Friday, January 10, 2020

Meet The Faculty: Episode 11: Professor Lauren Passarelli

Friday, January 31, 2014

Tune in to watch a report on 50 years since the Beatles came to America this Sunday, February 2, 2014 on CBS News Sunday Morning. It's a national show and during the 8 minutes on The Beatles, my Berklee Beatles' Ensemble will be interviewed!

* New * PASS' WORDS Channel on Youtube & Vimeo

It's a vlog! And it's live on you tube and vimeo. So we can converse some. You can leave comments, questions or even email me at lpassarelli@berklee.edu. And I can tell you new things, and you can see me. Subscribe, and you'll always know when I've added something new. See you there! L Pass http://www.youtube.com/channel/UCIwLfA5t5Z8dqpT5K9un2RA There's this youtube channel to subscribe to, too. http://www.youtube.com/user/laurenpass

Monday, October 28, 2013

Questions for Lauren, by Robin Stone


Questions for Lauren, by Robin Stone

Bolstered By Blue and many other tunes on this record have arrangements that are very complex, with multiple backing vocal parts and various instruments coming in and out. How do you go about composing and then arranging tunes like that?

Sometimes while I’m writing the song, I can hear other parts that are begging to be on the recording. Sometimes I have to listen to the songs awhile to think of the textures and sounds I might want. I get a lot of backing vocal ideas singing along to my tracks in the car, or while playing drums. I make notes of favorite sounds, from all kinds of instruments, and production ideas in other peoples’ recordings. Sometimes I just grab the list, oh yeah, I wanted to use such & such and just try it on the song I’m working on. Like how cool it is to hear sax & guitar in unison, or playing the melody on guitar in unison with a vocal line or putting flange on a bass so it splashes around the stereo mix, or how cool whistling or mouth trumpet sounds in a song. I’ll record the song and then start layering till I use all my ideas and the song waits for the rest, or the arrangement is finished. I play guitar bass drums and piano. If the piano part is advanced, I’m playing midi guitar, and I use the midi guitar to trigger any other instrument or sound that fits.

I’ve been writing songs since 1970 and have a giant pile of originals, most of which haven’t been released. And as years go by and I get better at recording, I’ve tended to think the toy equipment I was using before DAWs wasn’t good enough, and I can re-record and make everything sound better, sonically. BUT, it feels tremendously daunting to redo so much of my life’s work. Especially when I continue to write and record new songs. It’s also a lot of work to digitize and keep my songs accessible because the platforms and mediums to hold the music keep changing.

So I loved remixing, and mastering these songs, and the emotion in the original performance can be kept. I can make them sound like finished records now.

Many songs on Tender Ramble had been demos I’d recorded soon after I’d written the songs. They’d have a reference vocal, or still need bass, or need a new drum part. I had to focus on, “what do these need to be finished arrangements?” and added the tracks that came to mind.

There’s tremendous power in deciding. Just deciding that these selected songs would be on the next record and needed to be completed, gave me the ideas.

Some of these songs were from 2003. I’d listened to the demos many times since then. But I didn’t feel a burning desire to add anything till I decided. Finish these songs, let’s get them out into the world. And boom the ideas came.

It’s better to ask your brain better questions, like, “What would be the best sound or timbre or groove here?” Rather than, “I can’t come up with anything the song’s been hanging around for years, I don’t know what to play, otherwise it would have it on there already.”

Sometimes I say what would James Taylor have here? How would Frank Filipetti mic it? What would Pat Metheny play here? And I get into a receiving place where the right ideas come to me. How do I know if it’s right? If I love it, it’s right.
   
Bolstered By Blue needed new drums, so I jumped on the kit and played a new drum part. I could hear a cool piano timbre on the choruses but I didn’t know what it would be yet. I was hoping for a riff. I played it on my upright. It’s a fun quirky bit. I fiddle and sing, and search, and play until I discover what works, on any instrument that I’m adding. Infinite things could fit, and a song can be arranged in infinite ways. I just please my ears, please myself, and fill the songs with fun parts that tickle me.

When I’m done writing a song, I make sure I love every chord, every word and every melody note, and then it’s complete. Same with a production, I fill it with parts, sounds, effects, and production techniques I love. Anything I love goes in the song, (dachshunds, chocolate, kidding) and if it supports the emotion of the song, and feels right to me, it stays.

Happy Birthday is an interesting tune, your vocals were more experimental and your falsetto was a nice surprise. The tune had a Beatle infused bounce and the chorus was very catchy. What was the premise of the tune and its quirky nature?

I wanted to write a song for a friend’s birthday. She was feelin’ devastated about big changes in her life. She happens to be a great piano player who was encouraging me to write a song on piano. So I thought it would be great fun to write a song on piano to cheer her a bit for her birthday. (The second song I’ve ever written on piano. But it was real fun to find and play).

She had told me about Brother Blue, the storyteller, who had just died, and she was deeply saddened by that. So I quoted something she told me he used to say about people, in the song, “We ain’t nothin’ but music, wrapped in a body made of snow”. The feeling I got from the line was we’re only on this planet a short time. Let’s make the best of it. We’re strong but fragile, so take good care. Reinvent yourself, reboot, we are magic and we need to use our power for the good. So I came up with lines to encourage and remind, as we all need reminding, that we can take a sad song and make it better.

Reach Me had a really nice mix of acoustic guitars. Can you elaborate on how you went about recording those guitar parts?

    Reach Me was written in the early 80s. I recorded the two acoustic guitars in ’07 to revisit and record this song in Logic. I recorded the vocals just a couple of weeks ago. I used two, M-Audio sputnik, condenser mics. When you’re the engineer and Artist, you can put headphones on and position the mics any way you’d like that gives you a sound that works for your song. Just play the part and listen and put the mics in different places around the guitar, close, far, above, behind, in front, towards the bridge, the center, the strings, anywhere at all. Hear the differences; when you find yourself smiling because you love the sound, hit record. They were positioned aiming at the twelfth fret on an angle, and slightly above the sound hole about 8 inches away. This was my Martin 00028H, double tracked, so I played and recorded it twice. It depends on the song, frequency range and actual guitar part which mic placement sounds best. And every decision is taste. Have it as you like it.

Press On has a 6/8 time signature. Do you have any preference for any particular time signature when you write or do you let the song emerge, as it wants to.

    There are happy accidents, and inspirations and stumbling on a big, surprise, cool, idea where the song comes out as it wants to, but mostly, we do what we always do, It takes conscious effort to look for something new.

Creativity is a muscle and it needs to be exercised and used, so it becomes dependable. It started for me, with writing assignments for school. I’d write songs that fit the teacher’s wishes but also worked for me. And I loved that a new song happened with certain parameters to narrow down the infinite choices and start somewhere. The song wouldn’t have happened without the assignment. So you learn that you can turn your creativity on anytime you want to.

I tend to come up with 2 and 4 bar phrases and often write in 4/4. That’s one of the reasons why I love writing music to other people’s lyrics. Because non-musicians write what they want to say, even if the lines aren’t the same length or shape. They’re not thinking 8 bars and another 8 bars, and it forces me to write different shape music. It’s only been when I’m making a lyric line fit with smooth sing-ability that I write a 2/4 bar or 5/4 bar or 10 bar verse. And I love it because the measures float by and you hardly notice because you’re following a flowing melody and listening to a lyrical thought. I’ve written a few through-composed songs that way, like Honeywine, and my friend Stefanie Mis wrote the lyrics. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_uywVdrHiP4 or The Sea Road, this was a poem by Kate Chadbourne that I put to music. I loved that she had words like Somersaulting into a cloistered garden, how the heck am I gonna sing that?! I played with rubato and there were added beats. It turned out very Joni (Mitchell) I loved it. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7-Z2sqs-Pjw

Sometimes I take another structure, blueprint or shape of a song as a template, and write my lyrics to fit that song’s melody and form, then I write my own melody & chords to the new form of lyrics and I brake out of my usual 2 and 4 bar phrases.

A good example of that is John Lennon’s, Across The Universe. It’s basically run on sentences. I was on the train writing new lyrics to Across The Universe matching strong and weak syllables to fit his melody. Then at home I wrote my melody & chords to my new lyric. (That song still needs to be recorded and released.)

I had a student years ago who wrote in 6/8 all the time. That was his 4/4. So I was reminded of how much I love 6/8 and wrote a few in 6/8 ‘round that time, on purpose. This was one of them.

To Be Sure is a somewhat dark sounding and brooding track. Many of the tracks are different stylistically in vast ways. How long did the album take to write and record?

    Since they were already written the album came together quite quickly. About two months, just choosing songs, transferring tracks to digital, adding new parts, mixing and mastering. I do it all myself these days. Super cost effective, and I love making sound pictures.

