February Album Writing Month 2016: The Best of

February Album Writing Month – an annual songwriting challenge to write 14 songs in 28 days (14.5 this leap year, I guess?) – is something I try to do as often as I can, as it often seems to coincide with me having some sort of writer’s block. I also use it as an excuse to experiment in styles unfamiliar to me. Whilst in previous years that would mean writing on my sitar (which is still in Australia), this year I was more looking at different compositional methods. I’ve been studying Mark Levine’s The Jazz Theory Book in order to get a better appreciation for music theory (having never been formally taught music) and modal playing, and this provided the backbone for many of the 17 songs I ended up writing or collaborating on this February. Elsewhere, I also employed Eno & Schmidt’s ‘Oblique Strategies’, 12-tone serialism and generative music. Plus, my usual addiction to odd time signatures and tritones.

You can download the compilation of my favourite tracks from this February here, and they are also available streaming below with some words on each piece.

 

Track #1: Not Necessarily True

I spoke to Chris Harris (@headfirst only on FAWM) before FAWM began and he mentioned being interested in collaborating in some King Crimson-esque music. So I woke up on February 1st around 9am, picked up my guitar and started writing as much Fripp-esque stuff as my head could come up with. I sent this over to Chris who plays some excellent Chapman Stick, drums and extra Fripptronic guitars. It might not be particularly original, but it’s fun.

  • /
Update Required
To play the media you will need to either update your browser to a recent version or update your Flash plugin.

You can check out Chris’ various musical exploits here.

Track #2: Oblique Turnaround

I had written a rather nice chord progression, but was stumped for what to do next. I turn to the ‘Oblique Strategies’, which promptly tell me “Change nothing and with immaculate consistency”. That was not exactly what I was looking for, but I end up hanging on the turnaround chords for the lengthy ending. Including here as I particularly like my soloing.

  • /
Update Required
To play the media you will need to either update your browser to a recent version or update your Flash plugin.

 

Track #5: Knots

‘Oblique Strategies’ strike again with the instruction: “Remove specifics and convert to ambiguities.” I decided that playing with 12-tone music might be the best way (in that no single note has dominance over the other, hence the lack of specifics). I start with some Frippy angular guitar and then try and play some rather odd chord sequences that don’t repeat any of the same notes to each other.

  • /
Update Required
To play the media you will need to either update your browser to a recent version or update your Flash plugin.

 

Track #8: Space Viking Funeral

This is here because I like it. Originally, the focus was going to be me soloing in the Lydian mode, but instead I slowly build some loops and let the chords take over. A few people have said that I sound like Mike Oldfield, which is certainly not a direct influence as I haven’t heard much of him, but I’ll take it!

  • /
Update Required
To play the media you will need to either update your browser to a recent version or update your Flash plugin.

 

Track #9: Nectarine Slumber

I’ve never felt particularly confident in my ability to write polyrhythms, but this turned out not too bad! The first section features 5 over 7, the second section 4 over 7. The title comes from the piece reminding me of the Tangerine Dream song “Force Majeure”.

  • /
Update Required
To play the media you will need to either update your browser to a recent version or update your Flash plugin.

 

Track #10: Fuzzy Ants

The intro and end are experiments with chords and modal soloing, learnt from Levine’s Jazz Theory Book, whilst the middle is just some 7/8 prog riffage. I dig it.

  • /
Update Required
To play the media you will need to either update your browser to a recent version or update your Flash plugin.

 

Track #13: Binary Singularity

This one was cool. Using the detector sound of the newly discovered gravitational waves as a loop, I wrote some heavy riffage and weird noises. I then got in touch with Peter Watkinson (@sapient on FAWM) to add some drums and guitars. This is as appropriately heavy, spacey and all-consuming as a track inspired by the gravitational waves created by two black holes colliding could be!

  • /
Update Required
To play the media you will need to either update your browser to a recent version or update your Flash plugin.

Check out Peter’s own music here.

