A dissonant chord: Clubs, artists deal with coronavirus fallout

The COVID-19 epidemic has effectively taken over the world as we know it. For many working in the live-music industry, they are now thrown into the unknown with no timetable as to when normalcy will return. 

“Blue Collar Man (Long Nights)”


Greg Diem performing at KJ Farrell’s in Bellmore, N.Y. | Photo by Matt Fede

Greg Diem performing at KJ Farrell’s in Bellmore, N.Y. | Photo by Matt Fede

Meet Greg Diem.

Diem is the lead guitarist for Long Island-based pop punk/alt-rock band Final Call and Quinnipiac Class of 2019 graduate, is in the same boat. 

Final Call reaches out to venues via email and phone call, and was in talks for summer gigs when COVID-19 pandemic took over, according to Diem. 

On top of that, having to social distance from his bandmates has restricted their ability to practice and write new music. 

“It’s not as stressful as it is just annoying that we don’t really get to hang or play music together as much anymore,” Diem said. “Before this happened, we actually had a practice and were in the midst of writing a couple new songs, but now we haven’t been able to see each other in like a month probably now almost, and who knows (for) how long.” 

Final Call has performed in numerous venues, performing both covers and originals which can be found on Spotify. “Farewell” has been added to several playlists including one created by Alt Press and has over 32,000 plays on Spotify. 

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John Franklin is a 23-year-old West Caldwell, N.J. native currently living in Quincy, Mass. and a member of Quinnipiac University’s Class of 2019. Franklin has performed standup comedy and musical concerts across Jersey, Connecticut and Massachusetts. 

Franklin doesn’t have a manager. In addition to working full-time, he is also booking his own shows. Before the COVID-19 outbreak, it wasn’t that difficult to find places to perform in his hometown as there were places that he would frequent that would reach back out to him. Leaving home is where it became tricky. 

“The real animal was moving up to Boston because I don’t know anything about the music scene in Massachusetts,” Franklin said. “I immediately, you start emailing, calling, texting; going to bars and sitting there, going to venues and sitting there just taking your lumps and being like, ‘hey I’m a musician, I’m looking for a place to play.’”

Franklin has performed numerous covers during his shows, including Van Morrison’s “Brown Eyed Girl” and “Valerie” by The Zutons. He also performs originals which can be found on Spotify

Franklin was essentially starting from scratch after his move to Mass., and COVID-19 isn’t doing him any favors. 

 

“A Hard Day’s Night”

The effect COVID-19 is having on the music industry stretches further than the performers. TinyOak Booking is a booking group run solely by Heather Timmons, located in Boston, Mass. 

Timmons is the only employee, so she hasn’t had to have the tough conversation of laying somebody off as many other companies have had to do. However, she is still feeling the sting from the shutdowns. 

With no shows, Timmons hasn’t had any income since early March. To combat the loss of income, she’s had to get creative. 


TinyOak Booking merch from  its website .

TinyOak Booking merch from its website.

“I just launched a t-shirt preorder,” Timmons said. “Once people have ordered, that’s how I will be hopefully making some money.”

Holly Berlin is the owner and proprietor of Singers Karaoke Club in Syracuse, N.Y. Like Timmons, Berlin and her 13 employees are now unemployed. While she has funds in the bank to support Singers, if the shutdown lasts longer than five months, she would have to close down permanently. 

But even if Singers is able to reopen before the five-month mark, there is fear that the damage caused by COVID-19 will be detrimental to the karaoke club beyond the shutdowns.

“I am trying to be positive, but I fear that this will have a lasting effect on my business even if we are able to re-open,” Berlin said via email. “We are a karaoke club so people are using microphones every minute that we are open. I am worried that people won’t want to use a microphone after someone else, even if we were to spray it with Lysol after every use.”

The natural codependency between artist, venue and agent isn’t lost on Franklin.

“It’s a trickle down effect,” Franklin said. “I’ll never stop being able to play music, right, but without musicians, those places lose a ton of business.”

“Moneytalks”

With people being encouraged to stay in their homes, the economy has taken a hit. 

“(COVID-19) brought everything to a halt,” said Chris Ball, director of the Central European Institute and associate professor of economics at Quinnipiac University. “There’s sort of two effects. One on the demand side, people quit going out and buying certain things… people just carefully go out, purchase things on stores that cut back the demand side.

While there is a great effect on the demand side, Ball feels that the greater effect comes on the supply side.

