Spindlywrap
Or words to that effect.
Or words to that effect.
Good lord, it’s been over a year since I posted any of my weird Soundcloud explorations. (They’re still up there though - you should go give them a listen! I may eventually pull them down and package them and call them ‘product’, but in the meantime they’re still there and free. Click the ‘musickings’ tag and listen through those posts!)
Anyway, the process by which all those were created was: wake up & fire up computer by 7am on every day off, and starting from nothing create as complete a piece of music as possible by 10am, then go on with the non-music part of my day.
And that was really effective. I was finishing every year with 100 - 250 individual pieces of music created through a combination of my day off speed composing and just improvising on guitar or piano and/or warbling voice. And of course a good chunk of all of that was garbage, but I had enough of a pool to draw on for the soundcloud stuff that I could have kept it going… probably through now, if I hadn’t lost patience with spending a couple hours every week moving files around between different computers. But needing to simplify my life was not the only problem. By far the bigger problem has been the The Pile.
My primary writing habit my whole artistic life has been to turn on a recording device and try to create a brand-new piece of music on the spot. There’s a small amount of earlier stuff - mostly jams with other musicians on reel-to-reel tape - but I’ve been doing this at a REALLY vigorous rate since the late-1990’s, when I had better recording devices and the space to use them whenever I pleased. Eventually some of these pieces stick together in my mind as a cohereant whole, and I “finish” them, whatever that will mean for the project (better & rehearsed recordings, fleshed out structure & arrangements, lyrics & vocals?, etc.)
So just for funzies, let’s call half of everything I’ve done garbage - guitar jams, experiments, noise, no commercial potential, no work to be done, no reason anyone who’s not me would ever listen to it, and I why is my time so valueless that even I would listen to it? Then there’s the “successful experiments” - the kind of thing I would put on soundcloud. These are stand-alone pieces that will not benefit from more work - they are what they are, and will never be turned into something else. Between the successful and the almost-successful (would upload, but for one or two annoying, unfixable things), let’s call that 15 - 25% of the non-garbage music.
What’s left over is The Pile. A piece is in The Pile if I hear what it can be; if I hear past the stop-start/second guessing/retreads/sparse noodling of the initial improvisation and glimpse at least part of what a final version could sound like, it goes in The Pile to be “finished” “one day”. As of this moment (goes over, clicks on the iTunes playlist marked ‘Pile’) The Pile has 937 songs, 3.7 days’ playing time (x 24 = 88.8 hours). I do not believe this includes the Triptych pieces (more on those later). There’s another playlist called ‘remix’ - experiments that COULD be made listenable through some editing and rearranging - that’s another 21 tracks for another 5 hours. Throw in another (currently - I kept accidentally writing more) 53 Triptych tracks @ let’s call them 5 minutes per = another 4.5 hours of material. Some of this material is going to get longer as it gets fleshed out… let’s call it about 100 hours of material, and about 1,000 individual pieces of music.
The numbers are not good. Folks, I’m 47. There’s not enough life left to complete 100 hours of material, unless I do so full-time. So I buy lottery tickets.
The long and short of all this is that I no longer rise and make something new. I rise and work on something old. I try to whittle down The Pile. I need to finish some of this so that others can hear what’s in my head (and look at me strangely, fake smile on their faces, & quickly changing the subject etc).
Because I have a short attention span, I have everything arranged so I’m not plodding on one thing day after day. My current studio projects are:
Triptych is my current main project.
Several years ago, I was invited to participate in an online collaboration with several people I’d internet-known for years, but had never met face-to-face. (STILL the case!). I surveyed the landscape, saw 4 other guitarists, and decided to lead with the weirder guitar things I do. I pulled up my list of highly experimental, randomized tunings, tuned my acoustic 12-string to one selected at random, and wrote an amazing riff. As I was trying to flesh it out, I wrote something else. And another. And another. I think I had the better part of 5 songs, with melodies, before I went to bed that night. And 5 more the next day. And continued to write something else completely new every single time I picked up that guitar - now permanently in that tuning. I’ve always been pretty prolific, but I’ve never experienced anything quite like this. Music literally spilled out of me. I now have 53 of what I eventually called Triptych things that range between short riffs to fully fleshed out pieces. The recordings for the last 10 of them pretty much all include me saying “STOP WRITING MORE YOU ASSHOLE”.
But because it’s all sparse acoustic guitar and vocals, it all needs lyrics, and guess who’s not a poet, or a lyricist, or even particularly verbal. And because I’m me, they are all joined by a nebulous theme that I can’t really explain to anyone else who IS a poet, so it falls on me to try to be immediately good at a skill I don’t really have, or have time to master. Anyway. Try. Always try.
It will probably be released as a series of EPs as I complete them.
I’m currently working on this subset of the project: (ID# - Title or “Working Title” - current state)
Pretty much as explained above. These are mostly old riffs, electric, rock band &/or metal songs. Some of them need lyrics, some mercifully don’t; thankfully, I have not ascribed a lyrical theme to any subsection of them.
(optional)MMDDYY - Title or “Working Title: - Status
Honestly, I still need to do this from time to time to keep myself sane. I’m not just spitting them out in 3 hours though - I’m using the time to learn programs and technologies that I would have otherwise skipped under the tight 3-hour timeline. And I’m trying to keep them guitar-centric. When I have a large enough backlog of this stuff, I’ll start Soundclouding it again, but it’s my lowest priority right now, so that may take a while. I’m currently working on #5, and I want to get to #25 before I start uploading. I’m currently learning to use Clouds for this track.
There! Zoom in! Uh. A little to the left. Zoom in more! Hm. To the right and up, then…
If you aren’t careful, it will throw itself at you!
I can still hear you saying
Offsite Unsense: