Friday, October 09, 2009

Lost And Found Two

I've been going through my milk crates full of tapes, looking for some very specific recordings of my first band. So far, I've had no luck.

I did find a lot of music that really was life-changing when I was an alterna-teen (actually some of it predated that phase). One that I found was really great for me circa late 1989: Death's Scream Bloody Gore. I always thought that the lyrics on "Zombie Ritual" were really silly, but Chuck Schuldiner was a great player (RIP), and to a 14-year-old kid, it was cool:



And tonight, I'm going to a folk show....unbelievable.

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Wednesday, October 07, 2009

Lost And Found One


I've been going through milk crates of cassettes and long-lost folders of jpgs. It's amazing to me that I hang on to some stuff like I do. When the FBI confiscates my PC, I'll have some explaining to do.
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Now playing: The Mighty Rime - Aviary Aviator

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Tuesday, August 04, 2009

I Lied.

We actually recorded eight songs last Tuesday. I thought that it was seven, but, as a bass player, I rarely have to count past six, and usually four. So, I can't count to eight--oh well.

I got the rough mix today and it's lacking in several areas (when listened to on my bass-infested computer and car--on the 1970s Sansui, I can EQ the badness away). I have to keep in mind that these are mere demos and far from perfect:
  • The songwriting and arrangements really work, though. We did a good job with Ross' songs. I'm so proud of us.
  • If we can tighten up the bass track's low end and carefully tweak the midrange, we'll be set. I think that if I did a DI track and we used an in-phase room mic for the bass a way off, it'll fix my floppiness, which is the worst part of all of this (still not playing like I need to for a three piece, perhaps). Maybe some crap was done to the bass track unbeknownst to me--Greg did it right with a DI and a room mic on the 8x10" moderately loud with a touch of limiting on the DI (the UA 1176 plug in rocks). Maybe I just need to record with a different setup entirely.
  • The drums weren't terrible, but again, the low end is really loose. There's virtually no crispness on the cymbals. I'd like to hear more of that. I want the snare to crack a little more, too. The percussion just ain't quite as tight-sounding as I'd like.
  • The guitar actually sounds much better than I thought it would after listening to the playback. It could use a little bit more presence, but basically, it's cool.
  • The vocals actually are great, and that's what I think that the magical one was shooting for. Sometimes, they sit in a weird place, but I think that's because it has a really smiley EQ curve (no mids) on everything else. There's a couple of places that ADT would be cool, or RDT as the case may be.
I'm trying to not let this bum me out at all. This isn't for real, after all. This is just for (fuckin') Ronny to figure out if the arrangements will work. I think that we've made impressive progress in two months. Mostly, it's production problems that have shown up, which is the whole point of pre-production, I think. Some of the improvisation is brilliant, though. I love it when things happen.

The new and improved 'Army of Stars' is really the best I've heard since Last Man on the Moon. Somehow, we managed a rock 'n' roll fine, which I didn't think that I had in me.

This new one is great, with a little bass-cut, man.

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Now playing: Ross Etherton and the Chariots of Judah - Goodnight Everybody (5:01)

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Wednesday, June 24, 2009

That Olde Timey Radio.

Ross asked me recently for a compilation of the old RC crap that I have. Unfortunately, I think that I have lost some tracks (notably, "AM Radio"), due to hard drive mortality. I still have the drives in question, but I'm not that motivated to pay someone to retrieve the data. Among the classic rock is surely crap that'll embarrass me. Once I'm dead, someone can recover that stuff.

I haven't listened to much RC for a long long lonely time (like Robert Plant). I still stand behind my playing, though. We were actually a passable band. I'd love to redo it all now, though, because we're all certainly better players now.

One of the coolest things that I heard tonight is the Local Shakedown live set from 11-21-2003 (I think that it was 2004, but that's what it's tagged as). I love that my brother recorded it off the air, so this recording has all the am boom box goodness:

1. Red Cloud - Town Without A Name (4:42)
2. Red Cloud - Kingdom Gonna Come (3:11)
3. Red Cloud - A Coming Storm (3:26)
4. Red Cloud - Last Night on Earth (5:04)

There's so much material, mistakes, out takes, and instrumental stuff (and some duplicates). It's quite a catalog that I've kept up. Once I give Ross this crap, I think that I'll delete it once and for all.

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