This is the bento (lunch box) my wife made for me today. It looks like arroz con pollo, but it's actually dry curry. There were a pair of cherry tomatoes when I opened the box. Those were the first to go before I remembered to get out my new iPhone 5 and take my first photo with its built-in camera.

The weather was sunny and warm, so I ate outside near the Makuhari Messe convention center, thinking about what to do with the last 30 hours or so before hitting the stage. One thing is last minute invitations and reminders. Most of the Facebook invitations I sent seem to have gone unnoticed, as I thought.
Personal invitation is still the most effective technique, and the most fun. It lets me catch up with people about something that makes me happy. My enthusiasm usually enough to sell people on the idea, but it's even better if I have a flyer or something to give them…later. That is something I neglected, but the bass player used his iPad and photos of me from last week's jam session to make something. I then took that, and filled in some details. Distributing it to people I already invited seems like an effective way to get them to actually show.
Other things that have to be sorted before the down beat:
• Getting the bridge pickup on my G&L just a bit closer
• Breaking in the new strings
• Finalizing the set list
• Writing an ending out for my arrangement of Feel Like Makin' Love
• Printing out charts for guests sitting in
• Getting a video adapter for my computer for the visualizer
• Deciding what to wear and puffing out my afro
• Pick the bass player up from his hotel, and rehearse
• Find an inexpensive place to park the car
• RELAX, stop myself from overplaying, and let the music come through
I'm only going to use the G&L Legacy for one or two songs that need a whammy bar, but I could do the whole gig with it if my archtop failed. Could you do a whole gig with just a G&L? Which model?
For today's not G&L topic, how do you promote your shows (if no one is doing it for you)?