Photo Shoot at Little Hay Golf Course

July 9, 2009 by dearacetate
Rob, Sonny, Jack, Stee and Shane check out some of the shots taken

Rob, Sonny, Jack, Stee and Shane check out some of the shots taken

Hey Friends

We had a photo shoot this week at a golf course of all places, though we were in the woods just behind the golf course. The shoot was a lot of fun and we ended up getting some really cool shots.

Rob and Sonny in the woods

Rob and Sonny in the woods

The photos were taken by our mate Jack Watts who use to be in a band with our bassist Sonny. We will be posting the photos once we have selected which ones we like and jack has edited them. In the meantime I have uploaded a few photos of us goofing around between having our pictures taken.

Take care

Marc

Designing the album artwork (let us know what you think)

June 28, 2009 by dearacetate
Marc's first draft design of the 'Lost Days And Nights' album cover.

Marc's first draft design of the 'Lost Days And Nights' album cover.

Hello all

The pic above is a rough draft for the ‘Lost Days And Nights’ album cover, we’re still sifting through the artwork  ideas and should hopefully make a final decision in a couple of weeks.

Originally the artwork was going to be handled by a local photographer/cartoonist called Alistair Murphy and our meetings with him were very fruitful with many ideas brainstormed, unfortunately other commitments got in the way and Alistair had to back down which was disappointing but we all understood he’s predicament.

With Alistair leaving  the project I (Marc) decided to take a crack at the artwork. I wanted to create an interesting theme where the design could look edgy yet simple. I had recently seen a film called a ‘Scanner Darkly’ http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0405296/ and loved the dark gritty comic book effect and felt some of our songs especially Coked Up Russians, Tied To Shadows and Apperception really identified with themes explored in the film. I decided to take pictures of the band and edit them to create a similar effect to the film. For the name of the band and the album title I decided to keep with the comic book theme and used speech boxes that should hopefully capture peoples eyes.

All comments and thoughts are very welcome

Have a good week

Marc (D.A)

Marc's first draft design of the 'Lost Days And Nights' album back cover .

Marc's first draft design of the 'Lost Days And Nights' album back cover .

Watford live gig/Album progress

June 16, 2009 by dearacetate
DA Playing Watford Live 13th June 2009

DA Playing Watford Live 13th June 2009

As you’re probably aware by now, we have spent the best part of a year recording our debut album.   Because of the recording we’ve had to put gigs on hold to put the time into the album to make it as good as possible.

During the past twelve months we’ve been restricted to just a handful of unplugged gigs, and haven’t played live since recruiting Rob at the start of the year.  On Saturday we finally got back to doing what we love doing best, which is playing live. The gig was an acoustic set for the Watford Live! Festival, which is a series of events across Watford during June.  This is a great showcase of the best talent in music and the arts from the region, and we were very pleased to be asked to play. Interspersed between album preparations, we spent several weeks rehearsing and getting all the songs tight, and took the opportunity to play a few new songs in the set that we had been itching to play for a long time.

The sun was shining on the day and the crowd were enjoying both the music and the brilliant weather from the surrounds of the square.  Pete, who was doing a fine job of compering the St. Mary’s stage, was slightly surprised and impressed that Stee had driven down from the Download festival especially to play the show, and announced to the crowd the commitment to playing live. Having not played live for several months, it took us a few songs to get into our stride but once we rolled out crowd favourites Old Street and Alarm, there were a few who couldn’t help but move to the beat. We were also really happy with the crowds positive reaction to a new song called ‘On’, and hope those of you who haven’t heard it get to once we announce some live dates.

We’re happy to report that the album is 95% complete and that Shane is finishing off the last few mixes and then it’s off to the mastering engineer to make it sound even better. We hope to have the album available as a download via our website which is currently being developed and should be up in the next few months. The physical release of the album will be announced in the coming weeks so make sure you keep an eye on this blog and our myspace site: www.myspace.com/dearacetate

Thanks to those of you that came to the gig, have a great week.

