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Archives for: August 2010

:: August 28th 2010 ::

Mike Errico Studio Log. 08.25.10

Mike Errico Studio Log. 08.25.10

Starting is easy. Finishing is hard.

It's been pouring rain here for days. I keep getting caught in it, like it's aiming.


I stepped out of the studio and it began again while a gust of wind ripped my umbrella inside out. I was still deep in my head, listening to mixes, hoping that a snare drum will sit well and still have the crack I need. Is the kick drum substantial enough? Am I getting the lyric without overselling -- Have I learned anything yet?

The G train, a bizarre green line that winds around the outskirts of Manhattan, has become my commute between the Williamsburg studio and home. It's unreliable, shady and at any provocation, simply stops running, offering a garbled lie on the overhead about "track construction." I descended the subway stairs and heard the message.

Instead of standing in the rain to wait for the even-less-reliable shuttle bus, I decided to take the L to 14th, and switch to the F. I'd get home eventually. I lumbered to the L train. The LED sign over the platform read


F NEXT TRAIN ARRIVING 26 MIN



My wet jeans cooled and clung to me. Commuters filled the bench and sat hunched over their cell phones. Time slowed, and I plunged into a familiar pit of critics that swarm in my head. I sighed, and listened to them pick my record apart.

How are the new songs? Do they suck? Or are they good but badly done? Will I let people down? Will I realize that this entire record is a failed experiment after it's too late? Who'll tell me?

Is music so hard because it's trying to tell me that it doesn't want me? Is it like a bad girlfriend who keeps trying to get me to break up with it? Does this ever get, if not "easy," then just a little easier? I know that there are moments on this record that break my heart with how beautiful they are. And it's not even done yet. But do I have the strength to finish it?

In the beginning, everything is possible. Completion is the art of ending that. Choosing one sound is also the act of un-choosing every other sound. Each nearly-completed song is still engaged in a conversation about its possibilities, and the excitement of a compelling point of view is always balanced by the rejection of other curious and rich points of view. When I listen to the new life in the mixes of this record, I can also hear all of its unlived lives. I've made thousands of choices to get this far. But are they the right ones?

With eight minutes left on the LED sign, the L train pulled up. Rain had defeated hairstyles and laundry and people moved like a defeated army. I packed in close and stared into space.

"Excuse me, brother." A short, thin black man with a badly varnished 12-string guitar nudged his way in. After surveying the car, he turned to me and stood, maybe eight inches from me.

"My man. You get three choices. You like the Beatles, right? Three choices: 'Love Me Do,' 'Norwegian Wood' or 'Michelle.'"

"What?"

"Three choices."

Shaken out of my thoughts, I considered them. He waited, smiling with widely-spaced teeth.

"'Norwegian Wood,'" I decided.

"Your wish is my command."



He began the opening riff, and I smiled at its simple genius. And what an awesome story. What the hell is going on in that song? The woman sounds so beautiful, so in control of her rudderless life. Money is a figment ("She told me she works in the morning and started to laugh"), words are figments ("She told me to sit anywhere/I looked around and I noticed there wasn't a chair"), the "known" world is laden with preconceptions, and this gorgeous woman is a conduit to a new understanding of it. I realized I've always had a crush on her.

As he hit the middle sections, I instinctively joined in, singing the high harmony line. He smiled, approving. The bedraggled commuters looked up, smiling as well.

"Yes. You get the high harmonies. Nice."

People started laughing and spreading the word that a spontaneous singalong had broken out. A small moment of light peeked in on a downtrodden day.

...I told her I didn't and crawled off to sleep in the bath...



He came to the end of the song and nodded at me.

"It don't matter," he said, "black or white, Jew or gentile -- everybody loves a good song."

"It's really true," I said, reaching into my pockets for some money.

"Cash and good vibes," he said. "That's all I get from people, all day long."

I handed him some money, and he placed his hand on my shoulder. "Thank you. Seriously. That was fun." I put my hand on his and said, "Hey, thank you."

Almost an hour later, I finally stepped out of the F train. The rain had stopped, and the evening air was cool and moist. I walked by Frank's deli and glanced down at the newspapers laid out along the sidewalk next to the fruit. The splashy headline of the New York Post caught my eye, then knocked me back.




Silver Lining.

Record title?




More record news, plus personal brain fragmentation at Twitter: http://twitter.com/mikeerrico


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:: August 23rd 2010 ::

Much-Needed Trippy Interlude.

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:: August 21st 2010 ::

Mike Errico Studio Log. 08.21.10

Two more mixes down, one very stubborn vocal to go.

"Waving Goodbye" is in the can. Cowritten with Eric Krasno and Adam Deitch, this is the tightest of the bunch.

"Count To Ten" - what to say. Straight magic. Angie Pollock floats with the strings, the nylon guitar is just exactly all I could have hoped for.

"Wander Away" - giving me fits. Where the hell is it? I'm still looking. I've come to think of it as My Great Musical Lesson for this record, because it has been so stubborn coming to fruition. I'm digging through it, still. Working for it. I'll get it. But not today...damn.

Big thank you to Brian and Greg from New Haven, CT for posting "On The Other Side," another up-and-comer. That song taught me a lot, too. This whole record has just stretched me 100 directions. So unlike anything I've done. I'm loving it.



More record news, plus personal brain fragmentation at Twitter: http://twitter.com/mikeerrico

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:: August 17th 2010 ::

Live Leak: "On The Other Side"

"On The Other Side," from forthcoming release.

