Showing posts with label Headgap. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Headgap. Show all posts

Friday, December 24, 2010

A Bombazine White Xmas

Jayne and I are holed up in an apartment in Montmartre playing chess and writing songs for the next Bombazine Black album.  Snow is falling as I type and it's almost time to break out the vin chaud.

It's a complete coincidence that in the year we release a song called Montmartre we find ourselves here for Xmas - life moves in mysterious ways doesn't it?  Next year we'll release a song called the Maldives and let's see what happens.

Among other things it seems the perfect time to have a bit of a look back on the year and see if we actually did anything, or am I just tired because I'm suffering from mono.

Thank you to everyone that came to shows, bought records, gave encouragement or even downloaded our songs illegally.  It's just nice to be in your life.


2010: A Re-Cap

January

Matt, Dan and Daryl's 'other' band Gersey begin rehearsals for the Pavement Australian shows in March.


February


Gersey play their first show since 2007 at The Toff in Town, Melbourne.


March

Gersey tour Australia with Pavement and have an absolute blast.  Lots of photos up on Facebook.




April

Matt composes the score and Jayne is a twisted sister in the theatre production Cageling, conceived by the unstoppable force that is The Rabble. It opens to rave reviews and full houses at Melbourne's Forty-Five Downstairs. A "nuanced sound design" said esteemed theatre critic Alison Croggon among other things.




Dan and Daryl's other other band Tall Buildings record their debut album at SoundPark in Northcote.


May

Mixing of second Bombazine Black album Motion Picture completed by Tim Whitten in Sydney.


June

Cageling opens in Sydney to more rave reviews.  Curtain Call say the score is "one of the most engrossing and cohesives aspects of the work."
The Sydney Morning Herald said it was "a ringing score." 


July

Motion Picture is mastered by Roger Siebel at SAE in Arizona.

Matt and Marty from Gaslight Radio start record label/distro house Letters & Tapes.




August

Jayne completes the artwork for Motion Picture, with layout by Iain Downie.




Paris-based Bombazine Black bass player/drummer Taylor Holland releases a book of his photographs, Lignes.




September

Motion Picture is released to universal acclaim.  Wireless Bollinger called it "heartfelt, emotive music that trades in sincerity and timelessness" and The Music Blogs said "I’m a little speechless. This album is incredible."

You can read all the reviews for yourself here.


Bombazine Black perform the album launch show at The Toff in Town in Melbourne with The Marlon Winterbourne Movement and Sirens of Venice. The AU Review review the show and say "there are movies and there are motion pictures and the Melbourne based instrumental band led by Matt Davis of Gersey fame, proved that they are Scorsese."




October

Rehearsals begin in Berlin for theatre/dance piece Soft Landing that features music from both Bombazine Black records.




Letters & Tapes releases The Marlon Winterbourne Movement album Merry Go Round on the Moon.




November

Soft Landing opens in Berlin and sells out the season.

Tall Buildings finish mixing their new record with Sloth at Head Gap.  Expect the release early next year.


December

Matt completes score for Jonathan auf der Heide's new film The Day Before Yesterday.

Jayne publishes a book of her writing and artworks from The Existential Bunny Rabbit.




It snows in Paris.


Merry Xmas all, see you on the other side.

M

Monday, September 27, 2010

Track by Track

Here's a piece I wrote on the songs on the new album for Mess & Noise..



Annelets

In our second year in Paris Jayne and I lived on Rue des Annelets in the 19th arrondissement, just behind Belleville.  The apartment building on the album cover was across the road from our place, and every morning the Miami Vice guy would go out onto his balcony and smoke cigarettes.  There’s something about Jayne’s photo that reminded me of a Hitchcock film, and once we had decided to call the record Motion Picture I knew that photo would be perfect.  It seems like he could be anywhere.

I had arranged to do some recording with Parisian vibraphone whiz Michael Emenau (MNO).  The plan was that we’d meet at his studio (in the basement of a dodgy building near the Père Lachaise) and just improvise and see if we could come up with some songs, record them and put them out.  Bang - just like that - old-school jazz vibe.

But the night before the session I freaked out and thought I’d better come up with a few bits, a chord progression at least, something to go in with, otherwise we could be in there for hours while I try and figure out something to play.  Grant Green I ain’t.

So I sat on our couch in front of the French news and came up with the parts for Annelets.  On the recording with MNO the ‘change’ was repeated a few times, and the ending was just a middle eight, but I moved it all around when I got in the room with the band in Melbourne.  It seemed more disciplined to keep the change short, and dreamier to let the middle eight be a whole part onto itself, almost its own song.  I really wanted that part to sound like a 70s film score, maybe Midnight Cowboy or something like that.


The Bel Esprit

I wrote The Bel Esprit on the same night as Annelets and it has pretty much remained the same as I wrote it then.  The ending blew out a bit once I started playing it with the guys in Melbourne but it’s still pretty long on the version with MNO.  I have a high tolerance for repetition; I love what happens after you think something surely can’t continue on without a change.  For me it then starts to become meditative and comforting, and sometimes funny and joyful. 

Once I got the band involved I really wanted to keep my part very simple and straight and let the madness of Eugene [Ball]'s trumpet and Jayne’s piano surround it.  I hoped this would help it feel loose and organic while still giving you something in the song to hold onto, even if you couldn’t actually hear that part. 

I worried about the ‘chorus’ part in this song for a while, it’s pretty straight, definitely the straightest part on the record, and in the end it was that aspect that saved it.  I thought, if you’d made it this far into the record you deserved a little breather, a little bit of pop before it opened out again.


