Saturday, December 29, 2007

Post Birthday Wrap-Up

Ah, another birthday flies by. I spent the day "doing whatever I want" (per Melissa's orders,) and as such, I played Call of Duty 4 until my eyes bled. As evening approached, the urge to leave the house kicked in. We started off the evening in a cab headed to the Beveridge Place Pub, and on the way we hit a raccoon. Quite a start! Melissa, Matthew, Heidi, and I settled into the couches and ordered a pizza. The best thing about that place is that they encourage you to bring food in. Heck, they even have take-out menus in a binder for your perusal. Matt, Angela, and Mikey ambled in after the pizza arrived, and we had a swell evening of trivia and a couple of rounds of pool. We ended the evening sitting in the living room with Heidi, Matthew, Grandma, Annabel, Melissa, and I watching infomercials for Midnight Special and the TimeLife Soft Rock compilation until 2 in the morning. All in all, a fine time!



On the music front, Matthew and Angela provided me with a brand new lyric book for the new year. I had to rebind my old one recently, so the gift was very welcome. On the book front, I've just started reading " World War Z", which was gifted to me yesterday by Melissa. I enjoyed Max Brooks' previous zombie effort, and am hoping that this one will be great. God, I love zombie anything...





Thursday, December 27, 2007

Oasis and Brian Wilson in the same post... strange

Well, as the title suggests, I've been listening to Oasis pretty heavily lately. I guess the fact that they are in the studio and under a new contract is bringing them back in my mind. I have been spending some time re-evaluating Standing On the Shoulder of Giants(sic). The "sic" comes from the fact that the Newton quote is actually "... on the shoulders of giants.", but Noel was drunk when he saw it, and wrote it down as "Standing On the Shoulder of Giants - a bum title." That is pretty frickin' hilarious that he kept it. Anywho, I listened to that album twice this week, and today checked out Heathen Chemsitry again. All in all, they are somewhat lazy albums, but have aged better than I remembered them. SOtSoG is over-the-top psychedelic. I saw them on that tour, and remember them having a keyboard player bashing away at a mellotron in the background of the stage. I think it must have been Jay Darlington (of Kula Shaker... more on that later,) as he played on almost all of their albums including the one they are recording now. Aside from that ramble, listening with fresh ears, the album sounds pretty refreshing. Additionally, Heathen Chemistry comes off as very solid, but surprisingly, Noel is the worst songwriter on that effort. Normally I'm all about Noel, but Liam showed him up right proper on that album. Scary, that!

By the way, here's a shot from the proceedings for the 7th studio album by the lads. Notice a very Ringo-like Zak Starkey to the right:






Back to the aforementioned Kula Shaker, their album Strangefolk arrives on this side of the pond in a month or two, and I am damn excited. I downloaded their new EP from iTunes, and cannot wait until the LP comes out here. I'll be damned if I'm gonna order that import from Easy Street, ex-employee discount and all! I saw them at the Metro in Chicago on one of their last gigs before they broke up, and truly miss their increasingly cranky Harrisonesque music. To tie it all together, Jay Darlington no longer plays with them. That's a shame, as he really added a ton to their sound.


As for Mr. Wilson (Dennis!), he is going to be recording That Lucky Old Sun in January. I've yet to download a bootleg of the recent performance, but anything involving Wilson and Wondermints, and I'm sold. Yes, I admit that the Christmas album was almost total ass, but it still sounded great. To be honest, I would love a new Wondermints album, but they are taking one for the team by keeping Brian performing, writing, and healthy. I've yet to track down if they played on "Speed Turtle" with him, but I'm sure some trolling of the usual haunts will turn something up.


Doo-be-do, back to it...

Wednesday, December 26, 2007

One more thing...

"Now and Then" is still being buzzed about by Beatle bees online.

After Christmas Ramble

Howdy all! I trust that your December festivities went well. My Christmas was nice and relaxed. Melissa, Annabel, and I went to grandma's house to bury the baby in presents. First and foremost, the baby ended up with a beautiful red-lacquer toy piano. Sure, she's three months old, but one has to start somewhere. Something tells me that pops will be recording with it very soon... wait, he already has been recording with it. Musically, I ended up getting "Can't Buy Me Love : The Beatles, Britain, and America" along with "Inside the Music of Brian Wilson: The Songs, Sounds and Influences of the Beach Boys' Founding Genius". Both look great, and the Wilson book looks technical. Very technical. Since I enjoy that sort of thing (instead of the fluff pieces that most music related books are,) I am really excited to rip into that one. Also of note was the HD DVD add-on for my Xbox 360. I've yet to make it home to set it up, but it will soon be happily married to our HDTV.


