Archive | September, 2011

Inagural Journey

5 Sep

I’d like to take you on musical journey, more specifically my musical journey, from a tiny dweeb with a mix CD of songs downloaded from Kazaa to this post pubescent humanoid interested enough in music to volunteer to write for this esteemed music blog.

I envision this category as an exploration of musical genres that I enjoy, handpicking artists, albums and even specific songs that are part of my musical gospel.  These music genres and how I divide and subdivide them are really of my own creation and bear no resemblance to what you may or may not have read on wikipedia.  Also, I haven’t decided yet if I will crossover artists between genres.  You’ll just have to stay tuned to find that tantalizing bit of knowledge out.

With that administration stuff out of the way, we can now make way on this exploration.  I’d like to start with my longest obsession: the blues!

The Blues: Great Guitarists

My guess is if you’re here, you’ve at least heard of the greats.  Perhaps you enjoy listening to the Pioneers of Blues, like Robert Johnson, Chuck Berry, the three Kings (BB, Freddie and Albert), Buddy Guy,  or Hendrix.  Or maybe you rock out with the blues guitarists of the British Invasion, try Jeff Beck, Mr. Eric Clapton, Jimmy Page or Keith Richards.  Perhaps, (like myself), you find something really cool about Southern Blues like SRV, Duane Allman, Dickey Betts or Gary Rossington.  Those guys are the greats for many reasons but they certainly are not the only great players out there.

I’m sure you’ve heard of a guy named John Mayer.  Tall, skinny white dude who only seems like a prick until you actually hear him speak and you can confirm it.  Everytime I used to hear the man’s songs I had the sudden and barely controllable urge to break things.  Sometimes I still do.  However, that doesn’t change the fact that although he may have the voice of a pop singer who injects himself with estrogen, Mr. Mayer plays like a guitar god on steriods with three hands who will be killed painfully when and if he stops playing with a healthy does of skill and soul.  Just check out the mans solo and even compare it to the great Eric Clapton’s.

As amazing as some of these guys are, I’ve never wanted to learn to kick ass and take names on guitar more than seeing a guy by the name of Davy Knowles play live.  I was standing next to another act, a pretty good guitarist himself by the name of Evan Watson (checkout this video) who was standing there, mouth open, shaking his head as Davy fretted and played with one hand.  Check out his album Coming up For Air to understand just how talented he is.

Just watched Davy?  The song he just played isn’t actually his.  It’s by a guy by the name of Rory Gallagher.  I know, wimpy first name, not wimpy player.  The bad boys of rock and roll themselves,, those Rolling Stones even asked this guy to play for them.  That’s how good.  Check out the Irish 74 tour live double album for a legend in tippy top shape.

Cut/Copy – In Ghost Colours

4 Sep

Everyone loves to party. I’m pretty sure it’s something integral to our human existence. We are coded to enjoy fun, naturally. Unfortunately, however, the most common way to party is to be in a room filled to the brim with other partiers while you drink alcohol to the point of memory loss and listen to dirty dub step wobbles. Seriously, does no one else see this as the mass production form of partying? I mean businesses and certain social organizations love the money, but cannot everyone else see that they are just being manipulated hardcore? What is a club if it’s not exclusive? The late 00’s and the early 10’s will surely be an interesting time period to study in the future (read dirty dubstep wobbles).

But I’m ranting now. I meant this to be a cute bit about how certain people like to party in their own unique ways and how it usually turns out much better than the generic brand of partying. Just going out into the night and finding your own fun place to hang out. And if you get lonely there invite friends. That’s what exclusivity means. That’s usually how most great things come about. I mean, the term, “thinking outside of the box,” itself sounds like it originated from some sort of freestyle fun.

Today I bring you a form of non-mainstream dance music. Cut Copy is an Australian synth-pop group brimming with 80’s nostalgia and 90’s sounds. Their 2008 debut album In Ghost Colours is full of upbeat party happiness and amazingly trippy transitions. I’m bringing you a single from the album and a personal favorite.

The single Hearts on Fire is borderline house dance music. The builds and drops it contains definitely make it eligible for the title, but in reality it goes so much further. The bass line and the drums make you realize that this isn’t just the usual computer made dance music, but rather a band making you rock out.

The vocals are simple and repetitive yet highly effective in light of the dance context. The sounds they used carved an entirely new route for this type of synth pop, pretty much making it viable to listen to. The brass solo and guitar solos are thrown in at perfect moments. The entire piece flows like a concrete song yet feels like it should go on forever as you party.

Just the name alone of this song, Nobody Lost, Nobody Found, speaks to most situations involving going out to party. One of the tripper songs and therefore pertaining to my interests the most, it opens with a sort of descent from space. The guitar line is quick and reminiscent of some sort of techno. The bass line is borderline funk, but just lazy enough to carry this chilled out dance song.

