March! Another single release from '2020 visions'. - Another dedication...
Couple of years ago, I was considering life coaching. I found a big box of old Tony Robbins cassettes and I made it my task to listen to this dude. It was 'early' or 'vintage' Tony from the eighties.
Good, but man he has come so far since then. But one thing that stuck with me was a phrase he used to delete procrastination: "Someday leads to no-where'. And I live by the Tasman Sea - we got quite a horizon going on there.
The phrase stuck to me and it became the first line of the song I'm releasing in March. It is not a self-help song. It is a thought=stream which lead, like-as-like to a story I began to desire to tell.
My other main influence for this song was Gene Vincent. I've plundered the odd vibe from Gene Vincent over the years - and set out to write a song loosely based on 'Lavender Blue' which Gene Vincent covered in the sixties, I believe.
So, the song, which started as 'Someday (Leads to Nowhere) was eventually redubbed
2020 visions' as I composed a song based around questions - the central one being - "How does life Look?" - Would it look different without the people in my life I have now?"
Are we stuck? Are we dynamic?
https://clark2.bandcamp.com/album/2020-visions
Are we grateful?
Saturday, 7 March 2020
Friday, 14 February 2020
Dedication #1
I wrote a song that was really a tribute to two others I’d admired: One, Del Shannon. Del Shannon wrote ‘Runaway’.. When I was a kid at the ‘Fitties’ slot machine arcade, a glass box with wire puppets of The Big Bad Wolf and the Three Little Piggies in it could be activated for a penny. For reasons known only to a native of those parts, the song and action activated were ‘Runaway’ by Del Shannon. This 1961 hit engraved itself into my psyche thus.
The story for Del and Runaway is a short one.
Originally from the country, Shannon went to New York seeking a career-boost. Disc Jockey and impresario, Ollie McLaughlin persuaded Shannon and keyboardist Max Crook to rewrite and re-record one of their earlier songs, originally called "Little Runaway", using the Musitron as lead instrument.
On January 21, 1961, they recorded "Runaway", which was released as a single in February 1961, reaching number 1 on the Billboard chart in April. Shannon followed with "Hats Off to Larry", which peaked at number 5 on the Billboard chart and number 2 on the Cashbox chart in 1961, and the less popular "So Long, Baby", another song of breakup bitterness.
"Runaway" and "Hats Off to Larry" were recorded in a day.
Shannon enjoyed continued success in the United Kingdom, where he had always been more popular.
In 1963, he became the first American to record a cover version of a song by the Beatles: his version of "From Me to You" charted in the U.S. before the Beatles' version.
Another homage featured in ‘Hinterland’ is Patrick Michael DiNizio of The Smithereens, who I had the pleasure of seeing at Glastonbury in the eighties. If you listen not to hard, you may hear inflections of ‘Behind the Wall of Sleep’ in the chorus.
Patrick died in 2017 and it jarred with me, as I’d been working on my song at about the same time.
This song is dedicated to Del Shannon and Patrick Di NiZio accordingly...
We all have off-days - Learn From Them.
I have been
writing songs for a long time. For whatever reason, the ‘song-fairy’ sprinkled
her dust over me and I got the inclination to express myself in word and song in
my early teens. I had an uncle who could ‘play anything’ so I thought ‘You
won’t be able to pay this bugger…’
When Jae
Bedford Of The Bedford School of Music and Performing Arts https://thebedfordschoolofmusic.webs.com/ asked me to hold a songwriter’s workshop during the 2020 harbour Street Jazz and Blues Festival https://www.harbourstreetjazz.com/
– I readily accepted. My pride, ego and vanity all a-flutter.
But then thought: 'Shit!'
– I readily accepted. My pride, ego and vanity all a-flutter.
But then thought: 'Shit!'
‘What on
earth might I be able to offer by way of advice”’
I suppose I
could boil it down to this:
Listen to
other songwriters. Forget about their
look, their age, their gender, their sexuality or background. All that stuff is
the wrapping that promoters like to envelop the ‘product’ in. Listen to each
songwriter with the same ears. Ask yourself. Is this a good song? Not ‘Does
this artist look good in a cat-suit?’
And yes, if
not looking good in a cat-suit is a measure of song-writing ability I’m up
there with Lennon and McCartney. And secondly challenge yourself. Be prepared
to accept that even Lennon and McCartney had their off-days.
Tuesday, 11 February 2020
Thanks for not selling me your Gear, Dude!
