December 16, 2010

Dashing through the gigs....

Friday night - Heathman Hotel
Saturday night - Arrivederci
Sunday afternoon - ORS at St. Mary's Cathedral
Sunday night - "A Wilsonville Christmas" at Abella Italian Kitchen

Last weekend was a whirlwind of holiday gigging, and I love seasonal music - so it sure was fun!

Friday night was at the Heathman, with Lucia Conrad on violin, Nikki Graybeal on cello, and Bill Athens on bass. The room was decked out, with lights, greens, and a big Christmas tree with the hugest ornaments I've ever seen. People packed in, on both floors, some on the stairs.

Some of my favorite moments:
- Lucia's violin solo in "Christmastime is here". To try to describe in words: soulful double stops and blissful trills. Simply beautiful.
- Nikki's cello lines in "Winter Song", by Sara Bareilles. First off, amazing song. Add a talented cello player to play the changes on the haunting chord progressions = rip-your-heart-out loveliness.
- "Noel": We played the original arrangement of this song, which I wrote a few years ago. This year the Oregon Repertory Singers are performing my new arrangement for choir, so it was a treat to perform the old one with strings. Quite a few of the Singers were there to hear it!

I just love performing with string players. What a magical night!

Saturday night was at Arrivederci - a duo gig with my friend Michele Van Kleef. I love the vibe at Arrivederci. Down-to-earth good Italian food, fine wine, and a real living-room feel to the performing area.

Michele and I performed a mix of originals, holiday tunes, jazz standards and covers. Some of my favorite moments:
- Michele's song "Paint you red". Yes, it makes another "favorite moment" list. I love that song!
- "Lo, how a rose 'ere blooming" - I'm trying out a modern arrangement of this old song from the 16th century. A musical style mash-up!
- "Santa Baby" duet. Michele is a very talented, classy woman, but she also knows how to deliver the cheese and/or ham when a song calls for it. We giggled through the whole song!

Sunday afternoon was the first performance of the Oregon Repertory Singers' Christmas concerts at St. Mary's Cathedral. It was our first time performing "Noel". To have something I've composed performed by 60+ musicians to a crowded cathedral was truly a once-in-a-lifetime thrill! And, we get to perform it 3 more times next weekend! I was amazed and overwhelmed by the experience. More info about the upcoming concerts can be found at www.orsingers.org.

After ORS I dashed down to Abella in Wilsonville for the final gig of the weekend: "A Wilsonville Christmas". My friends and neighbors Michele and Christina joined me for some 3 part vocal harmony. So fun! Favorite moments:
- Christina's rendition of Joni Mitchell's "River". She made it her own!
- Leonard Cohen's "Hallelujah" - we each took a verse and then did some echoes / harmonies in the chorus.
- "Have yourself a merry little Christmas": Christina sang lead while Michele and I came up with some impromptu extra vocal parts. Harmonizing on the fly is a bit of a rush - add another person making stuff up at the same time and you never know what you'll get!
We all stuffed ourselves with ravioli after the show. It was great to do a show in my neighborhood! Christina, Michele and I all have children at the same Wilsonville pre-school, so the kids' teacher and a bunch of parents from the school showed up. Seasonal music + great friends + ravioli = a great night.

November 29, 2010

Studio session video

Just spent a day in the studio working on the new record with Daniel Smith, electric guitarist. Here is some of the magic:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dax8qnJvyTc

November 12, 2010

Noel

A couple years ago I did a little tinkering with "The First Noel". It has always been one of my favorite carols. I changed the melody, messed with the rhythm, went modal. Then added 2 violins and a cello, tom drum and shaker, and performed it with a bunch of friends at Christmas time. Audiences seemed to like it, and I've always thought I should do something more with it. Maybe find some different poetry so I could play it year round. Maybe record it as a holiday single. Or maybe re-score it for choir?

I have the privilege of being the accompanist for an incredible choir, the Oregon Repertory Singers. So in many hours spent with make-me-crazy Finale computer software, I set "Noel" for choir, and hoped it would be good enough for them. And this Christmas, ORS is singing the "world premier" of my piece.


