27 Mar: studio

HEY, CALIFORNIA
Geoff Melkonian – strings

JEFF LYNNE
Geoff Melkonian – strings

SHERMAN
me – backing vocals

Today there was less accomplished, though more from lack of time spent than time wasted. We only really worked about four hours today, for some reason there was a cavalcade of guests through the studio, mostly I think to say goodbye to Rob before he goes off to New York. However, what was accomplished was important. Geoff Melkonian (Josh Joplin Group) came in to play on HEY, CALIFORNIA. He played an upright bass with a bow during the bridge-like portion of the song, three tracks of complementary lines. Two low and one higher, sort of a cello sound. This, of course, set my mind to work. Once he was finished I asked him if he’d be interested in playing on another song, which is why JEFF LYNNE has returned to the list above. I knew there was still no way to get the ELO sound I was really shooting for, but I had him do a part during the choruses and the build at the very end, up in the cello range of his instrument. Hopefully it will at least give the illusion of more strings being involved. It sounded great to me, even if it isn’t quite what I had originally hoped for. One thing I did notice, in hearing it again today, is that the backing vocal parts we did a couple of days ago, the trademark ELO chorus vocals we did by mixing myself with the Mellotron, sound great. At the time I wasn’t sure it worked exactly. Anyway, this is the song that I will have completely finished by Friday, mixed and ready to be mastered and sent to David at IPO. I think it works.

We did some backing vocals for SHERMAN. I didn’t have any ideas, so Rob suggested doing the same sort of build up I did in parts of “Jeff Lynne.” We started in and he suddenly suggested I do them in my 1930’s singer voice. Most of you won’t have heard this before, but there’s a particular way that second-rate movie stars sang in the thirties… I first started doing it after I saw the Marx Brothers’ Animal Crackers for the first time, years ago. The romantic lead in that movie does it and it’s hilarious to me, you sort of sing from the back of your throat in a very warbly sort of way. So I did a four-part harmony in that voice, but we stopped before really sitting to listen to it, so whether we keep it or not I have no idea at this point. This is one of those moments where I just trust Rob’s idea until I hear it in action. We also did some work on the mystery song.

Tomorrow I’ll be there from 10am until late in the evening. “Hitchcock Blonde” and “King Sham” aren’t finished, but all they need are some keyboards, which we can do just before mixing. So all that’s left at this point is “Sherman” and the mystery song. I think it’s a safe bet that “Fall Down” will not be recorded, we may decide to give it a go, but at this point I’d rather finish up everything, give every song a listen to and make sure nothing has slipped by, rather than rush to complete one more song. So off the list it goes. Ten songs plus a bonus track doesn’t seem too bad. After Friday I should have “Jeff Lynne” in mixed form, plus rough mixes of everything else, and I can try to work out the track order.

It will feel so good to have them done.

26 Mar: studio

HEY, CALIFORNIA
me – vocals, mandolin

OVERTURE
Rob – guitar, baritone guitar
me – piano, tambourine

Things seem back on track. I did backing vocals for the end of HEY, CALIFORNIA. A small struggle at first, since it was early in the day for me and my voice is always a bit rough then. They were these atypical three part harmonies, that Rob kept making “the Mamas and the Papas” jokes about. He came up with them, though, so who’s to blame? I ask you. I also played mandolin during the bridge-like portion of the song. The song is very sparse up until the end, it should really stand out on the CD.

Rob added another electric guitar to OVERTURE, the Les Paul, and a solo. He also did a track playing my baritone guitar with a lot of fuzz on the sound. The baritone was in the studio throughout Slumberland, as well, but was never used. I did a piano track, the same method as the original version of this song that was scrapped, with the piano mic’d and run through the rotating leslie. That’s a fun sentence if you don’t know what the hell I’m talking about. I also played a really jazzy tambourine, in honor of my friend Scott (who isn’t dead).

We’ve added time this week, which is good. I’ll be there tomorrow during the day again, then Thursday day and night, and then Friday during the day. So I feel a lot more confident about getting the recording finished and getting “Jeff Lynne” mixed by Friday.

22 Mar: studio

HEY, CALIFORNIA
me – lead vocal

LITTLE PLUM
Michael Lorant – clarinet

Another day where it just doesn’t feel like I accomplished much. The vocal for CALIFORNIA was one take, with the exception of the falsetto at the end. For some reason, everytime I would start in I immediately got a tickle in my throat and would start coughing. Michael showed up around that time so we stopped while he did the clarinet for LITTLE PLUM. He hadn’t heard the song yet so it took a few passes to work it out, but it sounds great, sort of a raspy undertone to it, really nice. Then we stopped for lunch, came back and I did the falsetto bits from before. Not much, really.

Nevertheless, Rob doesn’t seem to think we’ll have trouble finishing up with three more days to go. It’s harder for me to judge.

This morning I remembered that I forgot how hard it is to find baritone ukulele strings. I may have to break down and go to MARS. The last time I was there for strings I stood around for about ten minutes waiting for someone to come to the counter, and finally I gave up and went behind it and got them myself. Went to the front register to pay, and then out the door, where they had TWO people checking receipts. Nice.