Jazz

Jazz Job Completed

by Enormous on October 16, 2008

As I thought I would, I finished the jazz album mastering session last night in less than three hours.

I’m a fool to myself, I really am. I could have stretched the session out if I had had a mind to do so, and made a considerable profit, but instead I worked twice as efficiently as I normally do and got everything done in record time.

I have always been this way; I’m too much of an artist sometimes and not enough of a ruthless businessman. I don’t suppose I am the only person like this.

The session itself had some unique comedy moments – my professional encounters inevitably do – which I shall document here in my next post, jazz lovers.

{ 3 comments }

Jazz Band Mastering Marathon

by Enormous on October 15, 2008

I have an attended mastering session booked in tomorrow.

A jazz band contacted me a few weeks ago wanting to come in to the studio and master an album of traditional swing numbers. They have stipulated it be an attended session and are adamant it will take three or four days.

Apparently there are about twenty tracks, and while I am very happy to have the studio booked up for four whole days, I had to explain to the man who made the booking that the whole session would probably only take an afternoon, if that. ‘I work pretty quickly, you know,’ I told him, stupidly.

I’ve been in this situation many times before: trying to stretch out a recording or mastering session simply to earn more money. I don’t feel comfortable doing it, I can tell you. I hate being disingenuous – even if it is for business reasons.

Okay then – I’ll do it! I’ll try and stretch the session out to five or six days if I can.

(Is that bad of me?)

{ 2 comments }

Mood Swings and Elevators

by Enormous on June 15, 2008

Punk drummer Sonny Starr paid the studio a visit yesterday. I was incredibly busy as usual and did not have the time to pay him much attention or to patronise him in the way to which he has become accustomed.

After he’d finished telling me about how he’d had a ‘right good blow-job’ from a member of Amy Winehouse’s female entourage in an elevator in a hotel in Dublin, he began trying to cajole me into letting him book some studio-time for some spurious band of which he is now a member. ‘We’re called the Mood Swings,’ he told me. ‘It’s sorta punk-jazz.’

I was having none of it. ‘I know you’re trying to book the studio for the Dysons,’ I insisted. ‘They aren’t coming in – not after last time, Sonny.’

‘What do you mean?’ he whined.

‘Your guitarist, Staz. After he’d spent the day sitting in a corner sniffing glue and urinating out of the upstairs window on to passing black men, he took a substantial dump, if you recall, on top of the toilet seat.’

‘Oh, yeah, sorry about that. He ain’t with us anymore.’

‘You still aren’t coming in.’

‘We’ll pay you in speed.’

‘You definitely aren’t going to be recording in this studio.’

‘But we’re jazz, man.’

‘You have no conception of jazz, Sonny. You only have one style of drumming: fast and loud.’

‘No listen,’ he said, ‘it’s easy. You just emphasise the fourth beat of every bar.’ He drummed on the table with his hands to demonstrate. His technique sounded fairly accurate but for some reason, the moment seemed weighed down, depressed.

‘Go away, Sonny,’ I said finally.

‘You’ve changed. You ain’t my friend no more,’ he said quietly. I detected real regret in his words. Opening the heavy door to the control-room, he turned and asked me: ‘Wanna buy some speed?’

{ 3 comments }

British jazz musician and trumpet player Ashley Morgan has launched a new record label called 447 records. Ashley Morgan described his new record label as exclusively analogue and says that another collaborative record label project, The 447, will be launched in a few months time.

{ Comments on this entry are closed }

. . . And All That Jazz

by Enormous on March 24, 2007

Aren’t guitars great? I’ve just bought a new one: a gold seventies Fender Jazz Bass. It’s gorgeous.

I don’t play bass much but I needed one for various recording duties and this beauty winked at me in the dusty shop and whispered: ‘We should be together.’

I have several guitars: an 80s black and white Fender Telecaster (maple neck); a much-underrated Yamaha SG 3000s; a tobacco sunburst E/Gibson Seraton VSB; and a very versatile Yamaha APX-10D acoustic. But it is my trusty Telecaster that I use more than any other. (I actually have a collection of revealing and fruity photographs with me and my beloved Tele together on satin sheets; I am quite naked in each one. Mail me if you would like to see them – serious guitar-lovers only, please.)

On stage, I’d love to use my Yamaha SG 3000 more – it sounds amazing: warm and sustained but with plenty of top-end bite especially played through my old Fender Twin combo – but it’s just so heavy. Enormous bounce around on stage in front of the spangly backdrops quite a bit when we’re in full flow, and the weight of the Yamaha is just too much for my tender young shoulder bones to bear night after night when we’re on a long tour. It once caused my guitar strap to snap dramatically on the first chord of the first song when Slaughterhouse 5 were playing at the Marquee in London. That really got the show off to a flying stop! Happy days…

On the Fantastic hi-fi today:
Motown – The Hits Collection Volume 1
Orange Juice – The Very Best Of
Billie Holliday – A Flag for Lady Day

{ 2 comments }