Entries tagged with "guitar"

Tuesday 8 July 2008

Making arrangements

A successful few days in the studio

Over the past couple of weeks J and I have spent another few days in the studio, without playing a note. Yes, it’s session-player time. In particular, we’ve now got:
Part of the trumpet score for "Mute"

  • electric guitar (a Dano 12-string jangle on “Invincible” and some sweet swell-pedal action on “Still Life”) courtesy of Dominic;
  • more drums and percussion by our engineer/producer Don
  • violin on “To The Nines” by Andrea and more on the way for “Aphrodite”;
  • crazy undersea bowed-string noises and vocalizing on “Siren” from Rami
  • organ, piano and harpsichord, courtesy of Richie; and
  • a suitably over-the-top trumpet section on “Mute” all played by Stefan.

Who knew just sitting and listening could be so much work? We’ve learned a lot about listening, and coming up with musical ideas on the fly, not to mention guiding other people into realizing those ideas. It’s a fun challenge, communicating musical concepts to other people through words, singing, vocal noises, and occasionally, actually writing things down.

The whole trumpet score for "Mute" Julian had always had a trumpet melody in mind for the bridge on “Mute”, and wanted big, bold chords for the ending. I added a harmony to the bridge, and started fleshing out the “chords” idea with a swingy rhythmic motif… and then realized I was going to have to write the thing out. I’d composed the part in Logic, and couldn’t get the program’s “Score” view to output anything that made any sense. So I summoned up every last bit of music theory I’d ever taken, and wrote the whole thing out. Took a couple of late nights, and I worried that it was illegible, but our players approved.

Here’s the bridge from the demo version, with lovely synthesized trumpets: Mute (trumpet demo, 880k)

Not everything we did could be scored, of course, but regardless, we found it really, really helps at least to have a clear idea of what you’re after before you start. When Rami came by to play, bringing with her an Iner Souster creation called “Fat Bob”, we didn’t have parts written out - Bob, having one string and no fingerboard, isn’t particularly suited to playing melodies, anyway - but I think we had a strong idea of the texture and atmosphere we were after. J quickly joined in, offering images of a ship breaking apart at sea, the creaking of the rigging, the cracking of the timbers and the crashing of the waves. I’m really looking forward to sifting through the resulting noises and building them up into a soundscape.

Lots more to go: more drums, keyboards, backing vocals, violin and percussion - not to mention mixing and mastering. But it’s all starting to come together nicely.

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Friday 29 September 2006

Five musical moments

Sitting in a darkened theatre watching Bring On The Night, which follows Sting and collaborators through the recording of and tour for Dream of the Blue Turtles. (I’m not a huge fan, especially when it comes to his lyrics, but I like a lot of his tunes.) Something about that outlandish key change at the top of the chorus, with one of his trademark melodies swooping over it just sent chills down my spine. It’s like the whole song’s just sailed over a cliff and soared up into a pitch-black sky.

La Mer by Debussy, I don’t remember the conductor or orchestra - I think it was a Time/Life box set we got at a library sale. There’s a moment when the horns rise up, lifting a single violin note with them like a wave cresting. No vibrato on this version, just a pure, sweet little zing! - perfect.

The Pixies, “Vamos”. The Surfer Rosa version. While the rest of the band chugs along frantically, Joey Santiago’s guitar, possessed by the insane ghost of a police siren, suddenly sits bolt upright and goes: vipvipvupvipvupvipvipBOAINNNNGGGgggg. (New list: favorite weird guitar noises.)

XTC, “New Town Animal In A Furnished Cage”. Near the end, Andy Partridge just lets out this scream. Not a long, drawn out holler, but a pinched, neurotic, can’t-keep-it-in-can’t-let-it-out scream that’s cut off about two microseconds after it starts. “AA!” And then he goes into the chorus. (Compare to Björk’s longer, trumpet-dive scream on “I Miss You”.)

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Friday 30 June 2006

“Piltdown”

Cubase screen during recordingThe song-a-day revival continues! (It’s an occasional project / working method I started a couple years ago - here’s the little manifesto-to-myself that I wrote back then.)

Feels good to be back in the saddle. Here’s the latest piece, working title “Piltdown”. Curious little one minute boogie.

2006_0629_piltdown.mp3 (1.1 megs)

Working order: drum loop - guitar - bass - lyrics/vocals - new drums. The guitar playing is definitely very David Byrne.

I haven’t been letting myself get away with just sketching in “la la la” melodies instead of lyrics. And I notice my subject matter (if you can call it that) is shifting a little bit too… though some themes continue to run through almost all my songs.

Also, from earlier in the week, a little snippet of me messing with the Filter Queen, using it on everything in sight:

2006_0626_glimmers.mp3 (700 k)

Today’s bon mot — “Like a fish in the headlights.”

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