“Probably the bigger effect is actually on the supply side where everybody’s told to stay home,” Ball said. “So that cuts back the labor to all of the businesses which means they can’t make as much stuff, which means businesses can’t sell things, which means they can’t earn money, which means they can’t pay their employees. So it’s a vicious cycle that cuts back on both the demand and the supply side of the market at once.”

While performers can’t perform in person for their fans anymore, they’ve gotten creative with figuring out ways to entertain their fans. Many utilize Instagram Live to put on shows from the comfort of their own homes. 

Despite this switch in venue, Franklin doesn’t think that it will have a long-term impact and deter performers from going out on tour once normalcy returns. 

“The thrill of performing in front of a crowd, whether it’s three people, 300 people or 3 million people far outweighs seeing a number on a screen and only seeing yourself,” Franklin said. “It’s not like a regular industry where like these jobs are gonna realize who’s essential and non essential… the future of music will always need crowds.”


Interior still shot of Singers taken from a video by  Wasim Ahmad

Interior still shot of Singers taken from a video by Wasim Ahmad

Acts don’t just get booked because they’re available for a date. A lot of research goes into whether having a certain act perform will be beneficial for the venue. Now that a lot of artists are taking their talents to social media, it is more valuable than ever for researching bands. 

 

The venue can see how many likes a performer is getting on Facebook, how many followers they have on Instagram and Twitter and how many views they’re getting on YouTube. However, that’s not the only aspect venues look at.

 

“There’s a lot of different ways you research the band,” said Brian Phelps, owner of Toad’s Place in New Haven. “Some of the bands have been through in the past and so you have some history with them. So you can look at that and see what they’ve done since the last time they came through.”


Stage-view at Toad’s Place in New Haven | Photo by Sean Raggio

Stage-view at Toad’s Place in New Haven | Photo by Sean Raggio

Another way is to see if radio stations have been playing their music. 

When Toad’s Place isn’t holding concerts, it’s a club for those in the Greater New Haven area and beyond. Quinnipiac senior business management major Steven McAvoy has been to Toad’s both as a club and for a show and he appreciates its familiarity on both occasions.

 

“I’ve been to concerts in New York City, a lot like some, like the Highland Ballroom, other places like that,” McAvoy said. “…it’s kind of like mosh pit seating where it’s you all just kind of file in and you do it. I love that.” 

“Move Along”

So what needs to happen to get music fans, like Steve, and artists like John and Greg back to what they love? 

Director of the Bandier Program for the Recording and Entertainment Industries at Syracuse and former editorial director for Billboard, Bill Werde, can see three things happening over the next 12 months that can shed light as to when normalcy will return. 

“One, we’re going to develop a lot more clarity about this virus, and when, from a health perspective, it’s going to be safe to gather in large groups again,” Werde said. “Two, we’re gonna have a lot more data about the economy… is it going to be able to afford people disposable income so they can go to concerts and continue to pay for streaming music. Three, the presidential election which could deeply affect both of those first two items.”

While it’s unknown when things will start to head back to normal, “normal” will not exactly be what it used to be. 

“I think that parts of this year will return to normalcy, but I don’t think it will ever be completely normal this year,” Timmons said. “I think shows will resume, and places will reopen, and things will be happening, but it won’t be in the same way as before.”

One of the biggest factors is how long quarantine is in effect. Once people can return to work, the economy will start to balance out and with less people isolating, the live-music scene can get back up and running. 

“I expect by fall, if people are pretty much back to normal, most businesses will be up and running pretty well and we should look mostly like our normal autonomy,” Ball said. “I don’t think we’ll stay in this bad recession, in this very bad situation more than another couple of weeks.”


Final Call performing. | Photo by Matt Fede

Final Call performing. | Photo by Matt Fede

Despite having to halt plans for summer shows, Diem is optimistic about Final Call being able to get back on stage at the tail-end of summer and into the fall. When the music industry gets knocked down, it doesn’t stay down for long, according to Werde. 

“The good news is everything bounces back,” Werde said. “The culture’s a pendulum, and it’s always swinging.”

QU softball players staying in shape during quarantine

The United States is in the thick of the COVID-19 pandemic, leaving Americans with a world that is unlike anything this generation has seen before. Public gatherings are prohibited, which means no sports, but what does that mean for the athletes? 

On March 12, the NCAA cancelled its remaining sports seasons due to the virus, followed by Quinnipiac closing university housing on March 18. Along with that, more of society began to shut down. Including gyms.

For these collegiate athletes, their respective seasons are over. But for many, there is still a lot of sport left to play throughout the rest of their careers. Many of them are finding ways to keep in shape despite losing all the resources once at their fingertips.

One place to go to find inspiration for a workout? Their fingertips. 

