I can barely remember why I decided to take a purely improvisational direction with this group. I only remember that it had something to do with me being too lazy to arrange songs in the form that I had in mind.
Either way, I'm glad that we're writing songs now. It seemed a unanimous decision when one person piped up in frustration during a jam, then everyone else voiced their agreement, including myself (surprising myself as I did so).
Anyway, I have a clearer idea of how to not only arrange my own parts, but how to arrange my gear as well - manipulating switches, twiddling dials and things, as well as routing things differently.
I will be writing by myself and with other members and rehearsing with the full group when we have enough stuff to go over in a session. Writing with different people should produce a pretty diverse range of sounds.
Another thought: I have been thinking about who I want to interest with what we play and have decided that it'll mostly be other musicians. I guess the decision was arrived at unconciously. I'd like to say that we'll ideally entertain anyone, but that's not realistic - somebody will be put off by what we're doing, regardless of what we do, especially if we write music that's not reliant on contemporary mucial conventions.
I'm hoping that we can steer away from lyrics for a while. I think that this may not only distract from the music, but also give people something to sing along to - I feel that this might be talking down to the listener in question. Three of us would be willing to sing, but the vocals would have to be purely musical. I have thought about covering some songs, a few of which have lyrics, which I'd have to sing. Personally, I have no problem having my voice mixed as far back as possible and possibly have what I'm singing garbled beyond lyrical coherency by various effects.
That isn't a new thing to do, but in the context of the songs I'd be singing...I think it serves to completely change the focus of the song.
Loopy
So, Ellen's interested in playing violin for They Came And Ate Us: The Musical. At least, part of the time.
She feels that there's a lack of variety in the stuff we play and it's not helped by what she's contrubuting. Not only that, but she mentioned that she kept hearing violin riffs while she was guitarring, so that's quite promising. I have no idea what she has up her sleeve, but it should be interesting.
Meanwhile, Rhys and I have been jamming continuously. He's still not listening to loops sometimes, which means that he gets out of sync with the machine, but nowhere near as often. It got me thinking - none of us five has learned to play to a metronome. Probably ever. I sure as hell haven't.
I've been thinking about why I choose to loop some phrases and not others - opting to repeat the phrase myself. I think that sometimes I intend to change the dynamic of what I'm playing ahead of time - if it's a loop, it obviously ain't gonna change, unless I fiddle with the volume of it, which isn't the same as playing a guitar gently vs. bashing on it.
I'm not as sure as I'd like to be that this is the case, though - I'll have to pay more attention to what I'm playing and what I plan on playing afterwards, I think.
She feels that there's a lack of variety in the stuff we play and it's not helped by what she's contrubuting. Not only that, but she mentioned that she kept hearing violin riffs while she was guitarring, so that's quite promising. I have no idea what she has up her sleeve, but it should be interesting.
Meanwhile, Rhys and I have been jamming continuously. He's still not listening to loops sometimes, which means that he gets out of sync with the machine, but nowhere near as often. It got me thinking - none of us five has learned to play to a metronome. Probably ever. I sure as hell haven't.
I've been thinking about why I choose to loop some phrases and not others - opting to repeat the phrase myself. I think that sometimes I intend to change the dynamic of what I'm playing ahead of time - if it's a loop, it obviously ain't gonna change, unless I fiddle with the volume of it, which isn't the same as playing a guitar gently vs. bashing on it.
I'm not as sure as I'd like to be that this is the case, though - I'll have to pay more attention to what I'm playing and what I plan on playing afterwards, I think.
They Came And Ate Us
The thought of how I want this kind of music to sound has been bouncing around in my mind for months now. New ideas keep entering my mind, sometimes pushing old ones out, but often, disturbingly enough, merging with what's already there.
In case I need to tell you, this is not necessarily a good thing.
Think of someone very impressionalistic with a high degree of irreverence towards social norms who is currently making a wedding cake for a friend's wedding and seeing a bunch of onions and a jar of mustard in their peripheral vision. Disaster is bound to hit.
But then, how are new foods created? Just by making minute changes to existing dishes? Sometimes, but only gradually and you can't really make any drastic changes without making huge leaps of faith occasionally.
I'm sure it'll all work out - as long as we don't tell people that we're making a cake, they may find it passable if not palatable. But what do we tell them we do, if they ask? (and they will ask)
Here's where my issue of marginalising comes into play - I'd settle for calling us an experimental rock band. I'd have to if I were to try getting paying gigs at music venues.
"MY GOD! What the hell are they doing? Why are there two drummers playing two different things? And why are there two different riffs playing to each drum kit? And what's all that awful feedback? Why the hell is the bass player dancing around like a freak?"
