EQ / volume adjustments yourself on a small mixer on stage.
The sound boards / webcast console in the back of the room. Your house sound and all webcast audio is controlled from here. We do everything we can to give you a monitor sound that works for you, but during the show you may have to make minor EQ / volume adjustments yourself on a small mixer on stage.
The downstairs bathroom with shower / washer / dryer / toilet.  No, Elvis did not OD in this bathroom.  We hope you won't either.
The downstairs bathroom with shower / washer / dryer / toilet. No, Elvis did not OD in this bathroom. We hope you won't either.
There are several mattresses around the place that you're welcome to as long as you don't mind sharing with the Red Cross babies.
There are several mattresses around the place that you're welcome to as long as you don't mind sharing with the Red Cross babies.
There are airbeds and cots all over the place.  You are free to use any of them and move them anywhere you'd like.  The downstairs bedroom is public.  Audience members and friends often crash here after a house concert rather than driving home.
There are airbeds and cots all over the place. You are free to use any of them and move them anywhere you'd like. The downstairs bedroom is public. Audience members and friends often crash here after a house concert rather than driving home.
You can have the special Musician's Spare Bedroom all to yourself if you'd like.
You can have the special Musician's Spare Bedroom all to yourself if you'd like.
Feel free to bring your own hot babes to sell your CDs at the show.  You keep 100% of the proceeds.  You keep 100% of the door.  Then you'll probably have to give it all to the hot CD sellin' babes...
Feel free to bring your own hot babes to sell your CDs at the show. You keep 100% of the proceeds. You keep 100% of the door. Then you'll probably have to give it all to the hot CD sellin' babes...
The sign at the entrance.  Please remember that Whole Wheat Radio is truly a homegrown and all volunteer operation.  If you have a hungry ego that needs constant feeding or has forgotten the roots of musical and human pleasure because it has been mollycoddled by big-biz-musical-internetty-hype for so long (i.e. if you are a pain-in-the-ass prima donna with strict requirements to be treated like a musical prince or princess) this is definitely not a good place for you to play.
The sign at the entrance. Please remember that Whole Wheat Radio is truly a homegrown and all volunteer operation. If you have a hungry ego that needs constant feeding or has forgotten the roots of musical and human pleasure because it has been mollycoddled by big-biz-musical-internetty-hype for so long (i.e. if you are a pain-in-the-ass prima donna with strict requirements to be treated like a musical prince or princess) this is definitely not a good place for you to play.
A packed house concert.  Note that all shows don't have this big of turnout depending on weather and other activities around town.  Talkeetna is small place with a limited audience of only a few hundred people to draw from --- of which only a small percentage are into acoustic house concerts.  But the webcast audience more than makes up for any lack of warm bodies in the house.
A packed house concert. Note that all shows don't have this big of turnout depending on weather and other activities around town. Talkeetna is small place with a limited audience of only a few hundred people to draw from --- of which only a small percentage are into acoustic house concerts. But the webcast audience more than makes up for any lack of warm bodies in the house.
The Pilot Cracker Playboys jamming on stage.  This place has a good, warm vibe that helps musicians settle into a groove that casts its magical spell everywhere.
The Pilot Cracker Playboys jamming on stage. This place has a good, warm vibe that helps musicians settle into a groove that casts its magical spell everywhere.
Families with children do attend our shows.  We are working on providing supervised childcare downstairs so that restless kids have a place to go when the music no longer interests them.  Shows do not have to be
Families with children do attend our shows. We are working on providing supervised childcare downstairs so that restless kids have a place to go when the music no longer interests them. Shows do not have to be "family-safe" - we feel it is the parent's responsibility to choose what is appropriate for their kids to be exposed to.
There is a kitchen in the main room so food is often a part of house concerts.  We suggest something like two 40 minute sets, with a 20 minute break so people can eat, drink and socialize ... and you can sell CDs.
There is a kitchen in the main room so food is often a part of house concerts. We suggest something like two 40 minute sets, with a 20 minute break so people can eat, drink and socialize ... and you can sell CDs.
A lot of nationally touring folks have performed at Whole Wheat Radio.  You will be in some great company!
A lot of nationally touring folks have performed at Whole Wheat Radio. You will be in some great company!
If you prefer outdoor facilities, there is a working and revered Holy Shine Of Our Father Outhouse available.
If you prefer outdoor facilities, there is a working and revered Holy Shine Of Our Father Outhouse available.
Beta, the Whole Wheat Radio house dog, will love you and treat you right even if no one else does.
Beta, the Whole Wheat Radio house dog, will love you and treat you right even if no one else does.
We try not to take things ultra-seriously while at the same time being as home-style competent as possible.  We figure if you have fun and break down that artificial wall between performer and audience, the muses will be highly pleased.  We do everything we can to facilitate.
We try not to take things ultra-seriously while at the same time being as home-style competent as possible. We figure if you have fun and break down that artificial wall between performer and audience, the muses will be highly pleased. We do everything we can to facilitate.