Marc

Diary of an Album (Part 9)- The final pieces of the jigsaw

April 21, 2009 by dearacetate

Hey all

DA hard at work recording keyboard parts

DA hard at work recording keyboard parts

It’s been a while since I last posted, so to stop Stee hogging the blog I’m gonna update you all on what the bands been up to. I’ll try and keep it short and sweet :)

Well I guess I better start by saying we have Acquired a new band member in the form of Rob Northcott, he’s our new keys man and has really bought some fresh exciting ideas to the songs.

Shane and Rob try and get some interesting sounds using Stee's Roland jp-8000

Shane and Rob try and get some interesting sounds using Stee's Roland jp-8000

So the album……

It seems like we’ve been working on our debut forever but in truth it’s probably the best part of a year and a half as the recording sessions have been scattered throughout the months. We have everything recorded down and are happy with all of the recorded takes of each instrument. We’re at the mixing stage now which entails Shane working his ass off to do justice to the recordings and retain the energy and raw sound of our live shows on the record. This week Shane has been tidying up each songs session by cutting out unwanted audio, colour coding recorded instruments, setting volume levels on the mixing desk and labeling channels so everything in the session is easier to work with.

As those of you who follow our twitter will have noticed Shane has been mixing one track each day, this takes him an average of 8 hours a day and even then the mixes won’t be finished as he will revisit them just before we get to the mastering stage.

We are getting our album mastered by a top mastering engineer who has worked with the Who and Led Zeppelin! So we’re all really excited about hearing the final results. There will be more detail on the mixing and mastering of our debut album in the next blog.

Cheers for reading

Marc

Diary of an album (part 8) – February update

March 1, 2009 by dearacetate

It’s been a few weeks since the last update, and things are progressing nicely.  We’ve had a couple more weekends in the studio, jam sessions round mine mostly working on keys ideas, plus Shane’s been busy working on the production side of things.  The first weekend we’d decided to tackle Out of Spite, and the vocals for Dark Ideas and Tied to Shadows.

Out of Spite was the only album track that we hadn’t already made a start on, as we were recording just vocals and guitar for it; rather than as a full band recording with drums etc. like for the other album tracks.  I headed down to the studio Friday evening, joining Marc and Shane who were already down there.  We’d discussed how we were going to approach the performance, opting for a more laid back approach, free-time paced by the flow of the vocal, rather than to an instrumental rhythmic pulse or click.  It consequently meant that we had to get a simultaneous take of both the guitar and vocal in one go.

As well as the Neumann U87 mic that we’d been using in previous vocal recordings, we had a couple of Gefell mics, plus a Brauner Phantera, which I was interested in trying out with a view to perhaps adding to my home studio set-up at a later date.  Unfortunately one of the Gefell mics had a technical fault, and the other Gefell positioned off-axis wasn’t really picking up much of a signal, and at the very low sound volumes I was singing at, had too much self-noise in its signal chain to be useable.  When we’d played the song live at a few acoustic shows it was a more powerful vocal sound, partly through necessity, as the vocal could easily be lost behind the volume of the guitar in such an environment.  In the studio we were able to take a different approach, almost whispering the vocal to the point of break-up, which gave a very different, up front personal sound.  For guitar Marc started off with his acoustic guitar DI’d like we would live, however it wasn’t really the sound we were after, and decided to use the 335 once again.  We put several takes down, happy with the general vibe of what we’d recorded, leaving it for another day for Shane to pick out the best takes.

Saturday we’d opted for another evening session, giving me chance to watch Blackpool away at Crystal Palace that afternoon.  I met up with friends in a pub before the game, sticking to soft drinks, and vowing not to shout, chant and cheer during the match.  Dark Ideas was probably the most melancholic track we had to record, and two minutes in to the game, and Blackpool already down to ten men I was starting to wish I’d gone straight to the studio, the slight upside being I’d be in the right frame of mind to sing like I was feeling miserable.  The dark clouds weren’t to last though.  Against the odds, the ‘pool battled their way to a one nil victory, playing some great football at times.  I managed only one slight lapse in not shouting, but that was the ref’s fault, failing to award an early pen much to the disdain of the travelling tangerine faithful.  I made do instead with some vociferous clapping and miming that would’ve done Mr. Chaplin proud.