This is the song that would be playing at 5 in the morning as the sun is beginning to rise and yet the party is still going. The bird noises at the end play perfectly into this, and they then cut them out and drop the beat again signifying that the party never ends.

This entire album is pretty much like these two songs, but has enough variety to make each and every single song stand out on it’s own. The next time you are at a party and are bored of the dubstep, try requesting Cut/copy. I guarantee that everyone, especially the girls, will enjoy the break from the nonstop wobbles. I mean parties are supposed to be wild and random, not the same thing over and over again.

Cut copy recently came out with a new album, Zonoscope. I haven’t had the time to fully process it yet, but every time I listen to it I like it more and more. Go out and listen to some Cut/Copy and party alternatively.

-oko

P.S. The internet is one big party.

&)

Matt Kiefer’s Musical Craft

4 Sep

Matt Kiefer cares about music’s honesty. What is musical honesty? Artists are quick to go into studio and process songs like a frozen McDonald’s hamburger. It is easy. There are little mistakes. But musical honesty occurs when an artist refuses to let the “studio” do work for them. Kiefer, a musician and recording engineer from Pittsburgh, does find himself in an interesting situation because he is a recording engineer. If anyone knows a screw up, he does. He explained to me that he once would record several versions of each piece in meticulous fashion. But now, he thinks authenticity is most important.

“Of course I want the songs to sound perfect for the listener and capture the best possible performances but I also think those live takes and occasional mistakes sometimes add to the beauty or naturalness of the song,” Kiefer explained in an interview with The Music Court. “I used to stress over little things and take 5, 6, 7 or even 10 takes of a track to assure that the performance was spot on..But now I only take 2 or 3 takes at most and just keep the best ones. On the EP you’ll hear some occasional string smudges and stuff like that, but I think it feels more real to the listener…Like im sitting there playing it right in front of you. I’d rather give people something honest and that will translate perfectly live rather than “studio magic” up some polished manufactured piece that falls apart or doesnt translate the same way live. I like my recordings to say:  “I’m not the best musician, I screw up like everyone does…But I mean well!” I really just want to seem human.”

Kiefer’s worldly pieces do feel human and one can feel the love that Kiefer has for melody and quality. In the instrumental “Lucky Vegas,” Kiefer’s fluffy guitar transforms into a more pleading sound with the culmination of the creative drum beat that changes throughout the piece. It is fresh and original. “New York Puppy” provides a similar, but deeper feel. The song moves with the guitar’s efficiency. Kiefer will be releasing a free EP soon, but before that release check out his Reverbnation for songs. Follow Matt on Twitter: http://twitter.com/#!/realmattkiefer

Like I wrote earlier, I had a chance to do some Q+A with Kiefer. Here are Kiefer’s insightful answers.

1.) When did you first start recording and writing songs?
I first started writing songs when I was about 12 years old when i started playing guitar and really started listening to punk rock. Bands like The Ramones, Rancid, and The Smiths were all I was listening to at the time and all of their songs were just a few chords and really easy to play so I dabbled with their songs a bit and eventually started learning how to pick the chords up by ear and pretty soon I was figuring out and jamming along with all my favorite records and albums. As far as recording music goes, I worked my ass off cutting grass and selling it when I was about 15 and bought a little four track tape recorder from the pawn shop (that I probably paid way too much for, come to think of it now) and started making demo tapes in my bedroom with a crappy pawn shop mic and crappy old cassette tapes I’d find in my dads dirty dank basement. I remember I would sit on my bed all day and record hundreds of ideas that I’d come up with and just listen back to them thinking I had hundreds of songs…when all i actually had were just the same riffs and chord progressions in different keys! (laughs)
2.) What were your big music influences when you were growing up and how did this shape you into the artist you are now?
Growing up I listened to a lot of punk rock and a lot of 80’s soul and RnB. The punk bands were introduced to me by kids Id cut school to skateboard and get stoned with and new bands I’d find out about going to shows around the city. My dad used to play a lot of Journey, Alabama, Prince, The Jacksons, 80s Pop, & Jimi Hendrix records throughout the house so I think naturally I ended up being influenced by the old school stuff hearing it all the time. The focus with all those classic groups was strong melodies, so i think my sense of, or intent of wanting to be super melodic with anything I do probably stems from them.
3.) Okay, give me the rundown of what you have been recording. Just solo tracks? Have an album in the works?
Well, right now im recording an EP that will be for download absolutely FREE in the next couple of weeks on various music sites on the net. Im calling it “The FREE-P” and expecting to have it up for download by the end of September.. So far its just me and a bunch of acoustic tracks layered on top of each other… but I’ve got some great friends who are layering keys and strings on the EP as well as playing drums and various other instruments for me. But the majority of the work is just me in my home studio. So look out for that! After that I’ll be right back in the studio working on a full album slated for release around the end of this year. The album will be a mix of chill melodic acoustic tracks and also a full band feel at times ala Red House Painters/Sun Kil Moon. I really want to release a very strong collection of music this year.

