Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Backdoor Santa, Crooked and Wide


Its been a while, sometimes life is what happens when you are waiting to do what you want to do…

I was on the Facebook wandering around and checked out a YouTube video posted by Steve Turner.  It is Clarence Carter doing “Backdoor Santa” which is totally worth laughing at.  The “Ho ho ho” kills me!  Santa only comes once a year…

Anyhow, seeing Steve’s mug shot reminded me that it was about 9 years ago this time of year that I got to live the dream for a while, assistant engineering on the Mudhoney record Since We’ve Become Translucent.  It is still making me smile now. 

Rewind another 9 years and I am at Duke University, hollering “Touch me I’m sick!!!!” at the top of my lungs in the little smoky on-air room at WXDU FM, knowing that my dorm-mates (I’m looking at you Lee and Dan) are listening, and will probably call in a request for Mr Bungle any minute. We listened to Sound Garden, we listened to Nirvana, we listened to Metallica, but Mudhoney is special.  Somehow it was the loudest sounding, the hardest, the energy just bursting out of the speakers. Like Iggy with the Stooges, or Black Flag it just made us want to destroy things and fight.  Usually we just drank more and fell down, but the possibility was always there. I lost my voice screaming along with Mark Arm a few times.

I have to insert a little side note here - There was a little short New Yorker named Ray who had the show before me, and he had educated me into the more obscure punk records (yes actual vinyl) in the WXDU library.  One of the bands he played for me (and I admit it was a struggle to get into) was Lubricated Goat.  Yeah.  Paddock of Love.  Yeah!

So jump forward again, and I am sitting in Gravelvoice studio with the Audio Wizard Scott Colburn.  Gravelvoice at the time was basically under the Aurora bridge, just down from the troll eating a Volkswagen in the center of the universe (otherwise known as Fremont).  You walked past the glass blowing guys place, into the studio and to your right was the bigger tracking room, straight ahead the smaller one, which you walked through and left to get to the control room.  Scott’s collection of weird shit everywhere.  On the wall was an archtop guitar, maybe it was a Kay?  It was completely unplayable, the strings were rusty, and if the word “action” describes how far from the fretboard strings are, these hovered above the neck so high, that the word “action” did not apply.  There were many eyeballs.  Residents fans anyone?

The mics are on, the band lays into the beginning of “Crooked and Wide” and through two walls, insulated walls, the bass punches me in the chest. Guy.  From Lubricated Goat.  Yeah!!  It was so loud.  I was cool though.  I might have been grinning like the Cheshire, and attempting to dislocate my own neck when Dan’s drums got going, but I don’t think anyone noticed...

Until Mark started doing vocals.  Luckily it was just me and Scott in the control room.  I was useless.  I just wanted to listen, and maybe cry.  That voice!  Scott, after the first take, calm and wise as always says - “Yeah, I think you could give that another try.”  Me in my head - “WHAT???”  Important to note we are tracking to analog tape here.  New take means old take is gone.  Forever.  So Mark simply says “OK” and blows his first take out of the water.  Me in my head – “Aaaaaaah!  Good thing I kept my mouth shut.” 

For some reason, during these sessions, and I can’t remember now who started it, we were eating large quantities of [brand name deleted] miniature orange chocolate chip cookies.  How’s that for punk rock?  Anyhow, we ran out.  Break!  We all leave, except for the Clarence Carter fan Steve.

9 minutes later, as we walk up to the door we hear this sweet ringing vibrato guitar.  Clear as a bell, bluesy, just gorgeous.  Mr Turner.  On the freakin Kay.

When you go listen to Steve Turner’s hands on Crooked and Wide here please ignore the picture.  Note Mark’s vibrato is pretty great too, but he’s playing through the Electric Mistress (that steely flange/chorus is so great!) so you can tell who’s who.

Merry Christmas folks, hopefully I’ll be writing a bit more again soon.

Sunday, September 26, 2010

Too Early : Rusty Willoughby


“In this world I’ve come to realize, you don’t want to get there too early”

I was lucky enough to record and mix an in-studio performance from Rusty Willoughby at KEXP last weekend, and since then I’ve been unable to get this song out of my head.  That sounds a bit clichéd perhaps, but remember I mix a lot of songs, listening to them hundreds of times in a day, so its pretty rare that one breaks through that crowded part of my mind.

Rusty and the band – Barbara Hunter, Barrett Martin, Johnny Sangster, and Rachel Flotard were great to work with, funny and serious at the same time.  This is my favorite kind of people to work with, they can really play, the craft is there, but there is still fun to be had playing music with each other.  I had a blast just being in the room.

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Size does matter - Sequoia National Forest


It’s been a while since I posted, a lot has been going on!  Anne and I went down to Sequoia National Forest for a vacation / road trip.  I cannot recommend this enough if you have never been.  We drove back up 101 and went through the redwoods too! 

When you are young, maybe size doesn’t matter so much.  Everything is amazing.  New sneakers make you want to run.  You bring spiders into the house to show your mom (that was hilarious Lori)!  A big tree however is still just another part of the world.  We watched little kids being much more fascinated by pine cones, or their gameboys, than “the biggest tree on earth!”  Nevertheless, I’m here to tell you, that as a vaguely adult like person, a big tree has the power to make you believe in something, the power to make you feel like a kid again.

We set off from Seattle on a Friday and sure enough it was cold and grey.  The latest summer arrival since we got out here in 1999.  It wasn’t until we got to Oregon that the sun really showed up.  We stopped in Portland and had lunch on Alberta Street, which I really dig.  The houses and restaurants and shops are all in amongst each other, nary a chain in sight, and the mix of people is great too.  Fish tacos.  Nuff said.

We trekked on and made it to Ashland, though after dark, so we stayed there and wandered in the park by the river in the morning.  I sat and practiced a little dobro and Anne took a walk, then we loaded up on coffee and headed for California. 

Lunch at Terry and Denise’s Wayside Grill in Mount Shasta – I think I’ll be visiting this town any time there is driving instead of flying to CA.  Love the mountain, its cooler despite the baking sun, because you are higher up.  Read the Shasta Angels post to know my other reasons for loving it here.

