Jam – 2013-10-28 – Carroll’s

ds131028Once again this week we had everyone there to enjoy the festivities that is Deadstein and once again this week I hauled in my multi-track recording outfit to capture the sounds. As I have been mixing the music I haven’t had too much time to stop to write about the evening, and now that it is almost a week past, there is little to remember with the exception of the music which we I dutifully captured and reconstituted for your listening pleasure. Actually, this week there was little to reconstitution and in many respects, this weeks mix down was down much more expeditiously then the recent past. Nevertheless, as usual, the recording quality and capture of the night’s performance is heads and toes above what a stereo mic place in the middle of the studio provides us, so enjoy it.  Though he didn’t play it, Kevin brought in his Fender Starcaster for us to all check out.

In many respects, the songs selection from this weeks is a little of trying to get a few ore more songs that haven’t been recorded on the recent multi-tract deluge as well as getting back into songs that we are bound the repeat. The resultant setlist lacked flow and continuity buy tied up a few ends giving us a pretty open slate going into the final couple of months of the year. Freak from within and from a freak, Freak Out!

kevjazzmaster

The audio files are provided in the following folder:
http://deadstein.com/audio/10-28-13

Jam – 2013-10-01 – Carroll’s

ds131001It was another multi-track evening with Deadstein. The whole band was together including Donna for the first set. We had no guests. Carroll’s didn’t even haven us in their schedule but fortunately Kevin was there early and got them to set up the studio in plenty of time.

While I was setting and tweaking the recording session everyone played a great version of the newly minted Wednesday Morning Blues written and belted out by Donna. Wow, throwing in Morning Dew references throws it over the top.

To open the second set we counter balanced the Brokedown closer of the first set with a Ripple. For the Ripple Kevin broke out his 4th guitar/bass of his recent coming out display, a 4-string Guild bass. From there we launched into a threesomes with the Here Comes Sunshine –> China –> Rider followed by a Truckin’ which died a quick and painless death. This was followed by another big threesome of Uncle John’s Wharf Rat and Sugar Magnolia, without a Sunshine Daydream to close. We finished with the figurative encore of US Blues. Surprisingly enough, another pretty solid night of music, all things considered.

The audio files are provided in the following folder:
http://deadstein.com/audio/10-01-13

Jam – 2013-09-26 – Carroll’s

ds130926It was another multi-track evening with Deadstein, this week commemorating the great Buffalo 9-26-81 show by playing its setlist. We had the whole band there and Donna was scheduled to play but had to cancel at the last minute.

There are more comments to come so hang in there and don’t Freak Out.

The audio files are provided in the following folder:
http://deadstein.com/audio/09-26-13

Jam – 2013-09-12 – Carroll’s

ds130912For the first time in what seems like weeks, we had the whole band together to jam this week in Deadstein together, at least for the first set. By the time the second set began rolling on by, Donna had to catch her train out of Dodge. First the first time in like 5 weeks, I decided to take a week off from multi-track taping as I was falling behind, so I figured, I would leave it up to Rich to record the night’s music. As far as recordings, we on successfully got the first set as something in the setup failed for the second set.

The other big event for this jam was the fact that it was a celebration of Lee’s 50th birthday. That bestowed upon him the honor as well as the obligation to select the setlist for the night. Lee’s maturity really shined during this obligation as he spit appropriate song after appropriate song considering all that had to be considered. He had the Bob-Jerry trade-off to consider as well as the , what does Donna sign consideration. In the end, Lee was very considerate and set Donna up to rip through several of the songs she sings lead on. Lee’s choices were right on as he expertly ended Deadstein’s first set promptly at 10pm.

As far as guests we enjoyed the presence of Stu who was doing work at the back table while enjoying the groove of Deadstein. The we also had Monica with a new ultra-freaky guy, I think also named stu, who came in with a magical book of secret potions of art or something like that. In any case, he appeared to by quite the freak and seemed to fit in quite well with all the freaks that have preceded him. He asked us if we were “burners.” We didn’t know what that meant but it was a reference to going to burning man. You learn something new every jam at Deadstein.

Wishing Lee a super freaky Deadstein happy birthday for his 50th and we all look forward to celebrating another momentous birthday again when he turns 100. Can’t wait for that September 2063 when we can all freak out again.

The audio files are provided in the following folder:
http://deadstein.com/audio/09-12-13

  • Saint Stephen
  • Shakedown Street
  • Samson and Delilah
  • Terrapin Station
  • The Wheel
  • All Along the Watchtower
  • Midnight Moonlight

Jam – 2013-09-03 – Carroll’s

ds130903On this Tuesday night,, Deadstein found itself jamming at Carroll’s without Rich or Donna. What we were missing in musicians we made up for with recording equipment. For the 4th week in a row, I managed to haul all the mutli-track recording gear into a jam to capture the “goings on.” That was a good thing because the “goings on” were worth capturing, working on and remembering.

