Thursday, July 30, 2015

Song List One: The Latter Day Beatles
When the touring stopped, The Beatles stopped being a mere rock and roll band and became a chamber orchestra. Bolstered by horn and string sections, and often employing multiple percussionists, the tracks became more densely packed. Add new instruments like the Mellotron and synthesizer, which allowed band in a box type capabilities, and throw in herbs, chemicals, and ideas regarding the use of the studio as a compositional tool, and the end result now seems to have been inevitable.

I recommend the use of headphones. The mix is 43 minutes long.

1. Hello Goodbye
2. Strawberry Fields Forever
3. I Me Mine
4. Rain
5. I Am the Walrus
6. Paperback Writer
7. I Want You (She's So Heavy)
8. Get Back
9. Savoy Truffle
10. Happiness Is a Warm Gun
11. The Fool On the Hill

12. Tomorrow Never Knows

Monday, July 20, 2015

Small Synth Boy in a One Synth Town
            Electronic music predates my birth, so its commercial and expressive applications sound totally natural to me, who, to a large extent, was groomed by numerous presentations to accept it. Though the early means of manufacturing electronic music, in facilities now referred to as the classic studio, grew from and was associated with radio, the greatest exposure came through commercial use in movies and television. In my case, the penny nail through the forehead was during the television premiere (1961) of The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951), when the sounds of twin Theremins (invented 1919-20 by Lev Termen) warbled otherworldly atmospherics throughout Bernard Herrmann’s brilliant score. Not so long afterwards I experienced the shockingly radical, all electronically generated soundtrack of the movie Forbidden Planet (1956), composed and executed by Louis and Bebe Barron in their New York City studio. I, like many Americans in the early sixties, was seduced by The Maxwell House “Percolator” Jingle (composed and executed by Eric Siday around 1960), and after that the sounds of the synthesizer, unusual and infinite as they seemed, found acceptance not only by me but also by players and listeners all over the world.
            I’m not sure when synthesized sound first entered my ears; in fact, I’m not even sure the first synthesized sounds I heard were actually made by synthesizers. Instruments like the Ondes-Martenot (invented by Maurice Martenot in 1928), The Ondioline (invented by Georges Jenny in 1940), and others certainly produced wide scales along with complex harmonics and timbres, and compositions constructed in classic studios often recorded sounds originally produced by components later used in synthesizers, so pinning an exact date is difficult. The first time I heard music described as performed on a synthesizer was Switched on Bach, by Walter (now Wendy) Carlos (recorded and released in 1968). However, a Moog was used on several tracks by The Doors on Strange Days, and I may have heard that prior to SOB. I know for sure that the first synthesizer line that really stuck in my skull was the end lead on ELP’s Lucky Man in the spring of 1971. I’ve been in love with synthesizers from that moment until now.
            Other than sensing that the synthesizer was a keyboard instrument (I believe I’d already heard of ELP and knew that Emerson was a keyboard player), I knew nothing about ELP, its music, or of the synthesizer. I bought a Crawdaddy magazine with ELP pictured on the cover, and after reading the article a couple of times, I learned a little about the synthesizer, and a bit about Emerson, Lake, & Palmer, the band’s first record, which I purchased via mail from the Record Club of America.
            The summer of 1971 (the Summer of Love in my little hometown) was a great musical time for me. The only other time to compare to it in terms of new musical possibilities was the official Summer of Love in 1967 when an entirely new kind of psychedelic consciousness unfolded as much on the Top 40 radio stations as at the acid tests and experiments in the Western world. By 1971 much of what had in 1967 been considered experimental became mainstreamed and in some cases even standardized in the music industry and society in general. The cutting edge of popular or youth music offered up a variety of styles later referred to as Progressive, or Prog-Rock. One of the hallmarks of this Progressive music was an attempted mixture of popular and classical elements (with varying success rates), including, because of advances in multi-tracking and other studio technologies, the conception of the rock combo as a chamber orchestra. These studio rock orchestras, comprised of many gifted musicians, composers, recording technicians, and producers, and utilizing new instruments like synthesizers and Mellotrons along with traditional rock combo formats often supplemented by more traditional orchestral instruments like members of the string, reed, brass, and percussion sections were able to achieve finished compositions that rival traditional orchestras in power and subtly. Advances in amplification and the new, portable instruments allowed groups to present studio accomplished works on stage. Following pioneering bands like The Beatles and The Mothers of Invention, acts like ELP, King Crimson, Yes, Pink Floyd, and the Moody Blues took advantage of new and evolving technologies in their compositional and presentational approaches. I delighted in the entire movement.