Last week we rehearsed it for the first time. To hear 60+ singers sing something I wrote was truly exhilarating. It sounded so much better than me plunking out the parts at home on my piano. I did my best to hold myself together, while I improvised my part. I'll probably write something for the piano eventually, so other choirs can perform it. But for now it's my little gift to ORS, and their gift to me in singing it. Thank you ORS!

October 30, 2010

Recording session: Piano

We just recorded over half of the piano tracks for the new CD!

I love recording sessions. They are so intense in focus and creativity. And to finally be the one on the instrument, creating tracks on my own songs, was truly exciting.

Dead Aunt Thelma's Recording Studio in Portland, Oregon is a great place to record piano, because it has a nice 7-foot Steinway piano. I got some sweet sounds out of that thing: resonant bass tones, clear mid section, singing but not-too bright high notes, an even action throughout, and a lovely soft pedal effect. It did everything I needed it to. That makes a pianist happy.


Dean Baskerville was there serving as producer and engineer. It's nice having one person that can do both jobs! It's like a two-for-one deal. And he is SUCH a perfectionist, which I am so thankful for. I need someone picky. Someone that would hear if I wasn't quite in the pocket or if the piano pedal squeaked. Or any strange minute little thing that could happen while recording that you would hear later and say "What was that?"

When Dean is listening intently, he covers his eyes. I caught him in one of his regular poses:
Such an intense artist!

Dean mic'd the piano just right to capture everything. For one song, "Hey Yeah," he added this old-school ribbon mic, which made the piano sound a bit vintage. Very cool.

Jeramy Burchett came to part of the session to co-produce with Dean on the song "Words or not". Get those two together and the creative ideas really start flying. They had me try a bunch of different ideas, and we ended up with some great sounds. Different rhythms between my left and right hands, cluster chords, Coldplay-esque driving eighth notes.... the song has been transformed! It was like watching my baby grow up in fast forward.

All of my other recording projects up to this point have been "live", in that all the musicians plug in at the same time and record all at once. They are charming and raw with their flaws and group inspiration. But this project is different. It's being produced. Each instrument is tracked and recorded separately. So each player can take the time to make it right.

Which means multiple takes, punch-ins, edits... all part of the trade. As the night went long, though, the performer in me was itching to get one song in one take. And then it happened. The last song of the night, Joni Mitchell's "Both sides now". I sat down, played through it one time, and Dean said, "I think that's it." Ahhhh. I went home feeling good.

Next up - strings. Tim Ellis on guitar. Wahoo! Stay tuned.

October 20, 2010

Gigging with Michele Van Kleef

Crazy story how I met Michele... we've actually lived a 2 minute walk from each other for awhile now, but met just in this last year because our kids attend the same preschool. At one of the first parent/teacher gatherings, it was very cool to meet another performing musician in such a small group of parents.

Then, come to find out, Michele was the real deal - she was the girl lead singer in the band Calobo! When I was in college at the University of Puget Sound, I was a Calobo groupie. And Michele remembered the packed concerts at the UPS Student Union Building.....I was a little star struck for a sec there.....

So we became friends, our kids became friends (actually, her daughter has already decided that my son will be her husband someday), and we got some gigs on the calendar.

Rehearsing was a bit of an issue because of having children around all the time, but we made it work. With one child napping upstairs and 2 children dancing around us at most of the rehearsals, we got 14 songs ready! With background vocals and all. Her songs, my songs, some covers, jazz standards, it was quite the mix.

We played 2 shows: the Heathman Oct 8 and The Allison in Newberg Oct 9. Bill Athens joined us on upright bass. There was quite a crowd! It was so fun playing for such an enthusiastic and supportive audience.

Michele has an amazing voice, and harmonizing with a good vocalist is so much more fun than singing solo! She also brought her guitar and added some really nice layers to the instrumentation.