I left the ground feeling jubilant, managed to catch the next direct train back to Watford, and stuck Radiohead on my iPod in the vain hope that it’d wipe the beaming grin off my face, and get me in the right frame of mind for sticking the vocals down.  I didn’t succeed in making myself feel suitably miserable, but it turned out not to be a problem.  We got the main vocal takes down that we needed, returning in the morning to add the last of the chorus harmony parts.

Sunday we had planned to record the vocals for Tied To Shadows.  We spent quite a bit of time trying out different techniques to get the sound and vibe that we were after, such as getting close up on the mic for certain sections, and singing the track with different levels of aggression and despondency; this was after all a song about being tied to an addiction.  We got some reasonable takes down, but we weren’t entirely happy with the vocals in the chorus.  I was starting to get a little tired vocally, and as happens after singing for a while, was losing some of the richness to my vocal tone.  Although what we had was ok, we decided that we could probably get a better take another day, so left it there for vocals, having had a pretty productive weekend.

On the Monday the following week Shane and I were back in the studio to put vocals down for Coked Up.  We had a listen through, and were pretty happy with the guide vocal from a previous session, that was already down.  We put down a few more takes, paying particular attention to the chorus section, which we thought may benefit from the layering of vocals takes, ready for the rest of the band to put down their backing vocals for that section at a later date.  We also rang Marc from the studio to discuss ideas to rework his vocal in the breakdown section, which I’m looking forward to hearing.

That completed my band involvement for the week, with no Wednesday jam session as I was away in Seville to watch Spain v England.  It was nice to escape the weather back home, swapping the snow and ice which was just about resisting melting away, for a few rays of sunshine, a game of football, and the chance to relax for a few days away from it all. I returned on the Sunday, a marginally rosier shade of place, with some new song ideas scribbled down, and some pictures of chalices and clocks on the camera that I thought might possibly be of interest for future artwork ideas.

The following week we were back to our usual Wednesday jam session, which we used to go through some more ideas for keyboard parts for the album tracks, sorting through Tamma Connection and Alarm.  Friday night we were back in the studio, to revisit the vocals for Tied To Shadows, which we recorded down without too many problems.

Saturday morning we were back in the studio to look at the vocals for When The Karma Falls.  We put down a few takes then decided to try out some
production ideas, adding effects on the verse and bridge vocals.  We re-recorded those sections again to get a performance that made the most of the accentuation of the breathiness.  Having experimented singing the chorus with different amounts of attack, and mindful that we wanted to add some additional harmony parts to it, we decided to move on to recording keyboards, and come back to that section on another day; hopefully with the added benefit of getting a richer vocal sound from the start of a new session.

Marc and Rob had arrived down the studio after lunch, and Rob was ready to put down the first of his keyboard parts for the album.  First up was The Chalice.  Rob spent a little time playing along to the track, tweaking the synth sounds out of the JD8000.  With the sound sorted he put down a few takes, with him and Shane taking turns controlling the speed of the arpegiator.  Leaving that one to edit another day, we moved on to Alarm, for which we already had some keys ideas down in the chorus.  Rob had however come up with some really cool spacey sounds for the track when we’d jammed it round at mine during the week; adding what I could best describe as the final layer of icing to the track.  That was soon sorted, and the recording completed for yet another album track, with just the mixing and finals production steps to be done.

There was one remaining recording task to complete that day, which was to re-amp and effect the last note of the chorus in Dark Ideas.  It also proved an opportune time to discuss renaming tracks.  Dark Ideas had been a working title, which we’d never got round to changing, after a fair amount of brain-storming between us we came up with a new title of Apperception, which I think nicely suits the meaning of the song.  We also had a bit of a think about renaming Out Of Spite, but didn’t stumble upon the right title straight away.  Shane had been busy during the week mixing Apperception (Dark Ideas), and we had one effect left to add, which involved feeding the held note at the end of the last chorus in to the memory man pedal and Fender reverb, which wouldn’t have sounded out of place as a special-fx sound in Doctor Who.  We listened back and all agreed that adding an extra layer of sound to the end of the track worked.  Leaving another finished track for Shane to finish mixing.