“Through Instagram my friend Brooklyn, who’s one of my teammates, she posted a workout she did and tagged a couple of us teammates,” sophomore second baseman for the Quinnipiac softball team Bridget Nasir said. “We’re like, ‘oh, let me see you do it, like you do this exercise do this workout like it’s really good.’ So we kind of stay entertained like that and connected through that.”

Sharing workouts using social media and trading workout ideas is key for athletes who now have limited resources at their disposal. 

For many collegiate athletes, odds are they aren’t going to have a home gym stocked with all the equipment that they would be having at a regular gym or back at their facilities on campus, so they have to improvise. 

Utilizing what’s available in the app store has helped sophomore catcher Lo Yarnall. Yarnall doesn’t have access to weights at home, and the Peloton app has been her go-to. 

“Running audios, bodyweight exercises, it’s just stuff that you can do at home,” Yarnall said. “That’s easy. On my off days I do yoga or something. It’s just basically to make sure I’m moving every day.”

The players aren’t the only ones putting in work during this newly extended offseason. Coaches, such as strength and conditioning coach Megan “Coach Meg” Kudrick.

“We made a point as a staff to reach out to all of our teams, offering our support for whatever they needed,” Kudrick said. “We sent out some workouts just in case. Our thought is, you know, that’s an outlet for a lot of people, especially athletes, to be able to move and train and do something.”

Yarnall uses working out and exercise as a healthy escape, and says that now she can use this time to focus on what aspects of working out she finds work best for her. 

“I guess it’s weird because we’re all trying to fill that gap,” Yarnall said. “We kind of rely on exercise to clear our minds and let us calm down and usually we get like four hours of it a day, but now that we don’t, it’s like we’re trying to fill that gap with whatever we can do.”

Kudrick interned with Quinnipiac from August to December, 2015 before coming on full-time in March, 2016. She works with Quinnipiac’s softball, baseball, track and field, men’s and women’s cross country, men’s soccer and acrobatics and tumbling teams. Previously working with tennis and golf until 2018.

Some of the workouts include a “one by twenty” program and a full body isometric program that can be completed without any equipment, making it good for those who don’t have equipment available at home. 

Something making this more difficult on Kudruck is that this graduating senior class was her first class as a full-time member of Quinnipiac Athletics. 

“It’s tough, I’ll be honest,” Kudrick said. “I mean I know it’s tougher for the sport coaches and for the athletes… to see it abruptly come to a stop and they don’t get to see all the hard work they put in all year. You don’t get to see them in their element and see them succeed and all the improvements that they’ve made and it’s really unfortunate.”

While utilizing these workouts can help give the athletes a sense of normalcy, it just isn’t the same as being in-season and really training hard with your team. 

“You put it in a good word, surreal,” Nasir said. “I kind of wake up and I’m like ‘I shouldn’t be here,

I shouldn’t be in California, I should be playing.’ I think the worst is on weekends. Saturdays and Sundays so I’m like ‘dang I should be playing a game right now.’ I just miss it a lot…it breaks my heart for the seniors.”

It is unknown when the sporting world will get back on track, but these athletes are staying dedicated to ensure that when it does, they’re ready. 

Entertainment in the closed world

By Sean Raggio

It may seem as though the world has come to a standstill, but despite the end of sports, public gatherings and the need to distance ourselves from each other, the entertainment world lives on. 

Cinephiles everywhere will be able to rejoice as several film studios will be releasing movies early for streaming. 

Sony Pictures, Warner Bros. Pictures, Universal Pictures, Disney and Lionsgate are among others releasing their films throughout March and into April. 

“Given the rapidly evolving and unprecedented changes to consumers’ daily lives during this difficult time, the company felt that now was the right time to provide this option in the home  as well as in theaters,” NBCUniversal said in a statement. 

Some of these movies include “Frozen II,” “Bloodshot,” “The Hunt” and “I Still Believe,” among others. 


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On top of that, Amazon has launched Prime Video Cinema. It allows consumers to buy or rent movies that would otherwise only be available at the theatres. The titles are only available for 48 hours to rent. 

“This is the first time a major Hollywood studio has made a break from the traditional movie release cycle,” said Steven Musil in his CNET article. “Movies usually spend upward of six months in theaters before they move on to predetermined dates for release on other formats, such as digital downloads and rentals, DVDs and, later, TV and streaming.”

While we’ve already gone over a week without mainstream sports, members of the hockey community have taken time to reach out to and connect with their communities. 


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This past Wednesday, March 18, Stanley Cup champion, and current Tampa Bay Lightning forward Pat Maroon tweeted to fans that he was going live the following night. He even said he may have people join him, they just had to bring wine. 