A few of my favorite moments from the gigs:
- Michele's song "Paint you red". What a beautiful song! Very cool chord changes. And the blend of piano, bass, and guitar was magical.
- My song "Love on a rainy day". Michele added a lovely low duet part to the choruses and bridge.
- During the song "Lucy in the sky with diamonds," this strange guy got up in front, sang it with me at the top of his lungs, and twirled his girlfriend around in front of the piano. The whole room was cracking up, and by the final chorus everyone was singing along.

We hope to get more duo gigs on the calendar.... stay tuned!

September 30, 2010

A vibey drum session

After months of pre-production, I'm so excited to say some official tracks have been recorded. Stuff you will actually hear on the album is finally on tape! Well, saved in a computer file - you get what I mean.

Jackpot Recording Studio in Portland, OR, is a great place for recording drums. Good and plentiful gear, nice acoustics, vibey.
And most of the sound panels are covered with either Barney purple or bright orange fabric, on bright green walls. So retro, you can't help but feel creative there.

I hired Jeramy Burchett, a fantastic session player and producer as well. The set-up of microphones and drum equipment was quite extensive.
There were mics next to the drums, in the drums, over the drums, under the drums, around the room. I'm so glad Dean (producer and engineer extraordinaire) can keep it all straight.

Dean and Jeramy collaborate regularly, so their communication was all dialed in. Dean is also a drummer, so he had a lot of ideas going into the session.
I followed most of their "drum session speak" and really enjoyed watching their creative process.

Jeramy brought a ton of gear. I think I saw around 10 snare drums! He is very committed to getting the right sound. Even with all he brought, he even went to a nearby music shop that day and bought more gear to get the right effects on one of the tunes: a cymbal sizzler and this white pillowy bass drum beater. Instead of calling him the drummer with "all the bells and whistles", I coined a phrase: "the drummer with all the sizzles and pillows."

For one of the tunes, a tom drum groove was front and center in the mix, so Jeramy spent a good chunk of time tuning them in octaves. I was really glad he was such a perfectionist about it. It took awhile but it was worth it for the song.

We had 8 tunes on the docket for the day - which is a lot, usually Dean and Jeramy do only 5-6 in a day. As the day went long, Dean had to tease Jeramy: "We'd be so much faster if you didn't have to tune your toms in octaves on each song."

It was a session full of vibe. We actually used the word "vibey" to describe many things that day. You can use it for almost anything! The urban dictionary defines vibey as: to describe a feeling, a place or atmosphere. Try it. You will feel so vibey saying "vibey".
Thank you to Dean and Jeramy for all the artistry, perfectionism, and commitment to the best sounds possible for each song.


September 23, 2010

A sunny day for the photo shoot... finally!

"Those sunny days, with their sunny rays, can sometimes seem few and far between...."


A line from one of my songs, "Hey Yeah", was so true this September in Portland, Oregon. September also happened to be the month for the outdoor photo shoot for the new album. We wanted summertime photos, but had to wait because Annie Schilperoort, the amazing photographer I just HAD to use, was on maternity leave through August. September hit and then it was just rain, rain, rain every day! Luckily we had a few days to choose from, and as they always say, 3rd time was the charm. Day 3 of all of the possible day options the stars aligned: clouds parted, the sun shone, all the clothing made it in the car, and childcare was lined up for all the women involved (hair stylist, makeup artist, photographer, and myself).

I was so excited when I left my house that morning, because I had put so much prep into the day. A few months ago I asked myself, how do you create images that mirror the music on the album? How does auditory art transfer to visual art? What is the setting, what are the clothes, what is the style, what kind of piano should I play on? First I spent a lot of time thinking about the music. What are the main themes in my lyrics? What musical styles are represented? It came down to 4 elements:

1. nature
2. romance
3. vintage
4. current

Okay if you've read this far, surely you'll keep going!

Nature: I refer to beauty in the natural world over and over again in my lyrics. It's so inspiring! I love being outside. I wish it was summer all the time. All I want for Christmas is a mountain bike and a couple days to ride on the Deschutes River Trail...