I was definitely brooding in that one. A family member had died, one of my dogs was dying and it was a rough time. But I was falling in love at the same time. It felt so strange to feel such elation and grief at the same time. It felt like I might split in half. So it was good to write a song to try and feel better. And that’s why a lot of these songs got delayed till now, because I wrote Blast of Love, a whole album of love songs, and recorded and released those first.
http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/laurenpassarelli

What Falls Apart is a trippy journey that takes the listener on a ride through the many twists and turns of the chord progression. Backing solo guitar lines lay out the form harmonically and the vocals are rich. My personal favorite, it’s a little different from the rest. Where did that tune come from?

    I had picked up my acoustic and just played that opening riff. One of those happy findings. I remember playing the song for Jane (Miller) and she smiled and said, “Where’d you get that riff!” She was enjoying it. I just sang along and words popped out me mouth. The riff went down so I sang a melody that went up. Little contrasting, easy ideas. But here’s the thing, once you put all the bits together, it makes something whole, and it’s often infused with your best intentions if you worked thoughtfully, and it sounds cool all together. You can’t just isolate one bit and decide to throw away the idea because it’s simple. You can’t possibly put everything you know, feel, and understand about music, writing or improvising in one song. It would be like using too many spices in one dish, it probably wouldn’t taste good. And it may sound contrived or forced if it isn’t done to support the song and only done for show.

I was going through changes as we all do, and was reaching for feeling back towards my center. “Take me back, hold me there, talk me clear, pour me love (which was a cup of tea), reach my shaken path, catch what falls apart.”

When I was ten and I wrote my first song, it felt like a veil had lifted or a curtain opened and I was inside this wonderful place where all this magic happens with sounds, and emotions, and guitar! Something that didn’t exist before was now here, a new song. It was thrilling. And it still feels the same way when I write today. I feel like I’m ten, and everything is exciting. The blank piece of paper or recording is filled and something new is in the world that wasn’t there before. It’s a blast. Years ago, it was difficult and expensive to get your music out in the world. Now technology makes it so simple and the waiting for musicians, money, or ability is over.

This album seems more introspective than prior albums. How has your writing style changed over the years?

Well I do have a lot of introspective songs. My album Shadow Language has a lot of deeply emotional songs. Although I did experiment with letting the takes stay if I was feeling edgy when I played a solo like in, To Be Sure, or was actually crying in, Where Are You, because my dog died, but I wanted to record the song I had written while I was waiting for her to be delivered to me three years before when she was a puppy.

I’ve been intrigued with playing crazy things and singing at the same time. It came from touring with the Beatle band that I was in for 12 years. Playing the little guitar melody in Michelle while singing the ooohs, the guitar part at one point goes up while the oohs sing down; doing the guitar riff for Drive My Car while singing the beeps, completely different rhythms, playing the Eric Clapton lines in While My Guitar Gently Weeps while singing, woke up the side of my brain that began to understand drumming. At the same time 921 was our new building, complete with drum sets in every classroom. Score! I’d stay after school and play drums. When I realized I had real potential, I bought a drum set, and I’ve been playing drums to my songs ever since.

The Beatles taught me infinite curiosity, and how to find something new. So I like to write something that stretches my guitar playing and vocal range. When I was kid I’d write quietly in my room in my family’s house. I didn’t realize that the melody notes that were easy to sing with soft guitar would be impossible to hear over a band. So I remember purposefully writing songs that had higher melody notes so that I could sing them with a band.

They say it’s easier to write a sad song than a rocker, so I’m often intrigued with writing funky or up-tempo songs. Middle of Me, was inspired by I Saw Her standing There. What a great riff in that song. I was playing my Dillion Duo Jet with the dynasonic pickups that sounded like every song on the Please Please Me album and I had to find a fun riff. Middle of Me is also a Brother Blue saying. “From the middle of the middle of me to the middle of the middle of you”, Like, be sincere, man. That riff had been hanging round for about seven years before I finished the song in ’09. So I made it sound like a 60’s rocker.

I like using the guitar in all its glorious ways. Different string sets, alternate tunings, capos, counterpoint within the main guitar part, I’m often arranging the main guitar part as I’m writing it. Its not just all six strings or one lead note at a time. There’s lots of delicious bits to explore, like a piano player would fill in here and there. I like getting the compliment that this doesn’t sound like an original song, but something that has always been, and using different keys that one wouldn’t expect to hear a guitar player write in.

I was a performance major, I can play the three parts, walking bass line, melody, and chords at the same time. Between the Bill Leavitt awesome technique books and playing classical pieces with a pick, I have a great groove and can skip strings in fun ways even in my own songs. I love what deep practicing and guitar virtuosity has done for my playing.

