The READIN Family Album
Me and Gary, brooding (September 2004)

READIN

Jeremy's journal

Even the denial of a true idea creates a space which vibrates with possibility.

James Hamilton-Paterson


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Tuesday, January 8th, 2008

Every time I see this Saramago quote: "The gate is wide open, the madmen escape." at the top of my blog, I hear it sung to the tune of "Away in the Manger". Not that useful but there you have it.

posted morning of January 8th, 2008: 2 responses
➳ More posts about Blindness

🦋 Creepy Charlie

It is starting to sound to me like an actual song. (See a couple of posts down for the fiddle part.) -- like just now I was mulling over what the lyrics to it might sound like, if they were written and I were singing them. I think the genre is probably rock or rockabilly.

...A song about memory, I think -- with lots of references to Modesto and to the Central Valley if I can swing it. Mostly because those Valley city and town names have got the exact right cadence for this melody -- Sacra-ment-o, e.g. -- the line in my head is "Driving up the high-way, north to Sacra-ment-o," possibly followed by "Don't know what I'll do there" or "Haven't seen my ba-by" or, not sure. Memory and being bored -- these two are tangled together pretty inextricably in my world view.

posted morning of January 8th, 2008: Respond
➳ More posts about Songs

Monday, January 7th, 2008

🦋 Music stuff

  • I think I am not going to do any more Songs posts until I buy a microphone and an audio processor. I have been planning to do this sometime soon -- I think I will feel much better about the music I am posting if the audio quality is a little better. What I have been doing up till now counts as a sort of a proof of concept -- the concept is pretty well proven.
  • If any of you have got advice about what sort of mics and audio converter I ought to buy, please leave them in comments, or e-mail me if you prefer. I will be most grateful.
  • This afternoon I thought of a short tune. Played around with it on my violin and I came to realize that it integrates really well with "After Midnight".
  • I came up with guitar chords to accompany "Creepy Charlie" -- I am looking forward to recording the piece with viola and guitar, and maybe to writing a "b" part as well. (In the recording I posted the other day, there is something that sounds like it might be a "b" part but I think it is actually just a second voice on the "a" part. This is something I don't know how to figure out.)

Update: bullet two is no longer operative; I have ordered an Edirol E-MU EM8740 audio interface (which I will call "emu") and a pair of Behringer C2 microphones.

posted evening of January 7th, 2008: Respond
➳ More posts about Guitar

Sunday, January 6th, 2008

🦋 Shanghai Love Motel

Don't believe the lack of hype: Shanghai Love Motel is going straight to the top (of?). Listen to some great music for free at their MySpace page, go listen to them on Saturday in Brooklyn (Jalopy, 315 Columbia St. between Hamilton Ave. and Woodhull St., 10 pm), anticipate their forthcoming first record. Anticipate!

posted evening of January 6th, 2008: Respond
➳ More posts about Shanghai Love Motel

Saturday, January 5th, 2008

🦋 That Long, Lonesome Road

Here is another fiddle part, in ABC Format and PDF.

posted afternoon of January 5th, 2008: Respond
➳ More posts about Fiddling

Friday, January 4th, 2008

🦋 Fallible Memory

So who remembered that at the beginning of Peter Pan, before Peter ever comes and takes the children to visit Never-Never Land, he existed as a story that Wendy told to her brothers? That part of the story had totally vanished from my memory and from Ellen's. (Other things I did not remember include the in-your-face racism and sexism, pretty hard to miss -- I guess it's been a long time since I watched this.)

posted evening of January 4th, 2008: 2 responses
➳ More posts about Family Movie Night

🦋 4 songs: various

Some miscellaneous stuff for you tonight, with annotations.

The first two tracks are "Weary Day" and "The Louisville Burglar", from my and Jerry's set at the open mic last week. Still haven't got the video sorted out. Track 3 is my arrangement of "K.C. Moan" by the Memphis Jug Band (and famously covered by the Dead, a-and I know this song first and best in its performance by Jim Kweskin and the Jug Band) -- this is a song we are working on, Jerry sings it much better than I do so just think of the vocals as a placeholder.

Track 4 I would like to know what you think about: It is the next iteration of the song I posted the other day calling it "a variation on Dvorák's 'Humoresque'" -- that description was not a very apt one then and it is works even less well with the current version. The song is definitely a different one from the source. I am calling it "Creepy Charlie" and I just have no idea what kind of music it is. So if it makes you think of anything could you leave a comment? Thanks.

The fiddle part for "K.C. Moan": ABC Format or PDF; "Creepy Charlie": ABC Format or PDF.

Hmm... and looking at them side by side now, I notice that my "K.C. Moan" part is almost note for note the same as my "Bed on Your Floor" part in a different key and with two extra bars inserted. Which, well, they are pretty similar songs I guess.

posted evening of January 4th, 2008: Respond
➳ More posts about Music

Thursday, January third, 2008

🦋 Syncopation

I worked out a fiddle part to "Bed on Your Floor" -- here is ABC format, here is PDF. I try to write out as close as possible to what I'm playing on my fiddle; it puzzles me that so few of the notes actually start on a downbeat. (Well this has been true of the songs I have transcribed in 2/4 and 4/4 time; the songs in 3/8 and 12/8 seem to be more dominated by downbeats.) Nearly every note of this song that is not the first note of a measure starts on an upbeat or a quarter-beat. -- Well maybe that is an exaggeration. But still, there is a lot of syncopation. I don't think I've ever seen the rhythm pattern in the first, 3rd and 4th measures written out.

posted afternoon of January third, 2008: Respond

🦋 Variation

This is a variation on "Humoresque", by Antonín Dvorák.

Wow! And check out this performance of Dvorák's piece -- it will blow your mind.

posted morning of January third, 2008: Respond

Wednesday, January second, 2008

🦋 Is this a new song?

So I came up with a melody that's quite different from the ones I have been playing, and just wondering whether it's actually original with me. I know I hear a lot of jazz tunes that I forget the name of and maybe even that I have heard them before -- indeed I thought of this tune while I was whistling to myself an old Dixieland standard that I do not know the name of. (I have included a short, rough recording of that tune at the end of the tape -- if anyone could clue me in about the title I'd really appreciate it. I don't know what it is about jazz that makes it difficult for me to retain information about the songs.) My question to you: is this tune (which I'm calling "Looking for David" for the time being) a new song, or something I am lifting from elsewhere?

posted evening of January second, 2008: Respond

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