VENUE REVIEW: Charm City Art Space

As a reference to touring bands we are attempting to create a library of reviews of the venues we have played. Most of these venues are in and around the Baltimore area. We attempt to review the venues from the perspective of a performing band (sound, environment, staff, money situation, etc.) For more specific information CONTACT US

Charm City Art Space reviewed by Stephen Thomas

1729 Maryland Avenue
Baltimore, MD 21201
http://www.ccspace.org

Yes, it smells like cat piss in the basement. Yes, the bathrooms barely work, and the sink is more of a pipe sticking out of the wall. But to leave it at that is to completely disregard the accomplishments the Charm City Art Space has realized over its 7-year existence. CCAS remains as the longest-running DIY space in Baltimore City, with more than 500 shows to its credit. All this, without any paid employees, and having a strict “no-drugs, no-alcohol” policy in effect.

The performance area (the basement of the Baltimore rowhouse in which CCAS is located) is relatively small; while a four-member band should have no problem, it may be difficult to fit larger bands in there and the low ceiling prevents HorsePower from standing at full height. Before you go on, you store your gear in the basement’s back room, next to the sump pump and gas meter. The sound system, though small when compared to typical clubs, is adequate for the space’s size. You steady your equipment with the spare cinder blocks sitting around in the basement. Combine the cat urine smell with the lack of air conditioning and/or heat, and it can become rather uncomfortable for those who are environmentally demanding.  It’s generally a low- to no-frills kind of performance space, and most gigs tend to be “nasty, brutish, and short,” as the man says regarding comparatively uncivilized spaces.

That said, there are a lot of things going for the CCAS. Nikc mentioned to me that they’ve always been straight when dealing with bands and the cash they’ve earned for the night. Sometimes the staff will buy dinner (pizzas from around the corner), and share with everyone, and STILL give you your door take. And the street-level space is comfortable, and serves as the home to one of the most comprehensive zine libraries I’ve ever seen. Although there’s no drinking in the CCAS, there are plenty of watering holes in the nearby blocks (such as “The Gallery” and “Club Charles”), and technically there’s no rule against rolling into the club already inebriated.

We’ve played there a couple of times, with varying levels of success. I personally love their space, and enjoyed our gigs there (though I’m more partial to old-skool screaming punk and DIY venues than pretty much anyone else in the band). It seems more like a house party than an official gig.  I’ve been there a handful of times when the entire basement is literally packed with people and there’s barely room for space between the performers and the audience. If you’re just starting out, if you appreciate the DIY aesthetic, or happen to be on tour and need an odd weekday slot filled at last minute, CCAS is the place to be.

The Power of Instant Marketing(?)

I love the idea of disposable and instant marketing fodder. We’ve been making flyers for our shows for years, but never really seem to get them to the proper locations besides the club we’re playing and maybe on our Myspace page.

Tonight we wrote, produced, edited, and posted our own commercial for a show happening in 4 days. The four hours (or so) of work is just a bit more time than I usually spend making a flyer. On Sunday morning it will just be a relic and perhaps completely useless (at least old flyers make pretty cool wall art.)

But will it bring more people to the show?

 

 

What the hell is this?

Here Is An Attempt At An Owner’s Manual For A Band

If you are a major band that is making a living off of your music then skip right over our weak sauce. Your homework is done.

But if you are…

a.) Thinking about starting a band

b.) In a band that is seemingly going nowhere

c.) About to record your first album

…then you might want to check this out.

I’m not really gonna bore you with details about our history or the merch we have for sale. But I do want to tell you about the stuff we have done, the places we’ve been, and the hare-brained schemes we’ve conducted.

‘Why Write? You’re Musicians! Musicians Can’t Write?!’

Well, being an active band for five years and a recording band for seven. We’ve run the gamut of opportunity. We’ve met some shady characters, some great fans, tons of great aspiring bands on the road and off. The problem is no one ever seems to get anywhere. Bands fall apart. Fans appear, reappear and disappear again. We had this idea to start documenting some of our experiences, major failures and some wins so that you could copy our successes and skip over the pitfalls.

Here Are Some Of The Features We Have Planned

  • Do’s and Don’t's For Band Marketing
  • Recording Advice and Tutorials
  • Technical notes about the venues we’ve played at
  • Advice on creating interesting marketing tools for your band (like stickers, shirts, and yes..video games)
  • And more! (For real, because this is a work in progress)

‘What Gives You The Right?’

Look, I know what you’re thinking: “These guys think they’re pretty hot shit”

Well, yeah, but not really. As time goes on you will read about the things we’ve done, and hopefully you will far surpass us and never want to read this blog again. I mean that.

Don’t believe me? Well we can talk about it.