I purposefully make songs sound different from each other, even if they’re in the same tuning so if you hear one of my solo shows, you don’t get bored with my guitar accompaniment. You can use tempo changes, grooves changes, different registers of the guitar, different tunings, pick & fingers, just pick, just fingers. The guitar is capable of so much and in any style. Don’t settle for limitations, over come them.

I love when singer songwriters take my pop rock songwriting lab and leave saying, “Wow, I can write songs and be fluent on guitar.”


Thursday, June 2, 2011

Lauren Passarelli Live on Stageit.com

photo by Patty Axford

Come one come all! There's this new way of enjoying live music from the comfort of your own home with guaranteed front row seats! Stageit.com is a new website where I will be performing every 2 weeks. Share the link with friends & come by.

Thursday, April 28, 2011

It Gets Better All The Time

April 28th, 2011

For Fab Four fan, it gets better all the time
Thursday, April 28, 2011
LAST UPDATED: THURSDAY APRIL 28, 2011, 11:18 AM
BY BRYAN WASSEL
TOWN NEWS
STAFF WRITER
A former Paramus resident has accomplished a series of firsts at Berklee College in Boston: becoming the first woman to graduate the guitar performance program in 1982, the first female faculty member of the guitar department in 1984 and the first female to be promoted to full professor in the department in 2009.

Lauren Passarelli, who was born in Teaneck and grew up in Paramus, developed her interest in guitar at an early age, citing the Beatles as one of her biggest influences. She had a plastic guitar when she was 2, and was truly inspired by music when she saw the Beatles perform on the Ed Sullivan Show when she was 4.

“You know, the Beatles never said they were the best musicians or the best writers or anything, but they enjoyed it so much and they just said, ‘If we can do it, anyone can do it,’” Passarelli said. “So I thought, ‘Then I’ll do it too.’”

Nicknamed “George,” after Beatle George Harrison, by her students, Passarelli is not only a professor but the department’s resident expert on the Fab Four. In addition to her standard lessons, she created the Beatles’ Guitar Lab and Beatle’s Ensemble at the college.

Her formal education in guitar began in 1969, when she began taking lessons from Paramus guitar teacher Lou Sabini, who still gives lessons in the borough to this day.

“He’s a great, great guitar teacher and he got me off to an incredible foundation, a great start,” Passarelli said. “I studied with him for five years, from 9 years old to 14, and he got me using the guitar books that Berklee College of Music published, so that’s how I heard about the college.”

Passarelli’s musical talent goes beyond just the guitar, and while attending Paramus High School she played flute in the school’s marching and concert bands, as well as guitar for the stage band. She also sings, plays piano, bass and drums, engineers and mixes her own music, and has been writing and recording her own songs since 1970.

“I love it all,” Passarelli said. “Certainly writing the songs is a giant thrill, because I like sitting there with a blank piece of paper and a blank recording and knowing nothing is there, maybe not even a scratch of an idea, but within an hour there’s a finished song. It’s just the most amazing thing, it’s like playing with magic.”

After graduating from Berklee, Passarelli was immediately invited to join the faculty, but had to wait two years for an opening. She has taught at the college, sharing her love of music with students using a lighthearted approach, ever since.

In addition to teaching, Passarelli has recorded multiple albums, and played with other renowned musicians, including Melissa Etheridge, Leni Stern and Pat Metheny. She also performs live concerts online and has guitar lessons and labs on all aspects of the instrument available online.

“There’s ways for people to reach out, and the Internet brings everybody together these days,” Passarelli said.

E-mail: Wassel@northjersey.com


Wednesday, March 2, 2011

Blackbird & Bellabye





Blackbird & Bellabye

I’ve always gotten a kick out of learning songs & guitar parts deeply to sound like the recordings that I loved. That was my measure of how well I knew the music & how much attention I paid to the detail that was there.

I have offered to play what’s on the recording, to play the exact guitar parts. It has been this skill that has gotten the attention of many band leaders wanting me to play on their record or join their tour. (All Together Now, Sarah Burrill, Pat Metheny) This helps if the artist is used to it, or loves those guitar parts or they have become part of the composition in a significant way.

This kind of practice has evolved for me over the years so that I have spent time with quite a diverse batch of playing styles, repertoire & accompaniment grooves & have gotten into the nitty gritty of what makes a player sound the way they do.

Far beyond the notes they choose or the rhythms they play are the deeper emotional content of touch, feel, tone, attitude, nuance, how they bend a note, slide, hammer, pull off, the dynamics, the articulation, phrasing, distinguishing effects, anything you can notice to sound like what’s there. This has given me vast options in my own playing & made my art huge. It’s also taught me how to arrange my own guitar parts for my songs & other artist’s original songs.

