Monday, March 28, 2005
Over and out from here.....
Thanks to all of you that came to the last Thursday night jam. It was great to see all off you one last time and make some music together. And having Lindy Raines there to play as well was over the top. Jusst think, all of my favorite players in one room. It was a greate send off, thanks so much.
And, those of you that were there got to see my younger son Toph take the stage and play the conga drums. He was great, totally into it, making rock star faces and doing lots of flashy tricks on the drums. By the end of the night I had 2 of my boys on stage, surrounded by Todd Glazer (harp), Lindy Raines (guitar), Gary Lamar (guitar, John Clark (drums) and Joel Lockman (bass).
See you all in November for the next Blues for my Brother benefit!
CD party and the aftermath
For those of you that missed id, we kicked off at 8pm, with an acoustic set. I played my old national, Joel played the doghouse and John played a snare with brushes. Real minimal, and exactly what we did on Amy VanSingel's 9th Alley Blues show on KNBA. We played some old standards and a couple of songs from our new CD, including Glenn Highway Blues, Long Way Home and Cold Cold World.
From there we settled into some electric instruments and played the rest of the CD. It was great to see Patti Greene, Gary Lamar, Mr Whitekeys, Todd Glazer, Kyle, a.k.a. Minnesota Slim, Sherman, Steve Pradell and Veronica Page. They all sat in with us, and kept the party in high gear. When the music stopped somewhere around 2 a.m. I think we were all played out and ready to face the raging snowstorm outside!
The most overwhelming part of the night was the huge turnout of people that came to wish us well and buy a copy of the CD. Boo Rody jumped in to help get everyone a CD that wanted one, and gave me a chance to visit with about 80 people. Every little bit of positive feedback is appreciated, and validates what we set out to do from the start- record some honest original blues songs that captured the feel of our club set. Thanks to all of you for your vote of connfidence!
Saturday, March 26, 2005
CD's are here.....
Here's a picture of me and some of the boys after opening the box of disks at the studio:
Vintage Guitar Photo
No, all that gear is NOT mine. The old bassman is, and the 100 watt marshall too. The rest came from all my buddies here in Alaska, all professional musicians. Every bit of that gear is something you'd see at a blues gig somewhere in the state. We took over Studio 68 on a Sunday afternoon, dragged in our favorite gear and let loose. My buddy KB brought in some of the best stuff- that old vibratone, the Gibson RV-whatever amp, the satellite reverbs. What a time that was...
Monday, March 21, 2005
Repairs, repairs, repairs
The lesson here is not to play so hard, I suppose, but where is the fun in that? So, we're packing tools too. Grrrr.
Sunday, March 20, 2005
New Lap Steel Tuning!
But, while I was there Larry turned my on to his 'secret' lap steel tuning for 6-string guitars. It goes 1, 5, 6, 1, 3, 5 from low to high. So, if you were in E the notes would be E, B, C#, E, G#, B. I knew the rest of my weekend was wrecked, and it was- all I've been doing is playing the steel guitar so I can master this tuning. Here's what's so cool about the tuning- it's overall a major tuning with the added 6th. But in the middle of it is a minor triad (the C#, E, G#), which means you can play minor chords without bar slants. You can also make a minor 7th chord too.
The other cool thing about this tuning is that the relationship of the 3 highest pitched strings are the same as in a open G country blues tuning. So it's not that much different than most standard blues tunings- it's just got that 6th scale degree in it. And, if you pull the high string up a whole step, you've got a 4 note minor chord. Damn, it's a very cool tuning.
Thanks Larry! I'm a total convert! Was it nice out this weekend? Somebody needs to tell me....
Saturday, March 12, 2005
the Eric Bibb Show
Hey all just got in fro the Eric Bibb show and I gotta tell you it was a great show. Eric is an engaging performer and a fantastic singer. If you don't recognize the name you really should check out his music.
It's always a treat for me to play with someone of his caliber, that's no surprise. But there is always something about a show that hit's me as interesting, or something I had never though about. This time it was watching Eric do his sound check (a sound check is where the performer tests all the gear before the performance and makes whatever necessary adjustments need to be made). He worked systematically through the house sound, verifying that the guitar and his voice were 'recognizable', which I though was a great choice of words. He made some minor adjustments with the help of Sheila the sound engineer until the sound in the room was perfect.
It was pretty obvious last night that the monitor speakers (the ones that he was listening to) were really inadequate for the job. And here I agree- the monitor speakers were a pair of Carvin monitors that make a male voice sound like it's coming through a cheap telephone speaker. Remember the teacher's voice in the old Charlie Brown comics? That's what it sounded like. Now, that may sound like a small thing, but it's really important that as a singer you hear your own voice coming back at you. First, it's a comfort and it gives you confidence because you sound like yourself. Second, and much more important, if the sound is off you'll unconsciously compensate for the missing frequencies and hurt your voice. Eric had a gentle way of working with Sheila to get everything as sounding as good as they could, and then he was done. He kept making one statement that I thought was really pretty profound; "it sounds good, but it doesn't sound like me yet". It's really something that sound reinforcement engineers loose track of, as basic as that is.
OK, I did my sound check with Mr. Bib in the audience, and he was a great help dialing in the tone of my old National guitar. This can be tricky because it's not like a regular guitar made from wood- it's all steel and needs to have a certain 'thump' to it in order for all to be well with my universe. All was well.
We spent a few minutes talking guitars with him and then right after a quick bite to eat it was showtime. The sound was great and the
I played 3 new songs, 2 of which you'll find on my new CD. I opened with the title cut "Glenn Highway Blues". It felt really comfortable, and armed with that sense of security I played a real slow song called "Hole in my soul", that I wrote the night my father died. It was the first time I've ever played that in public; it's a very personal song. The time was right and from the comments I heard later on it was well received.
And so my friends my last acoustic gig in
Peace
Son
Monday, March 07, 2005
I'm ruined.....
http://www.ebay.co.uk/
I thought I was escaping by leaving that behind. I'm ruined.....
Melissa Gibson's Birthday too
CD Release Party!
Well, one last gig to mark on your calendar- we’re having out CD release party at Studio 68 on Saturday, March 26th at 8 pm. Joel Lockman, John Clark and I spent a solid week in the studio working on a hybrid of old-school blues and a 21st century punk attitude. We’re really excited about the results. So, join us for a night of merry-making and mayhem!
I’ll open the show with some solo delta blues, and then we’ll play an acoustic set as a band. This’ll gradually get louder and crazier as we go electric and bring up lots of friends and special guests. Oh, we’re recording this for posterity as well!
This is, however, the last gig for us till November (when we once again bring you ‘Blues for my Brother’). If I don’t see you, be well and take care of each other till I get back, ok? I’