Then comes the long farm stretch on I5.  Redding, Sacramento, Stockton.  Olives, sunflowers, nectarines, peaches, oranges, plenty of alfalfa.  It is fun, and sunny. Then it is flat and long and hot.  The shape of the hay bales did vary though.  And there were cows, and goats, and llamas to point out.  Still this is where the music selection gets to be the game, we started out with Lindsay Fuller’s CD - yes still no i-pod for me, I’m waiting for the i-phone to be AT&T free before I make the shift.  Oh, and a lot more memory, because I do like uncompressed files too.  You can interrupt your CD music with some great Latino country stations, though the accordion might wear you down.  Also, the 1980’s are now “Oldies” so there was plenty of teen nostalgia music to try too.

Then we took a left after Stockton and took the 120 to 99.  Same – little towns and farms everywhere.  I mean OK there is Modesto.  I’ll take Merced over Modesto or (god forbid) Fresno.  The UC Merced campus is right on Main St, and this has infused the town with some friendly vibe. 

When searching for a place to stop and stay a while, I think the criteria are as follows.  A town you want to visit should have some trees.  They should be alive.  It helps if it is a town with a college.  Look for a main street with a cluster of local stores and restaurants.  There should be an independent paper, even small ones make a difference.  Some sort of natural landmark is good – a mountain, a river, a lake, the worlds biggest potato, something.  Where there are some tourists, there are people who make money selling them stuff, and the “you ain’t from around here” danger drops.  I’m sure I’m forgetting something important?

In Fresno we thought about staying, but it was so bleak and post apocalyptic that we just kept driving.  We would hit Merced on the way back after Sequioa.  I just kept on plowing until Squaw Valley, which had that important thing I was forgetting – a place to sleep when its dark and you are tired, that is close to a place with beer.  In the morning I got up and went and practiced outside until the flies got too aggressive.  Off we went on 180, right into the forest.  $20.00 gets you a week’s pass for both the King’s Canyon and the Sequoia parks.  Feel free to pay more if you have it.  Or just keep going back.  Think about it, if you have a tent, that’s only 80 bucks a month rent?!

Big trees!  It is impossible to describe the feeling in there, the smell of it.  It is like the idyllic healthy land of fairytale forests.  The trees are huge, and they block the sound.  There are almost no loud bass sounds when you are in the trees, so it is just the breeze through leaves, and the animal and bird sounds. The trees are so big that pictures of them seem silly.  Even panning up and down with the movie camera doesn’t do it justice. 

Some of them are more than 250 feet tall, 20 feet in diameter.  The scale does things to your sense of self.  You remember how short life is.  Some of these trees are coming up on their 3500th birthday.  The older you are in human years, I’m sure the greater the impact.

One of the best things done on this earth, was the establishment of the National Parks.  The Sequoia groves are churches of nature.  The coastal redwoods are a bit murkier, and I actually like the darker more threatening vibe too.  The high Sierras are clean and clear vistas.  The northern California and Southern Oregon coasts are gorgeous.  If you can go, go.  Maybe take the kids when they are a little older.

I feel as though breathing the scent of the incense cedars, the earthy musk of fallen giants, then the sun-warmed plains, then the salt and rock of the Pacific, has changed my life again.  It is as if the air has altered me chemically.  It is a very, very good feeling. 

Saturday, July 3, 2010

PS Lindsay Fuller @ Tractor


Just a little note – Lindsay Fuller’s CD release show was wonderful, her mom had flown in to surprise her, she was a little overwhelmed it looked like.  The show with the full band was great, I highly recommend going and seeing her.  Mark Pickerel’s set was amazing too, his voice is so cool, its like Roy Orbison joined the Sisters of Mercy.  It was pretty fun to see the Sangster v Fielder guitar slinger showdown too – there was some quality axe wielding, and a few good rock moves.

Tonight I’m playing at the Conor Byrne pub with Silverhands if you are looking for some twang rock for your 4th of July warmup.

Shasta Angels

“But what is this, what you have sought to learn from teachings and from teachers, and what they, who have taught you much, were still unable to teach you?” – Hermann Hesse

The quote above is from Siddhartha, which I read when I was a teenager.  I probably ought to read it again, but one of the things I love about the books that really get you, is that you take some meaning from them, and it grows into its own thing.  The book itself doesn’t matter as much as your own meaning; your own understanding that appears.  I always wanted to take Siddhartha’s journey, to leave home in search of myself, and to return for the final part of the puzzle.  This is one of the reasons that to this day, I love heading out on the road with a band.  Every time, the music gets better.  Every time something happens that changes me forever.  BC and I had just played in Portland, slept the night in Beaverton, and we climbed into the car knowing this leg would be different, no friends, no family, and a new venue to play.  California or bust!

It was a beautiful drive through Oregon, pausing in Ashland to take a little walk in the park, before continuing into Northern California.  Roughly six hours later, BC and I arrived in Shasta with the sun still shining.  Wherever we went in this gorgeous town, the mountain glared down at us.  Big nature will do that, it reminds us that we are puny, unimportant, young, and arrogant. 

We found our campsite for the evening first, almost by accident, we turned a corner and there it was.  A friend had left the staff shed open for us at her plant nursery.  Comfortable that we could navigate back after the gig, we headed out again to find the venue – the Wayside Grill.  One missed turn put us back onto the freeway, but a loop around found us exactly where we were supposed to be.

The Wayside is a restaurant and bar, back deck, pizzas and burgers, wine menu, the whole bit.  Outside in the parking lot, was a collection of California shiny-trucks (you can’t keep them that clean in Seattle) and a couple of Harley Davidsons.  And one scooter, which was nice, as I was starting to get a little bit of an “uh oh!?” feeling.  It just didn’t look like a music venue, and then even if it was, it didn’t look like the kind of place that would dig original songs.  I knew it was all in my mind, but I was really not thinking we would have much fun.

We walked in, no guitars yet, just trying to get a feel of the deal.  Sure enough the girl at the door station was not expecting a band, and when we asked for the booker she directed us instead at his wife Denise.  She smiled and said “We were wondering if you guys were going to show up.”  I wondered whether she was happy that we had, or if maybe she’d been hoping we would have bailed.  Still she was smiling though.  She went off to find her husband Terry.  I wandered over to the little corner stage, half pacing, half just gauging the lay of the land. 

There is one of those Bose PA systems, the one that looks like the base of a basketball hoop you put up in the street in the suburbs.  There’s a couple of wireless mics on stands, a little board, and a guitar.  There’s stuff up there like the other band is coming back later.  Uh-Oh.

