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Music Reviews Uncategorized

New Album Review on The Free Music Machine

Looking back at classic Dylan, one might be tempted to overlook this quiet & mysterious gem.  Even though the years have revealed much more about the activities of Bob after his motorcycle accident on July 29, 1966, it’s still a unique body of work with a language of its own.

JWH_Dylan

Come check it out…click below…

John Wesley Harding

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Art food Music Painting Photography Uncategorized Writing

Weekend Crash Time (or “everything is an ellipsis in parentheses and lowercase”)

The first weather-restricting weekend of the season…

First thoughts are “work”…things, tasks, chores, stuff…work…

Move the bicycle indoors…(this is how I get around most of the time)

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Fix the pickup on that one guitar…(Jay Turser take on a reversed Ventures-esque Mosrite…I am putting in that foil neck pickup and goofed it up by wiring it incorrectly)

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Add more layers to this painting…(named “stop always saying what everyone wants to hear”)

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Or this painting…(titled “slowly back and forth in sanguine rhythm”)

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Make that honey chicken recipe…(HelloFresh has some great stuff to cook)

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Iron clothes…(uggggghhhh)

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Dodge all the “work” and drink…(recently a Georgian waitress and friend introduced me to some of the wine traditions of her country)

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I’d like to know how to separate myself from this “work” concept and just “be”…because it seems counter-productive (which in and of itself I must admit, ties back into this “work” concept).

I think the best thing I can do is make a commitment to get some shoes on and get out there today…going out to dinner usually helps.  I will make the chicken tomorrow…and of all these things above…most of them have the potential to lift my mood – taking care of the bike for instance, saving money and being so proud to cook my own food…and though it is harder for me to reach into – even ironing clothes to look better…

I would like to work in some other stuff – watch some Hulu (but not too much), read some of the four or so books I am reading (I will bring one when I go out…check out more of that band Warpaint, whose songs like “Beetles” and “Krimson” from their 2008 EP are tattooed looping in my brain…this morning I went over to YouTube and Echo/Alexa and listened to some newer stuff…I liked it all…

I should also own what I have already done – laundry and calling up glasses.com to set up my exchange for those new reading glasses.  They goofed and sent me distance.  Also, I learned two Beatles guitar parts – electric solo from “And I Love Her” and some of the solo from “You Can’t Do That.”

For those paintings…I kinda think they are both very close to done (the top one especially) so I may just make that decision this weekend and pull out the other two I am working on.  One is on glass and the other on canvas.

Maybe it is not about “work” but “should”…giant shoulds hanging over my head – I should record more music, I should study something, I should finish this or that…

Recently put up this Guy Debord quote on my Facebook page…”Like lost children we live our unfinished adventures.” – I think I like that very much.

Thanks for reading…not much writing focus today…

Everything is an ellipsis…

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Music

Brown (version 6)

http://ift.tt/2sIBCW8

This track has gone through many versions. The one which appears on The Fairfield Blues (http://ift.tt/2tds4pl) is version 8, mixed in 2014. This is version 6, mixed in 2011. This version is pretty similar to the released version, enough where it may not warrant inclusion on a longer release. However, I mastered it today (7/4/2017) and am releasing it here for free. The photo here is an alternate idea for that album cover.

This album was an experiment in what I was calling “long-form pop” at the time. I can be extremely critical of these works now but I still can acknowledge that I created them.

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Music

Ares (Original Long Version)

http://ift.tt/2rgf0QS

This is the original unedited June 21 2008 version of the song that eventually ended up on the album “No Underwear” (located here – http://ift.tt/2ssiUWt). Features a few differences and more meandering vocals (the original take from 2006 was just improvised lyrics to which I later added a bridges and piano interludes to).

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Music

Taste (early mix)

http://ift.tt/2rhARX0

The 4/12/08 mix of the song “Taste” which eventually wound up on the album “No Underwear.” Recorded and performed by Jim Lemanowicz with the exception of a drum track recorded in 2007 by Jim Lemanowicz and Paul Cama. Mastered on 5/29/17

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Music

5VLR

http://ift.tt/2pbyYeI

Violin processed through stuff

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Music

Tom’s Singing Vagina by Gland Central Station

http://ift.tt/2pbaS2e

01 Sep 2007, recorded at Kings Park

Paul C – drums
Tom B – bass and backing vocals
Jim L – guitar and backing vocals
Gary P – keyboards and vocals

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Music

4VRR

Recorded and performed by Jimmy Lem on 15 Apr 2017 using violin and Ableton Live.