Life has been very busy of late, but Melissa and I soldiered through the holidays and are looking toward having some downtime soon. I snuck in a some pre-Christmas music by doing some session work at Avast! 2, here in Seattle. They have a beautiful grand piano up there, and the cavernous studio-B is... well... cavernously huge. It's mind-blowingly fun playing on the piano that was used on the Shin's second record. It was my first time in that studio, and it is a beautiful, spacious, and relaxing place to record music.

Speaking of recording music, I promise that I will actually get out some demos of my newer material one of these days. I am trying to find the time to record the bevy of tunes rolling around in my head before I forget them. Here's a list of what's coming up soon (hopefully!)

- "Roadtrip to Disaster" Kind of a distillation of everything that I love about 60s music in one song. Curtains is working on this one for live use as we speak.

- "Selling the Future" A very simple folk-style song (possibly corrupted with synth drums... shudder) involving the parallel stories of (lonely) Sylvia and (broken businessman) Tim.

- "Dumb Angel" A pretty little song full of community-based hatred and such. Fun!

- "The Ballad of Molly McGinty" As it sounds from the title, it is a traditional shanty. It concerns a woman who supports the forgotten street children of her town by stripping! It involves such splendid topics as murder, homelessness, and pneumonia! Fun!

- "Sal & Ramona" Yes, I will finish this one this year, I promise. It involves the named old couple. It now has the addition of another song being stapled to the front of it, called, "Sal's Wild Years". The transition between the two is "The Man On the Flying Trapeze", as it fits well and is public domain. All in all, it will be around 10 minutes or so.

Other than that, not much is happening musically. We are on a nice vacation from practicing right now, but will be playing a show at the Seattle Art Museum on the 3rd of January. Come on down!


Saturday, December 22, 2007

Beatles Reunited (sort of)

Well, let's just dig in, shall we? You know, recently I have seen a synergistic batch of postings about the possibility of Paul and/or Ringo going back to "Now & Then" and finishing it up as a new Beatles track. This sent me back into a project that I have had brewing for about 7 years now. So many people have attempted to asuage that ache for "what-ifs" for the band. What if they never broke up? What if they kept working together throughout the 70s? What if Lennon was not murdered? What if John and Paul decided to go down to Saturday Night Live that one night? Well, I am mostly concerned with making 70s Beatles albums. Yeah, this is a total theoretical piece of bullshit, but you can do whatever you like with your time and CD burner, okay?

Years ago, at the dawn of the inter-web, I actually posted some of my track-lists and fake album covers. Upon hearing of the desire to release a new Beatles single, I started googling my old haunts. To my surprise, I found one of my old photo-shopped covers (uncredited... but hey, who really cares) on a website that was dedicated to what the author called "slider" Beatles. Riddle me what the heck that means! Anywhen, let me give you a brief background of how far I got the last time around: (n.b. my blog, my project, my rules. If you have to take issue with my track choices/chronology screw-ups, be nice and constructive. Remember that this is for FUN, and not part of the research for your mock online thesis about the logistical foibles and chronological failings of my pet-project. Okay, rant over...)

So, I combined the solo efforts of the lads, and came up with a few albums (at least out to 1975). They went like this:

1971- Instant Karma
1972- RAM
1973- Band On the Run
1974- Beatles Live in '74
1975- Call Me Back Again

I came up with covers for most of them (at least I could find covers for a few), and intended to finish out the 70s too. For the "live " one, I edited together live material from Wings Over America, Live in NY, and Concert for Bangladesh, cross-fading performances with applause. Yeah, Ringo only gets one song ("It Don't Come Easy" - flubbed lyrics and all), but that is what I had to work with. I listened to it the other day, and it still tickles me to hear Paul finish Yesterday as George yells out thank you and launches into Something. Yes, I ha(d)ve way too much time on my hands.

Short story long, I recently became obsessed with watching the Anthology outtake DVD and listening to the Lennon "Dakota" demos. So, I compiled the 1980s one-off "reunion" album When We Was Fab. What follow is the background story. Just read along and pretend with me...


