Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Songwriting Tips: Demo Clip #2

Here we continue to make something out of nothing.

Now that we are off to a good start the goal is to finish. It's crucial for me to get some momentum. To feel the wind at my back and move to sketching out the rough outline of the entire song. I need to work fast. Just record and go. I replace the perfect with the good enough. Works for me. In songwriting and in life it's your personal weirdness keep you from thinking in a straight line and progressing to the next step. I'm weird and so are you. Be proud. Learn how to get rolling.

And since I do not fancy myself a singer (not would Clapton or Jimi) I've added a solo guitar track here. This sounds like I'm going all Peter Frampton in my basement. But it's really my way of looking for vocal melodies. Otherwise I'd try to sing and it would just get ugly. The melodies flow from the guitar and I can go back and find the best and discard the rest. Like I said. Works for me.


Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Musical Inspiration: Fela!

I live in NY and I'm a big fan of the arts. However I rarely take in Broadway show. It’s expensive and it’s usually a musical. (Expensive + musicals = I’m not there.) But this past Friday night that’s exactly where I was. Sipping fine whiskey and taking in “Fela!” a big musical over at the Eugene O’Neill Theater.

“Fela!” is the Jay-Z and Will & Jada Pinkett-Smith production that transports you back to 1970s Nigeria to hang with Fela and his band of singing and dancing outlaws.
If you like funky live music and getting to see 1st hand, that some people in this world just get all of the talent, then this show’s for you. While I felt not worthy to call myself a musician afterward, Fela inspire me. It gave me a million ideas of how to make music better and be a better dancer too. J

And we a TMZ moment: Robbie Robertson member of The Band and Shutter Island music director, sat in front of us. Having played with Dylan and a million other legends, the guy’s Rock royalty. I only had one small complaint about Robbie: He fanned himself with the Playbill all through the 2nd act. I find celebrities doing things during slow parts of Broadway show, distracting. (Sorry Rob!)

But really there were not many slow parts in “Fela: “The Most Original Show on Broadway” as it’s billed. So if you’re in NY, have $250 and you call yourself a musician, get over to Fela it’s a lot of fun!

Sunday, February 21, 2010

Songwriting Tips: Demo Clip #1

My previous post strummed the parts out. I decided to slow in down and move the break up front. (IV, V, IV) Here's a sketch demo in Garage Band.


The final version will bear zero resemblance to this demo. No moody moody synths. More Strokes in attitude and Norah Jones in arrangement. The aim is to just get started and have fun.


That's all.


Saturday, February 20, 2010

New Songwriting Project Video

Thought I'd show you start to finish how I write a song arrange the song and record it. Start to finish. Song is in A. Chords so far are A D E (I,IV, V) with the chorus F#mi E, D, A (VI,V,IV,I)

Stay tuned to see it unfold and wrap up.

Thursday, February 18, 2010

Songwriting Tips on How to End a Song

You only get one shot at a first impression? In music you need to make a fist AND a last impression.

Everyone loves a big finish. Start big. And end big. Nowhere is this idea truer than in music. Great endings leave you wanting more. But as I pointed out in my last post starling’s hard. But finishing? That’s harder!

Finishing is actually so difficult that the band Spoon, recently released song that actually has no ending. The thing ends so abruptly you’d think your iPod ear buds got yanked out. But no they abandoned it entirely. Major label acts can’t even finish.

Young Idiot musicians typically treat endings more like the periods on a sentence than an event. Pros make an event out of it. (Aerosmith’s Sweet Emotion)

2.5 tips for finishing

1. Land it like a plane or crash it like a train! Smooth velvety conclusions are elegant, Messy chaotic and gory work. Don’t do anything in between

2. If its bad make it big. Big endings typically sound like something is happening and trick most listeners that its good.

2.5 If you’ve tried tips #1 and #2 and your ending still smells, just paint it red. Its my favorite!

Eat your vegetables. Close the deal. Finish what you start!


Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Three Tips for Songwriters

What's the worst decision I ever made as a Young Idiot musician? Taking music lessons. Why?


