Tuesday, 22 May 2007
Leave of absence
This website taught me that I need to sing. As the aborigines said "you got lens cap on". But they also said "man got pipes, man must use pipes for good of aborigines and mankind as whole". Is it my destiny? Only time will tell. But I've got my mojo back and very soon I'll be playing palsied songs of heartbreak and laughter to small audiences throughout the west of scotland.
I'm back. But were you ever here at all?
Thursday, 12 April 2007
Choice of Name
I want to use this post as a kind of scratchpad for ideas for my band name, that I can share with you and hopefully if anyone feels inclined to do so they can comment on whether or not they think they're any use. I already started this on a post somewhere below, but consider this the official brainstorming session. Feel free to suggest what I should be called if you would like to do so.
- The Meat Counter (my original idea, stemming from a decision to call myself after the best named shop on dumbarton road, a competition which this local butchers shop won. it would be easy to have gimmicks associated with it. Can you imagine a packed out madision square gardens crowd counting along in unison as I threw a variety of meat products into the sweaty throng? Would be excellent I think).
- Aesop (this is kind of my chosen hip hop name. It's based around the fact that the chap Aesop told stories (he called them fables) and i'd kind of be an urban story teller, as well as the fact that in street parlance one might say "Ay 'supp?", meaning "Hello, what's cooking?". I also like the way that it rhymes with furry cup which might be a catchy albeit parental advisory lyric in one of my more risque lps).
- To be continued...
I'd also like to take this opportunity to talk to some of my guitar playing audience about the various axes I've managed to accumulate. From an initial starting point where all i had available was a Guitar hero II SG Controller, I've now got access to some three guitars, virtually a collection. Photos will be added, but for now, here's some textual descriptions...
Acoustic (made by a mysterious company called 'Ranger'): A six (steel) string acoustic guitar this is the one that belongs to my brother, which i have taken on permanent loan. [Actually, a word to my brother, who sustained nasty ligament tearage while playing football with me on Saturday, get well soon!] Anyway, this guitar is quite good, and I think as I grow up as a player I will develop an increasing fondness for it. However, at the moment its neck is quite narrow and its strings are all coming at me like cheese-wire on my fingers, so it's difficult to play. But when i'm ace I'll probably sleep alongside it or something. This is my first real six string. Although I didn't buy it at the 5 and dime. Whatever that is.
Classical (made by a company I've heard of called Hohner i believe): This is also a six string, but with three nylon strings. It's considerably less streamlined than the acoustic, but I think maybe better made. It's got a nice fat neck for big hands and the strings are less sore cos they're not steel. Good for learning! (I hope). This guitar belongs to my friend Laura who has no time for music now that she has her little bairn Michael to look after. I will therefore be stealing this guitar and passing it off as my own. Laura is also the owner of the four-track recording studio what-sit that I'll get running very soon in the interests of letting you hear my work so far.
Electric: I've not seen this guitar yet, and I don't know who makes it or even what colour it is, but Adam has offered to lend me it (it belongs to him I think, he's not just passing on stolen goods) in order to facilitate the achievement of my endeavour. He says it's much easier to learn on the electric because you can just make a bunch of noise and people assume you mean it. Which sounds like a reasonable philosophy, but perhaps not one to implement prior to learning the very basics. So expect a Dylan-esque judas moment sometime in the next couple of months where i go electric and cos immediate schisms across the entire musical landscape. Looking forward to making distortion happen with this.
So I've been lucky to have been well positioned to steal and be offered such varied guitar access. I also know someone with a ukelele, although if the acoustic neck seems a little cramped I think the formby special would be like lilliput to my big gulliver digits. They'll become increasingly svelte and nimble over time though I'm sure.
Latest News
So, my busy-ness has been wide-ranging and oh-so-much-fun. I've been trying to get some chords going, but it's a little more difficult than perhaps my bullish initial attitude was prepared for. Spurred on by my friend Adam and by the wisdom inherent in my Complete Guitar Player book, I've been developing my first chord, but I remain inconsistent. I've christened it the "Leah Betts" because it's such a bad E. Here's what it looks like for tab' fans:
But like I say, I'm continuing to refine it and haven't quite worked out how to make it sound clean, nor have I got the recording nous to enable you folks to hear it. Nevertheless, this will all change soon, and I hope to be putting up examples of my art in the very near future. Watch this space. I really have to commit more time to getting better. I confess that I haven't done as much in this area as I would have liked to.
