Friday Studio Notes

The day flew by quickly. Tons of lead vocals. I sang meh ass off. A song called ‘Hollywooden Dreams’ proved quite difficult since it is quiet and mostly falsetto. Paul and I tried to pick the best lines, examining the timbre and breath with a microscope. Sometimes I can’t believe I’m trying to sing this stuff and would prefer a true professional take over. What the hell though – they are my babies. I’ll deliver them as best I can. Perhaps someone will want to adopt them and give them better clothing and food. Ok, enough self-deprecation – a constant theme of mine.

Eric started doing lead guitar parts tonight. We set up the amp and ran a long cable into the control room so he could just hang out with us while he recorded = a laid back and comfortable way to track if you ask me. Punch-in instructions didn’t have to be relayed thru the pa, which would have taken twice as long to get everything ‘correct’. No headphones either. We just listened to everything over the monitors and were able to provide guidance with no interference whatsoever. Eric is another guy I can’t believe I have the opportunity to work with. He paid close attention to the demos and made sure to get all of the hooks right, while making them sound so much better. I can’t wait for you to hear this cd. Joe and Eric have simply killed their parts.

Wednesday and Thursday Notes

Ok, I’ll admit it, I’m writing this about 5 days after the fact. I’ve returned each night completely drained and haven’t felt like doing anyting, much less typing. This album has a lot of extremely difficult material. The songs sound deceptively simple, but are a real bitch to play or play correctly. Who wrote this crap? What was he thinking? Is he insane??**

** actual comments from me, chris, eric, joe and trey at various times.

Paul is pushing the recording equipment to the limit – about 4 mics on each guitar amp = 4 tracks per guitar. 2 in front, one in back, one ambient. The sounds are thick and syrupy. Ran thru all of my parts. I doubled many of them through a, dare i say it, marshall speaker with an ancient 50’s PA head that I’m ttold was the impetus for the marshall head. A very innocent looking metal box with 4 tubes – one per input with their own gains. I think Jeff Beck pioneered the use of it to get the wild distortion everyone now takes for granted. I tried to reduce the strums for a few tunes. I need to remove more of them from future songs. Its been a fall-back of mine for too many years.

Joe completed all bass duties with only a punch here and there. He’s a lot like me in that he gets angry when flubbing one note out of a thousand. Ok not like me as I flub a much higher percentage. Joe’s work at the end of the song ‘So Green/Human Reel’ is gonna wow you. I remember begging Joe to play bass for us way back when. He’s a monster guitar player in real life and I know its not as fun to play ‘that other instrument’. I thank God he agreed to play – he’s nailed every part with conviction and agility.

Oh – I don’t think I’ve given you the setlist for the cd (in no particular order yet)

Oldies –

  • Ego
  • First Five
  • You’ll Come Around
  • Mariner’s Dilemma

Newbies –

  • Be Cool
  • Sweet Simulacra
  • So Green
  • The World’s Ventriloquist
  • Little Doll
  • Hollywooden Dreams
  • Anymore

1st day of recording

WOW! Whirlwind was an understatement – more like Tornado. I arrived at Artisan around 1pm yesterday and Paul and Trey were already set up and getting drum sounds when I arrived. Paul is a master at getting the most out of a kit. We used Artisan Owner Tye Robison’s kit for the session btw. Paul set up several ambient mics around the room to fill out. I’m convinced he could have used 2 booms for the whole kit and it still would have sounded incredible.

Have I mentioned before how much I love my friend Trey? Aside from being a kind and giving human being, the guy is a monster drummer and tore thru 10 of the 11 songs in an 8 hour period. That’s right, we’re almost done with drums. He’s probably spent the most time rehearsing the new material (including myself) so he was more than prepared. I’d say only 2 or 3 takes per song were all that he needed to get the job done. Joe and I played some scratch guitar/vocal/bass along with him to ensure the structures were correct, but I doubt he needed us. I’m sure he got a kick out of me singing guitar and keyboard leads in sotto voce.

Tye hooked us up with Kirk Powers – a really nice guy who provided us with some fabulous basses to rent for the session. Since I forced Joe to be in the band and play bass at gunpoint – we really haven’t invested that much in good gear – so this really helped out.

I’d post all of the tech-specs on what mics and amps we are using, but I honestly don’t care about that. You can contact Paul if you are interested.

