Posts Tagged ‘the family’

Oldies: Chinese Drop

Tuesday, 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.

1st music post - Dethroned

Monday, February 9th, 2009

Oldies: Dethroned, from the album, The Freak

Dethroned, the subject of my first post, is a song I wrote when I think I was 19. The lyrics were based on a poem I had written in high school, about a scenario wherein the position of “God” is filled by humans, and is something sought after until it is attained, at which point it loses its luster, the person falls from grace, and is thrown into a sea of fire with the rest of the previous applicants.

I recorded this song, I believe, with two different bands (could have been more, but alot of my studio dat tapes broke with age). Here is the first incarnation:

Dethroned, Version 1

This was recorded in, I believe, 1996 at Star Dog Studios, by the guitarist for a band that did lounge-style covers of songs like Smells Like Teen Spirit - the Austin Lounge Lizards. He was a pretty good producer, and the product would have turned out much better if we had had any money. But we didn’t, so we recorded the entire album live. That’s right, live. Which explains the mistakes everywhere and the extremely rushed feeling. Plus, you can only mix with the sounds you record, and, as such, this sounds pretty bad. But my backing band was sure well practiced.  Tim Trentham on guitar, Ted Vanscoy on bass, me on guitar and vocals.

and, the final version:

Dethroned, Version 2

Here, we were produced by the marvelous Lars Goransson in 1997, whom I continue to have the pleasure to record with to this day. As you can see, this is a much more professional sounding track. We had more money (bankrolled by the wonderful Tom Palmer on guitar), and thus more time. I added a backing track of piano to the mix, and generally, this is my favorite song off the album.

The music was recorded one day, with extra tracks recorded the next, including a good 6 hours for vocal tracks.  Lars was a very good producer, and pushed me to my limit on this recording (my limits weren’t all that hot a the time, but I did reach them, nonetheless).  Phil Hampsten on drums, Ted Vanscoy on bass, Tom Palmer on lead guitar, me on vocals, keys and guitar.