Anyway, I've also been busy in other aspects of my life. However, it seems that since commencing my adventure I've increasingly began to expose every aspect of my behaviour to some kind of rock microscope, to determine its appropriateness for an aspiring pop artist. For instance, I went home the other day and played golf with my dad. Golf?! I hear you exclaim. Well, given the fondness for golf that has been displayed by both Alice Cooper and Meatloaf in recent television specials, I have little doubt of golf's credentials as #1 game for the older theatrical rocker; if i could sidle into that genre one day I'd be pleased as punch. I understand that terminal mid 90s Dave Lee Travis favourites hootie and the blowfish are also big fans of golf. I don't quite know what that means. For those interested in the game I played ok, having not played at all for about a year. The final score was a draw, leaving me and my old man both contented.
In other sports news I played squash earlier this week but I have never heard of any musician living or dead who has played this game. The closest I can think of is the Smashing Pumpkins, but that isn't very funny. Check out the vid below though, which is weird. As it goes on them butternut squashes develop an ever-more phallic personality.
Wednesday, 4 April 2007
Quiz for Proper Guitar Slingers
One of my hands is noticeably larger than the other. I want to know if this is a blessing or a curse. If you wanted to play the guitar right handed, would you prefer a larger left or right hand?
Answers in the comments field please. The first to respond gets to see my natty digits up close.
Tuesday, 3 April 2007
It's All About the Music... But Is It Really?
Looks are important in today's pop. And I've been letting myself go a little lately so therefore I'm taking some active steps, primarily in the interests of achieving pop success.
In the interests of toning up I'm banning all red meat from my diet. Red meat is what gets me the most. Not the desirable, expensive and generally regarded as pleasant meat like steaks and chops however. No, my tastes in this regard could be described as quite Dick Emery. As in "ooh, you are offal, but I like you". There's smack in them thar' Scotch Eggs. And undoubtedly similarly addictive constituents within sausage rolls, pork pies and pretty much every Greggs product.
So that's all going to go. But I also have to work the body too, and therefore I'll be hitting the gym with reasonable regularity and continue to play football twice or maybe thrice a week. That will be useful too should I become a regional, national or international star, enabling me to participate with vim and vigour in the event of any charity celebrity soccer match. Exchanging one-twos with Harvey off of So solid, megging fannybaws out of two pints of lager and a packet of crisps and finally slamming home despite Ben Shepherd's last ditch lungbursting run and attempted tackle.
I also have some body shop for men face scrub so my pores should be clean and all that jazz, which is important.
I was also thinking it might be beneficial to adopt (or perhaps feign) interest in some kind of eastern spiritualism. It might be that such a course is more appropriate for after the second album, but look at Kula Shaker. Actually, good point, look at Kula Shaker. I wonder what happened to the Jeevas. I think they failed because they neglected to acknowledge the mystical historical significance of the letter K. The Keevas would have enjoyed considerably more success I bet. That name reminds me of Kevin Keegan a wee bit too, which would probably translate to good record sales in the North East of England, where apparently he is still revered to this day.
I think that dropping red meat is also probably quite compatible with many eastern spiritual philosophies. It's important to have all the bits and bobs pulling in the same direction.
Got 9 Months to Go
- Firstly, get your guitar in your hands and count the strings. This tutorial requires that there are 6 (six). Some guitars have twelve I think (sometimes on two necks which is quite fetching) and banjos have five. Or four and a half maybe. But this is certainly for 6 (six) stringed guitars.
- If you have a piano or other guitar already in tune you'll already have access to a reference note. Otherwise, do a google search for "Online Guitar Tuner" or something like that. I don't want to endorse one site over any other, but I used guitarforbeginners.com. This gives you your starting point for tuning your instrument. Like making yoghurt I don't know how to tune without a little bit of tuning already done. Leave this website running and sit somewhere where you can reach your mouse (or other pointing device) and also hear your computer's speakers. What's that, you're deaf?
- So, pick up your guitar with the fat bit (the 'body') on the right and the pegs (the 'head') on the left as you look down, assuming you're right handed. The string nearest your face (thick one) is called Bottom E. Then, in turn the strings are called A, D, G, B and finally Top E. You'll probably notice the long bit of the guitar that connects the body to the head (called the 'neck') and perhaps see that this is split along the length of the neck into little individual sections. These are called 'frets'. You've probably heard of these before. I had. They come in soon, and are rather important.
