351 Days
07/09/08 03:58
I like to think of music albums as real records. I'm
not referring to large black disk with a bunch of
grooves in it, but a historical piece, documenting a
place and time in a songwriter's life. I haven't made
that many recordings all tolled. A few with my
college band, my first full record NORTH, and this
one. That is enough to at least say that I can
remember strange little details about each one. I
remember how exciting it was the first I loaded into
a studio to record, the blizzard while driving to the
studio in Ithaca, NY the second time around, the
amazing weekend of demo recordings we had in South
Strafford, VT for NORTH. There are the little details
that stick out, but a lot of it also fades away. With
this record, on the other hand, I know I'm going to
remember pretty much everything. I know this because
I've had to document everything I've done from the
very beginning of the process for my MA degree. The
point of it is for us to become fully conscious of
all the choices we make. From my initial writing
decisions to rewrites to my recording plan, it's all
been put down on paper to help me better understand
who I am as a songwriter. On submission day, I will
have been working in this record, is some way, shape,
or form, for about 351 days. I actually find it
really strange knowing that, but I'm really glad I
do. To me it represents a level of detail that wasn't
present in my other records. You could call it a lack
of consciousness. Just taking the time to write down
the decisions I have made over the last year has made
me a more confident songwriter. I think you'll hear
it in the music.