Whole Wheat Radio House Concert Specifics For Performers

Artists take 100% of all proceeds from our house concerts - door and CD sales. At this point, we do not have official tickets as this is still a house concert space and not an official venue. But we strongly urge folks to donate a suggested amount (usually $10) and they usually do. But some people in a rural area like Talkeetna honestly cannot afford to buy a CD and donate $10 to get in the door so we leave it to them to decide how to best support you.

We webcast live on the internet and sell the artist's CDs for whatever price they want to charge - usually $15. We add $2 for the actual cost of shipping and subtract the fee charged by PayPal for internet sales (approx. $0.79 on $15 sale) ... the artist signs the CDs after the show, we write them a check for all proceeds and provide an accounting sheet, and we ship the CDs out within 2-3 days. We generally cannot do quantity discounts or special pricing for multiple CD sales on the internet.

We also have an online internet "tip jar" which listeners frequently throw a few bucks into. We will also provide a tip-jar in house if you'd like.

Musicians get an enormous amount of web-love before, during and after the webcast. Your website(s) get linked heavily. Everyone in our little corner of the internet will know everything there is to know about you via the web. You may get additional web-love from bloggers who pick up on your house concert. We are continuing to improve and develop new ways for you to get real and quality fans from the web.

If the musician arrives early enough or is staying over-night and wants to do an on-air interview, we're happy to do that which often results in a few additional CD sales. We record the performance and, with the artist's permission, we air the tracks later on Whole Wheat Radio - which generates a never-ending self-perpetuating buzz for the artist as our live house concert recordings are by far the most listener-requested tracks in the music library.

Our main building has a capacity for 70-80 people (sitting and standing). The webcast has room for 90 listeners. Therefore, in a perfect world, your house concert would be heard live by 150+ people. But Whole Wheat Radio is far from a perfect world.

We seldom have an audience that large because Talkeetna is a small town with a limited number of warm bodies. Live audience size generally ranges from 15 to 40 depending on whether it is a weekday or weekend night and what season it is. An additional 30-50 people will tune in to the live webcast and be able to interact with each other and the live audience via our online chat. So, in the real-world, you can expect anywhere from 25 to 80 people to hear your house concert live. Several hundred additional people will hear the recorded version on the webcast as it continues to air long after your concert is over.

Past performers (including Jack Williams, Johnsmith, Danny Schmidt, Mark Erelli, Diane Zeigler, Brooks Williams, Stephen Fearing, Peter Mulvey, Kristina Olsen, Jeffrey Foucault, Radislov Lorkovic and many Alaskan acts) walked away with anywhere from $500 on a weekday to $1500 on a Saturday night. Please remember that the amount of money you make or CDs you sell is seldom related to your performance ... the exact same performance given to the exact same people on a different night could generate twice as many sales ... or half as many. If a financial guarantee is important to you, Whole Wheat Radio is not a good place for you to play. We do not make financial guarantees partly because we are not making any profit whatsoever on your house concert.