On the wall behind the stage, here it goes, there’s pictures see.  Of musicians.  Autographed no less.  Bob Dylan (!), Lyle Lovett, Faith Hill, Brad Paisley.  Note the general country music vibe, though Dylan always gives hope when you are a songwriter or a guy playing guitar with a songwriter.  Still, I was thinking how this would feel totally different if it was a Silverhands gig, we could twang it up, maybe bust out some covers and do just fine.  BC’s music is not in any way “country,” and my uh-oh was growing.

Terry came out and asked what he could do for us.  “Food” said Brandt, like some sort of hungry musician.  They laughed and got us set up with menus and then Terry came and sat with us, wine glass in hand.  We acted like Americans and ordered burgers (mine with sweet potato fries.)  The food was amazing by the way.

Terry Kincaid.  The drive from Beaverton would have been worth it just to listen his stories.  He is a songwriter, with gold records and movie credits.  He played with Alabama.  He’s opened for Waylon and Willie.  He was a cop, a martial arts instructor, a motivational speaker.  He plays harmonica and guitar.  He once took Merle Haggard’s keys away to stop him from driving home drunk.  Merle had driven his tour bus to the bar.  This led to going fishing with Merle on Lake Shasta.  He’s got a million more stories, and he tells them well.

It turns out Terry also has a restaurant called the Stagedoor Grill, down in Socorro, New Mexico.  Musicians like to drop in and play with the band at either place.  The Wayside has only been open for a few months, and he is traveling back and forth to keep both places rolling. 

By this time our burgers are traveling south on gullet road, but all these stories are doing nothing for my sense that our music wasn’t going to down so smooth.  But: food done, up we get and grab our gear.  Up on stage, lets do what we do.  People are eating with their families 5 feet away.  There was big food, some big bellies, even some big hair.  There are some leather vests.  Nerves and all, we launch into the set, and amazingly, surprisingly, unbelievably, nobody cares. At all. 

That’s right folks, no-one turns around and heckles, no-one gives us the stink-eye.  Remember that scene in the Blues Brothers, at the bar where they play both kinds of music?  That was what I was worried about.  And I can actually play country and Western.  But this, well, it was friendly is what it was.  A few people smiled or tapped a foot, but no-one got really got into it.  But mainly, they weren’t heading for the door either.  Until they finished eating.  Then they went home, because it was time to go home.  Terry and Denise were listening, they moved to a closer table and hung out, talking to friends, being the king and queen of the restaurant as they should, but they clapped after every song.

We were shaky for sure, missed some changes, played some clams, but we did what we do.  I started playing to BC, instead of the backs of diners and found my groove a bit.  Then I suggested we throw in a cover BC does – Kris Kristofferson’s Lovin Her Was Easier (Than Anything I’ll Ever Do Again) and as soon as he hit the first chord, it was like Terry’s radar went off.  He came up to the stage as we worked through the first verse and was rummaging through a box at the back of the stage.  We are resisting the urge to stop and find out what is happening behind us, when Terry emerges triumphantly with the correct harmonica, we nod him in for a break and he plays beautifully, and there’s a round of applause at the end of the solo.  The regulars are on our side now, and we get a few grins from the kitchen guys too.  One guy is watching us through the pickup window when he can.  Now it’s fun, so of course we immediately get to the end of the set, which in our case means we have basically run out of songs.  We bow and start packing up fast, like the opening band on a big stage.  Terry thinks we should play one more.  We pull an obscure Willie Nelson cover out, that we learned for a tribute night at Conor Byrne (at which I actually was the singer, but BC has a good ear for lyrics and melody and remembered it).  Shasta gets treated to Mr. Record Man and we don’t quite murder it, we just beat it up a bit and leave it to recover until someone else plays it right.  End of show.

 
Terry thanks us, and I can tell he appreciates the music, and he likes us.  We take a picture with him and Denise.  They are the best!  We are in love with the world, because we survived our own fear, and didn’t get punched by bikers.  We get paid, which is nice, because gas is not free.  (Side note – if you are in the business of building cars that run on sunlight, and you want some free advertising help, hook me up a tour van that seats 8 people and has room for a drum kit behind them, and I’ll drive it everywhere and preach the gospel of freedom from oil, and I’ll write you a jingle too.)

We head back to the nursery, and when we walk through the darkness to the shed, I now think that someone is going to materialize with a shotgun, or a large slavering dog is going to eat us.  Instead we turn on the light and find only crickets and ants to deal with.  Sweet!  Jam session.  We play a bit, and then turn in.

It turns out that the train track right next to the shed is the BNSF line.  We weren’t really sleeping anyways, strange place, post show buzz and all that.  Still – !whoo whooooooo! and then that choo choo was basically 20 feet east of us.  It was Loud.  It was awesome.  Then, the strangest thing happened.  You know that screeching sound a train makes when it rides over the transition from full rails to the rails going through the tarmac of a road?  Well this train was going quite a bit faster than they usually are when they go through the city.  That screeching from multiple cars all at the same time, at a higher rate of travel, turns out to sound like angels, actual angels from heaven.

Over the low rumble of the diesel and the sheer weight of all that steel rolling north, came seven tones alto to soprano, all slowly shifting pitch.  It was as if a million wind chimes all sang at once, resonating in the hut, until I wondered if the sound was inside my head, perhaps I was asleep and this was a dream.  “I don’t want to wake up,” I thought.  Then the end of the train went by with one last wail of tortured steel against steel, echoing off the mountain.  I was awake for sure, and absolutely present.

It brought tears to my eyes.  This is why you go on the road.  There are things out there waiting for you.  Things your teachers cannot teach you.  You have to experience it yourself to learn.  Some of those things are frightening.  Some of those things are your own demons in your mind - the unknown.  But - some of those things are not hell-hounds, all hell breaking loose, or Hell’s angels.  Sometimes good people will take care of you and listen to your songs.  Sometimes there are real angels, and if you are really lucky, they will sing for you.

Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Last Thursday in Portland - Mini-tour Part1


Wow – it has been really busy since the return from the mini-tour with BC Campbell.  I have stories to tell, coming soon!  Here is a little bit I wrote on the road, but never had a chance to post.

Friday 6/26/2010

Well it is Friday morning here in Beaverton at the Campbell household.  It’s just after 8am and all is quiet except for the dog next door.  I’m assuming that he is filling in for a rooster, or that indeed “things are not as they should be!”  He is doing a fine job in either case. 

