The READIN Family Album
Me and Sylvia, smiling for the camera (August 2005)

READIN

Jeremy's journal

Between your two wings is where the journey occurs.

Eduardo Galeano


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Tuesday, November 26th, 2019

🦋 Gluing up

For a while I have had in mind making a viola da gamba type of instrument with a steel wok as its soundboard and an arched maple back. An interesting question is how do you attach the wood to the metal -- I have had in mind screwing it together. Just now I had the thought that a thin wooden lining could be glued to the metal (I guess with Gorilla Glue?) and then attach the back with hide glue.

This way I can make the back much thinner, like a violin back, and not need thickness to screw into. No need to drill holes in the metal -- much better.

posted evening of November 26th, 2019: 1 response
➳ More posts about Luthery

Sunday, November 24th, 2019

🦋 Two Birds

Atman does not call himself "I"; Jiva does.
Jiva also calls himself "you," believing
that he is speaking to Atman.

posted afternoon of November 24th, 2019: Respond
➳ More posts about Songwriting

Sunday, November 17th, 2019

🦋 The form

So here is how I write the song form that I'm calling "rag" (hopefully making reference to that weird and intoxicating effect that Joplin attributes to "ragtime", and maybe to "raga" as well but who knows)

Start with: an earworm melody. Your own or somebody else's, or traditional. Fuck with the rhythm of it by lengthening some beats and shortening others -- get a melody with similar sequence of notes to the source but a drunken/stuttering sound. Notate this melody in Noteflight or similar software. (I am always using cello to notate this first step.) When you play it back it should be clear what song you are hearing and also clearly something funny about it.

Add parts. Usually I am adding a bass part first and then a treble or even two treble parts. Sometimes just a bass part or just a treble. I am generally using violin family instruments for my parts but that is just what I'm familiar with.

Bass part: generally quarter notes, sometimes eigth notes. I'm not using syncopation at all in the bass parts, for now. It seems pretty easy and natural to find a plunky bass pattern that fits the main melody, I'm not sure what technique is going into this. If there is a bass part, then make it pretty constant throughout the song, not coming in and out.

Treble part: listen to the main cello part over and over, with and without bass, until you start hearing ghost melodies that fit with it. Start notating them. The treble parts can rest a lot, they don't have to (and should not) be playing all the time. The ghost melodies should reinforce the primary melody.

B section: usually modulate down a fifth or up a fourth. No technique here, just whatever sounds good(?) or so to say quirky

End result: intro + A section, repeat, B section, repeat, d.s. al coda, outro. The main melody is on the cello but the treble parts are playing their own distinct melodies which can mask the main melody. Make sure they are quiet for a couple of key measures in each section.

See Counterpoint rag for examples.

posted morning of November 17th, 2019: Respond
➳ More posts about Writing Projects

Saturday, November 16th, 2019

🦋 Counterpoint rag (demo ep)

Here is a form:



My Imaginary String Band performs 7 new songs that I've composed at Noteflight, links are to the individual scores --

(notes on the form here.)

posted afternoon of November 16th, 2019: Respond

Wednesday, October 9th, 2019

There are 50 ways to breathe, my brother.

posted evening of October 9th, 2019: Respond
➳ More posts about Poetry

Monday, September 16th, 2019

Matter. Don't matter.
Matter, don't matter, doesn't matter/ in the Void

posted morning of September 16th, 2019: Respond

🦋 Jiva and Atman

Jiva eats the fruit of the tree: Jiva is bound to the world. Jiva is part of the world.
Atman does not eat but watches.
Atman links Jiva to the supreme unity.

posted morning of September 16th, 2019: 2 responses
➳ More posts about Upanishads

Sunday, September 15th, 2019

🦋 Jagged

There was a jagged man, and he walked a jagged mile.
He found a jagged sixpence behind a jagged stile.
He bought a jagged cat that caught a jagged mouse.
They all lived together in a little jagged house.

posted morning of September 15th, 2019: 5 responses
➳ More posts about The Tin-can Cello

There is no Lie without a liar; there is no Truth without a truth-teller.
There is no Song without a singer.

posted morning of September 15th, 2019: Respond

Friday, August 23rd, 2019

There's no I in meat

posted evening of August 23rd, 2019: 1 response

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