This picture popped up in my Facebook Memories today. Me and Kevin In the proto-Lizardfish days of 2012.
Look at how few pedals I had. Isn’t that cute? Wah, volume, a tuner, and the amp’s channel switch. It was so widdle.

This picture popped up in my Facebook Memories today. Me and Kevin In the proto-Lizardfish days of 2012.
Look at how few pedals I had. Isn’t that cute? Wah, volume, a tuner, and the amp’s channel switch. It was so widdle.

Check it out, I have been using the Logic Remote iPad app as a… ya know… remote. I’ve only ever used it as a midi controller to add midi instruments to GarageBand files, but over the last few days I’ve been using it as a remote control while recording guitar parts.
When I put together my workspace I put the computer on one side of the room and the pedal board on the other. I picked up an extension chord for my headphones, which allowed me to step on pedals while the tape was rolling, but it was the remote that let me stand by the pedals the whole time I’ve been working.
Well, most of it. I can’t select regions from the remote (can’t I?) and I can’t set up loops (can’t I?) but it does everything else I need to do. The best part?? It actually works! The midi controller functionality is a mess (though it’s infinitely better than it used to be) but the remote control works!
I picked off a vocal this morning, wrote a new song and recorded guitars for it tonight, and recorded the guitars for the only remaining pre-existing song too. I’m up to 14 songs, all with rhythm guitars done (the new song from tonight still needs a bass guitar part though, don’t forget!), and two of them have vocals too.
I have to have all the tracking done before vacation. Will I pull it off??
I think so but I’m starting to feel the crunch. The vocals are the logjam, I have to keep plugging away at them. Two down, 12 to go!
Oh yeah… and saxophone. Argh!

I did some recording and still managed to leave for work a little early… and the traffic was so bad I was 10 minutes late. In the traffic’s defense, it was almost drizzling. Hoo… ray.
This puppy hurts my arms.
I put the acoustic guitar onto the last two songs that need acoustic guitar, assuming I don’t come up with another one. They are both strummy and loud and boy are my arms tired. My arms are so tired you’d think I just flew in from the coast, har har hardy har har.
I’ve got one more song that needs electric rhythm guitar. That’ll bring the count up to 13. I want to add one more electric song too. Then there’s the Blind Chaos thing.
This is taken from a post on the RPM Challenge Forum:
For the uninitiated, blind chaos was a thing that was started in 2009 and ran, I think, pretty much every year until the forums/site was rebooted. The basic premise is record roughly 36 minutes of something and someone mixes it all together into an RPM Album.
I’ve never done one of these before. This, or something similar, has gone on more or less every year that I’ve been paying attention. If I decide to submit a contribution I would just plug in my guitar, hit record, and make noises for 36 minutes. Those noises can be musical or not, or some combination of both. When I first read that forum post a couple of weeks ago I was pretty intrigued by the idea. What would I do? Noodle? Crank the amp and get as much glorious feedback as possible? Kick on a delay pedal and make as much glorious self oscillation noise as possible? Some combination thereof?
I don’t know what I’d do if I even did it, and I don’t know if I want to do it or not. Maybe if I finish absolutely everything on the musical agenda before we leave for Florida. Not likely, but maybe.
That was a good weekend. My wife wanted to do two things to celebrate her birthday. She wanted to stay in her pajamas for the whole weekend, and she wanted to work. Those wouldn’t be my choices, but she’s a genius and she’s amazing and if that’s what she wanted to do to celebrate her birthday, that’s what we were going to do!
I cleaned the bathroom, I went to weight watchers, I went to the gym, I went grocery shopping, I did laundry, I washed dishes, I watched Kill Bill vol 1 and vol 2, and I played shit loads of guitar. All that while my beloved wife stayed in the office solving all of her company’s issues while wearing her pajamas.
When I went to sleep on Friday I had 10 ideas in progress. Nine had the song form sketched out and two had their rhythm guitar parts down. Fast forward to Monday morning and I have 13 songs in progress, 12 have their song form sketched out, 10 have all of their rhythm guitar parts, one has all of it’s vocals, and one has some of it’s vocals. Of the three remaining guitar-less songs, one will be electric, one will be acoustic, and one will… I don’t know yet. Maybe acoustic?