- Ok, here's where your reference note comes in. This better be right or everything else will be screwed. You need to play a low E: that can be from a piano, another (tuned) guitar, a friend who can whistle with perfect pitch, or like in my case, it can be generated by clicking the appropriate button on a handy website. Play your reference note a few times, and then play your own low E string. Now, it's important here to play your low E on its own and open. That means not touching any other strings and not touching any other part of the low E string's length (with your left hand) during the strum action. Now it's a case of alternating between playing your guitar's note, playing your reference note and gradually turning the appropriate tuning peg on your guitar until both sound the same. Then we're almost done.
- Now you just have to tune each of your other strings relative to your Low E. This is where frets begin to come in. I'll now refer you to the text from another helpful website, called howtotuneaguitar.org.
The A String
Place the first finger of your left hand just behind the fifth fret on the bottom E string. That’s an A note. Keep your finger on that fret. Now pick the fifth and six strings in turn, gently adjusting the fifth string tuning peg until the two notes are the same.
Place the first finger of your left hand just behind the fifth fret on the A string. That’s a D note. Tune the 4th string (the D note) to that.
The G StringPlace the first finger of your left hand just behind the fifth fret on the D string. That’s a G note. Tune your G string to that note.
Place the first finger of your left hand just behind the forth fret (note the B string is the only one that comes from a different position the forth fret, the rest are from the 5th fret).
Place the first finger of your left hand just behind the fifth fret on the B string. That’s an E note.
And that's you, tuned up and ready to go! It's pimps isn't it?! Check out that web-site referred to above for pictures and other fun stuff.
I'd like at this stage each month to suggest some plans for what I'm aiming to achieve. I'll have to come up with an overall plan too, in order to make sure I'm not still learning chords come December, but until I get round to doing that, here are my projections for April.
- Widely publicise the blog, in local circles, such as myspace and via email. Perhaps mention it to more people in drunken conversations. Only by doing so will I be forced to maintain a degree of motivation during the difficult, sore fingers times.
- Come up with a name under which to release. I have three ideas so far, which are Aesop, The Meat Counter and The Pork Chop Express. I think it may be because it's near dinner time that the meat based ideas are in the ascendancy. I will post soon about my name selection process.
- Get a myspace music account.
- And, amidst all this rubbish admin stuff, I'm going to learn a minimum of three chords and be able to segue between them all quite smoothly. I will have a single performance of music and voice online by 1st of May. It will be a cover version though. If anyone is reading this then suggestions for my first cover are welcome. Although I'd like to do something fresh with it etc...
Tune: **** [This one got Chris Reeves' foot tapping]
Visuals: **** [Looks a bit dated, but didn't your heart still skip a little beat when Jack Burton makes his first appearance three quarters of the way through. Good colour effects too, not utilised nearly enough these days]
Emulation-ability: ** [too many instruments and special effects that even though they look primitive now, are almost definitely beyond my means]
Smart readers will notice that Jack Burton from Big Trouble... drives a truck called the Pork Chop Express. I don't think I'll call my band that though. Well, later!
Monday, 26 March 2007
My Experience To Date
Here's a run-down of my musical forays to date:
Number One:
Band Name: Untitled
The first band I was properly in lasted for around half of an afternoon in a practice pad somewhere on the south side of Glasgow (I think it was just outside Clarkston - is that Riverside perhaps). It was with my good friends Andrew Bush and David Thomson who have both gone onto subsequent local creative success with a variety of bands, including Pariah, Sky at Night and Tall Ships. I was on vocals and I'd written some very shouty shouty angsty angsty lyrics which were embarrassingly poor... They went something like this...
"Today I feel depressed, cos society's progressed
To a time and place where there's no space
For magic anymore"
Quite shit eh? Then the chorus kicked in with the refrain,
"now is the time for all young men to act"
Will I ever be that good again? It's probably no surprise that David and Andrew segued into an instrumental-only band following that.