Jack Williams playing the old Wheat Hole
Jack Williams playing the old Wheat Hole

We generally don't do bands but prefer singles or duos. We generally don't do electric but prefer acoustic. All of these generalities have been broken in the past, but they are not our bread-n-butter so sometimes cause things not to flow as perfectly as you might like. (In other words, an electric band who used to cranking it up with their own amplifiers and 2 monitor mixes is pretty disappointed that a single amp blows the doors off this place, that there are no wedge monitors and that I generally turn all the amplification off in the house speakers because it deafens the audience. We really aren't into rocking out.)

Our current events calendar is here so you can see what we have booked. I generally cannot handle two house concerts on a single weekend so I book them at least a week apart. If you're interested in performing here, fill out this email form with the date you're looking at. Please try to be specific and keep your scheduling emails to a minimum. It isn't that I don't like you, but I have many many tasks from running the webcast to booking to doing the laundry that keep me busy sunup to sundown - so simplicity of booking is really appreciated.

If a promoter is paying your way to Alaska, please confirm with them first that they're okay with you playing here at Whole Wheat Radio in Talkeetna. We generally do not solicit performers but only provide additional gig opportunities for those already coming to Alaska. It's not our responsibility to pay for you to get here - that's up to you. If you're using someone else's dime, please be polite and make sure it's okay with them if you play here. Remember - as a house concert series, we're not making a dime off your performance so whether you play here or not makes no difference to us financially. We appreciate you and those involved with your tour recognizing that a gig at Whole Wheat Radio is a 100% free gift - if you aren't happy with that arrangement but instead feel the need to make demands of us, please book elsewhere and we'll both be happier.

We are happy to offer our "spare bedroom" downstairs for semi-private accommodations as well as whatever meals and amenities you might like to share with us. If you prefer off-site lodging, we can make B&B recommendations but we can't book it for you or otherwise be responsible for your experience.

If weather conditions make it dangerous for you to drive to Talkeetna, please do not hesitate to call and either postpone or cancel your show. The Parks Highway from either Anchorage or Fairbanks is a 2-lane road with curves and distracting scenery and live moose and icy patches in winter ... please allow plenty of time to arrive and depart if you are on a tight schedule. I hope I don't need to say this to any of you, but being the partner of a traveling musician I have to say ... much as we all love live music, it is not worth risking your life in a driving situation you are not comfortable with. I'd much rather you re-schedule than spin-off the road because a blizzard made it impossible for you to get here.

What we do to help promote your Whole Wheat Radio house concert

This list is a work-in-progress and serves as a general checklist template for Wheat Producers who want to put on their own event here at Whole Wheat Radio.

Find out more about Whole Wheat Radio house concerts by clicking this link which is geared to audience members.

Step One - Get the word out to the mainstream media (1-6 weeks before the show)

Following is a list of places we/you/they help promote your Whole Wheat Radio house concert (this is as much for our reference and the community to add to as anything else)...

  • Talkeetna Times newspaper: send email to tgtnews@mtaonline.net (needs to be done about a month before the event)
  • Pioneer Press newspaper: send email to editor@akpioneerpress.com
  • Art news send email to chris@artandsolegallery.com

Here is an example of the kind of short announcement they are looking for: Anchorage singer-songwriter Emily Kurn will perform a house concert in an intimate log cabin setting at Whole Wheat Radio in Talkeetna on Dec. 15th at 7PM. This special show will also be webcast at www.wholewheatradio.org Suggested donation is $10. More information 733-xxxx or www.wholewheatradio.org

Step Two - send an "early" email to listeners, Wheatsters and house concert folks (2-6 weeks before the show)

This is a short email just announcing that the date and time of the concert and giving a link to the wiki page where the details for the concert/performer are posted. (Example: Antje Duvekot House Concert)

Step Three - put up posters around town (1-4 weeks before the show)

If the artist has their own, then use those. But it's also good to make a special Whole Wheat Radio poster since it hopefully has our special brand of "quirky warmness" to it. Less text and more images is good as people generally aren't interested in reading the details on a poster ... just informing themselves of who, when and where an event is taking place.