It cooled off a bit from the glorious heat of yesterday, especially here in amongst the trees.  It feels like the temperature is on the rise already though and it’s still above 70 in the house.  I hope it gets hot again as today we will hit the road and head down I5 toward Shasta – California or bust!  I’ve been told (thanks Hilary!) that jumping into Lake Shasta is a really good idea, especially when it’s hot.

Yesterday was hot.  It was Last Thursday, so the festival was going on along Alberta Street.  Artists, musicians, and the quickly multiplying Portland street food carts mingled with hippies and whatever you call those people who look like hippies but really are peddlers of cheap trinkets from Taiwan.  There was a pair of kids with video cameras trying to shoot scenes for (I’m assuming) their upcoming feature.  They decided we would be cool to have in the shot, or at least that is what I’m assuming since they kept on sneaking up on us like they were hunting wabbits.  “Frick’n paparazzi!” I growled at them just to let them know they had no sneak.  A kid oughta have some sneak.

BC and I played at the Alberta St Pub.  It’s a cool little room with a decent sound system and plenty of places to sit.  They have a layout where the bar is in the center of the building with its counter facing out to one side.  The stage is on the other side of the dividing “wall” that is behind the bartender.  So if you walk in the front door, to your left leads to the bar, to the right is the music room.  There is a lot of sonic spill from one side to the other, mainly in the form of the jukebox being audible during the show, which opened with a quiet acoustic set from: - 

Lizzie  Lehman - She has a really good singing voice, and some cool original sounding chords thanks to some tricks with two capos.  She said she has been writing songs for 6 years and playing music since she was little, but has really only just made the move from open mics to booking her own shows.  The songs were young perhaps, but thoroughly enjoyable.  Her accompanist (on Gibson Hummingbird no less) was technically proficient, and musically far too fussy and busy.  Less noodle please.  (I’m trying to take my own advice as I play with more songwriters, so I know it is hard.)  It’s so much fun to pull out all your tricks and play all the time.  But please.  Less noodle.

We played second and managed to clear out the young ‘uns that had come to see Lizzie.  I didn’t really believe they were of age, but I did just turn 39 on Wednesday, thus I am allowed for a couple of days to talk about how everyone under 30 looks … twelve.  Remaining in the room to cheer us on were the Buoy LaRue folks and the family Campbell.  By the end of the set it was filling up again and once Buoy was on, the room was solid.  People actually cheered and clapped, and it was a lot of fun.  Seattle audiences take note – clapping and cheering is fun!

Buoy LaRue closed it out.  The band is Michael Herrman on guitar and vocals, in this case accompanied by Adam Hoornstra on viola and Will Amend on bass.  We (yours truly and the quick-witted Campbells) pretty quickly identified the viola as “not a fiddle” since it was clearly being used more classically than folkyly.  Yes folkyly.  Well I’m not going to say “folksyly” am I?  These guys can really play, and Michael is a pretty good storyteller, definitely check them out if you get a chance.

I’m off for coffee and breakfast, then we’ll pile in the car for the longish haul down to Mount Shasta.  More to come…


Monday, June 21, 2010

Lindsay Fuller: The Last Light I See


“The good lord he giveth, and then walks away”

I was lucky enough to catch a fine set by Lindsay Fuller at Conor Byrne last Saturday.  She was accompanied by Jeff Fielder, on dobro and nylon string guitar, and Rebecca Young on bass.  I scored a CD, Fuller’s 6th – The Last Light I See, and I’m listening to it now.

Fuller manages to combine literacy with story telling in a way that avoids burying the songs in “clever.”  The lyrics are just better than yours - sorry.  They have the difficult-to-achieve quality of being readable as poetry, without feeling heavy-handed or verbose.  It takes an intrepid writer to take on Leonard Peltier’s incarceration (Big White Lie), to find a good rhyme for “Prometheus” (East Grand Exit), and to reference The Scarlet Letter (Trigger Happy).  I am in awe of the integration between intelligence and song-craft.

How does she do it?  It’s all in the delivery.  Lindsay Fuller fulfills the promise of the lyrics, in a voice that already feels classic to me.  There are hints of Lucinda Williams without the Texas, or Gillian Welch without the California, but really her voice is her own.  She is intense, hurt, lonesome, angry, hungry, but - most importantly - she is believable. 

The mood of the whole disc might be summed up by the quote above. 

“The good lord he giveth and then walks away.”  Beauty and love - the gifts of the gods perhaps - are here, but temporary.  Blood and bone, the limitations of a hurting human body are here to stay.  When you need them, these songs express the fight to survive, and the longing for joy inherent in our condition.

This record will be in heavy rotation here at the Farfetcher house.

About the players:

Along with Young and Fielder, Fuller is joined by Mark Pickerel on drums and Jason Staczek on keys.  Phil Peterson and Aubrea Alford provide cello, viola, and violin.  With production by Matt Brown and Jeff Fielder and a lush mix from Johnny Sangster, the disc has no fluff.  It is all straightforward folk rock and uncluttered arrangements.  Lindsay’s voice is front and center, and the focus is on the songs.

Mark Pickerel brings solidity and energy to the songs, whilst maintaining an orchestral approach.   His big low voice can be heard on tracks 3,5 and 6 of The Last Light I See.

Rebecca Young displays equal facility with electric or upright bass, and a no-nonsense style – you get the right note, at the right time.

Jeff Fielder is now clearly a first call session musician and accompanist here in Seattle.  His melodic approach, and multi-instrumental fluency complement Fuller’s voice, and add an emotional depth and color.

Jason Staczek is a composer and plays piano, Hammond organ and accordion.  I’m sure 7 years making records as owner of Chroma sound didn’t hurt his musicality, or his sense for space, both of which come through on the record.

Phil Peterson (House of Breaking Glass studio) I’m guessing is also the arranger for the string parts.  Together with Aubrea Alford on violin he provides a cinematic, wind-sweeping-over-the-plains depth.

Links:


Sunday, June 20, 2010

Lindsay Fuller, The Holyfelds, The Starlings @ Conor Byrne

Last night Anne and I went down to Ballard to the old familiar Conor Byrne Pub.  I had a very pleasant surprise, and fell in love with the opening band – Lindsay Fuller.  I’ll blog a review of her new album very soon.

