Somewhere right now, Rick Nielsen is turning green with envy. http://t.co/YSKr4N2c
Posted 5:22PM, Oct 06 on twitter
Somewhere right now, Rick Nielsen is turning green with envy. http://t.co/YSKr4N2c
Posted 5:22PM, Oct 06 on twitter
For Cinco de Mayo: Cheap Trick Mariachi Mash Up
One of my favorite bands, looking like they’re having a blast revamping a 30 year old song.
Posted 11:22AM, May 05 2011 in Music ·
RIP, Ronnie Hammond. http://bit.ly/dFSLFC
Posted 5:11PM, Mar 14 on twitter
I’ve been on the internet a long time, and thought I had become somewhat immune to amazement at what I find. I no longer marvel that I can hear about a court ruling on CNN, and within five minutes find the PDF of the full ruling online for me to read in detail. I guess you could say that instant access to “current data” no longer phases me.
But the other night, I did a search on a whim about one night in 1981 from which I have some vivid memories, even though it’s been 27 years. Not only did I find an article written about that night by an expert on the subject, I found a recording of the entire event.
The music industry, bleeding profusely from largely self inflicted wounds, is proposing to volunteer your wallet to bind their wounds:
Edgar Bronfman Jr.‘s Warner Music Group has tapped industry veteran Jim Griffin to spearhead a controversial plan to bundle a monthly fee into consumers’ internet-service bills for unlimited access to music.
I last posted anything I claimed to be “music” on Valentine’s Day. I started working on another “song” shortly thereafter, actually thought I had it pretty close to done, and then all Hell broke loose.
It’s time for another Garageband creation, and this one is a little different in a couple of ways.
One, compared to previous offerings, it’s decidedly mellow. Vibes. Mandolin. Piano. An E here. An F there. I call it “sweEt unFancy” (3:55, 5.4MB).
It seems that every two to three weeks, in the course of eating, sleeping, working, and goofing off, I still manage to squeeze out some form of audio mayhem and claim it as music. People talk about how they’re good for maybe 3,000 words per day (no matter how you divide it up, email, work, or blogging). I’m apparently good for about 4 minutes of music every three weeks or so.
It’s time to close out 2005 with a couple of creations mixed up in Garageband and distilled down to an MP3.
Both are attempts to find and sustain a groove or two. I guess this is sort of like an A side and a B side. But I’m not sure which is “A”.
Probably “Year End Strut” (4:36, 7.8MB).
I’m in the midst of a busy week with not much time for any real writing here (no, nothing on the “new” Iraq plan, I’ve said it all a long time ago), however, I do have a new Garageband creation.
I tried to construct this one a bit differently. You know those songs you hear now and then that start off … oddly? The rhythm is slightly off, there seem to be distinct parts that don’t match, or seem out of place, and it creates an odd tension … which is suddenly released when everything pulls together and clicks. What sounded chaotic suddenly makes sense.
It’s been almost a month since I uploaded one of my Garageband creations. Time has been a bit limited lately. And I’ve played around with three or four “songs” that didn’t seem to be going anywhere, so they never got “finished.” But I’ve got one that is. Barely.
It’s time for two more … musical experiments … from the child inside to be added to the downloads page. While I don’t know that they’re completely successful experiments, they do both break a bit of new ground for me, and were quite successful at injecting fun into my otherwise busy days recently (though I actually play with these late at night). They are also pretty indicative of the diversity of my musical listening tastes, which I guess will tend to come out in this form.
Yes, it’s time for another bashing from my keyboard emitted in MP3 form. And this one reminds me of the old Saturday Night Live sketch on “Flucker’s Jam”: “With a name like Buzz and Drone in C, it’s gotta be good!”
A couple of weeks ago, I wrote that “I first thought it would be very self-indulgent for a rank amateur to ramble in my blog about what this ‘process’ has been like for me. But then I came to my senses and realized that rank amateurs rambling on subjects about which they have no expertise isn’t self indulgent … it is blogging!” However, I’ll be kind enough to move my rambling about music off the front page.
OK, so I dumped a couple of songs on you last week, my first efforts ever with my Birthday GarageKey, and it was a bit like a child showing off fingerpaintings. If you can recognize that the green thing is a tree, well, the kid’s doin’ great! If you downloaded them, I appreciate it. If you didn’t, don’t bother. I’ve got something much better.
The rules have changed. I used to be able to claim I wasn’t making a song, um, I was merely mixing parts others had made into a, er, construct. Yeah. But due to a birthday present from my Accommodatin’ Darlin’, I am now able to create all kinds of new noise all on my own … and, yes, Dear Listener, inflict it on you.
I warned you once. I warned you twice. But with over 500 downloads so far, you failed to squash this addiction to Garageband, and the resulting afflictions on you, Dear Reader Listener. And now, like some evil mutant zygote, the rate of growth has doubled. You now get two songs demi-musical constructs in one blast.
As of right now, about 60 people have downloaded the first MP3 I made in Garageband (I told Susan I am now a rock star, so she must be my groupie), and not one person has come forward to say, “Reid, it sucks” (though it’s not too late). Based on this overwhelming encouragement (what do you mean, “apathy”?), I’m assaulting you with Sound Infliction, #2.
I have no displayable musical skills whatsoever. My musical training consists of about three months of trumpet lessons in the sixth grade (they didn’t “take”). Oh, and as a teenager, I taught myself the rock and roll minimum for playing guitar, three chords … as long as the song allows lots of time to switch from one to the other. But thanks to the purchase of a Mac Mini loaded with the program Garageband, none of that matters. Who needs talent, skills, or training when it can be replaced with some computing power, some loops, some software, and a lot of mouse clicking? And thus, I get to inflict the result on you, Dear Reader Listener.
I normally get as peeved as anyone when rock and rollers try to get high mindedly political. It’s as obtuse as a NBA basketball star opining on military strategy. Or an actor promoting their One True Religion. But for some reason, this one tickles me.
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