Wednesday saw another session round mine with Marc and Rob, with Shane joining us a little later having finished work down the studio.  We’d tried several ideas for adding keyboard parts for Perfect Soldier and No Easy Target, but were coming to the conclusion that they probably didn’t need keyboard parts, and that Rob would probably be better off playing one of Marc’s recorded guitar parts when we play it out live.  The other track we looked at was Tied To Shadows, where Rob already had some cool progressions, but we were trying to get an idea of what sort of sounds would best fit with the track, ready for recording it down in the studio at a later date.

On Thursday Marc, Sonny and I headed down to the Function Rooms in Hemel Hempstead for the regular Juicebox night, this time in association with BBC Introducing.  It was a good line-up with bands from across the 3 counties area, and also chance to catch up on a few band bits with Sonny too.  It was a fairly late finish, the last band The Raid, having a number of issues which dragged their set out a bit.  Having dropped Marc back, I had a song idea wriggling around in my head (BPYBBO) as I was driving home. I noted down the idea when I got back, switched the lights out and went to bed.  My brain had other ideas though, thinking up new permutations of the ideas for the song, forcing me to scribble them down before finally getting some sleep.

We’d discussed the idea the night before of having a bit of a jam Friday evening.  Marc came over and we worked through some ideas for new songs, some that we’d already worked on previously, a new idea of Marc’s, plus a brief look at BPYBBO, for which I had rough lyrics and melody ideas for, plus a beat in my head.  The time went quickly and it was soon gone midnight.  Saturday evening Marc was over again, this time armed with a drum machine.  We began the session programming in some rough drum patterns for Apparition and NWBGLDTU, a couple of new tracks we’d jammed through as a band, and are likely to be amongst the first of a growing list of new songs to come in to our live set.  With that done we moved on to BPYBBO, starting with programming the drum machine with the rhythmic pattern I had in my head.  I sang my melody to Marc, and having established the key, worked out chord progressions for the bridge and verse sections of the song.  We jammed out a rough structure for the track, and were pretty pleased with the way it was turning out, with what we thought was a nice hook in the bridge.  We still had the chorus section to determine, and Marc came up with a couple of different ideas which worked with the verses, for which I still needed to work out vocals for.  It was again well gone midnight, and we called it a day.  I woke up in the morning and finished off the lyrics for the verses, and continued sketching out lyrical ideas for the chorus.  Meanwhile Marc recorded down an instrumental demo of what we had so far, and I was able to work out a chorus melody and begin piecing the lyrics together.  All in all a productive songwriting weekend.

We’ve made quite a bit of progress with the album during February.  Tomorrow evening is our first recording session of March, which sees me back in the studio to do the vocals for When The Karma Falls.  With that done that just leaves us to have a look at the vocals for Tamma Connection (yes we’ve renamed that one slightly too), which would then only leave us with backing vocals and keyboard parts to record, plus any additional production tasks before working towards the final mixes.  It’s been a long journey to get this far, there’s still quite a bit of production work left to do, but it’s getting pretty close now. :)   So there endeth another long blog.  I really should get round to them more often, but things have been so incredibly busy the last month it’s been tricky making time.

Stee J

Diary of an album (Part 7) we’re getting there, Electronic Rehearsals

January 26, 2009 by dearacetate

Hey all

Just a quick update

Having got down the lead vocals for No Easy Target the week before, Stee and Shane returned to the studio last Friday to record the vocals for our re-recorded super charged version of Old Street.  They started out the night using the Neumann U87 and Shure SM7 microphones together with Shane’s recently aquired Neve 4081 pre-amp.  Although that same set-up had worked well for the No Easy Target vocals, they couldn’t quite get the right vocal sound to suit Old Street.  Having spent most of the evening auditioning a number of combinations of different microphones and pre-amps, they found that the sound of Stee’s newly acquired Neve Portico pre-amp, with the U87 fitted best in the mix.  With time ticking on, they decided it would be better to come back  another day with with fresh ears and a rested voice.

