When I turned 12 in 1972 my
brother John gave me a very important birthday present – Neil Young’s brand new
album Harvest. From the opening notes
of “Out on a Weekend” to the haunting atmosphere of the closing track “Words” I
was caught by its spell. I had never heard anything so achingly beautiful
before in my life.
In the years before ’72 it was
all about the Beatles, the Doors, Jefferson Airplane, Jimi Hendrix, and even
the Monkees. But behind the façade of all that glamorous rock and roll a quiet
movement was building, a rootsy, acoustic, country rock feel with more debt to
Dylan and the folk scene than to anything else. Crosby, Stills, Nash, and Young
were its standard bearers, and when Young left the supergroup he fled to
Nashville and began working on Harvest
with a core group of seasoned country players. The album’s success took Young
by surprise and maybe even frightened him. Harvest
became the best selling album in America in 1972 and when “Heart of Gold” went
to number one, his first and last number one single, he backed away from the
fame fearing he was becoming middle of the road. “I headed for the ditch,” he
later said, “a rougher ride but I saw more interesting people there.”
Harvest went on to influence an entire
generation of country rock folkies like me. My own guitar playing, singing, and
song writing began to turn in that direction. It just felt like home. It’s all
there in the opening track, “Out on a Weekend” – that emptiness, that
loneliness, that simplicity, that bare bones honesty. A kick drum, a snare, a
bass guitar, an acoustic guitar, a harmonica, a pedal steel, and simple lyrics
about the redemption of the road – what else could you possibly need?
Many years later when I began
making my own records I kept looking for a way to emulate that feel. I didn’t
want to imitate Neil. Where’s the joy in mimicry? I wanted to find my own
sound, my own voice, my own truth. But an apple never falls far from the tree.
My first album, Live at a Better World, was recorded
live in the 90s at a wonderful folk music venue we were all playing at called A
Better World Café. My folk duo partner at the time Mark Jackson and I stripped
it down to two acoustic guitars and two voices – a simple, spare approach that
let the songs shine. For my second album Frame,
produced and recorded by Michael Krewitsky, we took advantage of the emerging
technology of Pro Tools and the freedom it gives you. We both learned a lot
about making rootsy Americana music with computers and software.
When I formed the Coyote Problem
we made two albums with producer Sven-Erik Seaholm – Wire in 2005 and California
in 2007. I told Sven I wanted a simple, dry, straight forward sound with
minimal production sheen. I wanted it to sound like, you know, a band in a room.
We succeeded. Both of the albums won Best Americana Album at the San Diego
Music Awards in their respective years, a humbling honor.
It’s been seven years since California. Life got in the way. The
Coyote Problem had a great run, but it was hard for me to keep up with the
demands of running a band and a challenging career as a philosophy professor. I
fired myself from my own band and focused on writing and teaching. I kept doing
solo acoustic shows. And of course the songwriting never slowed down. In seven
years a lot of songs piled up. I had to do something.
There are a lot of great
producers. But in the end I went back to Sven-Erik Seaholm. We work well
together, and I feel at home in his studio having made two albums there
already, as well as spending countless hours as a session player on other
people’s projects. We had a meeting and talked about the vision for this album.
We talked about Neil Young’s “Out on a Weekend.” We talked about Tom Petty’s
“You Don’t Know How it Feels.” We talked about acoustic guitar sounds and kick
drums and amplifiers. We came to an understanding about what the goals for this
record were. Like Steven Covey says, “Begin with the end in mind.”
Sven worked really hard to get a
rich, authentic acoustic guitar sound using a complicated array of three
microphones and signal paths (I try not to pay attention to any of that stuff –
it just makes me feel stupid). In many
ways, getting a good acoustic guitar sound is the most difficult thing to do in
the studio – the sound comes off the guitar in so many places and so many ways.
But Sven did it.
Listening back to the initial
tracks I realized something was missing. I needed a title song to unify all the
themes of the record. So I wrote one. I tuned my guitar to a double drop D (the
tuning Neil uses on “Cinnamon Girl,” “Ohio,” and “Cortez the Killer”) and I
wrote a song called “Two Pines.” It came out so good we decided to open the
album with it.
There are a lot of great drummers
and bass players. It was an agonizing decision. But I finally decided on Bob
Sale and Jim Reeves. They both have this amazingly powerful, muscular,
confident feel and they play with the most arresting of all qualities –
simplicity. They never clutter things up with busy, fussy, unnecessary
flourishes. They find the essence and bring songs to life. We tracked them
together while Sven and I sat in the control room. Our jaws hit the floor after
the first song. I had goose bumps. This was it. They showed up early, stayed
late, came in prepared, and exceeded all expectations. They tracked all 14
songs in one day, many on the first take. It is such a joy to work with
professionals.
That session was followed by
weeks of overdubs. I played Dobro, lap steel, 12 string, electric guitar,
percussion, harmonica, and of course sang the vocal parts. We brought in
Melissa Barrison to play violin on one song, and Sven played a piano riff on
another. But the album is mostly bass, drums, guitars, and vocals. Our
arrangement philosophy was “When in doubt, leave it out.”
In many ways, Two Pines is the album I’ve been trying
to make all along. I’m proud of all of my earlier work, but with each album you
learn a little more. You get closer and closer to the truth. The songs get
stronger. The playing gets better. The singing gets truer. You relax more and
more. And when you relax, the real you finally shows up.
All any singer-songwriter wants
is to hear their songs recorded well, and to share those songs with anyone
who’s interested. Real musicians don’t chase fame or money – they do it because
they’re drawn into the spell that music casts, and they simply want to add
their voice to the chorus. We all love music. We love what it does to us, how it
frees us, unlocks our heart, opens our eyes, and shines light on the beauty of
our own lives. We all have our favorite genres, styles, and artists. But
beneath all the surface variations, it’s all just one song – our song. Music is
memories; music is a new friend you haven’t met yet. Music is a feather bed and
a field of stones. Music is many things, and one thing – a way to know a truth
beyond words, a truth our soul is asking for, a truth that sets us free. That’s
what your favorite music does for you. Let it.
No comments:
Post a Comment