We were there to see the Starlings play.  Moe and Aimee (bass and drums, harmonica and vocals) are back from their bicycle tour and so it was a chance to see the starters in the game.  They sounded great, and it was a fun time.  The new CD will soon be out and you can check it out your own selves.  Highlights were Fallen Days (For the one on the run) and Apple Tree.  Anne and I had no choice but to shake a tail feather.

OK, so back to Lindsay Fuller.  The usual Conor Byrne racket made it hard to hear unless you were up front, and the usual no-one cares unless you are “famous” factor meant that a lot of people missed seeing two of Seattle’s finest musicians backing her up – Jeff Fielder on dobro and nylon string guitar, and Rebecca Young on electric bass.  Jeff also sang some well-blended background vocals.

There were obviously some people in the know, given the cluster-fuck of cameras and recorders.  Even with this indicator for the more astute beer drinkers, that strange semi-circular realm of death which no living person should enter still glared ominously at the crowd from just in front of the monitors.  I’ll admit Lindsay has been described as “intense” (thanks Mike), and perhaps that is why nobody wanted to get up there, or maybe like me they were trying to get in the cone of sound from the PA just to hear the music.  The music was great.

In the middle was The Holyfelds who brought some danceable energy and searing harmonies to the stage.  They also brought an autoharp, which I must admit gives me the heebie jeebies, however given the aforementioned hullabaloo I couldn’t really hear it, or the dobro for that matter.  Ahhh bad sound, why do you haunt me?




Help me out with a link for the Holyfelds will ya?

BC Campbell, The Elderly, and Eric Claesson and the Scowlers @ Mars Bar


Back to the Mars Bar with BC Campbell, this time opening for The Elderly and Eric Claesson and the Scowlers.  Finally its was hot in a bar, this endless cool weather is really putting the blues into this city.  Settled in with a Manny’s and off we went. 

When you play out in a band that is still paying dues, you can end up on some funny bills.  There was the time when Pelusa played at the Old Peculiar doing country and folk songs and between sets the bartender was rocking the Pantera.  I also love the sets where the acoustic guitar duo has to play after the big drums rock band – NOT.  You would think the club or the bookers would figure it out.  Well I’m here to tell you that this time, someone did.  We had 3 bands with different styles, yet similar enough to be on an i-pod playlist.  The order went from quietest and smallest group to loudest and with drums.  Everyone was super to talk to and hang out with, and the music was great.  Thanks Mars Bar.

BC Campbell I’ve talked about before, suffice it to say that we are getting better every time and we had fun on stage.

The Elderly were new for me, and I enjoyed the set tremendously.  3 singers --- doing complex harmonies rather well considering the stage mix in there.  Guitar, percussion, banjo.  Unfortunately I don’t have a link for you, and describing music is difficult when the comparisons are not obvious.  This is why there are so many horrible one-sheets out there, and why the question “what kind of music do you play?” is something every band should practice the answer to.  I personally have no idea

Eric Claesson and the Scowlers brought some big reverb guitar and a low voice to some cool Americana songs, and even a David Bowie (Labrynth) cover!  Also, they wore suits, which I appreciate, especially when its hot in the club.  Comparisons we made while sitting there were to Nick Cave, Chris Isaac, Jon Spencer and argh BC will have to remind me the rest – comment it will ya? 

Same goes for anyone with a link to the Seattle elderly, not the Pittsburgh band that likes  DMB, or the Swedish guys (!).  Just comment the link please.

An interview with Rich "Money" Bresnahan


People want to know – who is Rich “Money” Bresnahan?  So I did an interview with the man himself sitting in the noisy office at OTB.  We had a beer and talked about Minnesota, steak burritos, the Seattle Sounders and art.  Listen to the podcast for the story.

FF Rich Money by Farfetcher

Thursday, June 10, 2010

Black Gold is in the Water: a song for the gulf



Like most everyone I’ve been following the story of the catastrophe in the Gulf of Mexico.  My friend Tania posted this link on facebook and it really struck home.  At the same time I was looking at pictures from high-school friends back home in the Bahamas, including the other much better off dolphin to the right.

Basically it pisses me off.

I know we are all complicit.  I drove my car to work burning oil today, but BP and Halliburton (really these guys again?!?) should make no profits at all until this mess is cleaned up, every cent devoted to environmental and social restitution.  I’m pretty sure that’s not how it's gonna go down though.

Reading that article, and realizing that there is an underwater channel 7 miles long (more dirt moved than for the Panama Canal) leading into the river (MRGO – Mississippi River Gulf Outlet) freaked me out a bit.  Then reading that the drill on Deepwater Horizon went 35,000 feet deep really slapped me stunned.  Don’t airplanes fly at 35,000 feet?

So I wrote a song, and Anne helped me edit it.  You can listen to a rough recording HERE.  I would love some feedback, if people relate to it, I will do a proper recording and release.  If that happens we are going to donate all (any?) profits to GulfAid.Org.  If you want to cover it – just send me a link to your version and any money goes to the gulf please.

Black Gold Is in the Water (copyright Julian Martlew & Anne Curtis 2010)

This morning’s tide was black and blue, Black Gold is in the water
On Interstate 10 you can smell the smoke, from Biloxi to Pensacola
The fiendish schemes of countless fools, now twisted steel and wreckage
Eleven men died on that rig, their fire was extinguished.

The deepest hole they ever drilled, Black Gold is in the water
35 thousand feet straight down, straight south of Pascagoula
April 20, 2010, the gas caused the explosion
That rig sure lived up to its name, Deepwater Horizon

36 hours that fire burned, Black Gold is in the water
42 gallons in a barrel of oil, half million barrels squandered
That black blood still flows from the vein, that geyser in the ocean
Those fiendish fools they all forgot, Black Gold is also poison

The beaten bruised and burning sky, South of Mississippi!
Bears witness to the costs of pride and profits without Mercy.

Mississippi, Louisiane, Black Gold is in the water
No gold or silver in your hand, no music in the Quarter
America’s two poorest shills, have more Black Gold than Texas
But working folks can’t pay their bills, the deck is stacked against us.

Now bruises fade o’er broken bones, Black Gold is in the water
Clear ocean smells like diesel fumes, that crude hid undercover
If you make your living from the sea, your livelihood is stolen
No you can’t swim and you can’t fish, they stole the whole damn ocean.

