Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Great Song, Mediocre Lyrics

Jamie Cullum

I was working out a song for a guitar student by a British artist named Jamie Cullum called "All At Sea", when I discovered a gem. I liked "All At Sea", but it's written for piano so translating it to guitar is a bit of a challenge, and some chords just do not translate well. I decided to explore Cullum's repertoire and I came across one that I just loved called "I'm All Over It".

I enthusiastically worked it out just for my own pleasure...not an easy song to play by any means. Cullum is considered somewhat of a jazz-pop artist, and his jazz influences certainly come out in his writing. His first releases were mostly jazz standard covers but he began throwing in the occasional self-penned song by his second and third albums. By his fourth album "Catching Tales", the majority of the songs were original. The song "I'm All Over It" was co-written with Ricky Ross and appears on his fifth album "The Pursuit".

Sunday, October 23, 2011

What Is It About Pumped Up Kicks?

I can always tell when a song has caught the imagination of a lot of people because I start to hear about it from my guitar students.  It doesn't even have to be a guitar song per se, but as soon as my students begin referring to it, especially if the students are of different ages, it piques my interest.

Such was the case with Pumped Up Kicks by Foster The People.  It's a very simple song, musically, with a little bass/guitar riff repeating through most of the song and the same four-chord progression.  

For simplicity's sake, I have the guitar capo-ed on the 1st fret so my beginner students can play it using Em, D, G and A, one measure per chord.  The bass riff extends over that four-chord progression as well, but you can also play it on guitar, as some of my more advanced students like to do.

Monday, August 15, 2011

Diary of a Music Producer

Okay, that sounds somewhat pretentious.  I am not a big time music producer by any means.  But the last few months I have been deeply entrenched in my studio for hours at a time working on a new theme for a local television news show.  It is not the first time I have done this;  my music ran on that show for three years in the early 2000's and was then replaced by a corporate decision to brand a number of television stations across the country with the same music, produced somewhere back east.

This time, I was given a musical piece to emulate...not "copy", but essentially create a similar feel and tension to.  At first what I came up with was too much the same and I knew that, but it eventually morphed into something much more original.  The most difficult part was creating the drum track.