Sunday

Sunday night I went to Eddie’s Attic to see Sue Witty, Sonia Tetlow and Melanie Hammet play a writers-in-the-round.

So, lately I have been what I have been claiming I would try to be for the past, oh… 5 years or so. I have been getting out of the house and going to see shows and basically getting myself out there. Not just playing my own shows but going to support friends and meeting other musicians. Granted, my current job status gives me a lot more freedom to go out a lot (well, as long as it’s cheap), but also I have been fighting my own tendency to by painfully, pathologically shy. But since starting to get out lately I have felt like an actual part of the city’s music scene, something I’ve never felt before. I get recognized by other musicians, and that’s really something to me.

That this is an industry that lives and dies on the relationship doesn’t seem to be a disputable point. Here’s an example: Melanie Hammet. Just after I quit the band I played a show with Tammy Fowler at Eddie’s. We had played before. Anyway, she got a show at this place called Pine Lake, a community near Decatur that is sort of a nexus of a number of singer-songwriters and asked me to play there with her. I did, I was newly solo and needed shows. Melanie Hammet runs these shows and so I met her there at the show. Before the show she had asked her friend Rob Gal (my producer, and at the time we were recording Slumberland) if he knew who I was. I played the show, talked to Melanie. Linda Bolley (frequently mentioned in this journal, drummer for Gentle Readers) was at the show, saw me, bought my CD. Months later I got an email from Gentle Readers asking if I wanted to open their CD release party, Linda having played them the CD, as well. That show turned into a casual relationship with the band, eventually leading to Linda nearly playing in my band, singing with them at the Susi French Connection show, and the upcoming show I have with my band at Eddie’s on the 3rd.

I could carry this path further, but I think you get the idea.

Even so, walking into the club I began to feel a little like a stalker, because Rob and Becky and a number of other people I’ve been running into a lot lately were there. The doorman, who I know I’ve met before, maybe once, recognized me, called me by name and let me go on in (Sue had put me on the guest list). They were issuing numbers at the door to let people in, so I felt very odd. Linda was there, too. I also talked to Melanie after the show, who I haven’t seen since the Pine Lake show (that’s 2 years ago). She had apparently been to Rob’s studio recently and he had played some songs from my CD for her. She mentioned “Jeff Lynne” first, the third person who mentioned it to me that night. It doesn’t surprise me that he’s playing that one, actually, since it really does showcase his skill as a producer, managing to nail the ELO sound like that. Anyway, she was very complementary about the songs she heard, and also about the working relationship Rob and I have, the music that is coming out of that collaboration. She referred to it as “seamless.”

It was on the tip of my tongue to say that’s because it’s all Rob; I just bring my songs to him. But I didn’t. My self-deprecating inner-child was denied.

Saturday

Saturday night I went to the Dark Horse. This is the club that recently was rumored to be closing and becoming a dance club. But now, apparently, they are remaining a music club. This is a good thing not just because there are few enough clubs in town as it is, but also because it’s one of the very few clubs in town that has actual walk-in business. Most clubs in town if you don’t bring your own crowd you aren’t going to have one, but at the Dark Horse people actually come in from the bar upstairs, and you have an actual chance to garner new fans. Radiant City was playing there roughly every 6 weeks on the weekend and it was the best run we had, in terms of getting new people and selling CDs.

The problem has been the same, though, that I have suffered everywhere else, which is that, in booking terms, Radiant City may as well have happened 20 years ago because no one knows who the hell I am anymore. So, I have played one show so far at the Dark Horse since the Million Box started. That show was thanks to friends of mine in chain poets. They were playing there Saturday night so I went out to see the show and also to join them for ELO’s “Telephone Line.” After their set Greg (singer/guitarist) introduced me to the new booking person at the club, who they are friends with, and she had actually seen the show we did there back in August and is a fan of… well, me, I suppose. So, that was damn good news. It would be great to have a club I can count on getting booked into regularly, not to mention the possibility of forming a good enough relationship that the overall idea of creating a night and a community for pop bands in town might actually come to pass. Right now, of course, I’ll just settle for a show (Sunday she offered me a tentative date in March, and actually an acoustic date in February as well, so it looks like things could go really well).

Greg and I also talked for a long while about music in general and the Beach Boys in particular. So, let me take a moment to mention something just to disturb a number of people reading this, I suspect.

I have never been a fan of the Beach Boys.

Oh, I get what Brian did, and I grant him a great deal of respect for it. But it’s just never done anything for me. Anyway, Greg made a very hard sales pitch for Pet Sounds and so I have a copy right now. Sometime this week I’ll give it as fair a listen as I can, I mean, sit down, focus on it.

studio stuff and wacky ideas

Got THE CALL last night from Rob.

THE CALL being, “Hey Paul, you’re coming to the studio to do some backing vocals tonight, right?”

Well, no, I wasn’t, until he asked. So, once Sarah got home, it was downtown to the Snack ‘n’ Shack to do some more backing vocals for Desmond Drive. The vocals were for the same two songs I have done previously, just new stuff.

But I got paid.

So, nice. I felt strange about it anyway, of course, like getting paid somehow meant I didn’t also like his stuff, which I did. That’s really something I’m going to need to get over. Also I gave him some tips on selling the CD, like notlame and all that. Like an elder statesman or something. Anyway, he’s only three songs in on this, so there’s seems to be more work where that came from.

Today I’m heading out to pick up half the content for a freelance job I’m doing that, once paid, will cover me for close to a month. Somehow I will make this plan work.

One other note from last night… Rob and I both played at that show in December I talked about here, with the Susi French Connection (a band called the Gentle Readers play all 70’s AM radio hits, lots of fun). Well, shortly after that show I had an idea about something to do to maybe offer to open for them again. Last night I tossed the idea offhandedly to Rob, as if I were just making a joke. He jumped at it, though, so it looks as if it may come to pass. Gentle Readers do these shows usually once a year (although they’re doing it on Valentines Day this year, I’ll give anyone details who wants them, I’m singing on the Hollies song again), so this isn’t anything that will come to pass until around December.

But… an all 80’s new-wave cover band. I already have about 6 songs in mind, more to come. Relive your college radio days!

Feel free to make suggestions. My list has doubled since I typed the last paragraph…