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Art GTD Music

Randomization vs Gear Aquisition Syndrome

This past year in preparation for moving to a new place, I cleaned up some of the clutter I had accumulated in my life.  Among these things – old clothes, broken things that I never fixed and things in the back of the closet that I hadn’t touched for years.  However, I retained most of the music equipment, instruments, and music software.

I decided to hold onto these things because I wanted to hold onto the idea of recording music.  I wanted to hold onto all the beautiful combinations of instruments where I can forge out my musical identity unhindered and unafraid.  This presented a few problems, as we shall see.

  • Gear Aquisition Syndrome – this may mean different things to different people.  As of this moment for me, this phrase represents an avoidance technique whereby someone substitutes the purchase of an item for actually using it.  When the time comes to use the item, you magically find something else to buy.  I licked this problem years ago.  I stopped buying things but still retained almost everything I purchased.  I even selected a few items to either trash or share with my friends.  This brings us to our next problem…
  • Too Many Choices – yet another avoidance technique in which we simply overwhelm ourselves from ever getting out of the startup gate.  It seems so seductive to think that things will be easier when you have all these choices.  Years ago, I bought my very first guitar multi-effects unit and instantly I had very convenient access to many sounds.  Prior to that, I had a drawerful of pedals.  Something I noticed is that right around that time, my recording activity dropped off.  It was as if I was stunned.  It only got worse once I got the money to buy more multi-effects, more pedals, more instruments and then DAWs (96 tracks?  No problem!) and software.  Literally thousands of choices – which did not translate to thousands of songs.
  • These two things seem to feed each other.  I’d get paralyzed by the amount of choices I had and would buy something new and be even more paralyzed.  Crazy!

At some point a few years ago, I decided to set into motion some constraints.  Off the top of my head, I’d pull out two guitars and a bass and a few pedals (or VSTs) and leave everything else in closets or drawers.  I’d stick to the same equipment until I got bored with what I was doing and then call it a “project.”  I released a few more mini-albums.  This worked better but still presented some issues.  For one, I still knew that I had all that stuff in the closet and I was forgetting that some of it was even there.  Secondly, I still faced too many choices in all the options we have for writing songs – keys, number of verses, my backlog of lyrical and musical sketches that I have never stopped doing.

Around the same time, I started getting into GTD – Getting Things Done by David Allen.  It’s a system that helps you organize things into lists and helps you go back to those lists and be true to them.  It worked wonders at my job and with recent medical issues.  So I started putting musical activities – mostly tutorials and books –  into my lists.  I did OK with this for a while – it worked great for lyrics (I’d schedule object writing or writing prompts for each night) and remixing things in the can.  I was writing a set of lyrics every day earlier in 2016.  Lots of backlog.   Lots of archival releases.  Little in terms of new finished material.  What I found was that learning just for the sake of learning – without a real goal – can also be a bit boring.

Here’s what I am embarking on now –

  • Create lists for many if not all aspects of a song – bass sound choices, how many guitars, what key, song length, which midi controller…so many.  I came up with over 20 lists.
  • Weight the lists accordingly – so for instance, I have a great Aria bass, a decent Epiphone bass and some fretless and multi-stringed ones that I have limited facility on.  I also like synth bass.  So created a list that had ten occurrences of Aria, 6 of Epi, 3 synths and 1 of the rest.  I also included a line for 2 bass sounds and 3 bass sounds.
  • Plug these lists into https://www.random.org/lists/
  • Schedule any learning, reading or recording time based on what I have randomized
  • Important list I have is “maximum tracks” – this should help me finish.

I committed to writing one song by the end of January.  Comment and wish me luck, please!

Thanks!

Categories
Music

West End Glutes by The Exploading Jazz Commode

http://ift.tt/2a8jvRV

Tom & Jim – guitar, Gary – piano. In the basement.