The beaten bruised and burning sky, south of Mississippi!
Bears witness to the costs of pride and profits without Mercy.

September when the storm-winds sing, Black Gold is in the water
White lab coats with smart machines, cannot control the weather.
Katrina, Dennis, Dean, and Ike, rushed up through MR GO
And Hurricanes as yet Un-named, won’t tell which way they’ll blow
Men in pride who face their gods, have never learned their lesson
And you and I will pay the cost, of Deepwater Horizon.

This morning’s tide was black and blue, Black Gold is in the water (repeat)

Sunday, June 6, 2010

Before the doors opened: On The Boards NWNW Festival 2010




It’s been maybe 8 years now, I’ve been working at On The Boards theatre.  This season is close to being over, the NWNW Festival is the last blast.  Perhaps you can allow me this moment of nostalgia?  Looking around, it’s maybe the middle of my life, a time of grandparents and sometimes parents passing, of kids I remember being born now going to school, big changes and little.  Also it’s finally the transition from what we call “spring” in Seattle to what we call “summer.”  Which begs the question -   “What have I been doing with my life?”  I have a good answer though, read on.

I’m sitting in the theatre now, listening to the HVAC and the bass from the show downstairs in the Studio, while the dancers performing later up here warm up. Dancers stretching is pretty calming, quiet conversation and occasional laughter drifting up over these familiar blue seats.  It’s one of my favorite times in this business; I know what I have to do for the show, my cue list is ready, I’ve eaten dinner, and it’s time to get in the calm headspace I need to do my job well. The On The Boards technical team is superb – Illvs Strauss on lights and Mark Meuter on the deck – we’ve done this before.  Oh – and I’ve mopped the marley.

For those that don’t know, the marley is the dance floor we lay on top of the dance floor – it rolls out like pieces of linoleum over the sprung floor (layers of fancy plywood with compression pads in between).  We literally tape it down with gaff tape.  The one out now is white on one side, and on the side facing up at the moment is a sort of dark charcoal, basically its black.  Before each show we sweep and mop the marley.

I love mopping, getting into a rhythm, the sound of the mop on the floor, the clear progress.  I prefer to do it without music playing.  I have my mental geographical markers for rinsing the mop.  I keep the mop pretty dry.  I work slowly, knowing that in this case, mopping doubles as an inch-by-inch inspection of the floor.  The aforementioned dancers will be barefoot and balancing here. Their connection to the choreography is the marley. Timing matters too, this warm-up I’m watching out of the corner of my eye is thankfully after it has dried.  We can’t control what bits of debris from the outside get carried in, but the effort has been made, the marley is clean.

The doors open in an hour, the public will come to see the results of years of training and hours of rehearsals.  The show may not work.  The people may not like it.  The critics may disparage.  Or maybe I’ll hear a standing ovation tonight.  I know the fear; I feel it when I play music, the doubts about technique, the questions of composition, the terror of performance.  I know the joy of earned respect and acclaim that may come after.

I look up and see friends and artists - brave performers beginning to move across the floor.  I’ve been watching them create, grow, change, fail, and succeed.  I’ve been here for years.  What have I been doing?  I’ve been trying to help them.  Oh – and I’ve been mopping the marley.

Thursday, June 3, 2010

Softly Now @ the Rendezvous


Wednesday night, the Rendezvous Jewelbox Theatre, I’ll skip the  history this time as I covered it in an earlier post - reposted here.  Playing in order of appearance - BC Campbell, with yours truly on guitar, Sam Watts as “Ghosts I’ve Met”, and Alex Guy as “Led to Sea”.

This show was curated by Levi Fuller; as part of his “Softly Now” series, which you can go and see the first Wednesday of every month.  The show was early, which is great for a week-night event, we were on by 7:30 and the whole shebang was over by 10pm.  Perfect!  Get a little dinner, catch a show, still have time to chill before sleep and back to the grind on Thursday.  PS It was great to see Renata Almeida at the show – hooray!

Our set went well, BC is singing great, and the new songs are coming together nicely.  The sound was great- clear and loud without being too loud – sound guys love an “acoustic” night because its easier to make things sound good when the stage volume is lower – especially in smaller rooms.  We really hit it on “I Believe” and “Tell Me” –  there are recordings of both from the basement on BC’s myspace page linked below.

I had never heard Ghosts I’ve Met before, and I was pleasantly surprised – Sam has a quiet approachable voice and big sounding chords, with some really great lines in the lyrics.  It was nice to get a chance to listen to his Taylor after BC’s Martin – live comparison!  Still no clear decision, the Martin has more good mids, the Taylor is brighter by far, always will be a taste thing I think.  If I was moneybags guy I guess I’d have a Martin for plectrum stuff and the Taylor for fingerpicking.  Favorite song, “Payphone Patience.”

Led to Sea (a Stranger genius nominee for those in Seattle) is viola player and singer Alex Guy, with an assortment of effects pedals and loopers.  She sings in the post Tori Amos school, and I clearly hear the connection to Mirah, and Laura Veirs.  Her solo show is impressive, she will win some fans on tour this summer.  The music is arranged beautifully, and she plays “out” enough to keep the listener on alert.  Fans of Andrew Bird, 2 Foot Yard or maybe even Maya Beiser will find a new record to love with “Into The Darkening Sky”.  Locals in the scene – Paul Kikuchi on percussion is a stunning player, and Lori Goldston (the Kevin Bacon of Seattle musicians I swear she knows everyone) played some cello, and Jherek Bishoff on bass is a player too. 

Here’s your links:


Repost - Rendezvous with Shasta Bree


Playing with Shasta at the Rendezvous.

http://www.rendezvousseattle.com/index.html

Ok – so for those of you that do not live in the (sunny today!) berg that is Seattle, the Rendezvous is one of those bars that has mythical status.  Everyone knows about it, has an opinion, and quite likely has gotten way too drunk there once.  It was one of the first places I ended up in back in the 90’s (that’s more than a decade ago people) and I remember it as a dark scary place with a real tough bouncer, cracked out people getting in physical altercations in the front room, incredibly strong drinks, and people who didn’t work for the Rendezvous but did work at the Rendezvous selling things that I wasn’t sure I didn’t want.  Tony who played this gig with us (more on him later) reminded me that you used to be able to cash your welfare check at the bar. 

