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Giggles and Train Rides

I’ve made recordings of train rides – I used to use my Sony DSC-W50 camera and just leave it in my pocket or put it at the window if I wanted the video, (more recently would be a tablet or smartphone).  I think I was inspired by my friend Gary doing a similar thing on the subway years ago…but at the same time, I’ve been recording crap since forever.

When I was around 8 or 9, my uncle Frank gave me a Sony-O-Matic portable reel-to-reel recorder with one tape and a take-up reel.  I guess it was intended for dictation.  I used to fill it up with batteries and record my friends outside with the included chrome-plated microphone.  Eventually, I took it apart to see how it works and failed to put it back together.  For reference, I am including a still of what I remember it looking like.  For diarrhea & giggles, I found this photo on YouTube.  This is not my photo.

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Much later, the same uncle gave me a Panasonic cassette recorder which I used for much of the same thing.  Of note was a series of used car salesman sketches entitled “Lemon Louie.”  As I got old I used this same little cassette recorder as a way to play music (via a manually inserted speaker wire to a very large homemade cabinet my father made in the late 50’s or so).  I even included it in bouncing experiments later when I got better stereo boomboxes and such – record one instrument on the tape recorder, play it back through the speaker while recording a second instrument on the boombox.  I recorded my first long-gone lost “album” this way with a mandolin and at least one song about a local Chinese take-out place, “Chin’s Kitchen,” (which one day will be re-recorded perhaps).

The boomboxes (I went through three) figured into more “field” recording in between blasting whatever Sabbathfloyddeadkennedystalkingheads thing I liked at the time around the neighborhood. I would make tapes of me walking around my neighborhood in the early 80’s – including the “coveted” stereo car drive-by from speaker to speaker and creaking neighbors gates.  Also did some skits with friends imitating animals in the forest, some formative music jams, a talk show and some insane clapping which turned into almost pure white noise due to recording back and forth so many times, (I still have that tape & a few others).  A friend once recorded some sound effects (for a school play I believe) when his friend screeched out of their driveway in a 60’s Mustang.

This particular friend – Jeremy was his name – was also a big influence in recording…as was the Beatles “Revolution #9.”  Jeremy recorded songs bouncing from 8-track (he had a recorder!) to cassette – all within his Sears- or JC Penney-bought bookshelf stereo system.  He did a great version of “I’ve Just Seen A Face” and he and I did an extremely primitive Beatles covers tape (which I still own, although partially taped over).  As for “#9” – well, let’s just say that this is what you get when you tell a kid that he can’t be in the orchestra – and don’t be surprised if he is still thinking about 40+ years later.  I was forever bugging my friends – “c’mon guys, let’s make a REVOLUTION.”  Always.

In more recent times, I figured it would be a good way to get raw material for samples or loops.  Again, at least partly inspired by a friend and fellow improviser.  I also used to use that thing for just getting musical ideas down quickly because it’s easy, you just turn it to “video” and hit record.  Batteries are good and seem to last.  I liked that camera so much that when I dropped it one time too many, I just found another on eBay.  Same model – from 2006.

Some highlights – I’ve recorded conversations.  I’ve gotten a really good Brooklynese thing at a Bay Ridge diner, a very noisy “bar car” on the LIRR (which I used as “crowd noise” by multitracking it over a section of a song I was working on) and some weird conversation at a sushi place.  I’ve gotten loudspeaker announcements and passing conversations.  Cars, toilets, trucks, trains and street musicians.  Winter bike rides and screaming kids. Things we always hear but rarely pay too much attention to.

(This post inspired by that same friend Gary sending me an audio file of a recent train ride he’d made on his phone)

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All-Time Christmas Favorites

In 1995, I made this album with my friend Tom.  We worked on it during the spring, summer, and fall.  I would record most of the parts for Tom to play over on my days off from Stern’s Department Store.  I made sure that we were ready to release on Black Friday.  We sold for cost ($2 each) and by word of mouth.

Downloading is FREE – just click Buy Now and put in the number ZERO.

Enjoy your holidays!
Jim

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“Bruise”

Track from July 29,1996

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“The Lords of Creation (Forbidden Bookshelf)” by Frederick Lewis Allen, Mark Crispin Miller, Gretchen Morgenson

Fairly-told account of the events leading up to the US Great Depression – (despite the recent addition of the 1% subtitle).  Written in the late 30’s.  “The Lords of Creation (Forbidden Bookshelf)” by Frederick Lewis Allen, Mark Crispin Miller, Gretchen Morgenson

 

http://amzn.to/2gFhQ8V

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Project+ Certified!

Today I passed the Project+ project management exam…great feeling to gain accreditation outside my already recognized technical expertise.project252b_certified

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Cranberry Sauce

Long one so get comfortable – like John Lennon may have said “I’m very bored” or maybe it was “I buried Paul” or maybe just “cranberry sauce.”

My drummer and Dead fan friend Paul sent me this link to an article about Bob Weir’s early favorite – the Guild Starfire

Always enjoyed Weir’s voice and playing.  But all of those guys are very talented and good people and very lucky to follow their dreams.  Keeping my fingers crossed for Phil’s bladder cancer.