It was early 1980, and The Beatles were recording again after a nearly 5 year hiatus (due to John's wish to raise Sean). The cautious mood in the studio made the recording difficult. Could they still do it? Were they still making relevant music? The questions were all put aside when John was murdered in December of the year. The unfinished album was to be called Return to Pepperland, but the idea was shelved in the horror-filled days after the loss of Lennon. The tapes lay unfinished until 1987, when inevitable rumblings in the press culminated in the leaking of the unreleased track, "Return to Pepperland". Critics and listeners were delighted at the "return to form" sound of the song. McCartney and Harrison were furious, and quickly assigned blame toward someone close to them. George Martin was not named outright, but the press speculated that either Martin, Geoff Emerick, or even Mark Lewisohn was to blame. Eventually, Lewisohn's tape-runners were fingered, as a glut of unreleased "bootleg" material was starting to appear in studio-quality on the new CD format. The band closed-ranks and fired/sued those involved. For the next 5 years, the project would sit untouched. The band rarely was seen in public, and a media crack-down was followed by almost total seclusion from the world by George.

In 1992, the band mended fences within the camp, and got to work on what would become the Anthology film. Unbeknownst to the public, work was secretly begun on finishing the aborted album. At this point, with the title track leaked, the three surviving Beatles decided to refocus on finishing the unfinished songs and re-recording some songs. Buoyed by the quality of Lennon's "comeback" material, it was decided that the album would be released along with the film. In an interview with Rolling Stone in 1998, McCartney recollects "... at the time, we were very careful about letting people into our "inner-circle". Having "Return to Pepperland" sneak out was just unfair... we were very hurt. I mean people were crazy for it, but we would never have released it at that point. It shook us up... thinking that, umm, we might want to go back and sift through the tapes again." In the same article, Ringo said "It was bloody-awful. George was in a state after that. It started to feel like we were back in the Let It Be days... all meetings and everything."

After deciding to actually finish one of the most legendary unreleased albums of all time, the decision to enlist a new producer was made. Purists still argue about the choice, but former ELO front-man, Jeff Lynne, was brought in to conduct the new sessions. Lynne was obviously excited to be working with his idols, and he raced to finish the album for the film's release date. The album, almost 15 years in the making, was released in 1995 to almost universal praise. A reworked and renamed double-album, When We Was Fab, was hailed as "the most mature rock album ever made." by SPIN Magazine. Rolling Stone praised it as "a complete and utter masterpiece. Every song speaks to the deep loss of the three survivors. The long shadow of Lennon is ever-present, looming at times like an ethereal guardian over the tracks." The album shot straight to number one, and was a shoe in for Grammy-time. George Martin, initially offended by being replaced with Lynne, did come back to produce a couple of tracks, and contribute a few string arrangements to the album. Notably, McCartney's "Here Today" and Harrison's "All Those Years Ago" were heartfelt tributes to their fallen partner. Lennon's haunting "Grow Old Along With Me" closes the album as a "hidden" track. The album can be summed up by this quote from the New York Times,

"There is an implied sadness in almost every song. Even the more upbeat numbers contain a nagging and resigned sense of disillusionment. More than a cranky reaction to the horrific loss of their friend and bandmate, When We Was Fab is an emotional touchstone for the entire generation who grew up with these four lads from Liverpool. It is as if they stand above the grave of 60s culture with shovels in hand, burying the dreams and naive illusions of youth. This is an album made by grown men wholly in touch with their lives as fathers, husbands, and celebrities, while being totally at peace with their own mythology. Above all, this is a fitting swansong to an astounding career."

Here is the track list:

Disc 1
1- The Song We Were Singing
2- (Just Like) Starting Over
3- This Is Love
4- Woman
5- Somedays

6- Free As A Bird
7- King of Broken Hearts
8- When We Was Fab
9- Watching The Wheels

Disc 2

1- Flaming Pie
2- Rising Sun
3- What In The World
4- Real Love
5- Calico Skies

6- Pisces Fish
7- All Those Years Ago
8- Here Today
9- Beautiful Night
Hidden Track - Grow Old Along With Me

Bootleggers were able to find some of the original demos/tracks from the 1980 sessions for the following songs:

Beautiful Night (demo)
Flaming Pie (demo)
Return to Pepperland (full studio version)
Woman (acoustic demo)
Watching the Wheels (acoustic demo)
Real Love (demo)
Free as a Bird (demo)







So, that is one project that you can try for yourself. Artwork to follow...

Let me know what you think!