I recorded the 12-string acoustic guitar using a Shure SM57 microphone and I doubled each track. I am not very good at recording an acoustic because I am pretty undisciplined and I move around a lot. I might have the guitar positioned correctly relative to the mic when I start playing only to find when I finish a take I’ve moved about 20 miles away (figuratively).
I’m also woefully under-experienced playing acoustic. There’s a volume/touch sensitivity relationship that I just don’t get. When I play an electric through an amp I can use a very soft pick attack and still produce a nutso level of volume. I just turn the knob and there it is. When I play acoustic, my brain still expects the volume but I can’t get it by picking softly. As a result, I find that I am rarely able to pick softly. I end up slamming the strings like a sledgehammer smashing up asphalt. I just beat the crap out of the guitar. That results in two things: a pathetic lack of dynamics in the recording, and very tired arms.
As for electric guitar parts, last year I limited myself in the gear I could use. I had one guitar, one amp, and three pedals; a Klon style overdrive, a phaser, and a wah. As things were moving this year I found that I was constantly using the same gear, basically mirroring what I had last year. I used the same guitar on every track, two amps instead of one, a Klon style overdrive pedal, and a phaser and a wah. Interesting to note that none of the gear I have used this year was used last year. Everything is different but somehow the same.
The phaser and the wah are used for effect, not so much for tone. The stuff I am doing on the recording doesn’t sound like what I do in the band. In the band there is tons of distortion. In the recording it’s only a small step or two dirtier than clean. I made a conscious decision to change that up toward the end of my playing last night. I brought in a second overdrive pedal and I used a couple of additional effects, just to shake things up. I still have one electric rhythm guitar part to record, and I hope to add two more to the list before I’m done. I’m going to try and shake things up on those too. I’m hoping that one will get a fuzz box. Maybe not for the whole song, but at least part of it.
The vocal stuff so far has been the same as always. I sit in front of a mic (a Shure SM57 instead of my usual Shure SM58) and sing the first thing that pops into my head as I listen to the song. Last year I played with the idea of coming up with a melody using a keyboard and then writing lyrics that fit. I still want to do that, I just haven’t had the time.
This morning I cranked out a vocal part quickly. I wrote melody and lyrics for two verses, a bridge, and a chorus, and recorded two vocal tracks for each, some doubling and some in harmony. It went quickly and easily and I had a few minutes to spare before I had to leave for work so I started a second song. I came up with something that, in my head, sounded cool. Unfortunately the rhythm I was singing turned out to be a pain in the ass. The song is in 7/4 time and I had it so that the end of the first line is sung on top of the start of the second line, and I kept on screwing up when the second line enters. I eventually got it for the first half of the first verse, but I had to leave for work.
As always, the vocal part is what scares me the most. I’m not good at it and I don’t enjoy it nearly as much as I enjoy playing the guitar, or building the bed tracks, or mixing. It takes the most time and gives me the least reward. I also can’t take a day off from work to do it all at once because I’m already taking a week off for Disney World. I need to either record vocals before work in the morning, like I did today, or I have to drive to some secluded place and record while sitting in my car. I might end up doing both. We’ll see.
I also need to get all of this done, including the lead guitar and the saxophone, before we leave for Florida. I’m planning on using bed time in Florida to mix at least some of the songs, and then using the tiny window of time after we get home to finish off the last of it. I need absolutely all of the tracking to be complete before we leave. I can’t very well record vocals during vacation… unless Mickey wants to join in.
Thematically, I am still on the half electric, half acoustic bandwagon. I’m also wondering if I might monkey with the acoustic songs a little. Once I have all of the mixing done, I might replace the percussion track with an actual drum kit, and add a bass guitar. If time allows I might replace the sax with guitar too. I would end up with two entirely different versions of the same song. Only the acoustic guitar and the vocals would be the same. Think of the alternate mixes as a mini-album within a mini-album.
