Before spending money and sweat equity on this project, you would be well-advised to check what your competition is doing at the venues in your area you are considering working at since your end goal is to play out.

While BIAB is a good tool for a lot of purposes and would certainly do well for backing tracks, playing with a "canned band" gets a mixed response in a lot of venues. If there are others working with backing tracks in your area at the venues you want to play at, more power to you. That said, backing tracks will get you laughed out of most venues in my area (which has a surfeit of world-class musicians living and gigging locally). Before getting too heavily invested in backing tracks, make sure they're not going to hinder more than help you in pursuing the end goal.

Take this advice with a grain of salt, but I'm coming up on a 45th anniversary of making music for a living and I reckon that entitles me to an opinion on the subject. As an aside, the only gear I use for 95% of my gigs are a guitar, a mandolin, a dobro and a bouzouki and I usually sing/play unamplified unless there are more than 100 people in the crowd. Your mileage may vary.

Cheers,

Ed


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"We know what we are, but not what we may be"

- Noted bluesman Blind Will Shakespeare
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