"Oh, it's OK - they're an experimental band"
"Oh. Alright, then! :-D"
I have an idea that we're humans playing along to numerous machines. The idea is that we'll be watchable. We'll be painting a picture along to a sequence of generated numbers which may or may not be associated with specific colours (if anything's to be certain, whoever's watching us will not know for sure). Each member will be painting his or her own thing at once and it'll come together into a cohesive whole. That thing probably won't make sense to anyone watching unless we deliberately take on some qualities that they're familiar with. A riff that sounds like a Nirvana song, or a beat that is often heard in 90s pop music will surface. Sometimes it'll be due to an influence that one or two of us will wear on our sleeve, sometimes just through chance. And that will also depend on who's watching.
I'm steeped in the post-rock thing and Battles and Don Caballero (actually, are they post-rock? Or aren't they?) at the moment and there's a very clear mimickry (to me, at least) of post-rock stylings when I play guitar conventionally. When I play keys and tap crazy crap out, it sometimes starts sounding a little more Battlesey. Sometimes I think it's because of the gear I'm using - machines are designed to be used in a specific way and I'm not sure that I'm using mine creatively enough to fight against being bottlenecked creatively by them. The purpose the machine is imbued with is the purpose I end up fulfilling as I embody the machine's logic - unless I fight against it. But then, I might have to fight against the logic of musical parameters as well.
Then, it's no longer the audience I have to convince, but the other band members. Will I be bastardising what I'm doing if I tell them when/where I'm experimenting, or should I leave it unsaid?
Anyway, any issues with influence should be fine. The people we'd be playing to, ideally, won't have heard of these groups and probably won't even notice that we're improvising everything (so to them it'll just look like we suck).
Lucas, Ellen, Rhys and Tim will each be influenced by things entirely different to myself. Sure, I make the most noise (both in the band's idealogical direction and in raw decibels and frequency), but collectively it hopefully all balances out.
In case I need to tell you, this is not necessarily a good thing.
Think of someone very impressionalistic with a high degree of irreverence towards social norms who is currently making a wedding cake for a friend's wedding and seeing a bunch of onions and a jar of mustard in their peripheral vision. Disaster is bound to hit.
But then, how are new foods created? Just by making minute changes to existing dishes? Sometimes, but only gradually and you can't really make any drastic changes without making huge leaps of faith occasionally.
I'm sure it'll all work out - as long as we don't tell people that we're making a cake, they may find it passable if not palatable. But what do we tell them we do, if they ask? (and they will ask)
Here's where my issue of marginalising comes into play - I'd settle for calling us an experimental rock band. I'd have to if I were to try getting paying gigs at music venues.
"MY GOD! What the hell are they doing? Why are there two drummers playing two different things? And why are there two different riffs playing to each drum kit? And what's all that awful feedback? Why the hell is the bass player dancing around like a freak?"
"Oh, it's OK - they're an experimental band"
"Oh. Alright, then! :-D"
I have an idea that we're humans playing along to numerous machines. The idea is that we'll be watchable. We'll be painting a picture along to a sequence of generated numbers which may or may not be associated with specific colours (if anything's to be certain, whoever's watching us will not know for sure). Each member will be painting his or her own thing at once and it'll come together into a cohesive whole. That thing probably won't make sense to anyone watching unless we deliberately take on some qualities that they're familiar with. A riff that sounds like a Nirvana song, or a beat that is often heard in 90s pop music will surface. Sometimes it'll be due to an influence that one or two of us will wear on our sleeve, sometimes just through chance. And that will also depend on who's watching.
I'm steeped in the post-rock thing and Battles and Don Caballero (actually, are they post-rock? Or aren't they?) at the moment and there's a very clear mimickry (to me, at least) of post-rock stylings when I play guitar conventionally. When I play keys and tap crazy crap out, it sometimes starts sounding a little more Battlesey. Sometimes I think it's because of the gear I'm using - machines are designed to be used in a specific way and I'm not sure that I'm using mine creatively enough to fight against being bottlenecked creatively by them. The purpose the machine is imbued with is the purpose I end up fulfilling as I embody the machine's logic - unless I fight against it. But then, I might have to fight against the logic of musical parameters as well.
Then, it's no longer the audience I have to convince, but the other band members. Will I be bastardising what I'm doing if I tell them when/where I'm experimenting, or should I leave it unsaid?
Anyway, any issues with influence should be fine. The people we'd be playing to, ideally, won't have heard of these groups and probably won't even notice that we're improvising everything (so to them it'll just look like we suck).
Lucas, Ellen, Rhys and Tim will each be influenced by things entirely different to myself. Sure, I make the most noise (both in the band's idealogical direction and in raw decibels and frequency), but collectively it hopefully all balances out.
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