
![]() |
Credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA |
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Credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA |
I'm selling my turntable.
...and my albums.
It's been something I've been thinking about for some time. In a post some months back I wrote about how streaming and digital distribution have made CDs virtually obsolete. New cars don't even have CD players anymore, so the LP, despite a resurgence of interest in vinyl as a novelty, really is an artifact of another time.
A couple of years ago I looked at my three boxes of records and my turntable, which were on a shelf in the garage, and decided to bring them in the house. I bought a new cartridge and calibrated the turntable and set aside some time each week to revisit my favorite albums. I found I was listening with a different point of view, informed by all my experiences as a performer and producer. Along with the nostalgia and memories associated with the music I enjoyed the ritual of taking the records out of their sleeves and placing the needle. It's something like driving a vintage car, kind of clumsy but satisfying as well.
I have a lyric in a song of mine, "Classic":
"I bought this record when I was eighteen
And when I drop the needle it's a time machine"
It was great, but lately I find I'm doing it less and I've come to the conclusion that it had run its course, I've also been on a mission to simplify and focus more on my own more recent music and gigs. In a way I was paying my respects to all that great music from those amazing bands and artists, and now it was time to pass them on to someone who might appreciate them as much as I have. It's not about money, records are only worth a couple of dollars unless they are pristine and unplayed and these are certainly not that. I took good care of them, but they are, to be kind, "well loved". I'll put them on Craigslist and see if I can get a few dollars but I may just give them away.
Records for Sale |
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Credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA |
I had planned to release “Astronomy” on April 20th.
I’m going to wait.
It’s all ready to go. When releasing a project in the internet age you announce a release date and then upload the tracks to the distribution service. Usually this is around a month before the release date which allows for the tracks to be sent to all the streaming services. So I would have needed to get the files out around the end of March.
However in February, after weeks of threats, Russia invaded Ukraine. The bottom line is that for me it’s impossible to pretend that this is not something that can just be ignored and I can’t in good conscience put out this work when there is this much turmoil in the World. When it began there was some hope that there would be a quick resolution, but now it looks like this is going to go on for a while.
“Astronomy” can wait. It's ironic to me that this project, a musical celebration of the natural world, is symbolized by an image of the vast and awe inspiring reality all around us. Yet, at this moment we find ourselves held back by a singular evil and the worst impulses of mankind.
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Credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA |
I think everyone should spend a few minutes at the end of every day looking up at the night sky.
Our days are so full, doing all the things we need to do, the obligations we have to meet and sometimes we lose sight of the bigger space we live in. This is the perspective that inspired "Astronomy".
The more we learn about the Universe the more mysterious and compelling it is. Wise philosophers have for millennia tried to wrap their minds around the scale and meaning of this enormous and powerful reality that surrounds us and stretches beyond our ability to see, forcing us to use our imaginations to try and understand its purpose and our place in it. Art is a part of that effort. Art is how we attempt to express and connect with the unknowable and overwhelming reality we inhabit, even as we recognize that at this point in time there are no answers, only questions.
One thing we have observed is that all things are in motion, from the smallest atomic particle to stars and galaxies. It has been suggested that the fundamental frequency of the Universe is 432Hz, and that our bodies resonate in harmony with it. Take a listen:
Maybe so, and maybe all music, from Bach to Beatles, comes from some connection to this basic tone. We do know that we respond to sound and rhythm; we can't help it.
For instance, the song "Earthbound" from "Astronomy" pulses with steady rhythm that hopefully evokes the sensation of moving across a peaceful landscape. The melodies repeat in a hypnotic cycle that accentuates this graceful movement. The improvisations include a section that with soaring fluid lines using a distorted guitar tone. This sound is created by overdriving the volume of an amplifier so that the frequencies and harmonics all blend together and is unique to modern music, only possible after the invention of electronics. It's remarkable that this invention has contributed much to expanding our knowledge of the Universe.
There's a moment in a child's life when they ask; "Where do the stars go in the daytime?" If you are fortunate to answer them by saying, "They don't go away, we just can't see them because the sun is so bright. They are there all the time", you will see that realization dawn on their face, and perhaps the beginning of an appreciation for the wonder that is all around us.
"Astronomy" will be released on April 20th.
I'm in the final stages of finishing up the six tracks on "Astronomy" and each of them have a few details I'm working on. It's a moving target.
At this point the process becomes one of working on a track, making a minor change then taking a break for a day or so and then coming back with "fresh ears" to see if indeed the recording is "final". It could be a one of three things I call "TTT" (Tuning, Timing, Tone). It's always a matter of hearing something that doesn't sound quite right that bothers me, first just a little, but then after a while it becomes so glaring that I have to see if I can do something else.
I've learned two things about this:
1. Nobody else hears it, and in fact if I ask a friend, especially a musician friend, to listen they invariably either don't notice it or point out something else entirely, which of course sets me off in that direction.
2. I usually find something that I like better and replace the part with something that stretches my skill a bit further. I'm going to get in the weeds a bit to explain how this works.