Number Two:
Band Name: Untitled
My sophomore effort, another band that didn't last beyond point where we got a title. This was with an Icelandic dude called Nonny who I met sometime around the turn of the millenium, although I can't remember where or how (I was a little habitually tipsy in those days). We didn't even get as far as the rehearsal room this time, although the band was together a little longer. For whatever reason, Nonny, who's this great, passionate and totally enthusiastic guy thought that I was the missing piece of the jigsaw for a band he was hoping to put together in Glasgow. He needed a Bass player, and, he said, it didn't matter that I couldn't play (oh, how I protested about my inability to play) cos I had the right look and stuff. He was so up for it and I was so flattered, but ultimately began to feel really bad because I knew that I was incapable of living up to his expectations. I didn't actually try to play the bass much either during this period. I mean, the vocalist thing was more my cup of tea, because it's just like talking in a funny way over the music, and you don't even have to really learn that. But I really felt for Nonny, cos he had a lot of emotional energy invested in this band that was gonna be like the new stooges/lennon/slowdive and I must say I thought if he had a band full of himself he could probably have pulled it off. And he got screwed around too, which was upsetting; some guy who he had recruited to play guitar needed a new instrument, so Nonny bought him one. It was the last he saw of him though as this asshole guy did a runner and never got back in touch. Too trusting maybe. So, eventually things fell apart a little and I didn't see Nonny around so much, as he finished at Art School and went back to Iceland. Funnily enough though I was in Reykjavik a couple of years ago and I met this guy who was similarly infectious and enthusiastic and also took to me really quickly - turns out he was Nonny's brother. And I met a friend of his called Hanna that same time, and pretty much fell in love with her over the course of a couple of days. Never saw Nonny himself, but I've subsequently noticed his face on Myspace and I must drop him a line. Iceland rocks. It might be expensive to go there kids, but think how much you're costing yourself by not going...
Number Three:
Band Name: Untitled
Noticing a trend here? That's right, another untitled band and this time not much of a story to tell. I used to go to quiz at Nice 'n' Sleazy that had a karaoke section within it, and I used to take the opportunity to dust off the old pipes from time to time. My mate Bob decided that he'd be the latest to offer me my chance at superstardom with his emerging Stooges influenced project, in conjunction with another friend called Des. I used to love hanging out in his Byres Road house smoking fags and watching the people go below. Bob was a pretty dab hand in the kitchen and used to offer me a selection of tasty foodstuffs too. I remember the first time I ever enjoyed a courgette (that's zucchini for you US based readers) was at his house. It's all about how it's cooked he said. Anyway, at some point during the two or three times I was there that we were a band he'd get the guitars and mics out and I'd just seize up, and really didn't feel comfortable singing. I'll have to remedy that soon I daresay. But I'm sure it'll be ok.
Number Four:
Band Name: Untitled during my tenure, although subsequently became 20 miles
I went to see the John Spencer Blues Explosion at the Queen Margaret Union with my friends Mark and I think possibly our then flatmate Andy, or it might have been Joe. I thought they were ok; usual expectations of the Blues Explosion are probably almost always accurate, plodding, somewhat meandering but occasionally enthralling songs boosted by the charisma of the singer. Well, afterwards we were thinking, that was a bit of fun, let's continue the evening and head to the Glasgow Garage nightspot. It was a midweek evening, there wasn't owt much more to be doing. Who should we see there though, but Judah Bauer, the often noodling guitar player from the Blues Explosion. After a while for whatever reason he approached me and started to explain that it was very important that I become his new bass player. I mean again, what is with me and bass playing? Well, Judah, I told him, I'm not actually very musical. Again, the same response, doesn't matter you're perfect for what I'm trying to put together. You can learn! Well, again I was flattered, although it seemed that Judah had perhaps had a bit to drink and I was also a little embarassed. But still he kept coming back, begging me to join his band. Not that practical I suggested to him, since I'm here and you're based in America. Not a problem, far from insurmountable reasoned Judah in response, although the precise details of his rationale were maybe lost within a somewhat sozzled mumble. Well, we eventually parted, at which point he pressed a piece of paper with an email address on it into my hand, telling me to get in touch. I actually did, and he did respond to say he remembered me, and that we had to do something but very quickly it became clear that I'd been right, and that our musical futures lay along very different paths. But I did go and see the band he wanted me for, subsequently called 20 miles, at King Tuts Wah Wah Hut. I suppose part of me wanted to know who he'd got in instead of me. Well needless to say, the new guy had more bass playing talent than me, but did he have the look. Ha!, no.
If I was a wine I'd have been made tomorrow my vintage is so bad.
Welcome to My Number One Mission
I've always liked music, and always fancied being a pop star. Probably that's not too rare. I've always imagined doing the interviews, appearing on panel based comedy quiz shows and singing on Saturday morning television. Maybe I'd make friends with Ricky Gervais and appear on his hit television programme "Extras". Until now, (and with little doubt, even now), that has all seemed rather unlikely to come to fruition. Sure, I know a bunch of guys in bands, and probably could join one myself if I had a little more get up and go, but so far that's not really happened. Actually, I've been in four bands, although each experience lasted barely more than a single hour or so. But more about that once I've explained the point of this blog.
