Je ne parlez Francaise.
Thursday, March 19, 2009
Monday, March 09, 2009
Sunday 8th March 2009
Spent the night piecing together a redux version of Hal, using Casio tone keys on Amubulance setting, and some additional tom percussion added earlier in the week.
Saturday, March 07, 2009
Wednesday, March 04, 2009
Sunday 1st March 2009
Somebody won a raffle at the Star & Shadow Cinema the other week, and their prize was an exclusive song recorded by Death of a Salesman. The gentleman was called Hal, a word which fast became the basis of much of the lyrical content of the piece.
It was shaping up nicely last night, until the Mac froze and I lost almost two hours' worth of editing. Attempts today to recapture these details have proved fruitless. It's extremely difficult to chase a lost take; better to leave it a while and then come at it with a different approach. Often the end result is better than the original would have been, though to be honest in this case I would have preferred the machine not to have crashed.
It was shaping up nicely last night, until the Mac froze and I lost almost two hours' worth of editing. Attempts today to recapture these details have proved fruitless. It's extremely difficult to chase a lost take; better to leave it a while and then come at it with a different approach. Often the end result is better than the original would have been, though to be honest in this case I would have preferred the machine not to have crashed.
Tuesday 4th March 2009
There has been much gnashing of teeth here at Attorney Towers about whether to stick with the old recordings: they capture something fresh and special, but often contain a lot of mistakes and nasty bits too. I know now that John, You Saved My Life and Cash Mason will use the original mp3s, with other parts added to that, so as to preserve the initial take.
This Broken Machine would probably join these two in that category, were it not for a later version containing inspired Shille bass and some very odd Kaoss guitar. Upon playback tonight, it was decided to go with the more recent take. We'll see how it goes; the harmonica section will decide it for certain.
Tuesday 4th March 2009
First aired as a Steve: From Fragment song, Chino Necker was a frenetic gallop of a thing, lurching about with Brian Magee's depraved guitar lines fighting with The OC-inspired lyrics and Fleming's "about the beat" drumming.
I maintained it was too good a song to leave with S:FF, and pursuaded Andy to commit to tape his much more muted bass version. Again, this was first tracked several years ago as part of a college project, resulting in a very stiff and overly-edited take. The tempo has since come down a few notches, with a single coherent bass line recorded with vocals at the same time.
The idea here is to make it as different as possible to the S:FF version; less a little sister and more of a incestuous cousin, if you will. There is loose talk of beats, "depraved, expensive sounding" synth and "techno influences". I intend the vocal to be very hushed and croaky, with mathematical beats that are all wrong, but still make the cut anyway. The rest is very much up in the air... tonight we tracked a good click version, but Andy wants another swipe at it using Shin Jin Rui's bass amp instead of the DI. Personally, I think the clinical, percussive tone of the bass going straight into the desk may well be the exact sound we're looking for. We'll see.
I still hold out hope that S:FF will regroup for an afternoon sometime in the future and throw down a proper version of this song, in all its spittle-soaked, breathless glory. In the meantime, the upstart continues to take shape.
I maintained it was too good a song to leave with S:FF, and pursuaded Andy to commit to tape his much more muted bass version. Again, this was first tracked several years ago as part of a college project, resulting in a very stiff and overly-edited take. The tempo has since come down a few notches, with a single coherent bass line recorded with vocals at the same time.
The idea here is to make it as different as possible to the S:FF version; less a little sister and more of a incestuous cousin, if you will. There is loose talk of beats, "depraved, expensive sounding" synth and "techno influences". I intend the vocal to be very hushed and croaky, with mathematical beats that are all wrong, but still make the cut anyway. The rest is very much up in the air... tonight we tracked a good click version, but Andy wants another swipe at it using Shin Jin Rui's bass amp instead of the DI. Personally, I think the clinical, percussive tone of the bass going straight into the desk may well be the exact sound we're looking for. We'll see.
I still hold out hope that S:FF will regroup for an afternoon sometime in the future and throw down a proper version of this song, in all its spittle-soaked, breathless glory. In the meantime, the upstart continues to take shape.
Sunday 22nd February 2009
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