Oldies: Chinese Drop

June 2nd, 2009

So I wrote this song probably in 1996 or 1997, in my living room. I recall coming up with the chord progression while sitting on my couch, my bong on the coffee table, skipping class from college. The first time I recorded it was with planet zorn, tho I played it for many years prior to this recording with several bands.

The lyrics are a play on rhyming schemes. I wanted to have an artificial AAAAA BBBBB CCCCC rhyme scheme, where for each verse, there is only one repeating rhyme. The subject is a general paranoia song about fear of the Chinese and their nuclear missiles, their suppression of the Falun Gong, and their menacing of Taiwan. Next I move to the police and their fun practices with mace and smashing faces. Then I move on to the hypocrisy of America’s obsession with fame and giving passes to famous and/or powerful people.

The chorus was written as a separate song, which I cut up and inserted into the middle of this song. The song that the chorus comes from was a silly tuning song that was literally following the progression of the strings, which we played so everyone could tune without the normal choatic, boring tuning that most people do. The lyrics in the chorus refer to how hard it will be for us to get to the ideal, an impossibility.

I have played many, many roles in bands throughout my ‘career’: Keyboardist in my first band, and from there, bass player, singer/bass player, guitarist, singer/guitarist, singer, singer/keyboardist. I’ve played drums, as well as singer/drummer. One time I was a singer/guitarist/bassist, but we won’t get into that.

In this first track, it’s all guitars. I don’t like the production, but that is merely amateur work - and who plays the guitar solo? me, that’s who:

The next recording is from a live show:

You can hear me talking like the fool I normally am on stage at the beginning.

And finally, the latest version, recorded with a beautiful Wurlitzer organ for the main track:

This last track is definitely my favorite version. The third time is a charm, as they say.

wow, time flies by

May 19th, 2009

see title

going to france

April 13th, 2009

if you wanna know what’s goin on, we’re headed to the cote d azur, then to provence for a week.p-640-480-b9e3ec62-c209-4815-9fc0-1567d923ceb4.jpeg

Astroboy

March 23rd, 2009

Oldies: Solarx, Tomorrow

March 4th, 2009

So I formed a band called Solar X (yes, I have abysmal taste in band names.  so sue me.  you come up with a good band name), and we had a female singer, who goes by the name of Rola, a 19 year old Lebanese (I think) girl with a really nice voice.  The recording was made out at the bassist’s, (Brandon Simpson) house, which was out in the Hill Country southwest of Austin, recorded and produced by yours truly.  Which would explain the terrible production quality.  I learned not to produce my own music with this experience.  I still like the way the song turned out, nonetheless.  Chris McNelis, guitar, me, keys and backing vocals.

The chord progression for this song was written by Chris McNelis, and I wrote the vocal melody and lyrics.  It was the first really successful collaboration that I had done with any other musician up to that point.

Wear your heart upon your sleeve
Show the world what you believe

what’s your blog worth?

February 28th, 2009

Here’s something neat, I put my blog and my mom’s blog in this neat blog estimate tool, and look at the results:

http://lindamathieu.com


My blog is worth $14,113.50.
How much is your blog worth?

and here’s mine, which speaks volumes:

jasontemple.com


My blog is worth $0.00.
How much is your blog worth?

my visitor stats by browser this month

February 28th, 2009

I found this interesting. Look at Firefox’s huge percentage. I doubt this is representative of real world stats, but still. Wow.

Browsers Hits Percent
Firefox 7942 59.1 %
Unknown 3015 22.4 %
Explorer 1733 12.9 %
Safari 358 2.6 %
Mozilla 242 1.8 %
Opera 106 0.7 %
Netscape 19 0.1 %

Going Stateside this weekend

February 18th, 2009

Prolly not too many updates till next week.

Power Ranger Ninja Turtles

February 18th, 2009

The kids got out some costumes

Some nice French reviews of my album with Major Major

February 18th, 2009

A while ago, we posted our album on the internets in many various places. One of these places is Jamendo.com

(here)

We have had two really nice reviews from two French folks with extremely good taste in music. :)

Purely from a selfish, egotistical standpoint, I will post their terrible google translations here:

Review #1

That some albums on Jamendo unnoticed when they are simply great.
A lot of listening, but very little attraction for this album that deserve a visit.
So I’ll try to correct what seems to be an anomaly.
Do not turn around the bush, this album is one of the biggest success that you can find on Jamendo. The style does plaira perhaps not to some, but for the lover of pop rock, soft as well as more remuante, this album will be happy.
Want to gently let yourself be soothed by “Chinese” want to move, dance on “Satellite”. Every desire, Major Major proposes a solution. And the title “Satellite” really seems to be one of the best pieces of this style on Jamendo.
And then what else? That the singer is good? The recording is perfect? Instrumentation that is roaring, the effects impeccable, electronic sounds adequate interpretation brilliant?
Well … yes … let’s dare to say … this album is the bomb.
If you are skeptical about the quality of the albums on Jamendo, therefore listen this album and you will see, rather hear, that the best artists Jamendo worth the best commercial artists.
Indeed I would not be surprised if the majors are up to the Major Major. At least a foot from the nose, we should soon hear about it.
On this direction favorites …
On this night right direction …
Review #2
“You have a new message.”
I want Francis recommends an album, let’s listen.
I must say that this music is not necessarily my cup of tea, but I listen a little bit and I let me take this pop-rock sometimes a little soft, sometimes stirring but still excellently performed and sung all focused by a flawless production.
Voila I finally caught in the nets this artist wielding sounds right from the 80’s or other more contemporary electro or even a Hispanic atmosphere on “Party Till It Hurts” (Bravo the plow).

Conclusion: A good album, the superb job zikos, and a place in my favorites.

Respect.

Ras-Kal.

(Thanks Francis for sharing.)

So there you have it. Even people that don’t like our kind of music like this CD. What more needs to be said than that?