On Saturday Marc, Sonny and Rob headed to Stee’s place to work on the new tunes we’ve been brewing up recently. As Shane was taking a breather from spending way too much of his time in the studio we decided to use my Korg ER1 drum machine to jam out some rhythms and we’re pretty pleased with the results, so much so that we are definitely thinking about heading out and doing a few gigs with our electronic set-up (more of that later). We have just started jamming with a keyboard player called Rob and some of the ideas he has bought to the table have blown me away, he’s also pretty useful on the guitar so a versatile guy to have in the band. Rob played my Novation synth and Stee’s newly acquired Roland JP8000 synth and the sounds he made with them were mind blowingly brilliant. Sonny has bought lots of new effects pedals and is making some really interesting bass lines that are unlike anything I’ve heard recently in popular music. Anyway if you want to hear these new creations keep a look out for upcoming gigs on our myspace page myspace.com/dearacetate stee-rock-sign

sonny-novation-keyboard

Sunday morning Stee, Shane, Sonny and myself returned to the studio to nail the lead vocals for Old Street, I think it was good to have the 4 of us in the studio as we could all listen to the different takes and put forward our thoughts which is better than the recent method whereby Shane would call us on the phone and play the track down the phone which is not ideal due to sound quality. After getting a great take and agreeing we had the lead vocal down Sonny and myself headed home and to the pub respectively. Later that evening Shane sent out a new mix of Old Street and I was quite surprised as Stee and Shane  had recorded a plethora of backing vocals which makes Stee sound like a small choir in the chorus. I am now confident re-recording this track due to the hard-drive failure is the best thing that could have happened, yes the album has been delayed but it will definitely be worth it for that shift in quality and how much better the playing is which far usurps the original version we recorded 2 or so years ago.

shane-sonny-old-street-vox-session

stee-vox-old-street

Have a great week and let us know what you think of the blog

Marc

Diary of an album (Part 6) – Don’t be Alarmed

December 11, 2008 by dearacetate

Recording the Fender
It’s been a while since our last recording update, so about time we updated you on the album, and other things going on in the DA camp…

We’d decided on 12 tracks for the album, and 11 of those tracks are now recorded instrumentally.  In no particular order they are:
The Chalice
Had I Known (what you know)
Tied to Shadows
Dark Ideas
Tama Connection
When the Karma Falls
Coked Up
Perfect Soldier
Alarm
No Easy Target
Old Street

The last track remaining to be recorded is Out of Spite, which is an acoustic number which we’re approaching recording in a slightly different way, hence why it has been left for a separate session.

Of the 11 tracks we have rough mixes of the completed recordings for The Chalice, Had I Known, Perfect Solider and Alarm.  The remainder are waiting for us to finish off vocals, or finishing touches such as the adding of keyboard parts, which we’re writing in the studio.

You may remember in the previous blog we mentioned a “failure of an old backup drive”, well those sessions couldn’t be recovered, so we ended up having to re-record what we had for Old Street, No Easy Target and Alarm.  It’s not all doom and gloom though, as I think we’re even happier with these versions.  Having to get things set-up again for scratch, we took the time to experiment a little more with the sound we wanted specific for each of these songs.  This is probably most apparent for the way we recorded the drums for Alarm, where we tried different mic placement and recorded the tunnel that we’d created for the bass drum.

We recorded the vocals and keyboard parts for Alarm this week, which Shane is going to spend some time mixing over the next week or so.  We’re going to finish off the year rehearsing through some of the new material that we’ve been busy working on this year.  If you made it down to the acoustic gigs that we’ve played recently, then you may have heard Worlds Collide already, well that’s just the tip of the iceberg.  We’ve got what we think are a strong set of new songs eagerly waiting to enter the fray.  We’re really pretty excited about them, and secretly (or maybe not so secretly now) we’re thinking that the follow-up album is some way to being written already.

