Color Theory

snippets 28-30

I’m eager and excited, but mostly relieved, to present the final three snippets ahead of schedule. Two more lyric brainstorm sessions and I’ll start knocking out songs.

Retro Alto refers to La Roux, who I was listening to when I sat down to create this. I don’t want to venture too deeply into 80′s synthpop, but the crisp drum samples pull it into the present, to my ears at least.

Little Richie could be my final attempt at swing feel. If I can’t piece a song together between this and Swing Vampires (from the last batch), it wasn’t meant to be. I think I like this one a little better, despite the Harold Faltermeyer vibe.

Glowing thumps. Looking back over the lot, not too many of these snippets do. It seemed appropriate to close with a simple stomper that could go in many different directions.

In the next couple of days, I’ll post a single player with all thirty snippets, and a list of the song titles as they currently stand.

{ 5 comments }

Brian Hazard February 27, 2010 at 1:47 pm

Thanks Dave, thanks Marcus!

Pete has told me a lot about their use of the Fairlight (and like an idiot, I kept referring to it as the Fairchild, a vintage compressor). That’s not really the sound I’m going for, but they were certainly ahead of their time. Rest assured that the synthy stuff will have piano in it, and the piano-y stuff will have synth in it.

Personally, I think the last few batches of snippets are a huge improvement over the first few, but a lot of those early ones were just to get a feel for functions in the software.

Marcus February 27, 2010 at 3:16 am

“Retro Alto” and “Little Richie” sound promising ! I´m really impressed. Perfect for the clubs. “Glowing” sounds a bit like a good old Bobby O track, but with modern instrumentation and better mixing skills. I love Bobby
O productions !

davpunk February 27, 2010 at 1:22 am

not really feeling these so much. They feel like they have less thought than the others. And well, theyre just TOO synthy. The drums still feel old school to me. If yer lookin for a great 80′s sound, check out Best of Naked Eyes. They were a bit advanced for their time using the Fairlight, but had a nice sound and great hooks if you goin for that.

Brian Hazard February 26, 2010 at 7:42 pm

Canyon and Cole have similar tastes. Cole things Swing Vampires is the best one yet, but he hasn’t heard Little Richie.

I totally understand where you’re coming from with the backlog of ideas. For me, the real fun started when I finally exhausted mine while working on my fifth album. I went through all my cassettes and text files and used everything worth using, so The Thought Chapter started with a clean slate. Occasionally you feel like you can’t write about something because you’ve already covered the topic, but it forces you to approach things from new angles and not settle for another “I’m falling in love with you” or “you suck” kind of song.

Not that I’ve seen any of those types of songs from you. That’s just a pattern I’ve spotted with beginning songwriters. I suppose you got those out of system before you could write something like Goodbye Dear Aunt Bobeets, which is so much more interesting and truly unique.

907Britt February 26, 2010 at 2:25 pm

I love Retro Alto, especially the music box at the end. My favorite of these three. You have updated it well.

Canyon likes Little Richie more than I do. He says, “It’s awesome and I like the drums.” It seemed a little busy at first, but grew on me. I like Swing Vampires better though. As far as whether it’s “meant to be” it doesn’t grab like Hoover Slam, which is a slam dunk.

Glowing would be great for walking or dancing. I do like a good thump.

It’s pretty cool to have a window into your songwriting process. My equivalent of a “snippet” is usually a guitar ditty or one line of melody and/or lyrics, which will stew in my subconscious while I wait for the rest of the song to condense around it. These brew, sometimes for months or years—6 years in the case of Waterfall and Slightly Down—then all at once crystallize, often after I gain wisdom or life experience that reveals what I couldn’t see at the time. Rarely the inspiration is so strong that the snippet becomes a song immediately, as in Continental Divide. But I’ve never been able to set the schedule myself. The only thing that saves me is I have written so many songs that it will be a long time before I run out.

Props to you for charging ahead towards your deadline with such determination!

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