Romance: a jazz-influenced album just has to be romantic. Plus I have a few songs inspired by my marriage in the line-up.

Vintage: yeah, I'm a little old-fashioned. I bake sourdough bread and am trying my hand at pickling. Plus I spent all my college years studying classical music, which is vintage and timeless and so lovely - of course there will be elements of classical music on the album, my hands can't help it when they're at the piano. Oooh, and a string quartet!

Current: It feels like I'm finally standing in my own shoes with this album. Mostly original tunes performed in a unique blend of musical styles that is brand new - I hope!

Once I had these 4 elements clear, planning this shoot became really fun. My friends Emily, Stephanie, and Tiffany leant me clothes from their closets. I emailed a local designer, Kate Towers, and borrowed some of her one-of-a-kind pieces. I collected dozens of pictures online for reference. I hoofed around Sauvie Island with my kids and mom, scoping out the best spots.

Finally when the day came, it was like pushing the GO button. First stop, hair and makeup. I didn't want to look like a glamour girl. Just romantic, natural, outdoorsy. My professional stylist friends Tiffany and Bri spent nearly 2 hours covering me in makeup, curls and hair spray. It's amazing how much product and time goes into creating a "natural" look.

I put on the first outfit, picked up Annie, and headed over to the first photo setting: my friend Shirley's house. She has this cool vintage piano in a craftsman style house. And Shirley is a total groupie. She rarely ever misses a show and has supported me in my music and personal life for over 10 years. It was so special to take the "piano" shots at her house. And when we left, of course she sent us out the door with homemade gingersnaps. Love her.

Then Annie and I were off to Sauvie Island. First stop, a little pond. I changed in the open air to outfit #2 (an amazing Kate Towers dress!) next to my car (luckily there was no one there!) and pretty much walked into the pond. I love the water, so why not have some shots IN the water?

Then we headed to a wild Oak Tree area. Nothing made by humans in these settings, like orchards, fences, or barns. Just wild old trees and grasses. We did have to shoo away some insects and watch out for deer droppings, but that's just part of it all, right? I actually climbed an oak tree at one point. Then clothing change number 2 right there in the trees. Luckily no hikers ambling by.

Final stop, the Sauvie Island beach. Right at sunset - Annie said the light was perfect! We found some old driftwood to pose on, sat in the sand, stuck our toes in the water. Annie had brought these pink dalias that added just the right touch of romance.

Annie was just amazing the whole time - the few shots she showed me in the viewer on her camera were so artistic. And she kept me laughing by acting silly. I was so thankful to have a good friend for my photographer, because it's honestly quite a challenge for me to not feel like a total dork when I'm posing for a camera.

I haven't seen the official proofs yet, but I'm excited for them. Just to give you an idea of the look, here is a snapshot from my camera, taken just before we headed out to the beach:


So now the rain can fall and I won't be mad at it anymore. I'll grab my coffee, my kids, a blanket, and curl up on the couch with "The tawny scrawny lion". My kids will pick out which bunny they want to be on the carrot soup page. I'll still wish it was summer, but I'll accept the fall. The photo shoot is done!

August 14, 2010

Aug 13 gig

At the gig last night with special guest Guy Tyler on cello, and the always-stellar bassist Bill Athens:
What a great night! I had TWO string players with me. Although we played absolutely no Bach, Brahms or Beethoven, my classical self felt at home with this 1/2 of a string quartet. Guy brought an uber-mod electric cello. The thing weighed next to nothing and sounded really unique. Plus, jazz on the cello is just wacky cool.

Some of my favorite moments from the night:

Bill's improvised bowings on the song "Both sides now". My arrangement is a bit classical in style, so I just gave him the chart and said - come up with something really beautiful, Bill. Goosebumps.

Guy's reggae-ish rhythms in "Love is here to stay." My arrangement of the well-loved tune grooves like Ahmad Jamal's Poinciana, so it's like Gershwin in the islands. Somehow Guy made the cello sound like a steel drum. Super beachy.