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:: August 13th 2010 ::

Mike Errico Studio Log. 08.13.10

Wander Away


Vocals, Into Mixing.

My lyric sheet for "Wander Away," propped in the window nook in the vocal booth. I'm still searching for this vocal.

Meanwhile: Ari Hest, friend and cowriter of "Ready or Not," came in and knocked out background vocals. I feel fortunate to have him on the record. We go back. His voice blends so well into these tracks that we opened up the assignment: he hit "Ready or Not," "On The Other Side," and "You Could Be Anywhere," which he also came up with a bridge background part. Maybe it'll make it to the mix - that bridge has thwarted several attempts for us to fancy it up. It's like trying to put felt antlers on a cat.

Angie Pollock, cowriter of "Count To Ten," recorded background vocals for "Everybody Knows" and "Count To Ten" in a London studio, sent them over. I like the quality of her voice, it fits the songs and complements the lyric. And I like her accent, which I believe is Scottish, though it's only faint when singing. Funny to think that the first time I met her she was rocking a white keytar in silver pants on stage at the Hammerstein Ballroom with Goldfrapp. This is definitely another side of her.

It's so good to have both of these folks represented on the record in a performance.

We are gearing for mix, now. Two leads, and backgrounds for "Waving Goodbye" to go.



More record news, plus personal brain fragmentation at Twitter: http://twitter.com/mikeerrico

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On iTunes: http://itunes.apple.com/us/artist/mike-errico/id3567281

Mike Errico is on: Facebook || Twitter || YouTube || MySpace || Last.fm || Pandora || ILike || MOG

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:: August 10th 2010 ::

Mike Errico Studio Log. 08.09.10

Ghost Light

Two days have passed in the studio. All moves have become gigantic. Maybe it's just me, deeply tuned in at this point, listening for the door to click shut on tracking.

Lead vocals are going down smoother than ever before. The shocking standout, over and over again, is "On the Other Side." We listened to a succession of approaches, and back to back, they spelled out the story of my life. First takes: Way too hard. Too strong, trying to push and be heard. Later take: Less, but now confused. Voice cracking, lost. I can hear myself sweating. Bronchitis take: sad, morose, self-pitying and sabotaging. Post-bronchitis: Completely different mindset, soft, whispery and too far the other direction. Like a small forest creature had learned the words and sang them. A muskrat, maybe. Terrible. Then: A little stronger, up a couple notches, looking for it. And finally: A blend that finally understands the lyric, and interprets what it's been asking for the whole time. The song is now...I can't describe it. Lights out.

Having found the center of this record in my mind, huge swings have occurred. For one, two songs have been resurrected from the dead: "Ready or Not," written with Ari Hest, and "Next Time," written with Raul Midon. I'd given up on them, but suddenly they make sense for the record. "Ready or Not" vocal was fish in a barrel. "Waving Goodbye," written with Eric Krasno from Soulive, same thing. Two leads are left: "Wander Away" and "Next Time." Not to worry. I got 'em.

With leads down, background vocalists are being called in. Ari Hest will be stopping in for "On The Other Side" and probably "Ready or Not." Female vocalists are coming in, too, which is yet another first. Angie Pollock, cowriter on "Count To Ten," finished a remote session in London for our song. We brought in Julia Darling to give it a shot. Carolyn Eufrasio will take a stab at a couple. Maybe others will, too.

Big debates are now easily settled. For instance: "You Could Be Anywhere" was cut with both an acoustic piano and an electric piano (Rhodes). We bounced back and forth between them. People gave opinions. But after working on the background parts, I offered a third option: neither one. Perfect. They're now both gone. I have no doubt giant steps like that will become the daily routine for the next couple sessions.

I can't wait to get back in. Tomorrow.

More record news, plus personal brain fragmentation at Twitter: http://twitter.com/mikeerrico

Join the Mike Errico Mailing List: http://errico.com/mailinglist.html

On iTunes: http://itunes.apple.com/us/artist/mike-errico/id3567281

Mike Errico is on: Facebook || Twitter || YouTube || MySpace || Last.fm || Pandora || ILike || MOG

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:: August 9th 2010 ::

Mike Errico: August 14th, New Haven, CT

 

 

 Fox Theater, Oakland, CA, 5/6/10              Photo: Chris Campbell


LATE-NIGHT RADIO: An Evening with Mike Errico

SATURDAY, August 14, 2010 10-11:30PM
(Bar opens at 9:30)
Yale Summer Cabaret 217 Park Street New Haven, CT 06511

All Tickets $5 Reservations not necessary, but recommended:

For tickets and more information:
203.432.1567 | www.summercabaret.org | summer.cabaret@yale.edu

NEWS

Mike Errico has entered the studio to record the follow-up to 2010's Songs from Lift. Pictures and diary entries are posting on Mike's official blog: http://www.errico.com/blog

Follow on Facebook at: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Mike-Errico/8888939428

Studio news, plus personal brain fragmentation, at Twitter: http://twitter.com/mikeerrico

FREE DOWNLOADS
Unreleased versions, remixes and Tallboy 8, the seven-song live EP, are available for free at: http://www.errico.com/media.html


------

Join the Mike Errico Mailing List: http://errico.com/mailinglist.html

 

On iTunes: http://itunes.apple.com/us/artist/mike-errico/id3567281

 

Mike Errico is on: Facebook || Twitter || YouTube || MySpace || Last.fm || Pandora || ILike || MOG

 

 

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