Well, it occurred to me that given the recent changes to chart restrictions that enable downloaded songs to qualify for chart positions, it has probably never been easier for someone with very little talent to have a hit single, assuming that they are capable of fostering a sufficient degree of good-will from a motivated proportion of i-Pod owning webheads. And my natural conclusion following this observation was that I should test my theory and attempt to achieve the impossible. I aim to have a number one hit song within the UK singles chart (radio one, needless to say, not some kid jensen shit) by 1st January 2008. To keep it interesting there are a couple of barriers in my way:
- I have absolutely no musical ability. I can hold a note a little when singing, but have no idea how to play any instruments. I can find middle C on a piano, and can play the first 8 notes of the Eastenders theme tune with one hand, but I have little doubt that an alzheimer's suffering arthritic chimp could be taught to play it better.
- I don't own a musical instrument.
- I've failed to learn musical instruments in the past. When I was little I wanted a piano but after my mum and dad saved up and got me one I soon became a card carrying piano hater, and refused to attend piano lessons or practise, to the extent that to justify the expense my unenthusiastic father was forced to himself embark on a musical career. I've tried to learn the guitar on a couple of occasions - left hand finger pain has always dissuaded me within a couple of hours.
- I don't really know how one would get a song on iTunes or some recognized download service, even if I had a song.
- I don't really know how to write lyrics. I've tried before and what I invariably end up with is a bunch of clumsily expressed, sixth-form Morrissey-lite pap about broken hearts in council flats or (even worse) Brett Anderson-esque shit about grimy neon spires and gasoline daydreams.
- The best chance I have for success is to use the full allotted time, but a number one at the end of December is probably an impossibility, given that X-factor will stage their annual ruin-the-christmas-number-one-race-for-everyone chart battle between gushing (maybe obese) lady and charming but probably gay white soul boy.
- I'm not going to follow some pre-existing template. In any event, the most obvious reference point, which is Bill Drummond's book, probably doesn't take into account the whole download world. And if it's worth doing this, it's worth doing so alone.
- I'm a music fan, much more so than a chart fan, and therefore the integrity of my art is important to me. So, I'm going to enlist the assistance of the three people I know who know most about music. At least two of them must think my song is at least ok for me to succeed. Even if it hits the top spot, I won't achieve my mission unless two of them thinks it's not wank. Now, I should say here that I haven't asked them yet and should probably refrain from putting their names in black and white at this stage but in the interests of keeping everything legit, I'm talking about Dep Downey, Mark Hillier and Kate Laceby. The refusal of any to cooperate means that the remaining two have to like the song. If two or more refuse to play then I automatically lose for having friends that hate me.
- The recorded (potential hit) version of the song has to be performed and produced exclusively by me, and me alone. Notwithstanding the fact that I might get some friends involved to assist with any live performances (hah!) that I attempt, and that other versions of the song might well exist that have been produced and performed by some people that aren't the musical equivalent of a dirty old pus soaked hobo, the hit, if we're to be successful, has to be just me. It also has to be exclusively written by me, needless to say.
- I am quite good with computers, so things like setting up a website, digital mixing and stuff ought to be quite doable.
- I have quite good hand-eye coordination, being a bit of a computer game buff. I've often told myself that this ought to make me a natural for the guitar but the feel of those joy-pad buttons is so much more pleasing than ribbonising my finger tips on cheese wire all day for no more reward than a muffled and incorrect two chord version of good-bye england's rose. I have played a lot of Guitar Hero II lately though, and that does reward the dedicated player with quite sore finger tips, so I'm hopeful that this is all good training. I am better at Guitar Hero II than anyone else I know.
- I have access to a guitar (that one above about having no musical instruments was a bit of a red herring to be honest). I've had my brother's guitar for several years without him noticing to be honest, and assuming he doesn't reclaim it the show might just go on.
- I also have access to a digital four track recording studio thing. This belongs to my friend Laura who lives in London and since having her first child almost two years ago has been unable to commit to her recording career. The device itself is in a house just a couple of blocks away and as soon as I have a song I'll have it.
- I used to work in a Music Department, as a computer mong, and therefore I have seen lots of musical instruments and music software.
- I am literate (at least semi-literate) and have access to a pen and some paper.
So, wish me luck and hopefully the ride will be a thrilling one. Stay tuned for an almost immediate update.