The older gentleman that stayed till the very end - midnight. He clapped and cheered after every tune, and said we "made his Friday night".

Thanks to all the new and old friends that made it out last night. Hope to see you again.

June 14, 2010

Last Friday's gig, June 11

Joining me at the Heathman last Friday was Kevin Deitz on the bass:
and Dave Iula on the guitar:
Now, you all know "I heart Madeleine Peyroux", and would love to sound more like her. Madeleine is a guitarist, and she does this laid-back beachy vibe thing on her guitar. As much as I could try to emulate it at the piano, it just wasn't the same. Somehow it sounded more like Michael Buble than Madeleine Peyroux! And we all know from an earlier post ("And...I'm laughing at myself"), that me playing guitar isn't really an option.

So, having Dave Iula on acoustic guitar is what did the trick. Dave is a very versatile player and can handle just about any style. I played him some Madeleine, showed him my charts, and all of a sudden my music sounded just like I hoped.

Kevin Deitz is a well-respected bass player in Portland - and of course he was rock solid at the gig. He is capable of impressive virtuosic solos, and the tone he creates when using the bow is like rich dark chocolate. But for some of my songs I need something really simple from the bass, like whole notes or half notes. Nothing fancy. He said, "Well I'm not paid by the note, so if it's whole notes you want, that's what you'll get." I said, "No, I AM paying you by the note. That's why I want whole notes." He thought that was pretty funny.... I think? Either way, I got my money's worth. He was great.

Next month Bill Athens will be back on the bass, and Lucia Conrad joins us again on violin. Hope to see you July 9!




June 5, 2010

Pre-production

Hello everybody!

So pre-production is fun, exciting, new, and challenging - I'm lovin' it. Today Dean and I tackled my song "Hey, yeah". I wrote this song a couple years ago - it's about a bunch of things that I love, that I think of when I need to be cheered up. It's got this funky groove / Sara Bareilles feel.
Dean had some great ideas for the song - a breakdown in the 3rd verse, subtle lyric changes, jumping straight into the bridge after the 2nd chorus, a funky fade out for the ending... (am I giving too much away?) So this is pre-production. And this is what it's like to have a producer! Here is Dean driving the sound ship:
During the recording of the scratch track (the track you eventually "scratch", or erase, but use as the template for recording all the other musical elements, meaning drums, bass, piano, vocals, etc.), Dean encouraged me at the piano to terrace and build the song, saying things like "be sneakier at the beginning.... then do some higher register octaves in the chorus". On vocals he asked me to emote more - pick certain words to sing specific ways, become an actress if I needed to. I can tell he's going to do his utmost to drag the best I have to offer out of me.
The brim on my black hat kept bumping the screen in front of the mic, so I turned it backward - all of a sudden the gangster style just started flowin' out. Just kidding.

I'm excited for the CD. I look forward to sharing these songs with friends/family/the world - and I'll do my best to record them well.

May 15, 2010

Last night's gig, May 14

At the Heathman Hotel
Joining me was the rock-solid Bill Athens on the bass, and guest artist Cory Sterling on guitar. We played some new arrangements I've been working on for the new CD, a few new folk tunes, some classic jazz standards, plus a bunch of tunes Cory brought to the group. I really enjoyed learning some new (well, new-to-me) jazz tunes, and he had a cool original blues tune with some great rhythmic sections. Cory's off to play guitar in New York in the fall, so I'm glad he could join us at least once.
My 2 sisters showed up at the end of the night - they completely surprised me, because one of them lives in Boulder, Colorado. I knew she was flying in that night, but thought it would be too late for them to come. At 11:30 PM, there they were, just dancing along to the music. No, we're not triplets.

Hope to see you at our next gig, June 11 at the Heathman!