On Sunday, March 22, Mike Grinnell, producer of Barstool Sports’ Spittin’ Chiclets podcast, went live on Instagram for a Q&A with fans prior to editing an episode. 

Musicians are still putting out music despite the inability to tour for the foreseeable future. Childish Gambino and The Weeknd both dropped albums this past week. 

The releases mark the first full-length albums released by either artist since 2016. The Weeknd previously released an EP, “My Dear Melancholy,” in 2018. 

While you can’t go and see a concert, you may be able to see one from the comfort of your own couch. Bandsintown has launched a new feature to support artists putting on performances for their fans online. 

“The concert notification service can now push out a ‘watch live’ notification when musicians are live-streaming shows,” said Dani Deahl in her article from The Verge. “These notifications will appear on Bandsintown, along with Facebook pages, Instagram Stories, and other places that surface Bandsintown listings.”

Despite these unusual times, entertainers are still finding ways to connect with and entertain their fans, giving them a taste of normalcy. 

‘On The Rocks’ plans for more events after successful first week

On the Rocks opened its doors to the Quinnipiac community this past weekend with two events, followed up by a third one this past Wednesday night. 

The weekend kicked off with a ribbon cutting ceremony on Friday, Feb. 28, followed by an event on Saturday evening for students 21 and older to watch the Quinnipiac vs. Yale men’s ice hockey game.


A look inside ‘On The Rocks’ as comedian Shane Smith performs. Photo credit: Sean Raggio

A look inside ‘On The Rocks’ as comedian Shane Smith performs. Photo credit: Sean Raggio

“I thought it went really well,” third-year management major Glenn Adams said. “I thought it was very well managed, and it was really easy for people to get in and out, and for people to get drinks. It was a great opening night experience. I think it is really important because it’s not just opening a pub, it’s opening a programming space that is at times open to the whole student body.” 

With the pub being a brand new addition to the campus, it’s safe to say that there was a lot of excitement built up. 


Sliders, nachos, quesadillas, and more are available at On The Rocks. Alcohol is served at particular events. Photo credit: Kailee Heffler

Sliders, nachos, quesadillas, and more are available at On The Rocks. Alcohol is served at particular events. Photo credit: Kailee Heffler

“The reason I think there’s a lot of buzz around it, I want to believe, it’s because students were involved in the process,” Director of Campus Life for Student Centers and Student Involvement Erin Provistalis said. “This was something that they really were vocal about, and they believed in, and they pushed for and found ways to show that there was a need for.”

Wednesday, March 4 was the first opportunity since its opening that all students could experience an event at On the Rocks. Comedian Shayne Smith performed with Katie Boyle as an opening act. 

The event had food such as quesadillas, pretzels, loaded tater tots and chicken wings. No alcohol was served at the event. Students were able to play billiards and shuffleboard while the comedians were performing. 

“It was a great turnout, more than we were expecting,” On The Rocks manager Danielle Herman said. “I know people really wanted the food, and a lot of people ended up staying. We counted around 80 people. I like how it was an event to incorporate people who are under 21.”


On The Rocks was filled during its grand opening. Photo credits: Kailee Heffler

On The Rocks was filled during its grand opening. Photo credits: Kailee Heffler

Several of the remaining events in March will be centered around March Madness, according to Provistalis. In addition, On the Rocks will be open for both the men’s and women’s Final Four. 

With all of the hype around On the Rocks prior to its opening, students had expectations going into its opening. 

“I think also the layout … they put a lot more into it than we thought they were going to, the TVs were very nice,” Adams said. “The pool table, shuffleboard area…it just screamed school spirit. I think in the realm of spirit and tradition, it definitely exceeded my expectations.”

Having a pub on campus can also improve the safety of students when they decide to go out on weekends, which is an important factor for some when considering plans for a night out. 

“I think that the biggest thing is the fact that people are now able to go somewhere and socially drink on campus,” senior Steven McAvoy said. “It isn’t like going to New Haven and forcing yourself to get an Uber and other things like that.”

While On the Rocks is located on the York Hill campus, it isn’t exclusively for Quinnipiac students. 

“It’s a space where the community can come together,” Provistalis said. “Whether that’s students or faculty, staff, alumni, families…it’s a gathering place and it feels like that.”

On the Rocks will have five more events throughout March, and will have an April event schedule being released following spring break. 

While On the Rocks is currently only open during specific events, the long-term goal is for standard business hours to come into effect in the fall. 

The pub can be found on Instagram @ontherocksqu .