The album is coming together, and we’re pretty happy with the way it’s sounding already, and we’re yet to get to the final mixes, and mastered versions.  It’s taken us a bit longer than we thought it may have, “Rome wasn’t built in a day” and all that.  There have been a few things along the way that we hadn’t anticipated such as the hard drive problem, and nasty cold type things getting in the way of putting vocals down. Such things have dragged things out a bit, but the end is definitely in sight.

We should be back in the studio again early January to get more vocals down, and tracks mixed. Hope you’ve all had a great year, and look forward to seeing you at the album launch in the spring.

Cheers,
Stee J

re: Lost Days and Nights – choosing the album title

December 11, 2008 by dearacetate

Since we last updated you we’ve worked our way through our short-list of titles for the album.  We’ve also met up with Alistair regarding the album artwork.  We wanted the artwork and title to work together, and also to reflect the vibe of the album.

We had an initial brainstorming session and came up with several title ideas.  None of the song titles seemed to work as an album title, and the lyrics we’d pulled out, and other ideas didn’t seem to quite suit the set of songs either.

A week or two later Marc had gone through the lyrics again and asked me what I thought of “Lost Days and Nights” as a title, which is taken from a line in the first verse of Old Street. He’d already mentioned it to Sonny who was apparently pretty keen on it, and my first impression was that I really liked it too.  I told Marc I was keen, but that I wanted to sit with the idea for a couple of weeks.

Shane had also suggested incorporating another idea in to the title, in a similar way to what we’d done on a Dear Acetate postcard in the early days of the band, playing on the band name ‘Dear Acetate’ as the opening salutation of a letter, and the title being an extension of that.  From that we derived the idea of using “re:” as a prefix to the title.  We thought that it worked when interpreted as being a prefix on the ’subject’ of an email or as the reference at the start of a letter.

Putting the two ideas together we had “re: Lost Days and Nights”.

We think it sums up the theme or themes of the songs on the album pretty well.

For the artwork Shane had the idea of showing the letter or email being written on a computer, or at least something to represent that, and from that came the idea of using a retro computer on the front cover.  Another idea I’d been keen on was using the image of the broken workings of a clock, suggesting that the time (days and nights) had been lost.  We’d also played around with the idea of somehow representing the logo in an interesting way.  We should be meeting up with Alistair again soon to go through the ideas we had, the ideas he’s subsequently worked with, and work out what artwork we’ll be using where.

Cheers,

Stee J

Diary of an album (Part 5)

August 28, 2008 by dearacetate

Sat 16th August- we ventured back in to the studio for another weekend recording our debut album. After a late night the evening before playing the acoustic gig in Hemel, we opted for a late morning start. The plan for the day was to re-amp the bass parts that Sonny had recorded from the last sessions. Shane was first down, setting up the bass amp, and assisted in putting the mics in to position by Stee.

A couple of hours were spent positioning several microphones around the bass cab, with the intention of auditioning and using different mics for variations in bass sound for each song, and even sections within songs. Having experimented with positioning we achieved a variety of sounds that we were then able to try out within the context of the songs.

Marc arrived at the studio early afternoon, having been busy working on band promotion earlier in the day. Shane and Stee were busy re-amping the bass guitar for ‘Perfect Soldier’ and after some tinkering with compression and eq, we achieved a great bass sound with the desired punky feel. We then moved on to ‘The Chalice’ which we thought would suit a driving 70’s bass sound. The sound we settled on reminded Marc of ‘Ace of Spades’ by Motorhead. For ‘Tied to Shadows’ we decided to go for a mellower bass sound that worked with the softer sections of the song, and a more beefy, slightly distorted sound for the heavier sections. The plan had been for Sonny to make a start on recording the remaining bass lines, but unfortunately he wasn’t too well, so we postponed that until Sunday; Shane finishing off the session by doing a bit of editing of the takes before we called it a night.