May 6, 2010

I heart Madeleine

I really like Madeleine Peyroux’s style and approach to jazz music. Here is one of her album covers. Truly beautiful and so artistic. I’d love to do the same thing for my album, complete with a poofy gold dress, red flowers and bare feet, except I’d want to be sitting on a beach instead…

I was inspired by some reviews of her music:

“Norah Jones and Jane Monheit may have spawned a cutesy genre of jazz-lite chirping, but it’s one that Peyroux neatly sidesteps. Here, less is definitely more. Accompanied by piano, guitar, string bass, lightly brushed snare drum and occasional gospel organ, Careless Love has the same live-in-the-studio ambience that made Peggy Lee’s Black Coffee a benchmark album. An interpretive artist as opposed to a nothing-to-say singer-songwriter, Peyroux avoids the overworked wine bar songbook, bringing new sensibilities to Leonard Cohen’s “Dance Me To The End Of Love” and Dylan’s “You’re Gonna Make Me Lonesome When You Go”.”

“In recent weeks, “Careless Love” (Rounder), a record on an independent label by a sophisticated pop-jazz vocalist named Madeleine Peyroux, has quietly edged past 100,000 sales with almost no radio airplay. It’s become an out-of-left-field hit in cafes, wine bars and spas, where its smoky ambience suits the mostly post-college-age clientele.

“People who have heard the record in these places have had an immediate reaction: Who is that? Where can I get that?” says Paul Foley, general manager of marketing for Peyroux’s label, Rounder Records. “We’re looking for an upper-demographic audience that is not being served currently by the record industry’s marketing schemes.”

“With the release of her long awaited follow-up album, Careless Love, Peyroux’s potential as an artist is truly realized. Her smoky voice and knowing delivery make each song her own, whether she’s singing vintage tunes by W.C. Handy and Hank Williams, or contemporary songs by Leonard Cohen and Elliott Smith. Producer Larry Klein (Joni Mitchell, Shawn Colvin) weaves strands of acoustic blues, country ballads, classic jazz, torch songs and pop into a vibrant fabric that is both timeless and thoroughly up to date, with Peyroux’s arresting vocals always front and center.”

Yep, I heart Madeleine.

April 10, 2010

Last night's gig, April 9

Last night at the Heathman was pretty awesome. The room was packed, the tunes were fun, and the vibe was great.

The ensemble was an interesting mix of old and new players:

On drums was Ken Ollis, and he was rock steady as always. He really gets my music and I feel so comfortable when he’s supporting me at the drum set. Just last night we remembered our first gig – back in May 2008 at Bauman Auditorium. Almost 2 years of gigging! He’s a great drummer, and he doesn’t mind when I pepper him with questions about the music industry. Plus, his original compositions are brilliant. I keep bugging him to do another performance of some poetry he set to music. I forget the name of it, but he performed it with his wife (she was the singer) last summer, and I’d love to hear it again, plus invite all my music-minded friends that would really appreciate his style.

On bass was Willy Barber, and I just met him last night. Usually people are surprised to find out that jazz groups often don’t rehearse before gigs, even when someone is totally new to the group. That’s just the way it goes in jazz sometimes. Willy brought his electric bass, which was a unique change to the usual line-up, but I thought it sounded great. And when he took solos, his fingers really flew. I wished I could have watched him play, but I had to face the piano. Well, at least I got to be the closest person to his amp.

Our guest artist was Lucia Conrad, on violin. She is a classical player, so she had taken some time to prepare some really nice solos over the chord changes. She also threw in some double-stops and trills. I have always felt that jazz violin is such a great fit for our group. It was truly a pleasure to have her in the ensemble.

In attendance were the loyal regulars (you know who you are) and a bunch of new faces. Plus, a friend I knew in high school was there with her husband (thanks to good ol’ Facebook). I hadn’t seen her since high school, which is unbelievably half my lifetime ago. Sigh. It was fun to reconnect.

Thanks to everyone who came out to hear us, it was a great night. I hope to see you at our next gig, May 14 at the Heathman.