That’s a lot of shit to do with very little time left to do it. What the hell am I thinking?
I got quite a lot done over the last two days. Not nearly enough, but quite a good chunk. I can’t go into it now because the birthday girl and I are watching TV like an old married couple.
I love it.

https://hearthis.at/rpm-works-in-progress/rpm-2020-03-ipad-2820-6.26-pm/
I’ve had a decent recording day today. I added the rhythm guitar to the last four acoustic songs, and one of the electric songs. I’m bushed. My back hurts, my hands hurt, my head hurts, but I got a lot done.
Les Paul into KTR into Two Bassbreakers… it sounds like overdrive heaven. It’s so sensitive that every little touch rings out. It’s very unforgiving too so every spec of sloppiness comes through, but it just sounds soo damn cool. That file up above (assuming as always that it pulled into the post) will be deleted the next time I work on that song. For now let’s just use it as an example of how groovy this setup sounds. Also, the song is complete shit. I’m only interested in the trashy goodness of the guitar sound.
I’m guessing within five minutes of posting this I’m going to be embarrassed by how shitty it really sounds. Oh well.
I believe it was Ringo Starr who said it best when he said, “I GOT BLISTERS ON ME FINGERS!”
At least I think that was Ringo.
Anyway. I’ve always found playing an acoustic guitar is more of a work out for the arms than playing electric, and boy are my arms getting tired. (No actual blisters yet though)
I’ve mentioned that we’re going on a trip to Disney World soon. I’ve also mentioned that my foot has been all screwed up and painful lately. I may have mentioned that I sometimes have a lot of back pain too.
The foot has been okay of late and the back pain hasn’t been much of an issue, but I get sore and tired pretty quickly and there is going to be miles upon miles of Disney walking so… I started going to the gym. I’ve been three times this week.
Now before you get all pissy, this isn’t going to be one of those lets all get healthy kinda posts. Screw that, this is about music.
When I go to the gym I almost always just walk on the treadmill until my foot or my back start complaining. It doesn’t take long. I’ve been shooting for 15 minutes to start with. Hey, screw you and your in-shape-body, stop laughing at me! Bullies. Anyway, I always bring my phone and my air pods (I used to bring ear buds but let’s embrace modern technology!) and I listen to music. I always hope that I can just let myself focus on whatever I’m listening to and not even think about the amount of time I’ve been treadmillin’. It never happens though.
Until today.
Today I put on that stupid Spotify playlist that I added to the side panel over there —-> yesterday. The plan was to put 8-10 songs that I’ve been in the mood for lately onto said playlist and updated it every so often. So much for that, it’s about 20 hours long now. Sorry. My plan is to shuffle it, but that is redundant since I only have a free account and that means anything on my phone is shuffled. Fine by me.
So there I am, walking along, listening to music, not being distracted from the clock slowly ticking upward toward the goal of 15 minutes. Then it happened. The shuffle brought me to “Still Got the Blues” by Gary Moore and I just got lost in it. That song is perfect, that recording is perfect, that guitar playing is perfect, that song is perfect (I think I said that already). I let it take me to where ever it needed to take me and the next thing I knew I had been walking for 20 minutes.
Thanks, Gary. Rest in Peace, Sir. I don’t know if you were playing Peter Green’s ’59 Les Paul standard on that one or not (the guitar that is affectionately known as Greenie and is currently owned by Kirk Hammett of Metalica) but I am choosing to believe you did and that is part of why the tone is just perfect.
Anyway, here are some Spicket River pictures and one from downtown Methuen because it’s Saturday and that’s what I do on Saturday…
As I mentioned in a couple of posts yesterday, we are celebrating my beloved bride’s birthday this weekend. She asked for two things: One, to stay in her PJ’s all weekend, and two, for me to let her work all weekend. I will make it happen! I have a few chores to do this weekend, and I need to go grocery shopping. The rest of the time is (hopefully) going to be spent on RPM (probably not though, let’s be realistic). In fact, I’m going to go spend a few minutes recording some acoustic guitar right now.
Happy Saturday, everyone and thanks again to Gary Moore.