5.) I’ve noticed that you put a lot of effort into melody. “Lucky Vegas” is an instrumental and “Be Honest” has a melodious long folk opening. The melodies are fantastic. Talk with me about them?
Thank you! I’m glad people appreciate the melody! I definitely put a lot of focus on making sure the melodies are strong but still accessible to the ears of everyone. I can respect great musicians like Steve Vai and Joe Satriani, who are very melodic in their playing, but I cant force myself listen to their music for more than 5 minutes without feeling like their songs are just completely ‘masterbatory!’ (Laughs)
Instrumental music is something that I’ve listened to for many years and is really all I listen to these days besides classic Oldies and 80’s pop. When writing Lucky Vegas I was sitting in my hotel room on the Vegas strip at the Monte Carlo Hotel on the 43rd floor just staring out the window at 3 a.m. trying to write a melody that captured how I felt looking at all the lights and the people and the experiences I had in the city that week and the plane ride there. That song kind of wrote itself actually. That’s usually what happens. I start with a simple melody and it takes off from there and then two hours later I have a 3 or 4 minute piece of music that im in love with and describes a feeling or emotion or memory for me.
Be Honest was kind of the same process. It is a song I wrote a few years back about a failed relationship and the bitterness that comes along with the ending of it. Whenever I use lyrics in a song I always want the melodies of the instruments to be just as strong, if not stand out more. I kind of put my lyrics and voice second to the instruments. In this particular song I layered a bunch of guitars on top of the main guitar in an attempt to really add an atmospheric feel without turning on 15 pedals and making it sound like a My Bloody Valentine tune. I think it worked out the way I wanted it too, doesnt feel too cluttered! (laughs) Originally the intro was about two bars long then the vocals dropped in, but I really was digging the feel of the harmonies & the visuals I got in my head from of all the guitars after I wrote them so I decided to just let it ride a little longer and really build up something in the listeners head to the point where you feel like “Whats coming after all this?” Really wanted an epic intro to the lyrics, especially for first time listeners hearing my music for the first time.
6.) What is your favorite part of recording songs?
I can’t say there is a part of recording songs that i would call my favorite… To me the whole experience is absolutely enjoyable. I like the engineering aspect of miking instruments up, getting good tones, playing around in Pro Tools, breaking the recording “rules,” getting cool sounds and so forth. I also really enjoy the experimentation that comes along after I get the bed or main guitar track and vocal track recorded. Adding harmonies, taking them away, extending and building off of parts, adding new instruments… I also really enjoy listening back to the finished product & figuring out what I could do to change the song and make it better or breathe a little more. The way a song sounds once its recorded, mixed, and mastered usually sounds way different than when I originally wrote it. What I like about that though, is at the heart or core of all those layered melodies and different instruments is really just a very simple song I can play on the acoustic guitar and sing along with all by myself and still have them same impact.
7.) I always ask this, so bear with me, if you had a chance to have record a session with three musicians (alive or dead) who would they be and why?
Hmmmm…thats a tough one! There’s so many great musicians that I would love to collaborate with! I think I’d definitely like to get Prince in the room with me because I know he is gonna write some real crazy sh*t and probably bring the funkiest vibe with him.
Jeff Tweedy from Wilco would be pretty cool too. He seems like he lost his mind long ago and had it replaced with lots of insight and also knows how to make 50 incredible and timeless songs out of the same 6 chords over and over. Last, we would need someone who can throw down on the rhythm section so I’d probably ask Jeff to call his drummer Glenn Kotche. Dude is absolutely nuts on the skins and extremely innovative with some of the different rhythmic instruments he’s invented! I definitely reccommend Googling or youtub’ing him and watching his videos. Im always humbled anytime I get the chance to accompany musicians who are better than I am. Whether they are famous (never), strangers, or just my friends who are great at what they do. I think no matter how good we may believe we are, theres always something big or small we can learn from someone else.
8.) Future plans and aspirations?
Future plans are definitely focused around getting this EP out this month, and getting an Album out before the years end. From then on its gonna be back to touring either solo or with a full band. Whichever makes more financial sense! (laughs)
As we speak, I’m auditioning new members for a full ensemble to play out. We are gonna really bring something diverse to the live shows. Id like to have a set that incorporates a lot of loud, wet, atmospheric and distorted full band sounds and then we switch it up and pick up the acoustics and pianos a few songs later. Lots of ups and downs and something that really takes the audience for a ride for 45-60 minutes. Bring out some crazy lights, Projector screens and visuals and really talented musicians to really help bring these songs to life. The biggest and most attainable goal of it all though is just to keep writing songs that speak to me and keep me inspired and just hope other people can relate as well.