April 9, 2010

And.... I'm laughing at myself

So today’s meeting with producer Dean Baskerville was fantastic. We listened to all the tunes on the demo, listened to some tracks by my “influence” artists (Madeleine Peyroux, Norah Jones, Sarah Bareilles, and dare I say… Colbie Caillat?), and did some dreaming for each song. We talked about possible instrumentation, changing keys in some songs, players we could use, and just an overall feel and approach to the project. I can already tell that working with Dean is going to take my songs to the next level.

For example, he mentioned a studio drummer that has something like 15 different snare drums, so he can create just the right sound for a particular song. What? I thought a snare was a snare.

And, he was gutsy enough to give me some constructive criticism on my singing – which I appreciate probably more than he realizes. He has a great ear, great ideas, and is honestly just a nice person to work with.

So… why am I laughing at myself? Well, as we were listening to Madeliene Peyroux and commenting on her warm, laid-back guitar style, Dean asked me if I played guitar. I said, “Well, yeah, nothing fancy, but the basics.” He asked me to try some guitar playing on the tracks, so he could see what he has to work with. So tonight, I busted out ye old guitar.

I did some playing around on the guitar with my songs, but it sounded pretty campy. I get stuck when any chord with a flat in it comes up. What the heck was I thinking when I told him I could play guitar? I am a retired Young Life song leader, so I’m pretty good at songs like “One Tin Soldier” and “Closer to Fine”. I can even play a decent “More than words”, the rock band Extreme’s hit from 1990 – complete with the little knock-knock on the guitar body.

Even though I wasn’t all that pleased with what I was coming up with, I figured I could try at least one song. I fired up Garage Band on the MacBook and attempted my first guitar track on “Words or not”. I say attempted because I couldn’t make it through the whole song. My fingers hurt too much from the strings and my lack of guitar-playing callouses. Then I listened to it with my piano track muted, with just the partial guitar track and my vocal track playing….

And…. I’m laughing at myself. It sounds like a pretty good singer with a drunk guitar player. The rhythm is all uneven, there are these weird twangs and twongs when I pluck strings too hard, and this AWFUL sliding sound when I move my fingers up and down the fretboard. Plus, you can hear the guitarist laughing at herself in the track as she misses note after note.

So I don’t really think the idea of me playing guitar on the record is going to go anywhere. I know what I’d like to hear from a guitar, I just don’t know how to do it myself. Good thing there are plenty of talented guitarists I can hire, because if it were up to me, this project would be sunk.

Sheesh, laughing at yourself sounding absolutely ridiculous on a guitar is some good fun.

April 6, 2010

A young-ish mom's journey through CD production

The journey continues towards FINALLY getting the new CD done. It took me awhile to finish the first task: a demo recording of all the songs to be included. I was able to do this at home on my trusty little Mac book with Garage band. Which is why it took so long to complete! Although it was only a demo, I didn’t think the squeals of my 2 year old or the crashes of my 4 year old’s race cars would be all that helpful in the background. So on the occasional evenings that I would have enough energy left over to be creative after chasing them around all day, I worked on the demo. And it is done and in the hands of an official CD producer – Dean Baskerville.

This is my first time working with a producer. Dean has come highly recommended to me by many Portland jazz greats. (And he was a recording engineer for 5 of Sheryl Crow’s songs, including the song “Soak Up the Sun”, how awesome is that!) He has listened to the tracks, and we’re all set to meet this week to discuss the next step, whatever that is. I really have no idea.

So… you may be wondering, why do I consider myself a “young-ish” mom? Well, I think I’m still fairly young (in my early-ish 30s… hmm, I’m sure using “ish” a lot – a great way to be vague), but I read recently in a music industry book that artists in their mid-30s may be too old to capture much attention in the music industry. Which was crazy to me, because as far as I’ve heard, musicians only get better at their craft as they grow older. Maybe the youth-oriented focus applies mostly to the teenage pop genre. I sure hope so.

Besides, my little kiddos keep me young – they bring out the kid in me! But why does motherhood also seem to cause gray hairs to poke out my head from time to time? Well, at least blonde highlights are good at hiding those.