1) Often fatal to creativity.


2) Riffs repeatedly slip into songs without warning .


3) I communicate ideas in Roman numerals


Its especially crippling for songwriting. When encountering this problem as a Young Idiot I'd just ball up my fists and cry. Now more mature I resort to a precious bag of tricks.


Three tricks in losing the musical baggage:


1) Writing a song on another instrument : I drop the guitar and pick up a bass. When I lose chords I focus on the melody. Its like introducing Astroglide : a totally different feeling entirely.


2) Go dancing at a club or bar. Why? To meet that special someone who'll dump you. Songs simply flow from broken hearts.


2) Stealing with a twist : Swipe any 2 chords from Beatles "Yesterday" and two chords from any Stevie Wonder classic. You now have something you'd never be able to come up with in a billion years on your own. Pick any two you like. Radiohead & Donna Summer. Jeff Buckley & The Monkeys. Lady GaGa & The Carpenters. You have to put some time into it but this crime will pay.


No matter which way you go here you'll have to finish the song. But we'll talk about that next time.





Sunday, June 22, 2008

I am I am trying to teach my 5 year old the guitar...

When I hear the expression, "Those who can do those who can’t teach." I want to reach for an axe.  And that axe would be a Gibson Les Paul.    

That statement through a gross ignorance implies teaching is a quaint offshoot of babysitting. (Which, they'll say is what teachers are really engaged in.) In that statement i hear, "You want to learn something , Kid?  Get out there and take that education by force out in the "real world."

Fact is that that is a cop out.  Truly reaching a kid and impressing a lesson on them, making it stick and be inspirational is hard as hell.  It requires sales skills, coaching skills, psychological skills anthropological skills....  You must set the kid's frame of mind to sell the message and then inspire them to try something that they have no skill in whatsoever.   Introduce that new idea and skill with the perfect mix of art and presentation and you have a shot at moving the student forward.  

And like all things related to approaching my 5 year old the approach is one of peace, love, understanding and being consistent.  

But perhaps Kenny Rogers was thinking of teaching his 5 year old when he wrote: "You gotta know when to hold 'em. Know when to fold 'em.  Know when to walk away.  Know when to run...."

 

Friday, July 13, 2007

Monetizing a Dream.
Instead of giving Guitar Center cashiers my money, I should have bought the company's stock. Listed for years at GTRC (Who knew??) they're being bought out by Bain Capital, the venture capitalist running dogs founded by the hopeful, Mr. Mitt Romney.

Outside of a shareholder lawsuit and wild P/E ratio, it's got stable management and lots of cash to gulp down puny competitors and monopolize the industry. So Next time you’re using an essential service, wonder “Am I wandering past a pot of gold?” I will.

Monday, March 26, 2007

How do you Roll?

You wanna to get it on? Spontaneity in making love is one thing but some things just need to go by the book.

How do you get it on...musically? That’s an important question to ask yourself when you want to accomplish anything with your instrument. What are the perfect mix of conditions, feelings and attitudes that set your mind on "play", "write" or "record"? And no, doing a bong hit doesn’t count.

And what are the steps best for you structurally, that for example, get you to lay down quality tracks simply and quickly?

I recommend that you think hard on and write down each step on the path to that place. How do you have to feel to create that chill beat? How do you whip yourself into a rage when you are writing devil music? If you want to get funky, first you have to feel funky. So the rule is free your mind and your ass will follow. And its different for everyone.

Wednesday, March 14, 2007

Don't Forget to Write

...and record.

Like mirrors, recordings never lie.

So go and get a decent digital recorder and lay down some tracks and listen. Really, listen.
Do you hear what you want to hear? Maybe something that could use a little polishing? Not only will you develop your ear to hear, working with the recorder boxes, which generally suck to use, will become easier and thus more approachable. The result you'll record more and produce stuff that sounds better.

Sunday, March 04, 2007

Me & My Marshall Dual Bloc

A small change in your amp set up can affect your tone. A small change in your tone can be interesting. That interest can be exciting. That excitement is all you can hope for when your trying to get motivated.