A Review of Music in America’s Got Talent Top 10

1 Sep

Gosh, Matt, how many trashy reality shows do you watch. Three. Let’s get the record straight. I watch American Idol, America’s Got Talent (as of this season) and The Sing Off. Oh, wait. I watched The Voice. Damn. Yes, I admit it, I am a fan of music-related reality shows. What can I say? If you haven’t noticed from this blog, I love music. I love everything about it. I love melody and harmony – a simple acoustic guitar riff and a jazzy complicated bass piece. I’m a fan of good musica, musique, μουσική – music.

So, a show like America’s Got Talent appeals to me specifically because of the diverse music acts that tend to do well in the competition. Last night, after what seemed like an eternity (I am just figuring out that a season of America’s Got Talent lasts several months), the top 10 acts were revealed. And while judge Howie Mandel insists on calling season 6 the year of the dance, an equal amount of music acts are in the upper echelon of performers.

One cannot choose the “best” act of the bunch. I mean, how can one compare an old-fashioned, unexpected crooner with an opera singer? How about comparing a group of talented 12-16-year-olds who look like a 21’st century Jackson Five to an 11-year-old bluesy belter? It’s difficult. I do think that they are all quite talented and I am looking forward to seeing each of their performances on the top 10 show. But, before that happens, let’s take a look at each one and afterwards I will attempt to pick the act that I think will make it the furthest in the competition.


Performer: Landau Eugene Murphy Jr.  – 36 – West Virginia

Landau Eugene Murphy Jr. is a crooner. The purpose of America’s Got Talent is to find a potential Las Vegas act. It is difficult not seeing a man with his immense talent on a Las Vegas stage. I say this because there seems to always be a place for a 40’s/50’s throwback. I don’t think the crooner act is tired or antiquated. Murphy’s delightful voice can help restore the genre to Vegas. Murphy, a car washer from West Virginia, has blown away the judges week-after-week performing classics by crooners like Sinatra. And, on top of it all, he is so wonderfully humbled by the praise that it almost seems that he doesn’t realize the talent he has. You can’t help but root for the guy, and it is not difficult to because he is both genuinely talented and perfectly kind.

Lys Agnes – 27 – Colorado

Lys Agnes was a rising operatic voice until the sudden death of her fiance put her singing and vocal studies on hold for two years. Her touching story of triumph in the face of such personal tragedy immediately hooked the judges and audience during her audition. When she proved that she had a dulcet voice with exceptional range, she was pretty much propelled into the top 10. Talented opera singers with inspiring stories do well on talent shows. See Susan Boyle. Agnes deserves her spot.

Anna Graceman11 – Alaska

Anna Graceman is a prodigy in every sense of the word. The 4’11” singer is both mature in voice and prescense. Seriously. At 11, I was still having tantrums over not getting good baseball cards. Maybe I shouldn’t have admitted that. Anyway, Graceman has handled the stage with…well…grace, and her rocking voice and incredible piano skill make her a contestant to be reckon with on the show, even though, by the looks of her, you would never guess she was in a competition. She may be a little girl, but she kicks ass on stage.

POPLYFE – 12-16 – California

POPLYFE, the only band left in the competition, are a group of talented youngsters from Oakland. Here are the band members.

Dylan Wiggins, age 13 (Keys, Music Director/Producer)
Denzel Merrit, age 12 (Drummer, Co-Producer)
KehLani Parrish, age 13 (Lead Vocals, Writer)
Ranzel Merrit, age 15 (Sax)
Jaden Wiggins, age 11 (Bass)
Ali-Khan Lochin, age 15 (Dee-Jay)
Dillion Ingrem, age 13 (Guitar)

Now, don’t let their U.S.-wide anonymity fool you, POPLYFE is well-known in Oakland, where they are considered the next “big thing.” The band is being groomed by producers and, at such a young age, has performed at known venues. They are a gritty reboot of child-acts like the Jackson Five. They play serious rock n’ roll with flavor. It has been fun watching them perform and lead singer KehLani Parrish has one heck of a voice. They are all talented.

SO WHERE WILL THEY STAND?

Like I said, it is impossible to predict what musical act will outlast the other three. Like I said, they are all talented and I can see any one of them getting far. But since I challenged myself to make a prediction here is my final music act standings from 4-1.

4 – POPLYFE

3 – Lys Agnes

2- Landau Eugene Murphy Jr.

1 – Anna Graceman

Good luck to all of the talented acts!

UPDATE – 4:39 on 9/8 – I was correct with one of my predictions. Landau is through. But Anna Gracemen has been eliminated as well as Lys Agnes. POPLYFE, the precocious youngsters have made it through. The top four has two musical acts and two dance troupes. I am pulling for a Landau win. Who do you think will win?