Often there’s a new to me, sounding riff, guitar effect, or groove or way to finger pick or new voicings that impress me or different string sets involved with the voicings & then I’m inspired to nick a few ideas & write my own song with the goods.

In 2005 Paul McCartney released a song called, Jenny Wren & deliberately revisited his own accompaniment style of playing voicings in tenths as he did on his 1968 song, Blackbird. I thought this was cool & wanted to write my own song with similar voicings. I played with the Blackbird & Jenny Wren voicing shapes & came up with a progression that I liked, added lyrics about my new niece & wrote a lullaby in 2005 adding her nickname, Bella in the title.

I love that it became it’s own song yet has remnants & colors of the inspired ideas from Blackbird & Jenny Wren. I also love that just like playing with words when meaning takes care of itself, so also playing with chord forms, harmony takes care of itself. If you listen to cool progressions & play with them you will write cool progressions if you listen to cool lyrics & melodies & arrangements & productions & horn parts, bass parts, etc. you will naturally, by osmosis by noticing & digesting great stuff in an organic way, create great music. For me it’s about eternal curiosity & allowing myself to explore.

Paul McCartney & George Harrison used to start playing Bach’s Bouree & having never learned the whole thing would stop or go off & play their own bits & that’s how Paul came to write Blackbird with those voicings. He liked the sound of those open chords.

So anything you’re attracted to in the sound of someone’s playing is a great starting point & gives you instant gratification to get something new happening in your playing or writing. I do this with engineering & production as well.

In fact if you listen to the recorded vs. of Bellabye in the headphones you’ll hear this cool spaced pair miking technique.

I used 2 M-Audio Sputniks in the cardioid position one slightly pointing on an angle to the 12th fret, the other by my ear pointing down to the body of the acoustic guitar while I sang into a Neumann U87. Technically all 3 mics were picking up guitar & vocal but the air, the space that was recorded between the 3 mics was delicious! It’s so cool in the headphones.

3 acoustic guitar miking techniques with audio examples

http://www.humbuckermusic.com/acguitrectec.html

Blackbird, Paul McCartney, The Beatles, The White Album http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-ERnT1X9HPw

Jenny Wren, Paul McCartney, Chaos & Creation in the Backyard

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=36dtjxUMWdM

Bellabye, Lauren Passarelli, Playing With the Pieces

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0eyShqBIbP4




Wednesday, July 7, 2010

Happy 70th Ringo!


Steve Gorman (Black Crowes drummer) wrote this a while back in response to a fan letter:
Quote:
Ringo Starr’s drumming is infallible, untouchable, and he is quite simply the greatest drummer in the history of rock 'n' roll music.

So, there’s that.

With this in mind, it would stand to reason that you might struggle to learn his parts, even on so rudimentary a level as Rock Band provides. I will resist the urge to write an endless screed about why Ringo’s drumming is beyond reproach and instead offer a quick “Q and A” to examine your specific points.

Q) Was Ringo actually “different as a drummer”?

A) Was Magic Johnson “different as a point guard“? Was Frank Lloyd Wright “different as an architect”? You bet your ass. As much as people try to disparage Ringo’s playing, no one ever seems to have a suggestion as to what drummer would have made those recordings better. And that’s because there was not, is not, and never will be, a drummer more perfectly suited for the Beatles.

Q) Was his playing “pretty simple and connected to the songs”?

A) If by “pretty simple”, you mean “pretty perfect” and if by “connected to the songs”, you mean, “integral to the execution of these rock n’ roll masterpieces”, then the answer is a resounding YES.

Q) Was Ringo “less intuitive” than a lot of subsequent rock drummers?

A) Absolutely not. Few if any drummers in rock history have been more intuitive. Ringo understood exactly what every song needed to have, and bear in mind he was working with not one, but three songwriters.

Q) Any thoughts?

A) Yes. Don’t argue with me about this. I know what I know.


I love John Bonham, Charlie Watts, Phil Rudd, and the nutjob from Wilco (and about a million other drummers) as much as anyone could. They are all perfect for their bands. They are all irreplaceable. But Ringo was in THE BEATLES.

Check the scoreboard.

Ringo wins.

Sunday, May 30, 2010

Why Create Anything?

You must read Kate Chadbourne's post, Emily & Eternity, Journal May 30, 2010

Saturday, April 3, 2010

Come Alive

Don't ask yourself what the world needs,
Ask yourself what makes you come alive, and
then go do it. Because what the world needs
is people who have come alive.
~ Harold Thurman Whitman

Sunday, March 21, 2010

More On Creativity

Ever since I met Kate Chadbourne we've been talking about the creative process & recently on the phone she said three things that I couldn't wait to share with all of you.