Today we’re gonna record some horrible guitarist named Jeff Jones and then let Joe knock out some bass parts this evening. Eric’s coming in on Friday to do lead guitar parts and I, er I mean that freak Jeff will start on vocals Saturday. Holt will add his parts on Sunday and we should have a few days after that to add extra junk and experiment a bit.

So far, I haven’t had time to take advantage of the amenities Artisan offers – we are literally moving at the speed of sound to get this cd done. When yer the one paying for it, it kinda forces you to sink or swim – and things are going swimmingly. Hopefully Paul won’t be ready to kill me after his fingers fall off from so many punch-ins.

More tomorrow!

Let the studio madness begin!

Howdy Folks! Long rant for a change.

The Jones Thing is finally going into the studio on Tuesday the 25th, for a whirlwind recording session at Artisan. Paul Williams will engineer and co-produce again! We’re doing 11 songs, or really 10.5, since one of them will consist of snippets and loops set against Trey’s wonderful drumming. About 1/3 of the material is old and previously unrecorded, so that should go fairly quickly. The other stuff is brand new and has been fun to learn with the band. I’m looking forward to hearing the tunes outside of the demo versions I did myself at home.

I spent a lot longer on the demos this time, though I can’t say my performances or shoddy recording techniques were any better than before. I really do enjoy being in that moment of creative bliss – embedded within a line or hook, adding to it, massaging it. I spent a lot of time inside my head with these songs too, determining the best way to arrange phrases, melodies, etc. Now we just need to get those ideas expressed on the demos and in my head out there.

Again, to demean my own technical abilities, I sometimes lament that I am unable to properly ‘do’ the final versions of the songs by myself, but I really value the input and abilities of the rest of the band to make the tunes better and more ‘bandy-sounding’. Hence the need for The Jones Thing, an all-star band, if I may brag. The guys have done wondrous things with the parts and made many great suggestions and improvements to them. I’ll admit it has been hard to get everyone in a room more than once or twice a month – but there really is a magic that emerges after a few minutes of warm-up. During last night’s practice there were several great moments of clarity I think we all felt – knowing looks like “this is going to absolutely kill ’em”. ’em being you, the listener.

The new songs are gonna be quite um… different. Different in a good way I hope. I’m taking a lot of risks with the lyrics and arrangements. Nothing like Jandek mind you. Just a wide variety of quirky styles and genres. I’ve never tried to overtly edit my creativity into one pre-defined and accepted format. But don’t get too worried, this is after all, just pop rock music. Melodies will be everywhere and each song will have plenty of energy and interesting stuff going on.

Whether it be a good or bad omen, my hardcopy of ‘The Daily Adventures of Mixerman’ arrived this morning! Fascinating, hilarious read. Buy it!

I’ll try and post more during the session and let ya’ll know how everything is going. We’re going to mix the stuff in December and try and have a cd released in January or February, unless some label or distribution deal is struck – hehe. I’ll also work on a new version of this li’l site.

Take care,
Jeff

Studio Booking and dconstruction.org

Hey Kiddos – We’re all set to record with Paul Williams at Last Beat again in late October/early November. Just a couple more songs to complete and then of course learn or re-learn with the band. Everyone in the current lineup is pretty committed to doing the thing and a few other folks have mentioned they’d be happy to play if things get dicey with schedules. We’ll try (haha) to do a couple shows as well to prep.

Speaking of Paul Williams, he was recently interviewed on this cool new internet podcast show called dconstruction.org hosted by Lindsay Graham and Robert Jenkins. Its a high-quality broadcast which critiques independent music in and around Dallas. Check it out.

Silly Midi Stuff

Oh yeah, that band thing…

Everyone has been extremely busy with other endeavors so alas we have not practiced or played live in quite a while. I guess it will happen when it happens. I haven’t really been that proactive either, so you can add laziness to the heap of reasons why you haven’t heard from us.

I am, however, still writing more tunes for a new cd – and will try to bundle 8 of the latest with 4 of the really old ones (Ego, First Five, Mariner’s, You’ll come around). Looking to book some time in late October at Last Beat again. Hopefully we can secure Paul Williams for production. Of course if Andy Partridge happened to take an interest in the project, I guess I would let him help too.

When I do get a little break at work, I open up cuebase, draw some silly midi notes and come up with the most vapid loops like this, this, and this. Most of the patches used are emulated 70s era synths which add to the cheese value. It is a stress-relieving exercise at least. I promise the ‘real’ new stuff doesn’t sound like this.

Will let ya’ll know when ‘real’ band stuff happens too.