That guitar is very cool – When looking a guitar pics, I immediately almost always look at the pickups and if I see new ones, I think to myself that I’d like to find a guitar with those pickups.  I care less about the guitar itself, the pickups to me are important.  Not even the play-ability because the limitations can guide or force you in the context of a song to maybe concentrate on lyrics, percussion or bass or whatever.   The pickups.

Nice article about old pickups that are not the standard Fender Gibson ones we all have heard about a zillion times…I have yet to digest this but it looks like a good resource.   Speaking of digestion…I’ll be right back!

Continuing on…

I subscribe to this great free magazine called Tape Op.  Just search for it and give them your address – I think they have lots of sample articles and maybe a few PDF copies to download and check out on their site.  Anyway, they had this cool interview with a guy named Deke Dickerson who is an author, guitarist and records other people.  He seems to be associated with retro-minded musics like rockabilly but also seems very multi-faceted, funny and intelligent.

My memory is a little fuzzy here but perhaps because of this I looked up the EchoSonic which was apparently the first tape echo (within a guitar amp, from what I understand).  This was invented/made by Ray Butts.  I looked him up to find that he also invented a guitar humbucker pre-Gibson that became the Gretsch Filter’Tron.

Gretsch and Guild have forever been associated in my mind as two other G manufacturers who were not Gibson.  So full circle.  Kinda.

Have a swell day!

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Six Twelve Six

Six Twelve Six

Pearl River fretless, Danelectro 12, etc.  04 Apr, 2007

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Smart Phone MP3 review – John Frusciante

On my phone I have three JF albums – The Will To Death, Curtains and Sphere In The Heart of Silence

At some point quite few years ago, I realized that the Chili Peppers albums I enjoyed most were the ones with Frusciante on them…so when I heard he released six albums in one year (June 04 – Feb 05), I had to check some out.  And that’s just a slice of his 12 solo albums and his 5 contributions to the Peppers’ ouvre.  More properly, he recorded these with Josh K as a two-man band, where some albums feature only his singing and some feature both men singing.

Despite what most of the public thinks, I consider this his main career.  Will To Death being IMO much better, with more emotional pull than any RHCP album I’ve ever heard, sagging a little with the short instrumental “Helical” but picking up again until the end. The dragging beat of “A Doubt,” the reverb sound effects on “An Exercise,” the well placed hi-hats of “Loss”…overall a nice strum-based electric small band outing with an honest “room” sound.  Drum sounds are big for me and this album has a great drum sound.

The seemingly obtuse lyrics paired with this guy’s voice and his falsetto leaps imbue the songs with meanings in slices like the declaration “no one makes a loop a round me” and “I can’t wait for life” in “A Loop,” the regret in “I have thrown so much away” in “Wishing” and the title of “The Days Have Turned” opens up into sadness with “the days have turned away from me.”  Coming at me in a time in my life when nothing coukd be assumed and everything was changing, these scraps of lyrics connected.

I am most familiar with WTD but I do also have two others on the phone. Curtains leans in an acoustic vocal direction similar to his solo shows and seems on a par with WTD, just a newer acquisition for me so not much comment yet.  “The Real” and “Time Tonight” do show me already that this album comes from the same place and that Frusciante will be worth exploring deeper.  Sphere is a bit harder to get into – with shared vocals with Josh Klinghoffer and an interesting lo-fi electronic approach.  Josh, by the way, replaced John in the Peppers for their latest album.

“Inside of Emptiness” is another album from the same time period – though not on my phone at the moment, just gave it a quick refresh spin on the computer…”A Firm Kick”…”What I Saw”…this guy is great.

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Film Processing Today…

My film processing today was a (temporary) bust…

My first choice was a roll that I knew was exposed to light (a little) – a color (C-40) roll…for those who don’t know, color is usually handled in a lab…but I found that it could be processed like a certain BW film (Ilford HP5+)…sooo not easy going in but a good candidate for a “test run.”

I got an old/new developing tank on ebay that can also handle 110 film (most can’t)…so I tried to use that but couldn’t get it on the reel so I put film back in canister and pulled out my other tank. 45 minutes of struggling and I finally got the film on the reel.

Figured out my chemistry and dilutions and set up three nice beakers…just about to start when I got a better look at the developer – BROWN…not good…disposed of it & left the film in the tank and am ordering more chemistry now…

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GTD Post – last one for now…

I’ve been posting my progress and thoughts on David’s Allen’s GTD (Getting Things Done) methodology using the DoIt.IM software for the past few weeks on Tuesdays.  This past Tuesday I did not.  Here’s why –

  • I believe that using the methodology I was able to uncover that posting about the methodology was time better spent elsewhere.
  • I don’t believe it is necessary to post about this on a schedule.  I discovered this when I finally let go of trying to use my calendar to schedule things that were not absolutely needed to be done on a specific day or time and started to trust my Next lists a bit more.
  • I’m using GTD so much now that this seems like a natural progression.

I will still be posting my own original music, videos, writing and photography – I’m not going anywhere!

I’m still using GTD – I love it.

Here’s a video of Mr Allen explaining the methodology that he uncovered.