We're all constantly saying many of the same things repeatedly but there are times when someone can turn the idea just a hair, to give you a glimpse of yet another facet of the idea you've known all along, or a new metaphor & all becomes clearer & even more possible, even more tangible & doable & it sparks my desire to jump in & create from this new perspective.

Reach up & grab something from that overhead compartment above you

I have often felt ideas come to me, as gifts, that they may not even be my ideas, but ideas coming from a cool place, that giant creative pool of infinite possibilities & I heard it first. I've never thought of it as an overhead compartment that I could simply reach into & pull out a great idea. That's cool & fun & closer than this giant sky, VAST overwhelming place that we may sometimes think the ideas come from.

Get words on the page

Many of my students fear writing down anything until they think the idea is good enough. Pat Pattison calls it free association, Kate calls it blathering & getting words on the page, I've called it blurbs, Natalie Goldberg calls it, keeping your pen moving, they're all great. The idea is to participate & get words on the page that you can play with, rearrange & jump into new ideas from. I've said it a bunch, but if you play with words you will find lyrics, stories, poems, prose, whatever you're desiring to write with words. Playing with them is the key, not worrying about rules, or formulas or another book to buy on how or another class to take. Go to the source themselves, the words, the feelings, the hot topics the desires in your heart. Scribble them down, move them around, cut & paste them, put them in different orders within the sentence, go after the spark that happens next & what you want to say appears. In the book Poem Crazy, Susan G. Wooldridge says, "Play with words as if they are blocks, meaning will take care of itself." I love the freedom of that. And, I am amazed to always find that it is absolutely true for me.

Be engaged, instead of waiting

I like the prize, I like winning. I like seeing & hearing a finished song or CD physically in my hands, the tangible representation of many hours of detailed work & thousands of decisions completed. I was recently waiting for the artwork for my CD, Playing With the Pieces. Even though I designed it & took most of the photos I needed help with following the manufactures templates & that's we're I'm at. Waiting for my friend to tidy up my ideas so they make sense to the printing people. I had hoped to get that CD in my hot little hands & feel the completed satisfaction of that batch of songs by my birthday February 1st & then merrily jump into my next CD, Blast of Love, finish arranging & tracking & begin mixing. I've been waiting since last May '09 when we started the visuals. So what's a frustrated Beatle to do? Get cracking on something else anyway! So I've been happily working on the new CD & writing new songs & recording them as well. I get so caught up in my own plans that it takes me a little while to remember to be flexible when I'm working with other people. Our deadlines are our own thankfully & there are many things for me to be creatively engaged with. But truthfully as with all advancement, necessity is the mother of invention. That is one of the reasons, I've learned how to play drums, trust my own bass lines, get into triggering all kinds of instruments with a midi guitar, start learning piano & now, learn some basic graphic design; BECAUSE I HATE SITTING AROUND WAITING. I love collaborating with my creative friends, but I can't wait for them forever. So you decide your comfort zone & instead of complaining, do something.

I wish for you all, joy, flow & great fulfillment with your creating. Don't wait, jump in now & have some fun.








Sunday, February 28, 2010

Go To Your Studio & Make Stuff

There's every reason on earth to enjoy the creative things you enjoy as often as you choose to. We see ourselves in definitive ways & at various times or ages in our lives we allow ourselves to have & be those creative things. At other times we wait for outside validation or an invitation or just don't allow ourselves to have that fun anymore. Sometimes a new creative fun comes up but we hold ourselves from it thinking only they can do that art form, I've never been good at that & so I'm not allowed to have it.


Not true. Not even nice. Who's side are you on anyway? Who's voice is that in your head? You are the only one who can validate you. You give to yourself or you hold your self back. You dive in & have the fun or you keep yourself from it.

Enjoy your time. Your life is here & now. It's your energy, your fire.

Explore. Investigate. Wander. Listen. Devour the things you enjoy doing. They're here for you. You are here for them. You belong together. They equal fun & fulfillment. There's so much information in books & on the internet on everything you're interested in. Go for it. Vy vait?


I had a mighty time giving a song writing & creativity clinic with the multi talented, Kate Chadbourne on Feb 23rd, 2010. The juicy sparks & laughs were flying. We could have gone on for hours. The presentation is on youtube. Jump in, get wet. Make a splash. Go to your studio & make stuff.