Track #15: Stumbling Ballerina

I’ve always been interested in writing some generative music, but the results have never really appealed. Here I write some music using FractMUS by choosing what key and mode the three pianos are in, their note lengths and then what algorithmic model will decide on which note to play. An odd but interesting experiment!

  • /
Update Required
To play the media you will need to either update your browser to a recent version or update your Flash plugin.

 

Track #16: Denouement

This is probably my favourite piece as I really tried incorporating all my experimentations in composition in one song. The first section is both partly generative (using the above program from ‘Stumbling Ballerina’) and partly me writing using the 12-tone method (as heard in ‘Knots’). The time signatures also continually change, and over the course of the track you hear 4/4, 5/4, 7/8, 9/8, 11/8 and 13/8! There’s a lot here I enjoy.

  • /
Update Required
To play the media you will need to either update your browser to a recent version or update your Flash plugin.

 

You can listen to the highlights of last year’s FAWM attempt here.

February Album Writing In Retrospect

So part of what I spoke of in my update post is completed, with me completing February Album Writing Month (FAWM) for the 4th time. It’s a great way to break through any creative blocks you may be having, and just fun in general (albeit life-consuming fun). You can view all 16 tracks on the link above, but as that page will be wiped by the next February, I thought I’d chuck a few permanent links up for some of my favourite tracks I wrote. And a few vaguely related images to pretty it up a bit!

Continue reading

A Galoot Up-Date

No, all is not lost, In Disciplined still exists. The Project/Object I’m next working on is just taking…well it’s taking over my entire life. I cannot even escape the title of this update![1]

I’m currently attempting to map out the conceptual continuity of Frank Zappa’s work, focusing just on the music and lyrics (i.e. not liner notes or artwork, which would expand my job tenfold). What is conceptual continuity? I will most likely elaborate far more in the article itself, but just so you have some idea why don’t I hand you over to Frank Zappa himself:

Project/Object is a term I have used to describe the overall concept of my work in various mediums. Each project (in whatever realm), or interview connected to it, is part of a larger object, for which there is no ‘technical name.’

Think of the connecting material in the Project/Object this way: A novelist invents a character. If the character is a good one, he takes on a life of his own. Why should he get to go to only one party? He could pop up anytime in a future novel.”

“…In the case of the Project/Object, you may find a little poodle over here, a little blow job over there, etc., etc. I am not obsessed by poodles or blow jobs, however; these words (and others of equal insignificance), along with pictorial images and melodic themes, recur throughout the albums, interviews, films, videos (and this book) for no other reason than to unify the ‘collection.’”

(p 139-140: The Real Frank Zappa Book by Frank Zappa with Peter Occhiogrosso 1989)

I’m also only listening to the 62-ish albums released when he was alive, although I am including Läther (which was compiled by Zappa as a 5 disc monster only to be rejected by Warner Bros.) and Civilization Phaze III (one of the last works Frank completed, but hadn’t released before his death). I’m a good chunk of the way there with 49 albums considered, but there’s still a ways to go!

In betwixt all of this, Montresor’s second album is on its way! I’ve just received the physical albums and they are looking splendid. I am currently auditioning drummers in order to get a few shows organised, ideally with a nice big album launch before I send this album off into the world.

I am also planning to partake in February Album Writing Month (or FAWM). I’ve done this I believe a total of 3 times in 5 years or so, and it’s always been a blast. Essentially, you have to write 14 songs in Feb (That’s a song every two days, dummy.) Some years I’ve completely smashed it out of the park and done 23 songs, other years it’s been tough going just getting to 14, but really it’s about just running headfirst through any writer’s block you may have and not stopping until you’ve collapsed from exhaustion. Creatively, that is.

So, that’s it for the moment! I leave you with some beautiful music that is currently playing as I type this. Take a wild guess at who it is?

[1] “Galoot Up-Date” being a track off the rather controversial 1984 Frank Zappa album Thing-Fish, and itself a reworking (or update) of “The Blue Light” from 1981’s Tinsel-Town Rebellion – see?! I cannot escape seeing links. I am basically John Nash. It’s only a matter of time before I am portrayed by Russell Crowe in a major motion picture.