Jan 13

There’ll Be Another One Along In 5 Minutes

The other night I was discussing an impending album release from a local band: as is invariably the case with skint unsigned acts the CDs would be duplicated by the band themselves and sold at gigs. I was offered a sample CD to take home but with the caveat “but it’ll still change”. A bit of discussion ensued and we came to the conclusion that left unchecked their album would keep on changing, evolving, and effectively no two batches produced would the same: comments from listeners such as ‘oh the drums are a bit loud’ might result in a balance change, or ‘that cowbell doesn’t fit there’ could mean an arrangement alteration. Put simply: there would never be a ‘final version’, even after the album launch gig, and it would be a perpetual ‘demo’.

Now, I am a firm believer of a release being ‘a point in time’ for an act, a snapshot if you will. When you bite the bullet and submit your track to get an ISRC (basically a barcode) you need to submit the exact track you are releasing, and when you have physical media duplicated then that’s where you draw the line: a hundred copies are etched and that’s it, no going back, no ‘tweaks’. Effectively you as a band or act are forced to draw that big black line on the mix, warts and all – that’s what separates the demo from the release.

Yet with home manufacturing it’s all too easy for a band to change things after-the-event, and it does a great disservice to the people who have been to (say) your launch party and bought a copy. Many new performers and young acts are too impatient to release their new tracks, so version-upon-version is published to Soundcloud (or whatever music-site-du-jour) spoiling the impact. As a band/act you’ll never be completely happy with something because after all your tastes evolve and your hearing changes, but that’s no reason to rewrite history.

There are some wonderful examples of ‘slightly broken’ performances out there – off the top of my head Minnie Riperton, David Bowie, The Beatles, Barry Manilow and even Scott Joplin have recorded imperfect versions which have a charm to them. Many of those would have been lost had it been easy to ‘evolve’ a track and I think we’d have been worse off for it.

As an extreme case I can cite an artiste whose second album consisted 40% of slightly reworked/reproduced versions of tracks from her first album. Her third album was 50% reworked/revised tracks from her first and second albums. Goodness knows what the fourth contained but I’ve stopped buying her albums now – I might as well wait for the seventh or eighth so I can hear some new work.

Mind, I’ve not been exempt from this in continued adventures with Obvious Pseudonym: 18 months ago we released The Six Noises EP, then a week after I’d the master copies had been dispatched I tweaked it into a ‘Special Edition’ version correcting lots of little mistakes I’d noticed since the band listening-party. Thankfully the original run of CD production was cancelled so we didn’t have to deal with physical copies, but still the iTunes version was different from the CD version in small, subtle ways (I believe the CD version is superior but you may have a different opinion). Nowadays I sit on a mix for at least a month and will go back and listen to it with fresh ears some weeks after it’s been mixed or frequently longer, eg. I noticed a slight mis-timing in the piano track on Baby Baby just the other week… 16 months after I recorded it.

In short? Don’t rush a release, give it time, but draw a line and wave goodbye to a recording once it’s flown the nest – don’t keep picking at it. Your fans will – eventually – thank you.

Edit: As @mattbluefoot points out: ‘This could be paraphrased as “don’t be George Lucas”‘. :P

Dec 16

Keytar, DMXIS, Accordion

Some studio changes and live setup changes happened recently – varied stuff but I figured I’d jot down my tawdry irrelevant thoughts on each.

We do a song called ‘Me Me Me’ in our live set which involves me playing an accordion. It’s not a pricey thing and it came out of someone’s attic but after a bit of TLC and application of glue it’s been absolutely fine; the main issue is that nobody can hear it off-stage over the guitars and drums. Accordion pickups are stupidly expensive and usually a special-order for a music shop (not really the sort of stuff you get in stock). Inevitably I spent a while trying to work out how to mic it ‘on the cheap’ using a boom-microphone but to no avail, and happened upon an article which suggested I use tie-clip microphones for it which was futile as well. Finally I came across a second-hand ‘accordion pickup’ – it’s quite neat and has three pickup mics across its length which will pick up the treble side of the accordion (presumably you need another for the bass side but I don’t play that). It goes straight into the desk just like a guitar and even has a volume control on the top of it. Ace – that’ll be in use at this Saturday’s gig then.

So I’m getting sick of being stuck behind a large keyboard rig while everyone else gets out and has fun. Enter the keytar, a keyboard with a strap which is played like a guitar. The particular one I’ve got hold of (a Roland AX-7) is simply a MIDI controller with no tone generation facilities of its own but this allows me to control my keyboard rig from the stage. I’m not going too adventurous with it on Saturday as I’ll still be cabled (the wireless MIDI interface is on special back-order) but should be a laugh and at least I might have the fighting chance of having some nice live photos taken.

Then there’s the lighting rig: we’re hauling out the new trilite-frame setup which goes at the front of the stage, nice and high up, all automated and sync’d to the drum machine. It’s being used via a combination of DMX-IS and Logic Studio, and I’m particularly impressed with the automation I can do exactly on the beat. I’ll be pleased if it performs as promised.

Oh, yeah, since the last two gigs were streamed on the Internet (with a combined listenership of over 700!) we’re not going to stream this one. I really don’t want people to start expecting it… :P