Thursday, February 18, 2010

Brenda Ueland on Creative Work

I think there is something necessary & life giving about creative work. A state of excitement. And it is like a faucet: nothing comes unless you turn it on and the more you turn it on, the more comes. But this joyful, imaginative, impassioned energy dies out of us very young. Why? Because we do not see that it is great and important. Because we let dry obligation take it’s place. Because we don’t respect it in ourselves & keep it alive by using it. And because we don’t keep it alive in others by listening to them. You must practise with all your intelligence and love. A great musician once told me one should never play a note without hearing it, feeling that it is true, thinking it beautiful. Writing, the creative effort, the use of the imagination, should come first of some part of everyday of your life. It is a wonderful blessing if you will use it. You will become happier, more enlightened, alive, impassioned, light hearted & generous to everybody else. Even your health will improve. Colds will disappeear & all other ailments of discouragement & boredom. - Brenda Ueland

Thursday, January 21, 2010

Keeping On


It’s so much fun to have a new project or song or idea in my head. My brain desires to be captivated & chewing on something delicious as often as possible. As an Artist it’s important for me to have something in the works, always stirring & devising, arranging & producing, to be playing with sounds & words & textures just thrills me.

I like to do it as often as possible because it’s as necessary & satisfying as eating & sleeping & breathing. I also feel that it is as easy to jump into the creative flow, as it is to plug an AC cord into the wall outlet to get power.

There’s a need for a decision, then an action of doing & some patience & allowing & then there’s the muse hanging with me while I play with words or instruments or plans as to what to do with all those words & music ideas. The inspiration always shows up when I do. We’re connected. So are you.

It’s trust, it’s intuition, and it’s fun & repetition. It’s habit & then confidence and there is always another part of it all to work on, to enjoy, and to spend time with.

When Joni Mitchell couldn’t find a music or lyric idea she’d paint. When the painting felt uncertain she’d go back to music. I bounce around to different instruments, new song ideas, older unfinished ideas & whatever feels interesting to me.

Sometimes Artists are afraid of too much freedom & too many choices. But I find it fascinating how we can start off with a blank page & blank recording & out of the infinite choose pieces, begin a puzzle, realize a form & direction & theme & finish a lyric or melody or progression. I love making those choices, taking my ear by surprise & pleasing myself & by getting tickled by the joy of it all. You have to show up & start, narrow it down, decide & add to it till it’s done.

I usually finish a new song in an hr or less. The whole thing: chords, melody & lyrics. I started writing songs at 10 yrs old & have written over the years in every order, from many different starting points. I love finding new ways to jump into the creative playground & have a go at it. When I hear another writer’s habits & process I like visiting their approach to get into the creative place in a new way. So if one attempt isn’t as effortless I can try another.

Since July of ’09 I’ve written a whole cd’s worth of new songs that I’m very excited about. Most were brand new ideas. Rescuing & finally getting to use a stranded verse or chorus or riff from the past became 3 finished songs. To my own amazement the new finished bits fit so well they sounded like they belonged together all along and two were ideas that I had had hanging around a long time. One was 7 years old. One was 12 years old & now these bits are finished whole songs. Lyrically 2 songs needed more life experience to unfold before I knew what to say. Another song got over it’s “I don’t know what I’m going to be” by co-writing with a friend.

I had been releasing digital singles through 2007 & 2008. I would write, record & release it to itunes, boom, done. I was getting a kick out of making the picture sleeves for them, getting to use my photographs for each. I’d also been asking everyone, “Do you prefer to buy digital downloads or cds these days”? Everyone was about 50/50 on this and so I have just worked on a cd visual layout for all those singles plus 2 unreleased songs and the full length CD will be called, Playing With The Pieces.

I have been recording the basic tracks to all the new songs as I wrote them since last July & that cd will come out this year as well. I want to call it Blast of Love. It was a fun phrase & when I heard it, I instantly thought it would make a cool title for my next cd & it would also be a great title song. So I sat down & wrote a song called Blast of Love.

It’s play. It’s easy. It’s just picking up instruments & letting yourself fly. It’s playing with all those pieces & choices & picking the bits & parts you love best & putting them all together. It’s giving it time & space to get a new perspective & point of view & seeing if you still like what you hear and if not, asking what does this need? Even asking the song itself. “Song, what do you want? Tell me your bass line. What do you want me to say here? How should I end it?”

One time I just deliberately sat down with 3 new songs & said, ok endings, find them, because these aren’t going to fade out. They want definite endings & boom the ideas just came. You have to decide what you need & what’s missing so you can find the solution. You have to let yourself begin and continue & then finish. If you’re happy with it, it’s good.

