SLOW TO SHOW-
Greg:
This is one of my favorite tracks
on the record. Paul’s horn parts superceded my expectations
by far. I came up with some silly little “mouth parts”
trying to imitate a trombone and Paul took charge and created something
beautiful and mournful. Just right. Todd’s drumming is outstanding
in it’s drama on this one. And his humid vocals on the backups
are very sensitive.
Paul: A timeless
sounding song with shades of Nashville and London mixed together.
Greg’s vocal delivery just screamed out for a Porter Waggoner-esque
reverb treatment. I got to do my worst drunken trumpet and trombone
section, a la “Wait Until Spring” and several others,
and I even added a tic-tac part on my Schecter 6-string bass. I
love the thump of Todd’s floor tom hits. My main bass track
was my Fender Jazz with nylon tapewound strings with a whole mess
of treble, for that McCartney White Album sound.
MY BIG FAME-
Greg:
I came up with the chorus lines while
doing dishes in my old apartment in Oakland about 2 years ago. I
dried my hands and finished the rest of the song in one sitting,
I believe. I thought we had recorded it too fast but once all the
tracks were laid down it made sense to me. I was happy to get to
use my tobacco-burst Stratocaster on this one. Paul and I did not
think my voice would hold out on the last round of chorus. It almost
didn’t.
Paul: Rock ‘n’
roll catharsis. I agree wholeheartedly with the sentiment. Greg
got an astounding “Nowhere Man”/”Big Star “O
My Soul” type tone on the lead guitar tracks on his Strat,
and an ugly-as-sin grunge out of his Epiphone Casino for the rhythm
parts. The Andy Summers-like guitar treatment was created by running
one of Greg’s tracks through a Small Stone phaser in mixdown.
Greg and I handled the vocals on this one because Todd wasn’t
around that day; I wish he had been there for every song.
WINDS OF EMOTION-
Greg:
I made a version of this song on
my 8 track at home. The arrangement was very similar to the way
it is now. I had four voices at the choral section in the middle.
I had not scienced out the harmonies so there was a lot of unison
and drifting around. Paul helped me get it all straight and came
up with some wonderful variations as well. John Hofer came up with
the “Streets of Avalon” line.
Paul: Just me
and Greg on this one. I had a hell of a time getting the bass sound
Greg wanted, which was referencing the Beach Boys’ “Little
Bird” from Friends (even down to the off-beats), but ultimately
I ran my Rickenbacker direct with no compression and nearly no EQ,
and it worked. I had to write out the “chorale” section
in the middle, and if you pan left and right on your stereo, you
can hear just two of me on the left, and two of Greg on the right.
Sounds weird that way.
HE’S SO BRAVE-
Greg:
You can find the demo of this song
on the “Purgatory”
EP. I feel that this is one of the most energized tracks on
the whole record. Paul nailed the sonic feel that I was hoping for.
Paul: He is, in
fact, so brave. That one goes out to Michael Torrico. I got to hit
the cowbell in the middle. Todd’s back in force in the vocal
department. It was his idea to do the choppy guitar riff in the
second and third choruses. A powerful performance of a potent song.
I, AS A GHOST-
Greg:
I came up with this song while I
was driving. I was listening to Bonnie “Prince” Billy
and I heard Will Oldham sing about feeling like a ghost on one line
of a song. I went along with the feeling and tried to imagine what
it might be like to look at the world from an outside perspective
and how I might use or misuse the powers that may come with that.
I am very happy with the way this recording came out.
Paul: Possibly
my favourite song on the album. I got to employ four different Mellotron
sounds from the old trusty rusty Mk II: flutes, M300 violins (in
tandem with Jeremy at times, like during the last verse), Mk II
bass accordion, and the famous 8 voice choir. Jeremy’s violin
overdub was very difficult, involving a complicated “wild-sync”
fly-in off another tape, but it worked in the end. A little real
flute in there from me at the top as well. A lot going on on this
one.
HALVING ME-
Greg:
Obvious subject matter that I think
everyone can probably relate to. I was freaked out and I wanted
to rock and this song came out. When I demoed the song I did not
have any words for the verse. The words that are in the song now
are the ones that came out of my mouth during the demo. Todd’s
snare hits at the end is the best drum moment on this whole record
(for me).
Paul: Look out
Ozzy. I only wish I’d have rocked out the mix a little more
on this one. The heavy guitar could have been louder. Ah well. Greg
had me on the floor laughing with his impromptu “vocal”
moments during the guitar solo. And yes, they do go backwards at
the end of it! Jeremy makes a brief cameo at the very end, as does
the Line 6 gadget, although you can’t really hear it. It’s
a low synthy noise that was done by me playing my stupid Japanese
fretless kidney bean bass through it. Listen very carefully on the
left channel if you want to hear it.
SUPERSCOUT-
Greg:
This was really fun to record. Especially
when Paul was playing the organ and I was playing whatever I was
playing at the same time. I had been listening to “All Things
Must Pass” when it was time to mix this song. I was getting
into all of the echo on that record and of course when I referenced
that to Paul he was ready to go. I think I could have gotten him
to put it all over the whole album.
Paul: Power pop
meets "All Things Must Pass." I misunderstood a directive
from Greg about the use of tape echo, and so it was applied liberally
to this song, but it turned out to be a fortuitous mistake. I like
Greg’s “secret” guitar licks on the right side,
which he did while I did my worst impersonation of Dan Eisenberg
on Hammond. Again, Todd was sadly absent in vocal land, and also
percussionally, so I did tambourine while Greg played a very percussive
acoustic guitar track. There was a lot of stuff going on on this
recording.
AVERY (I HEAR YOU)-
Greg:
Paul came over to my house to play a second
guitar on my demo of this song. He came up with a beautiful counterpart
throughout and a magical vocal harmony line. When it came time to
play and sing this song for the record we did it live, face to face.
This was a superbly sensitive moment between Paul and I.
Paul: Greg and
I tracked this one live in the room together, singing and playing.
The only thing added were bells, played by Greg. A very sensitive
moment.
THIS ALL ACCORDING TO YOU-
Greg:
You can find a demo of this one on
“Purgatory”
EP also. Jeremy’s “dub” melodica
part makes the whole mood of the song for me. Todd and Paul’s
musical interpretation of the lines “charge, charge, charge”
is quite macho.
Paul: My friend,
my man. Get different, indeed. Jeremy returns on melodica, and Greg
turned in a comical performance of half-speed chromonica. My cookie
sheet was used to great effect by the inestimable Mr. Roper.
LISTEN TO MY SHAPES-
Greg:
Not much to say about this one. It
did exactly what I wanted it to do.
Paul:
Rhombus? This song does in fact sound like it was mixed by the
bass player. No fewer than three different basses – four,
six, and eight stringed varieties – were disseminated within
it. The solo section is as close to definitive prog-rock as I’ve
ever gotten: bass pedals, two tracks of Mellotron violins, flanged
guitar, 6-string bass, mysterious voices (thanks to the magic of
the “Frippertronics” technique with two tape machines),
the whole works. The intro is entirely done by Greg on the Kiddy
Keys except for some stray thundersheet rumbles from yours truly.
The Echoplex “performance” that pops in and out hearkens
back to the style of the Rhombus Speaker Decision, and was very
much serendipitously performed and captured during mixdown. A suitable
ending.