Years later, new ownership, and about half the things I remember are changed.  Its not as dark, no crackheads, no deals that I saw going on.  The drinks are still strong, but since you can’t smoke inside, its not as hard to catch your breath after the first swig.  This gig I was giving my liver a rest, so I vicariously enjoyed the occasional gasp for air, and the way everyone’s eyes kind of slid off me like it was too hard to concentrate.

Every gig at the Rendezvous has to be weird.  I knew from experience not to get there too soon – the first time I played there I ended up standing outside in the cold rain, because the burlesque dancers wanted to finish packing up the feathers and rearranging the goodies into street wear without putting up with the gawking of some skinny guitar player.  This night it was the Job Stress Comedy Show, which I hope was funny, but I am just going to imagine that it involved employees of the Rendezvous slandering the owners of the Rendezvous whilst doing shots of Goldschläger.  Whatever it was, there were girls with feathers and glitter standing about as I pulled up to the no parking zone, hit the emergency blinkers and started loading.  Bouncer was still tough, but friendly.  Left Anne with the stuff and found rockstar parking.  As in I parked next to a chain link fence a block away, where various rock stars watched my car for me.

Inside – met Malachi – the sound guy named after the last minor prophet (I know this is debatable so you religion majors can take it to your own forum).  He does what he can with a strange room and not much gear.  Oh – did I mention it’s the Jewelbox Theater?  Nagahide booths man.  And some better than folding chairs.  The stage sounds strange, but it actually sounds decent in the house if you are willing to be quieter.  Which is hard to be willing to do when there is a DJ throwing down in the Grotto – ie same bar, private party room.  “I wanna rock right now, I’m rob bass and I came to get down” except really fast, and with a techno beat.  Thump thump thump, and now Acoustic Night at the Rendezvous!

1st up – 15 year old Cole Parrish, who impressed me with her togetherness and comfort on stage, and a tough girl handshake when she introduced herself.  Her songs and voice are already well on the way to being great, and I can see her doing really well.  You might as well go to her myspace now and listen to a cover of “Say My Named.”  Stay and hear some of her own stuff if you dig her voice, she’s got things to say.


2nd act – Sadie and the Crooked Road – a new band for me, always fun to meet some new folks doing the folks music.  They are on a multi date go round with Star, so you can catch them if you missed this one.


3rd up – Shasta and yours truly – we played a shortened set as the 5 band bill was not going to fit in the allotted time.  Tony and Star did the same at the end, to get us done by 1am (thanks Malachi for the extension)  Lucien and I got our thing going quick, I love playing with people that listen to each other, and he is really making the new GFI pedal steel sing sweetly now.  I love this instrument.  Resisting getting one.  For now.  Also we wore suit jackets.  Shasta and Val harmonized well despite wanting a lot more monitor J
and a blue dress was debuted.  With pockets!  Pics here

Music here


4th - Then Tony Fulgham showed us all up, just by being the guy who belongs on a stage, so easy up there.  Every now and then I hear Elvis Costello when he is singing (hope you don’t mind Tony) and everyone in the place wants to get a beer with him.  He also took the energy up, which almost defeated the DJ, who was ramping up too.


Finally the fans who waited so patiently, got themselves a tight half hour from the amazing Star Anna (just Star and Justin on acoustics this show) which was almost enough time for her voice to reach full power.  It was nice to hear people really digging the show, real fans.  Go see them on the 4/30/2010 at the Tractor in Ballard, and swing by Conor Byrne and catch me doing some Willie Nelson with the  Pennylifters beforehand.


Wednesday, June 2, 2010

Duke grad on the top 40 charts


Alright, this one is for my Cameron Crazies out there, and the Boggers in particular.  Please, tell me what is up with Mike Posner.  (Is he related to Adam?)  Apparently he just graduated with a 3.59 (B.A. in what?)  My first suspicion was that he was some kind of e-bag, then I figured with all the weed he was a Beta.  Nope – Sigma Nu.

Listening to/ watching the tracks on YouTube (here) I can not readily identify any reason to think this dude is “cooler than me,” or the p-froshwomen (yes “froshwomen”) in designer shades. But then again I graduated “O laude” as my mom likes to call it, and that was 14 or so years ago now, I guess I have to admit I no longer have my “finger” on the pulse of the college scene.  Still, there are football cheers with more poetry than this – remember “thrust the ball into the air, receive it with reckless abandon” and “we make holes in teeth.”  Of course there was “Put Newell on the nose, or were taking of our clothes” so I get that errrrr simple and direct has a certain hooky thing, hold on let me listen again.

By the way, what does “Ice Road Truckers” have to do with “Drug Dealer Girl” ?  OK, so his voice is more high school than college, though its kind of fun to see the quad back there – and I think its time to take up yoga, not sure why.

Getting his songs on itunesU was a pretty good move though.  Seems a little less egregious than selling the university comp tix like the guys at Kansas.  I can’t help it though, all I can hear is a bunch of guys in the back of every beat yelling “Moses!” in time to the music.

Go Devils. GTHCGTH!

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

Bob Dylan to play Bumbershoot

So the big news today is that Bob Dylan will headline at Bumbershoot this year!  The tickets price for a day pass is only $40.00 including the mainstage shows, if you decide to skip the big names you can get in for only $22.00, which is really cheap.  40 bones is cheaper than a Dylan ticket.  If you want to spend big bucks of course you can still go for the VIP tix at $450.00 for all 3 days, reserved seating and separate entry from the unwashed masses.

Having just gone to the Folklife festival this past weekend at Seattle Center, which was free with a suggested donation box, I can say that the chances of Bumbershoot being packed to the gills just went through the roof.  Folklife was already elbow to elbow on the pathways, though not much of the music was engaging enough to draw crowds at the stages.  I didn’t see that much to be fair – It was cold, rainy, and I was in cherrypicking mode, just went to see friends play (the Starlings). 

I’m already hearing the usual complaints that accompany the booking of Dylan – he’s old, he mumbles, he doesn’t care – but the fans know none of this matters.  I have a theory that ever since the booing that started in ’66 stopped, he’s been trying to get people to react any way he can.  The last time I saw him (with RD and Grilled Cheese here in Seattle) he sang every song using the same 2 notes “Like a rollin stooooone,  Maggies faaaarm no more, times they are a chaaaaanging,” and he played electric piano almost all show, finally putting on the acoustic at the end, and then barely playing it anyways – Larry Campbell knows what to play.  Its hit or miss how he will be (those crappy shows in the 80s ouch) but the band is so good even on a bad day it’ll be fine.  You know all the words anyways.

