January is known as a wasteland in the entertainment business.  After New Year's Eve, the attendance at bars and music venues drops off - the Christmas bills hit in January and inhibit the impulse to party, I guess.  Mr. G and the Mystery Band tried to break through these doldrums on Friday the 13th with our first gig as headliner at the Morseland Cafe.  It was a dead scene.
The Morseland is a hipster joint in the Rogers Park neighborhood in Chicago.  It is a nice room with a large stage and a huge sound system/DJ booth.  The food they serve is outstanding and the servers/bartenders are all young and friendly.  We hit the stage at about 10p.m.; the crowd was pretty small.  It didn't get much bigger as the night progressed.  We played our hearts out, but the crowd didn't respond much.  It is a little deflating to play a high-energy piece through to a big finish and hear no response from the house.  I guess this counts as a lesson in humility for me.  We still had fun, but we could have had as much fun playing in my basement.
A night like last Friday reminds me that it is a good thing that blues harp is my hobby, not my vocation.  I ended up paying the band with my own money - another night of losing money on a gig. It is close to impossible to make a living as a blues harmonica player - there might be 100 guys in the world that survive on a blues harmonica player's wages.  There is an old joke - "Q: What is the difference between a blues harp player and a large pizza? A:  A large pizza can feed a family of four." 
Ha.
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