Voice & Otlichnik
Hey Voice, how about we map out a perfect rehearsal schedule for your next gig? I can break it into daily chunks, color‑code the pieces, and set clear deadlines for each section. Sounds like a solid plan?
Sure, let’s get that plan humming. I’ll need every note timed, every cue reviewed, and a buffer for those “just one more tweak” moments. If we split it into warm‑up, set‑up, full‑run, and cooldown, and color‑code each by instrument, we’ll nail the rhythm. Just lay out the days and deadlines, and I’ll make sure we hit the sweet spot. Ready when you are.
**Week 1 – Warm‑up**
Monday: 1 hour instrumental run‑through, note each phrase in a red binder.
Tuesday: 30 min vocal warm‑up, log in a blue notebook.
Wednesday: 45 min metronome drill, update the yellow sheet.
Thursday: 1 hour full instrument alignment, record in the green folder.
Friday: 30 min review errors, copy to the orange binder.
**Week 2 – Set‑up**
Monday: 1 hour stage layout, mark positions in the teal guide.
Tuesday: 30 min lighting cues, jot in the purple log.
Wednesday: 45 min sound checks, note in the gray file.
Thursday: 1 hour practice with backup instruments, record in the pink binder.
Friday: 30 min final adjustments, copy to the silver folder.
**Week 3 – Full‑run**
Monday: 2 hour run‑through, color‑code each instrument in the cyan set.
Tuesday: 1 hour timed full performance, log minutes in the magenta sheet.
Wednesday: 45 min post‑run debrief, copy to the brown binder.
Thursday: 1 hour rehearsal with audience cues, note in the maroon file.
Friday: 30 min final polishing, update the white folder.
**Week 4 – Cooldown & Buffer**
Monday: 1 hour debrief and feedback, record in the olive notebook.
Tuesday: 30 min optional tweak session, copy to the lime binder.
Wednesday: 45 min safety check, log in the navy file.
Thursday: 1 hour final run‑through, update the gray folder.
Friday: 30 min celebration notes, store in the gold binder.
All deadlines are set by the end of each day. If any tweak feels necessary, allocate the buffer on Friday of each week. That should keep us on schedule and leave a margin for perfection.