A "Punch" |
For this particular fix I started by trying to simply play the same part with better timing, and played it about 10 times trying to do that, but it still wasn't sounding right. Then on the next take I not only got it perfect, but actually added an embellishment, completely unthought, that caught me by surprise. Now when listen, not only is it fixed, but it has something added that takes the part up a notch and that's what makes the whole process fun and fulfilling.
Now on to the next one!
When I was younger, (BG-Before Guitar), science was my favorite subject in school. In the 5th grade we learned about the planets and stars and I got a telescope. It was magical to be outside on a Summer night looking up at the sky and seeing the craters on the Moon and feeling the wonder of how a pinpoint of light would become a globe with rings around it, the planet Saturn so many millions of miles away. Later I moved on to cars, guitars and girls, but I never outgrew my love of science, and I feel like I passed some of that to my daughter, who chose a career in biology.
Art and Science are often seen as being similar. You might say that the both have as a core principle the idea of exploration, of learning more about oneself and this Universe we inhabit. Philosophers have suggested the meaning of life is to seek this knowledge, and I like that idea, as well as the idea that music is one way we connect with the fundamental frequencies that are constantly vibrating around us.
Credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA |
"Waking to Rain"
"Earthbound"
"Andromeda Run"
"Stratosphere"
"Mediterraine"
"Terra Aeterna"
"Waking to Rain" starts off the playlist and was the first song I recorded, though it's not the newest song. I had a couple of songs that were from earlier records that had minor seventh chords, not jazz in the strict sense, but leaning that way, and by updating them and adding some elements they fit into this concept. "Waking to Rain" is about that feeling when you start a morning looking out to a gray sky and everything dripping wet. For me, that usually means a laid back day, where you stay inside and maybe put off some chores. The song features Jen Ambrose on flute. Also, Paul Sandberg contributed sax solos on "Andromeda Run" and "Terra Aeterna".
I really enjoyed making these recordings. I had no preconceptions other than wanting to make clean, crisp tracks with close attention to capturing the instruments as naturally as I could. "Waking" set the standards. I experimented with amplifier and guitar settings with the idea of using a consistent sound throughout the project and for the most part I achieved that. One exception was "Stratosphere", where I played a Fender Stratocaster and took advantage of this instrument's distinctive sound to give the idea of flying at 40 thousand feet.
All the tracks are basically done. At this point I'm reviewing some of my improvisations and having fun seeing if I can top myself. That's right at the core of "Astronomy"; I'm exploring to see how far I can go.
This is the artwork for "Astronomy", my upcoming EP of instrumental tracks.
These songs are a departure from my singer/songwriter persona and lean towards jazz. One of the things I did during COVID was to spend more time practicing guitar and piano and these six tracks resulted from the new things I'm learning.
Astronomy is the branch of science which deals with celestial objects, space, and the physical universe as a whole. It's a big subject and well suited for a musical journey. With each song I've tried to express the wonder of the physical world, here on our beautiful, tiny planet and out there across the unimaginable reaches of interstellar space. Astronomy is about exploration and discovery and can also be applied to our personal lives as well. For me, this foray into unfamiliar musical territory has been exciting and rewarding. As these songs evolved they have led me to places I never thought I'd visit. As it turns out, a lifetime of listening to jazz, including favorites like Pat Metheny, Zappa and Steely Dan, had tuned my ears to this genre, so it's just been a matter of focused study to open the door and venture into this territory.
The recordings are coming along and I should be putting the tracks out soon, along with some posts about how the songs were developed. Here's the info on the image from NASA's website:
The galaxy captured in this image, called UGC 12158, certainly isn’t camera-shy: this spiral stunner is posing face-on to the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope’s Advanced Camera for Surveys, revealing its structure in fine detail.
UGC 12158 is an excellent example of a barred spiral galaxy in the Hubble sequence — a scheme used to categorise galaxies based on their shapes. Barred spirals, as the name suggest, feature spectacular swirling arms of stars that emanate from a bar-shaped centre. Such bar structures are common, being found in about two thirds of spiral galaxies, and are thought to act as funnels, guiding gas to their galactic centres where it accumulates to form newborn stars. These aren’t permanent structures: astronomers think that they slowly disperse over time, so that the galaxies eventually evolve into regular spirals.
The appearance of a galaxy changes little over millions of years, but this image also contains a short-lived and brilliant interloper — the bright blue star just to the lower left of the centre of the galaxy is very different from the several foreground stars seen in the image. It is in fact a supernova inside UGC 12158 and much further away than the Milky Way stars in the field — at a distance of about 400 million light-years! This stellar explosion, called SN 2004ef, was first spotted by two British amateur astronomers in September 2004 and the Hubble data shown here form part of the follow-up observations.
This picture was created from images taken with the Wide Field Channel of Hubble’s Advanced Camera for Surveys. Images through blue (F475W, coloured blue), yellow (F606W, coloured green) and red (F814W, coloured red) as well as a filter that isolates the light from glowing hydrogen (F658W, also coloured red) have been included. The exposure times were 1160 s, 700 s, 700 s and 1200 s respectively. The field of view is about 2.3 arcminutes across.
Credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA