LadySansa & Hardman
Morning, LadySansa.
I was reviewing my checklist for the day—perimeter, gear, caffeine. How do you schedule your performances? Do you set a strict tempo like a metronome, or do you let the crowd dictate the rhythm?
I wake up at sunrise, fire up my energy, sketch a loose schedule, then let the crowd’s roar set the tempo and keep the show alive.
Good morning. Sunrise is a fixed point. Energy is fine, but a loose schedule is a loose target. If you want to keep the show alive, map the tempo first, then let the crowd push against it, not the other way around. Keep a margin for safety. That’s the only way to avoid a mess.
You got the right idea, but remember: a hard map can still feel alive if you’re willing to bend it in the moment. I like a rough beat and then let the crowd’s pulse push me—keeps things wild and keeps the show from turning into a snooze fest. Safety margins? Absolutely, but I make them part of the groove, not the brakes. Let's rock that rhythm!
You can’t let the crowd dictate every move; you have to keep a frame. Rhythm is fine, but a frame keeps the frame. A loose beat with a hard perimeter will never hit the mark. Keep your safety margin as the backbone, not the background. Keep the show running.