If you’re hungry you find things that are edible to eat. If you have a destination desire you get in your car & get there. It’s the same with writing. If you want to write words, play with words, visit with them & see which ones describe what you desire to say. If you want to write harmony & melody you have to play with chords & melodies & get to know the emotional side of the frequencies you’re choosing. If you are moved by your choices someone else will genuinely be moved & they are your true listeners & fans. They get goose bumps when you do. If they don’t they may never be converted. Doesn’t matter. People who dig what you do are out there. Some prefer strawberry; some prefer chocolate it’s about natural connection & being heard on a cellular level. But you have to dig it first. Your own connection to your art is what matters most & allowing your self to have that connection every day keeps you sane, engaged & fulfilled.

Writers say to me they don’t have time & they haven’t been playing or writing or jumping into their art at all. Why not? You sleep & eat everyday. Why not let yourself have what you love? Even if you sketched, played, wrote for 15 min everyday you’d have more ideas to play with than piling up years of nothing & disappointment.

It takes 28 days to break a habit & 28 days to start a habit. Waiting around for bolts of lightning, “when inspiration strikes”, isn’t consistent enough for me. I don’t want to be so numbed to creative kindling that I have to be struck out of my regular life routine to catch a creative idea. I love being in it all the time. Staying warmed up & expecting keeps me receptive & eager & open & bolts of lightning happen every day & many times a day. There’s healthy respect that we need to have for the muse & when ideas do come I catch them on paper, recordings, videos & have a source to go back to if I’m in the middle of something else. Then when I am free to experiment & play with the pieces I have a starting place. The overwhelming infinite possibilities have been narrowed down; I have a new idea to run with.

I have videos on you tube about the creative process too. I can talk about it forever. It’s one of my favorite subjects. I believe it’s the life force I’m admiring so we all have it or we wouldn’t be breathing. Flow with it. Let it in to your every day experience instead of complaining. Show up. Invite the muse for tea & visit together. Stop being at odds with yourself. Splash, just make one. Nike, just do it, weave some wonder.

You feel terrible when you’re out of sync with yourself & a huge part of it for many creative people is they call themselves writers or players & never write or play. Deep down this bothers them big time. So change that. You’re the only one who can. Worse, they stop calling themselves writers & players & accept the tortured existence of being a creative human that has no outlet or art form. John Lennon said, “I can’t wake up you. You wake up you”.

Monday, November 30, 2009

Words from a student


Wavicles

By Greg Arney11. November 2009 18:04

My first guitar teacher at college, Lauren Passarelli, taught me a number of things that I am still learning years after the fact.

After carefully eyeing my picking hand, she faulted it for being inflexible. She prescribed several pieces which made use of the floating, string-skipping picking hand that is necessary for versatility and large leaps. A natural skeptic, I wondered if the effort of changing my technique was worth it, or if the "setback" would somehow slow me down. Many musicians, particularly those who have achieved some level of comfort with a playing style, are reluctant to try new techniques, fearing that it will render their current technique worthless. Months later, I discovered the problem on my own - and returned to her prescription. Now, years later, I am happy to say I have conquered this difficulty. However, I do face many more. I have a bad habit of practicing within my "comfort zone", even though I am fully aware that two hours of discomfort is probably more effective than 8 hours of comfort.

My current goal is to lay out all of the techniques and concepts that I really don't want to work on, things that make me feel uncomfortable or weak, and practice them relentlessly, going so far as to forbid any familiar activity for the duration of four weeks. If my playing is significantly changed in that time, I will know I have found another keystone on my path to mastery.

Lauren taught me another important lesson. My usual attitude as a student was that I must push as hard as I can against the wall. Occasionally, I would express my patient frustration to teachers and mentors. Having a need to organize the Universe, I told Lauren that I knew I would get X good if I practiced X amount of hours. For those of us who train ourselves to have high expectations and work hard to achieve them, we tend to want others to validate this view, even going so far as to expect that anyone we respect or admire will share this method. However, Lauren's response shocked me. She said that it wasn't the amount of time spent practicing or even how badly I wanted mastery. She told me that if I focus and have the right mindset, these things will find me, instead. The conversation took a turn into quantum physics, and we talked about ever-fascinating concept that light can be constrained as both a wave and a particle, and the view among many physicists that the expectations of the observer can affect the outcome of the observed. She called this a "wavicle", and when we parted for that lesson (which was one of our last), she left me with this: "Control the wavicles!"


Monday, October 19, 2009

Great Quote

To charm, to strengthen & to teach. These are the 3 great chords of might.


written on the outside of Harvard University's Music building.