Re: Guitarists: Stop hurting the audience at small gigs
My last band was a little three piece blues rock outfit, we played bars and pubs in our local area, usually with just a vocal PA.
This meant the drummer (who could play at three volumes: completely quiet, really loud, and 'now I've warmed' up even louder) could not hear the bass or guitar very well, so we used to set up with the amps at the back, then the kit, then my vocal mic. I would then self sound check by standing in the middle of the room while we blasted through an intro, then the bass player would take over the sound checking while I sang the first verse or so and the sound check would be over by the middle eight.
Amp stands or wedging the front of the amp are great if you're cramped in and also miced up, but if the amp is the side fill, how do are the people out front supposed to hear you?
Guitarist can be terrible for standing in front of their amps, so the sound is hitting them at knee or waist height, and setting their volumes and tone for what they hear, in practices as well as gigs. This is a good article because it highlights the end result of not thinking about where sound is going. In reality you need to position your amp according to the room, equipment being used (PA etc), space and how loud everything else is.
On a side note: Even with a really loud drummer (mine was really, really loud), you do not need a 100w head. I used a 30w Orange Dual Terror through 1x12 and that worked fine
