“Gregg Bissonette and I discuss the drummers that every serious drummer should know from Gene Krupa to Ringo Starr to John Bonham to Questlove. A comprehensive guide of styles from Swing, Jazz, Rock, Fusion, Hip Hop and Funk.”
Friday Music Finds: Svaneborg Kardyb
New band I never heard of before here that I am really digging. Check them out on Bandcamp and make a purchase. Svaneborg Kardyb on Bandcamp.
Thanks Jeremy!
Delvon Lamarr Organ Trio - Warm-up Set (Live on KEXP)
Nice set here. Enjoy!
A Warning On the Future of Music: with Author Ted Gioia
Interesting conversation between Ted Gioia and Rick Beato where they talk about music, music history and other stuff. Lots of good points besides the NFT gibberish. NFTs are a scam through and through.
-Thanks Jason!
Better late than never: Falling in love with Yankee Hotel Foxtrot on its 20th anniversary
Cool write up on AV Club about Wilco’s YHF.
“His lyrics expertly capture conflicting feelings, often seeming like he’s attempting to make sense of them in real time. That sentiment is expressed in “I’m The Man Who Loves You,” with Tweedy struggling to find a way to understand his thoughts and put them into words, allowing him to explain to his partner how he feels:
All I can see is black and white and white and pink with blades of blue /
that lay between the words I think on a page I was meaning to send to you /
I couldn’t tell if it’d bring my heart the way I wanted when I started /
writing this letter to you
Can’t he just hold his partner’s hand and show her how much he cares and loves her, rather than go through the brain-wracking process of putting those emotions into words? It’s a relatable feeling.
The pacing of the song is arranged in a way that sounds like the way scattered thoughts trickle in, with a rapid, thumping beat. You can tell he knows how he feels deep down: It should be as simple as that. But the lyrics also come from an anxious source, that understands that love isn’t clear cut. It’s a sentiment delved into throughout much of the record, including songs like “Radio Cure” and fan-favorite “Poor Places.”
And here is a brand new track from them that came out. Happy Friday!
Happy Friday!
Have some music to lift your day and burn this past week to the ground.
Bandcamp is joing Epic Games?
Wow, did not see this coming. Bandcamp is joining Epic Games? Wild stuff. I wonder if they are going to make a easy pipeline to get artists into video games or something. Interesting for sure.
“I’m excited to announce that Bandcamp is joining Epic Games, who you may know as the makers of Fortnite and Unreal Engine, and champions for a fair and open Internet.
Bandcamp will keep operating as a standalone marketplace and music community, and I will continue to lead our team. The products and services you depend on aren’t going anywhere, we’ll continue to build Bandcamp around our artists-first revenue model (where artists net an average of 82% of every sale), you’ll still have the same control over how you offer your music, Bandcamp Fridays will continue as planned, and the Daily will keep highlighting the diverse, amazing music on the site. However, behind the scenes we’re working with Epic to expand internationally and push development forward across Bandcamp, from basics like our album pages, mobile apps, merch tools, payment system, and search and discovery features, to newer initiatives like our vinyl pressing and live streaming services.”
Neil, Neil, Neil and more Neil.
Broken Record Podcast where freaking Rick Rubin interviews Neil Young in Two Parts. Worth a listen for sure.
Portland music scene overview
Back in June, I played a show that was recorded and posted to youtube. Super fun night and the videographer was just the nicest person. This morning I was curious about if she has done any other videos since and god lord man! Looks like she goes out almost every night and records local music here in Portland. A really interesting look into the scene here and who is doing what. Check out her channel at Blue Heron Video.
EP Artwork. We Are Parasols
Just finished up the artwork for another We Are Parasols EP release and got the permission to post it here. All done in Houdini and Redshift. I am tinkering with the idea to give Karma / Solaris a try and see how those work. Would be nice to stay entirely native to Houdini for the renders. I’ll have to do some testing.
Peter Erskine's 5 Key solo Elements
I stumbled upon Aubrey Drums Lessons the other day and it’s really interesting how he breaks down the phrasing. Gonna be spending some time here checking it all out.
International Grey resurfaces
A band I did a recording with back 2010 called, “International Grey” has just re-released a few of the tracks and they hold up surprisingly well. Give them a listen! They merged it with another project Named “Allegra Gellar” for the re-release since it is pretty much the same people besides me.
And for something a little different...
This was a fun night ;)
And the first set…
Give the Drummer Some!
Great interviews here by J-Zone at “Give the Drummer Some”. More on this website as well. Give it all a listen!
Larnell Lewis Hears "Enter Sandman" For The First Time : drums
This is a pretty fun thing to watch.
Music Friday
Snowed in pretty good up here in Portland, so snuggle up and listen to some tunes will ya?
Reaper
So I dabble in recording stuff, because, hey, why not? But with COVID, not being able to record new stuff, and all of that I have been pretty burned out. Also, I have been using Pro Tools for the last few years and it has gotten really stale. Just opening the program is depressing somehow. They are like the Maya or Photoshop of DAWs. Don’t like it? Screw you.
But recently one of my friends has started to track stuff at their place and wanted me to lay down drums on it. I think I recommended Reaper to him as an affordable way to record years ago, but not too sure about that. But after working with his files a bit I figured to make sending the project back and forth smoother I would give Reaper a try.
Man, it so far has been way nicer to use than Pro Tools. I took the entire project from Protools to Reaper without even have to google anything. The UI is just that easy to follow and find stuff. If anyone else is looking to escape the Pro Tools nightmare of dongles, license crap, crashes (oh my god the crashes!), I highly suggest giving Reaper a shot.
Folder instead of busses are just so simple and awesome to use. Guitar bus? Just make a blank track and drag them in. Done. Super clean and customizable interface. So far the only real hitch is that the free plug-ins that ship with it are downright ugly, lol! The 7 band EQ is pretty slick and has some nice functionality but it just looks like something from 98. Also, I can’t get my Sound Toys plugs in to load which is a bummer. But FET compressor and pretty much all my other ones load no problem. Get FET now. It’s so worth it.
The next step is to install it on my recording rig and get all the mics configured and try out some tracking with it. In Pro Tools I have been having a lot of crashes that when I am playing and it locks, it just starts screaming in your ear. So bad….
I Am Not A Data Point - mssv (Baggetta, Hodges, Watt) Live in PDX
Saw this live, was pretty amazing.
Dave Grohl covering Beastie Boys? Don't mind if I do!
Pretty awesome cover and good for a laugh. Full sound for just being a two piece as well.
Is it possible to play music together over the internet?
Here is something my friend Steve sent my way that I have yet to test out, but it looks like it might work? The Windows client is in Beta though which could be troublesome. If I get the time to run some tests, I’ll post the results here. Musicians Together Apart.
The hardest number to hit for most people will be the ping which from the Network Testing page needs to be under 50ms, best if under 30ms. All the other stats seem very doable with most broadband.