You would think it would be scary to have to listen to a full night of Deadstein where I was singing all the songs including a bunch of Jerry songs typically sung by Rich. I did my best and the result was at least a recording I could stomach. Not a ringing endorsement, but considering everything involved, being able to stomach is a compliment., In the end the music was much better than this a a true joy to listen to overtime. As Kevin described it, so much wrong with the music yet so much right about it also. If you listen to it enough, there is plenty to freak out over, so from me to you, Freak Out!

The audio files are provided in the following folder:
http://deadstein.com/audio/09-03-13

Jam – 2013-08-21 – Carroll’s

ds130821Deadstein’s primary guest this week was the venerable Mackie MDR-24 multi-track recorder, making its appearance for the 3rd week in a row. Not making his appearance was Alan, who was our only no show as he was vacationing in the tropics. Short of that we had no musical guests with Donna singing with us for the middle part of the jam.

After last week’s themed evening based on the 1/10/79 Coliseum show, we had not such plan for this week. I was just hoping to get a good recording of some good music after having a good time. I think for the most part, the goals were accomplished.

As far as recording, things were relatively easy for me because nothing had been moved from the studio from last week. This meant I had the same mixing board, containing only 8 full channels as last week, but the extra mic stands were in the room, not moved from last week. Even the small extra screw-on boom stand I brought for Scott’s kick drum, and forgot to take home with me last week, was left in situ waiting for me to use. What I did change out this week, was to leave my Behringer 8-channel digital pre-amp at home and I substituted it for my Mackie small desktop mixer. It has 6 pre-amps in it, even though when I got to the jam, I found out channel 5 was dead, so it really only has 5 channels in it. So in total, I had 8 channels from the mixing board and 5 from my Mackie, for 13 channels in all. That was just enough for this week and I’ll have to figure something out when Alan gets back. Most likely I’ll expand the use of the mixing board’s sub-outs so I have more than 13 tracks at my disposal. Of the 13 tracks covered: 1-4: Vocals (Scott, Rich, Donna and Larry), 5 Piano, 6: Guitar, 7: Bass Direct, 8-10 Lee Drums (kick, snare and overhead) 11-13: Scoot drums (kick, snare overhead).

The reason I switched out the Behringer 8-channel pre-amp for the Mackie analog board was because the guitars from the previous 8-14-2013 jam had a disconcerting sizzle to them that I am thinking wasn’t necessarily a digital artifact as much as it was an artifact of a bad (cheap) pre-amp. I say this because I didn’t notice the sizzle on the 6 drum-tracks recorded though it. Maybe the SM-57/guitar combo wasn’t good for the Berhinger. More investigation needs to be done to determine the the Behringer unit is destined for the scrap heap or not, because it is a lot more convenient to use the Berhinger if it sounds okay. Nevertheless, sound is what really counts, and the tracks from this week’s jam all came through without any cacophonous artifacts to worry about.

Funny, last week I tried to perform the mixdown simulating Kevin’s desired amp setup as applied to the direct out feed I recorded of his bass. I split the bass track into two channels and applied both high end (guitar) and a low end (bass) amp models to each respective channel. After some work in trying to control the low-end bass, I approached the sound Kevin was looking for, if not going a bit too far on the high end of things. This week I figured I would go back to basics and try to get Kevin’s desired sound just using one standard bass amp model on his direct bass recording. At first I failed miserably. Kevin thought I did everything wrong when presenting his bass as an overly blobby mess of subsonic tones. This wasn’t the sharp attach that sticks out of the mix he was looking for. I took Kevin’s criticism to task and got back to work to reshape his tone. I applied an additional EQ to his sound after the bass amp model, which contained its won internal EQ. That added a bump around 2k while taking away quite a bit from the 100Hz area. I also hit the 1176 compressor much harder that I had done previously which added some nice warm distortion to the sound. This coupled with a mastering process that also concentrated on tightening up the woofy bass, gave Kevin the sound he was looking for. I am glad to see Kevin actively listening to the recordings. I does help me out to have another set of ears to listen, as well as another set of arms to wind up and pack the wires at the end of the night.

KevinRecordingSetup

As far as playing actual music, I was kind of excited to be the only guitarist in the room. If we play Jerry Garcia Band music it is more authentic and if we play Grateful Dead music, I can switch between Bob and Jerry’s roles without having to think about stepping on anyone’s toes. With this in mind we actually focused on Grateful Dead to start and the Here Come Sunshine typically has 2 guitar parts so this would be a test to see how empty my one guitar could sound. From the first note on, the music felt pretty good and comfortable, so issues of not sounding good were not really an initial concern. As a matter of fact, the openness of the one guitar provided lots of space to work and live. Additionally, Lee and Scott were having a man crush with each other and each others drumming and the play between, each other, so that feeling of comradery only helped in the fun of the evening and the quality of the music. Lee thought there was something special going on. I don’t know if I was privy to it since I was focusing on my own issues, but if they are happy, so am I. In the end, I think the drumming sounds really good on the recording. Lee’s Kit is in the left while Scott’s is in the right and together, they give us the full rhythm section we are looking for.

With so much more to say and so little time to write it, I’m going to have to cut off the commentary at this point and just wait to make some more history with Deadstein. Until then, Freak Out!

The audio files are provided in the following folder:
http://deadstein.com/audio/08-21-13

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