songs

You are currently browsing the archive for the songs category.

A while back I made a promise to try and engage in more random acts of creativity; things get very dark around the Ponderosa when I don’t.

I’ve done OK with this, but I’m certainly not where I want to be in terms of frequency.

I was thinking about why my output hasn’t been what I’ve wanted, and some of it comes down to my damnable Virgo personality of needing to refine things rather than letting them be/go. While I’ve come to be largely OK with this, it does stand in contrast to much of what I preach with respect to getting stuff out there and refining.

What happens is, I’ll start with a sketch of a song or of a…er…sketch, and rather than keep it as just a sketch — a moment — I add layers.

The question is, do these layers really add anything? Isn’t the essence where it’s at?

I think the answer is that, yes, the essence is there…or it isn’t. Refining is not necessarily a bad thing, and, often, is absolutely necessary. But sometimes it’s more necessary to just create, and let the essence be what it is or isn’t.

I think if there’s something there, you’ll come back with a different eye, a different approach, and you’ll refine. If there isn’t something there, coming back to it a billion times won’t get you any closer to the truth.

To that end, I was taking a break from the jaberwocky a bit ago, and came upstairs from my office; the kids were running around in circles (not kidding), and I picked up my guitar. I’m fascinated and obsessed with staccato rhythms on guitar that imply melody, and am always on the hunt for these. A drop D and a capo later, I had the feel of something. I plopped my iPhone with the voice memo app running on my knee and banged it out.

My intention was to use this iPhone recording to just remember the idea of the tune. But then I started thinking of all the layers I would add to it, and it became less about doing something fun and cathartic and more about planning a time when the house would be quiet, the phone wouldn’t be ringing, etc.

Pretty soon I was tired just thinking about it.

So, screw it. Here’s the iPhone recording. Yes, that’s Henry running around in circles talking about monsters. Yes, that’s me breathing. Yes it goes out of time at one point.

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

Mouse and Pin Cushion

Once again, I’m honored to use, with her kind permission, one of Kristin Hersh’s amazing photos as the title inspiration.

If you want to hear real songs, head on over to Kristin’s Site; lots of amazing things going on over there.

I hope those of you who read Ye Olde Bloggee don’t mind these little moments of internal contemplation and their collateral manifestations.

Tags: , , , ,

This is an older instrumental that’s been looking for a name for a long time. Since I’ve been inspired by Kristin Hersh’s, “Kristin With an Eye” images to connect my songs to her visuals (ala “Southern Waste”), I though it made sense to finally give it a name.

Here’s Kristin’s image that retroactively inspired the song:

And, here’s the song:

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

Sachuest Point

It was written many moons ago upstairs in the little make-shift studio I put together above the Ryko offices in Gloucester. I’d disappear on occasion, when the business overtook the art, to try and remember what pulled me into this business in the first place.

The sort of drone-y under current in the song is a dulcimer. While sort of thought of as the autoharp’s less cool cousin, dulcimers are actually pretty happening. Have a listen, for instance, to this:

“Everybody hit the ground,” indeed.

Creative Commons License
Sachuest Point by George Howard is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 United States License.

Tags: , ,

photo by Kristin Hersh

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

Southern Waste

These are songs I write to quiet the madding crowd. I do them very quickly - like sketches - and present them warts and all (or all warts).

They’re licensed under CreativeCommons, so please feel free to use them.

A note about the title/image. One of the hardest parts of writing instrumental music is coming up with titles. Happily, Kristin Hersh, in her genius, posts a new photo to her blog every day. Not only do these images inspire me, but they also provide fantastic titles. With Kristin’s kind permission, I’m attaching my little songs to her images.

___
Creative Commons License
Southern Waste by George Howard is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 United States License.

Tags: , ,

I have no words.

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

It’s an Onion A.V. Club kind of night apparently. I like their list of “29 Terrific Instrumentals by Bands that Usually Sing.”

I was delighted to see not only my all time favorite instrumental, “Sandusky,” by Uncle Tupelo, but also a few others that aren’t real well-known but are great; such as, The Meat Puppet’s, “I’m a Mindless Idiot” and The Red House Painters’, “Cabezon.”

Certainly the list would have been better with REM’s “Rotary Ten” or “New Orleans Instrumental #1.” (Or, while strictly speaking not an instrumental, it’s hard to top the evocative “Underneath the Bunker.” Or - better still - the little interstitial interlude on the LP and cassette of Reckoning (I think it was called “Left of Reckoning” (I know that’s the name of the film…but…my albums aren’t with me…anyone know what I’m talking about?)).[*]

Clearly, I’m a fan of the instrumental, and have actually written many myself. Here’s one:

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

And now, to hear how the pros do it, here are the Meat Puppets:

And, of course, no list of instrumentals is really complete without this one from that other band from Ga.

______________

[*]OK, this isn’t it, but I’m honing in on it. Does anyone know what this is, by the way (it shows up for just a few seconds on the Left of Reckoning section of REM Succumbs. It’s haunted me forever:

Tags: , , , ,

Bad Behavior has blocked 516 access attempts in the last 7 days.

Close
E-mail It