Springheel Sunset

When we were in America showcasing the first record we ended up with a day off in LA.  A couple of songs had morphed into these full band numbers and I really wanted to try and get them on tape.  A friend of a friend was an engineer at Sunset Sounds and lo and behold they had a studio free on our day off.  So we went in and recorded Sea-Dark, Springheel and a new song, Roosevelt.

Sea-Dark didn’t make the album in the end - I couldn’t quite get it to sit - but Springheel came out really well.  The song was very live and organic and we really seemed to capture the feeling within the group at the time.  We were having such a great time.  In theory the song should have been quite hard to record - almost 12 minutes and with two distinct parts - but because we had been playing so much and were having so much fun, it was a breeze.  Chris [Reynolds, engineer] pressed the record button and 12 minutes later it was done.

I added a few string parts to the middle verse when we got back to Melbourne, and then Eugene added his trumpet, but apart from that it’s exactly as we played it that day in LA.


Roosevelt

I had come up with the basic progression for Roosevelt while we were on the road in the US and I really wanted to see if we could pull a whole song together completely off-the-cuff while we were in the studio.  And we did!  We came up with the change and the basic arrangement on our lunch break, played it once and then recorded it.  Jayne came up with her fantastic piano line mid-take on the grand old Steinway.  It’s the most pure recording I’ve ever done and listening to it now I still marvel at what we were able to achieve in half an hour.


Montmartre

I wrote Montmartre in a little office I rented above the Workers’ Club in Fitzroy last year.  We had already recorded Springheel Sunset, Roosevelt and a band version of Sea-Dark in LA, and I had Annelets and Bel Esprit from Paris, so I figured I was three songs off a full record.  I like short records, 8 songs, 35 minutes. 

So I rented this little room and I set about writing three songs to finish it off.  I came up with a new tuning - that always seems to spark off new ideas - and almost straight away I had the basic part for Montmartre down.

It somehow reminded me of this story I had heard in Paris about the bars in the red-light district around Montmartre and Pigalle, about the out-of-town guy that goes into one of these bars, for a beer or whatever, chats to a girl at the bar for an hour or so, and then gets presented with a 500 euro bill for her time, and a couple of Russian bouncers should he protest.

I told the story to the band as we were rehearsing it up and we managed to keep that kind of sinister feeling running through it.  Jayne came up with the engaged signal keyboard part, almost like the guy had had his bank account cleaned out and was calling his wife to explain, but he can’t get through.


Dark Kellys

Dark Kellys was the second song I wrote up in the room above the Workers’.  I had been reading Blood Meridian and thinking about Australian history and how we don’t have much fictional stuff written about the early days of white settlement here, the days of the gold rush and the bushrangers and all that - our Wild West.  There’s the Peter Carey book of course and the odd film but nothing like the mountains of stuff the Americans have.  I started imagining what it would have been like to have been living in Beechworth in the late 1800’s and maybe falling on the wrong side of the law, and then maybe having a falling out with the Kelly Gang and what mean bastards they would have been to have chasing you.    

So I wrote Dark Kellys about that.  The basic narrative is that you’re on the run, hiding out in the bush, petrified that the Kellys are coming to get you.  The slow build at the start is the coming storm.  It’s night.  You think you hear them and then the chorus - they come riding over the top of the hill and they’re on top of you.  Guns and knives and war.


The New Ruse

Once I had Montmartre and Dark Kellys I figured I was one song off completing the album, and that we probably needed something a little up-tempo.  Something short.  The New Ruse was one of a few songs that came out.  I thought it was ok but then Danny [Tulen]'s idea to have the stop-start drumming really made it something and I knew we had a song then.  It seemed odd and different and exactly what the record needed.  And then Miles [Browne] came up his bass line in the change which I think is the best part on the record.  We recorded it in one or two takes at HeadGap [Studios in Melbourne]. 

Sunday, August 29, 2010

Films / New Record - 4/8/09

On Sunday night we went to the premiere of Alkinos Tsimilidos' new film Blind Company, to which I and my Paris-based vibraphonist- extraordinaire-friend and 11th arrondissement cohort Micheal Emenau penned the score.  It screened to a full house as part of the Melbourne International Film Festival and included an introduction by Alkinos and Colin Friels (who plays the lead Geoff Brewster).  It goes to Montreal next.

Here's the poster:



 


 





















In other film news Sarah Watts' new film My Year Without Sex is in the theatres here and getting lots of attention and good reviews etc.  Apart from terrific performances across the entire cast it features four Bombazine Black songs, three from Here Their Dreams and one little specifically-written piece that I called 'Give A Little Beat'.
 
Session times and soundtrack info can be found at the official site here and here's a look at the poster:




 





















Apart from gallivanting 'round town watching movies we have also been putting the final touches to the follow up to Here Their Dreams. The basic tracking was done between Sunset Studios in LA, Headgap Studios in Thornbury and Michael Emenau's bunker in Cité Joly in Paris with a band that includes Danny Tulen and Daryl Bradie from Gersey, Miles Browne from Art of Fighting, Taylor Holland from Texan rockers Monroe Mustang and actress/writer/musician Jayne Tuttle.

It will now be mixed by Tim Whitten who some of you will know from such Gersey records as
Hope Springs, Storms Dressed As Stars and No Satellites.  So far I'm very very happy with how it sounds, can't wait for you all to hear it.  More news on release dates and all that soon.  
In the meantime here's a photo of Headgap engineer Sloth and I deep in contemplation mode..
 

Best,
M