Last year I moved but never set up an AWESOME Marshall amp lent to me by a band mate and a truly close friend. It's been sitting in my basement unused but today, I set that rig up.
It's a JMP-1 pre amp running through a 9200 Dual Bloc and it's definitley not vintage. After I slipped a multiverb into the effects loop it has a sexy techno kitty purr to die for. Playing out of it can olny be described as, quality time.

Ok, I've got gear wood. ;-) Gotta rage!

Tuesday, November 14, 2006

Take Your Own Advice

Lost the switch i used to have in my brain that gets me motivated to practice. Anyone see it?

I wrote some time ago that following a practice schedule was key in the improvement we all crave for our playing. Wish i could actually get down to it.

....Anyway...working on it.

Tuesday, December 06, 2005

Been Away But Im Back

Had to temporarily choose life's important and somewhat inevitable responsibilities over playing recently, but now I'm back. (Rusty chops and all.) The biggest part of improving you'll find is to play often. Biggest part of playing often is to be inspired. Biggest part of finding and maintaining inspiration is through your sensitivity to new sounds that excite you. If you engage in that process often enough not playing will be too painful to bear.

Monday, September 19, 2005

Playin' Slide

Been fooling w/ my slide guitar playing recently in Open G. Just going' for that "dusty ol pick up truck" vibe. My playing is pretty bad right now but no worries. Inspiration is everywhere. The slow bluesy slide reminds me of how much sadness there is in the world. But it also reminds you that with hope and love better times are just around the way. The power is in your hands.

Tuesday, August 09, 2005

Dirty or Spiritual?

Its been a while since my last post, but here’s a nice progression taken from a gospel/blues standard. Variations are many. Gives a great opportunity to experiment w/ chord embellishments and substitutions to make it as dirty or spiritual as you are. Sub a Domionant 7 for the iii and gets real dirty. Sub the vi & iii w/ Minor 7ths and it gets jazzy. I think you got the point. Now go get some!

I iii IV iv I vi ii V7 I IV I V
A C#mi /D Dmi/A F#mi/ Bmi D9/A D7/A E/

Thursday, July 14, 2005


Bosco on Stage Posted by Picasa

Moving the Bassline

Make your rhythm playing more interesting by adding a moving bass line. Joe Pass is a master of combining chords and moving bass notes to create melody and movement w/in a rhythm line. But it works for any genre. Red Hot Chilly Peppers guitar rhythm in under the bridge is a love letter to Jimi's approach to this style. Speaking of Jimi: Castles Made of Sand. And Stevie Ray did Lenny, which is also Hendrix-esque but pure SRV soul. A rule of thumb i use is if a bass players lines and guitarists chords can be combined creatively and smartly w/in a given space of a rhythm then you can add a moving bass line. Not going to work in all cases but when you’re able to make it work, them its a really nice effect. I’d tell you to ask Jimi or Stevie but alas they were taken from us way too soon.

Friday, July 08, 2005

Consitency in Playing Schedule

Trying to keep the practice streak going? Me too. How do you consistently follow your playing schedule w/ all of the other important things going on your life? The answer...Try hard to do it. You have school, a job, and kids...? a lot is going on. Initially its a real effort maintaining the schedule you set up. if you don’t try old habits drift back in. If you try hard new habits take hold. ....Try it. I will to.

Thursday, July 07, 2005

Remember Londoners Lost on 7 July 2005

Remember Londoners Lost on 7 July 2005
Here in NY we know terrorism's horror.
I hope that the families and friends of those lost in the 7/7 bombings of London can find peace and that their deaths will not be in vain.

Friday, July 01, 2005

Major Scales

Spend time w/ your major scales up and down the neck. The seven distinct patterns which if you memorize them, (uggh...hate that word.) will really be a great jumping off point to do almost anything. Modes : The Aeolian mode (natural minor scale) is probably the most useful scale in rock there as it meshes perfectly w/ blues patterns. The Mixolydian's funky and the Phrygian's spooky. It’s all there.
So bust out the metronome and choose one day a week to learn them. DONT front on the major scales!