Sun 17th August- Shane arrived in the studio mid-morning to finish up the previous days’ editing; ensuring the tracks were all ready to work on by the time Marc and Stee arrived at the studio. Fortunately they came armed with sufficient sustenance to get them through what was to be a monster session. Sonny although still suffering a little, put his bass takes down ready for re-amping.

With bass parts put down for Tama Connection, Coked Up Russians, When the Karma falls and Tied to Shadows, Sonny headed home for some much needed rest. Whilst Shane sorted through and edited the recorded bass tracks, Marc and Stee headed off for an hour in search of a backup hard drive from the nearby shops.  A failure of an old backup drive meant that some earlier sessions needed to be restored, and with us about to revisit those tracks, we needed a backup drive to send off with the broken hard drive.  Fingers crossed we can get the sessions back, or else it’ll mean re-recording what we had for Old Street, No Easy Target and Alarm.

The next task was to re-record the guitar verses for Coked Up Russians.  Marc decided to use Stee’s Brian Moore i8.13, instead of the vintage Fender telecaster he’d been using for the majority of the album, to get a metallic, modern aggressive sound. Stee had to turn guitar tech and open up the back panel before we could start recording the guitar parts, as the battery in the Brian Moore was dead, and then again to re-string after Marc broke a string. After Marc stretched the strings out and tuned up, he got a couple of good takes, before switching to the piezo pickup to achieve a slightly fatter sound that would give Shane more options sound and tone wise when mixing the track.

With the guitar parts for Coked Up Russians finished in just over an hour, we took a short break for dinner and had a quick chat about the vocal ideas. Shane discussed the microphones we would be using to record vocal takes and the reason for their suitability when recording different types of voices.

Shane wanted to try backing vocals on The Chalice, which began with doubling up the falsetto vocal in the chorus of the song. This process involved us listening back carefully to the two vocal takes together to ensure that the vocals were the same length, had the same phrasing, and complemented each other in terms of dynamics and volume. Shane thought that the bridge vocal may want thickening up too, to match the intensity of the music, but having listened to it double tracked, Stee thought he may try a backing harmony instead.  The harmony part seemed to work well, and when listening back Stee came up with a second harmony to sing over the top of the one that he had just recorded. The harmony vocal takes sounded great, but Stee was in a particularly creative frame of mind and despite the late hour, a further vocal idea began to formulate in his head which he immediately put down. When we listened to the vocals all mixed together but without the music, it sounded very much like a barber-shop quartet.  Although the new parts took a little getting used to, after a few listens we all agreed that it could definitely work if lowered in the final mix of the song.

We were starting to feel pretty tired, but that didn’t stop Shane from rallying the troops to carry on into the early hours. We decided to record Marc’s backing vocal for Had I Known What You Know. After about four takes, Marc was starting to feel quite fatigued, and left further takes for another day when he had the energy to deliver the vocal.  Stee with a sudden second-wind decided to ad-lib the breakdown section, resulting in him belting out the last ‘Go’, which from out of nowhere he held for over 20 seconds!  Something he couldn’t normally do live as he’d be too busy throwing himself and mic stand around the stage.  With the time approaching 2.30am we decided to call it a night after what had been a pretty productive weekends recording.

Our 1st acoustic gig

August 19, 2008 by dearacetate

Last Friday we played our first ever acoustic gig which took place at Boxmoor cricket club in Hemel Hempstead. It was a great evening with a very laid back atmosphere with people singing and clapping along to our songs. We had planned to play the gig as a 3 piece with me on electro-acoustic guitar, Sonny on acoustic guitar and Stee on vocals, however our drummer Shane was in the audience watching and by the time we were on stage for the first song he had got on stage with a bongo drum in his hands ready to play.

This was very amusing to myself and Stee as Shane had previously said he would never play an acoustic gig! After we finished our 8 song set which included a few new songs the crowd wanted more so we had to work out which songs we could play acoustically that we hadn’t already played. After much deliberation we ended up playing ‘No Easy Target’ and a punk/folk version of ‘The Chalice’ which we thoroughly enjoyed playing. We will be uploading a few videos from this gig so keep checking back regularly for updates.

Marc