I’d like to put out a huge vote of thanks
to the young man in a major musical-instrument franchise based in Dunedin, NZ. By
my estimation, he saved me several hundred dollars and helped put more food on
my children’s table.
My friend, I know yo are filling in time while your band gets some traction in the market, but seriously, were you that above putting in an ounce of effort?
Having done some research about Loop pedals,
I went into a veritable Alladin’s cave of music and asked about the best options.
I was keen to buy – perhaps ready to be persuaded.
The guy who showed me the pedal was a
paragon of restraint.
No ‘buy-now, pay later’ nonsense.
No ‘perhaps you’d like
to leave a deposit.’?
No reference to any easy-to-buy or credit facility.
No taking the object out of the box, rigging it to an amp and leaving me to savour its delights while he unobtrusively allowed me to fall in love with the pedal.
No. This guy was impassive. I can attest to
the sheer bloody-minded dedication with which he made sure I was not going
to be tempted, induced, impelled or persuaded to invest one red cent into the said equipment.
In fact, such was his disdain, I began to
suspect he thought I’d visited the shop in order to try and sell the peddle to
him!
Once again. Thanks for your dedication,
anonymous young man. I suspect you’ve saved many a relationship perhaps the odd marriage with your
dogged devotion to treating customers like some kind of inconvenience in your
otherwise frantic day….
Ps i am now a dedicated shopper in another music shop.
You know, where they actually interact with you.
Wednesday, 22 January 2020
Radio Gardening
I found Radio Garden - a great site if you like to trawl the airways globally and listen to radio from around the world.
https://radio.garden
So I decided to scan the world and send them my album. had a couple of responses - which is great.
In the meantime my bandcamp account has achieved 1000 listens. This is great too.
i should really find a way to celebrate this. Who's got any ideas?
I'll just release a single from the album each month and keep sending my APK (Electronic Press Kit) to people all over.
What is kind of spooky is the international 'tone' of music - it is like the same songs in different languages - the same verses, bridges, effects and auto-tuned voices. Even the adverts - they all have this homogenous same qualities.
I like being different. Unique even. Except I'm not. Well not very...
https://radio.garden
So I decided to scan the world and send them my album. had a couple of responses - which is great.
In the meantime my bandcamp account has achieved 1000 listens. This is great too.
i should really find a way to celebrate this. Who's got any ideas?
I'll just release a single from the album each month and keep sending my APK (Electronic Press Kit) to people all over.
What is kind of spooky is the international 'tone' of music - it is like the same songs in different languages - the same verses, bridges, effects and auto-tuned voices. Even the adverts - they all have this homogenous same qualities.
I like being different. Unique even. Except I'm not. Well not very...
Monday, 6 January 2020
Because it Can...
Spend two years putting together an album's worth of tracks and managed to get it out o deadline (before the New Year).
https://clark2.bandcamp.com/album/2020-visions
It was an instructive process. I got about 200 listens on Bandcamp, which is a start - Thanks to all who took the time to listen.
I also recall online conversation:
"I've put out an album."
"Are you gifting it to us?"
"Yes, no problems, I've set it up so it is $0.00 to 'purchase' on Bandcamp."
"Oh thanks, I'm not a music aficionado, so I'll pass on this occasion."
Now that is what I call altruism, asking for a freebie from a stranger on behalf of other total strangers.
But you gotta be strong if you wanna make music. Because the thing that fills your own head and obsesses and compels you to do something isn't what obsesses or compels others.
So what have I learned? Despite all the big-ups about how 'effective' facebook is for marketing your stuff, I remain unconvinced.
I'm approaching music blogs now, and am approaching radio-stations internationally.
I have to challenge the notion that I'm living proof you can't give it away.
https://clark2.bandcamp.com/album/2020-visions
It was an instructive process. I got about 200 listens on Bandcamp, which is a start - Thanks to all who took the time to listen.
I also recall online conversation:
"I've put out an album."
"Are you gifting it to us?"
"Yes, no problems, I've set it up so it is $0.00 to 'purchase' on Bandcamp."
"Oh thanks, I'm not a music aficionado, so I'll pass on this occasion."
Now that is what I call altruism, asking for a freebie from a stranger on behalf of other total strangers.
But you gotta be strong if you wanna make music. Because the thing that fills your own head and obsesses and compels you to do something isn't what obsesses or compels others.
So what have I learned? Despite all the big-ups about how 'effective' facebook is for marketing your stuff, I remain unconvinced.
I'm approaching music blogs now, and am approaching radio-stations internationally.
I have to challenge the notion that I'm living proof you can't give it away.
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