So the journey continues. Now that the production of this CD is out of my house and in recording studios, the pace should pick up. That is, unless a 2-year old squeal becomes a necessary effect in one of the tracks.

March 13, 2010

Last night's gig

Last night’s gig at the Heathman was some good fun. Joining me was Kevin Deitz on the bass, and Luke Soasey on the saxophone.

I haven’t had a gig with my friend Luke in at least 6 years – we couldn’t really remember exactly how long it had been. We both have small children, so maybe the sleepless nights have blurred our memories? He has a daughter, 2 1/2 years old, with his wife Molly. And I’ve got my two little munchkins. I do remember that we both performed at each others’ weddings – at Lukes’s, I sang “At Last” as Molly walked down the aisle, and at mine, he played a Calypso dance tune for the recessional. So some details stick in my head, after all! Good memories.

It was really great to gig and reconnect with an old friend. My favorite tune last night was “Cantaloupe Island” by Herbie Hancock. I only like to do that tune when I have someone like Luke in the band – and he ROCKED it. In case you’ve never heard that tune before, it is a jazz must-hear.

And Kevin was really awesome, of course. His bass solos move so fast sometimes – where do all those notes come from?!? He is truly a seasoned musician and I always love when he can be in the trio.

Thanks to all the fans that came out to hear us. I saw a bunch of old friends and made some new ones! We’ll be back at the Heathman April 9 – hope to see ya.

March 11, 2010

Surprise Advertising

You gotta love it when some people you’ve never met come to the show, and they say, “We saw a write-up on your band in the newspaper, and thought we’d come check it out!”

Recently, at a Heathman gig, this is what happened. And, it was a surprise – I had NO idea there was anything at all in the paper!

I called my agent, the great Andy Gilbert of Pacific Talent, to ask – What? How? When? He told me he sends out press releases every month of all the acts he books, and the writers just pick a different act month by month. So this month, it was my turn! Or our band by lucky chance? Either way, I’ll take it! Thank you, to the writer, Rob Cullivan – we’ve never met, but apparently you’ve heard us perform. Thanks for coming to the show and writing some nice things about us!

The article – short, but good – here it is:

“Pianist-vocalist Naomi LaViolette is a lyrical musician who knows how to string together the perfect run of notes, just enough to show you she’s got chops, on the keys or in her voice, but not so many that she overwhelms the beauty of a melody. She fronts a sophisticated jazz-acoustic-classical group, which writes its own tunes and also performs jazz standards and classical melodies. If you’re planning to pop the question, this is the band you want playing when you do so.”
The Portland Tribune, December 10, 2009

March 9, 2010

Welcome

Hello everyone! If you want to find out how the gig was, what’s happening with CD recording, just jump on here, I’ll do my best to post all my musical thoughts, dreams and plans.

2010 is the year, I say, for my first full-length CD to be recorded and available. The ball is officially rolling and I’m ready to get these songs down. At this point, songs to be recorded are as follows:

1. Words or Not

2. Hey Yeah

3. I'll find you there

4. Love on a rainy day

5. Lullaby

6. My superman

7. Fragile

a folk song:

8. Since you've asked

and because I love to do jazz standards, a couple of those as well:

9. Little Girl Blue

10. A beautiful friendship

11. Love is here to stay

I’m working on a new song called “Your Good Girl” – about a good girl who falls in love with a baaaaad boy. I hope it makes it on the disc but I’ve got to find some time to write between gigging, rehearsing, raising the kids, and did I mention yet, I’m a slave to my sourdough starter? It makes the best bread and I love to make it weekly – but it’s a time commitment! ahh, bread or new songs, that is the dilemma…

I'm also trying to figure out all this web marketing stuff – updating facebook, myspace, maybe even Twitter (is it really necessary?), and ILike and Amazon and ITunes and Rhapsody and sheeeeeeesh the bread might need to be bought at the store!!

Found a great quote today: When words fail, music speaks. – H.C. Anderson