Step Four - send another email immediately before the concert

Not currently doing until have the ability to let people determine how much email they get from us.





Other Alaskan Performance Opportunities

Some thoughts about touring Alaska

Would love to have some musicians help fill out this section.  :-)

  • Come to Alaska to see Alaska. With any luck your gigs will pay for part or all of the trip.
  • Summer is hectic in Alaska. There are more gigs available but also more people vying for them. Locals are harried (it's our big chance to work before winter returns) and may not be able to give you the same head-heart space they would in the spring, fall or winter.
  • Winter can be the most "Alaskan" season in Alaska. Adventure and excitement. Danger. Stories that no other singer-songwriter can tell. Gigs canceled or not well attended because of a 6 foot "minor" snow storm. Moose sharing the highway with autos. Audiences, performers and promoters all sitting down together at a table and sharing a pot of moose stew and chatting like it was still 1923. The moon rising where the sun should be. All this and more. We tend to never forget those few hearty singers who make it up here in the winter and they tend to never forget us. :-)
  • Spring & autumn are both very short (just a few weeks) but that brevity creates a special feeling. Locals are less harried in the fall but still flush with $$$ from their summer work and able to buy CDs. Spring is leaner but people are very glad to have survived another winter (those who are still left anyway) so the mood is entirely festive and "I love you and I love your music and life is wonderfully grand and do you want to get married and the spend the rest of our lives happily ever after or can I just buy one of your CDs?"-ish.
  • The two "big" cities are Anchorage and Fairbanks. Musicians often arrive in Anchorage, play in Anchorage, drive the Parks Highway to Fairbanks playing a gig or two along the way (including Whole Wheat Radio) while visiting Denali National Park and then finish/fly home from Fairbanks. But there are many other options as well, including a visit to Homer, Seldovia, Juneau, etc.
  • Alaska is a huge state with many distinct regions, cultures and lifestyles - so don't expect to "see it all" or "do the Alaska thing" in a single season - or even a single lifetime. Distances are immense so if you're responsible for your own transportation, you'll be spending a lot of time behind the wheel getting to gigs - looking at some gorgeous scenery along the way.



Helpful sites for musicians wanting to tour Alaska

Before you start contacting these folks, please remember - Alaska is a bit different than the Lower 48 when it comes to musical tours, promotion and audiences. We have a very small population here compared to what you're used to. So audience sizes and capacities may be less ... but the appreciation of Alaskan audiences is often overwhelming simply because we don't have a ton of choices every weekend of who we're going to see.

Also keep in mind that professional promoters are the exception up here - you'll often be dealing with people who host musical events because they love music ... but aren't as business-oriented as they are in Boston or New York. Go with the flow and you may find that our rough edges are just a disguise for some truly friendly, honest and fun folks.


  • Alaska Folk Music Gary Newman hosts this helpful site with links & information on Alaska's summer festivals, links to Alaskan musicians' websites, special events, etc.
  • Acoustic Adventures Trudy Heffernan brings great music to Fairbanks, including the summer and winter Fairbanks Folk Festivals. If you want to play in Fairbanks (you do) Trudy is your contact. You can sign up for her email Cyber Event Awareness List and she'll keep you well-informed on upcoming events. She also has a great resource list of radio stations/magazines that are folk music and Alaska related.
  • Tom Begich - A performer who hosts open mics and knows a lot about the Anchorage music scene - definitely a worthwhile contact if you're going to be in Anchorage
  • Whistling Swan Productions Mike McCormick is a professional booking agent who brings nationally known and upcoming musicians to the Anchorage area and Mat-Su Valley. Definitely 'the' contact person for getting a gig at any of the larger venues in Alaska's largest city.
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