“Who will go?” is a question my buddy Meuter raised, and it’s a good one.  Its like a socio-cultural survey – will the kids go, or only the older folks?  Looking forward to finding out.  The set times have not been listed yet, so I don’t know if I will be done with KEXP’s secret location music lounge in time to make it – assuming I have the gig again .

Dylan is in Europe now, and the set lists seem to have plenty of the hits in them, go here to take a peek.  As usual though, no way to tell if the pattern will hold through September.

Other artists I’m hoping to see :
Neko Case, The Decemberists, Visqueen, Zoe Muth and the Lost High Rollers, Star Anna, Laura Veirs, and I still love Bobby Bare Jr every time I see him live.

Ozomatli are always fun live, and intrigued to see if Justin Townes Earle has something new in the bag.  The whole list of performers is here.

Thursday, May 27, 2010

BC Campbell @ High Dive


Just a little short entry - BC and I played at the High Dive, it was a Nada Mucho event.  It was great to see Tom, Joy, and Mike out, and the swami made it just in time too!  The sound was great as always, great room to play.  It was very empty though. 

This was the first time in a while playing with BC, and we added a bunch of new songs, got to get those recorded soon, even just a rough version.  The duo show is coming together nicely though!  See you guys at the mix tonight, or the Rendezvous next Wednesday.

Monday, May 24, 2010

Catherine Cabeen @ Seattle Changing Room

It’s a strange thing to blog about a different kind of Farfetcher endeavor. But here I go…

May 21st through 23rd Catherine Cabeen put on a dance concert at the Seattle Changing Room. It was a great success, selling out every night, and last night (Sunday) there was a standing ovation that Catherine could not stop even as she tried to get attention to thank the audience and announce the post show q&a session. I was lucky enough to be involved not only for technical support – I also composed the music for the third piece performed “Composites.

My good friend Jay McAleer, who used to work at On The Boards theatre with me as the technical director and master electrician was responsible for getting this project started, and for including me. I was honored to be asked; we had talked about working on a project together, but it was still a surprise to actually get down to doing it for real.

Jay approached Catherine about creating a piece, using a text he wrote. The intention was to sidestep the ways that text has been used before in dance, by avoiding literal references, and instead focusing on the syntax and rhythm of the words. Catherine took this perhaps too literally (haha) and began devising a phonetic movement vocabulary, with the intention of actually translating the words into a new language, word by word, even syllable by syllable! This turned out to be an amazing way to create dance abstracted from the meaning of the words, but still directly related to the text. At the same time though, it proved to be a very slow and difficult way to choreograph a piece. The 1st, 5th, and 12th (last) sections used this method, but in the other sections Catherine returned to a less prolix method.

Jay and Catherine met once a week for rehearsals, in which he would read his words aloud as she worked through the movement she developed in her own practice earlier in the week. Jay and I also met up a few times and talked through the kind of music that would work, and in the spirit of not recreating the ways we had seen text used before, I suggested recording him reading, but then running his voice through synthesizers and processing to obscure the actual text while retaining the musical delivery of the words, the timing, and the rhythm. After our recording session I put together a first draft basically using every trick I had in the bag. We all met up at one of the Saturday afternoon sessions, and listened and discussed, eliminating some of the (ahem) bad ideas, and choosing the cooler stuff.

Back to the Farfetcher basement. The first section of the text refers to the “fife and drum” and to the fiddle, and here I was semi-literal myself! I pulled up samples of actually flute, African drums, and a pizzicato violin section.

In this vein I also dug into the sound effects library for these quotes:

Some sailing sounds - “If you must know, I was thinking of myself as sailed into Athens”

A train whistle - “During the 1870s, railroad companies in the United States maintained 50 different time zones”

Some rain – “All day long with the rain on the window, and the cracked teacup by the phone”

Jay meanwhile was adamantly stopping Catherine from being too literal in the dance, and he stayed the course with me too, reminding me to abstract more, to go for the moods, meter and feel of the text. I was being too…anti-metaphorical. Overall, the words we decided captured the overall vibe of the text were “the thick residue of experience,” and so everything got a bit darker. (I know I keep quoting from a text you don’t have – but you will have to buy the chapbook from Catherine’s site to get it, at least until Jay publishes it in another form.)

We added a typewriter sound (recorded with the laptop off and me beating away on the keyboard) and I reprised that sound later by playing snare drum samples on my midi keyboard as if I was typing. I used the flute to indicate the spaces between sentences for Catherine to cue off, since she was dancing to Jay reading, and now we were erasing huge sections of text from the mix. A few musical themes emerged, the characteristic flute punctuation, a pizzicato violin part, and a syncopated finger-picking pattern on my trusty Les Paul Special. I don’t know why, but the music turned up all basically in E though it drifts between major and minor. Catherine loved a rhythmic gated effect from the trial draft, but we moved it to a different section and I “technofied” it with an electronica snare roll and a dance style syncopated bass line.

My favorite cool trick may have been putting a gate on a wind sound, and then using Jay’s voice as a side chain, so that it came in only when he was speaking. I had a lot of fun with panning, delays and a truly massive reverb on the guitar. The “bro” turned up for the penultimate section (dobro I mean) – it’s a Gold Tone, tuned in bluegrass open G if you were wondering J

In the final section, Catherine spoke part of the text aloud in the room, which was then repeated by the recorded Jay. Remembering this sonic moment and its 3 dimensional performance reminds me that the piece is really all the parts, you have to see the dance, hear the text, and hear the music to really connect to this. Perhaps the video will be a viable approximation, and I promise to alert you when it turns up, until then – hopefully this tunepak (below) will work (or you can go to my reverb nation profile here). I had to break up the music into sections because of space limitations - anybody with a good free podcasting host please comment! Actually – all comments welcome, no-one has reviewed the show yet, so be critical and say what you feel. (I will delete spam and useless profanity though)

Thanks to Catherine and Jay for being incredibly fun to collaborate with! Thanks to Scott, Jay, BC, Tom & Joy, Rich and especially to my lady Anne for getting me through my art music debut!

The music is here: http://www.reverbnation.com/tunepak/2671983

Other links :

http://www.catherinecabeen.com/dancer.html

http://o.seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/thearts/2011913599_cabeen21.html