I'm afraid I'm gonna have to go with a hard and well-defined rule on that one.
"Do not stage dive at a wake. Even an Irish wake."
I've played an Irish wake. I lived in Cambridge (right across the river and usually considered "Boston" unless you're a snob).
Stage diving might have been the only thing that was too far.
I think we played like one set and then we had people going home to get their instruments, random people on the stage, no more "sets" - just a mishmash of music, and I'm not sure if it was exactly the next morning when we all left or if we left a day after that. I've asked and none of us are sure.
I'm afraid I'm gonna have to go with a hard and well-defined rule on that one.
"Do not stage dive at a wake. Even an Irish wake."
I've played an Irish wake. I lived in Cambridge (right across the river and usually considered "Boston" unless you're a snob).
Stage diving might have been the only thing that was too far.
I think we played like one set and then we had people going home to get their instruments, random people on the stage, no more "sets" - just a mishmash of music, and I'm not sure if it was exactly the next morning when we all left or if we left a day after that. I've asked and none of us are sure.
(post is archived)