            To be honest, Emerson, Lake, & Palmer took some getting used to. The opening cut, The Barbarian, at first, and maybe a little yet, left me with the same kind of feeling as Switched on Bach had. I like the sounds of SOB, but was put off in the same way as when the bald headed guy exposed us to the fine music of Bach in eighth grade music class. I just didn’t want to hear Bach, especially on a synthesizer. I felt new instruments should play new music constructed for those new instruments, and ELP was nearly the only game around for synthesizer compositions. Still, though The Barbarian had lots of juicy organ and piano, it was too long haired for my taste. I was also peeved that I had to wade through an entire side and The Three Fates before getting to the happy synthesizer material of Tank and Lucky Man, which closed out the album.
            As the summer wore on I heard more music with synthesizers used primarily for color and atmosphere. My research into synthesizers consisted mostly of listening to albums and reading liner notes. I discovered that The Moody Blues used synthesizers after buying A Question of Balance (1970). One night I accidently heard Beaver and Krause on a college radio station, and heard the incredible work of longtime synthesizer jockey Don Preston on The Mothers’ Lonesome Electric Turkey (1971) from the same station. I also saw a demonstration and improvisation involving a Mini-Moog on the Saturday morning teen show Take a Giant Step in the early part of the 1971-72 school year.
            The infatuation I had for synthesizers and their sounds grew, in no small measure, from the fact that I played a little combo organ in a little high school band. The organ I used, an Italian manufactured instrument (the Italians were on the cutting edge of transistorized organs at that time) under the Gem company name, was a rather modest 49 key instrument of four voices, vibrato stop, and a stop that allowed for a double bass sound on the first octave, separated by reverse colored keys. Though the exact same organ, made by the same company, was distributed under other names, including Vox (a highly prized, iconic organ of the pop combo (used by Paul Revere and the Raiders)), many fellow musicians occasionally pointed out its deficiencies, mostly complaining about its cheesy tone. I guess therein is the rub. But there was nothing I could do about that. My Gem was purchased for $300 and financed for eighteen months. I know, financing something at that price could not happen now, but I grew up in a working class family, and $300 was about what my dad pulled down for two weeks work, so that was the only option.
            Strangely enough, that same $300, worth far less now than in the late 60’s, purchases keyboards of greater capability than any combo organ (or most organs and myriad keyboard instruments) of the past. I own a Yamaha DJX purchased around sixteen years ago for just under $300. Not only does the instrument’s palate contain a respectable representation of iconic organ types (and 61 keys), but also iconic pianos, and strings, winds, and many other orchestral families, and the ability to change the timbre of any voice while playing. The DJX contains an engine that offers highly alterable accompaniments (not unlike the old Magic Chord feature of Lowry organs), sixteen arpeggio settings, and other performance control features, and a six track on board recorder. A single musician armed only with a DJX can play an entire gig and make sounds ranging from an orchestra to a jazz group to a hip-hop artist from a single keyboard. Nothing from the 60’s can rival the DJX’s possibilities. And the DJX is more than a decade old. Even cheaper models with similar capabilities crop up all the time, and right now is a golden age of popular instrument performance and price.
            One of the first things I realized about synthesizers was the possibility of incredibly widened and deepened sonic capabilities. I’d been hacking away with a mere four voices for years and was ready for anything new and more expansive. To a certain extent, that had already happened in that the organ I used was not the Gem I owned, but a more powerful double keyboard Whitehall owned by my group’s bass player. Still, even the Whitehall paled in comparison to the synthesizers I’d heard, and I felt new sounds would be helpful, mainly because my resources as a keyboard player had topped-out and hit the wall long before. I had a few things to say, but not the skill to properly say them.
            Regardless of how ready I might have been to give the synthesizer a whirl, the main obstacle was again price. Keith Emerson’s monster synth cost a staggering $20,000.00, and though I had no illusions about owning one of those, what about something smaller, like Mini-Moog? No go there, pal; no way! A Mini-Moog, at $1,400, might as well have been Emerson’s as far as I was concerned. The minimum wage then was $1.60 an hour, so do the math. The dances I occasionally played on Friday nights after football or basketball games paid $10 to $15 per group member per night. Get a job? I lived in a small town. There were no real youth jobs there. Wait for adulthood? That was all I had left.
            Right near Christmas, my friend, also the singer in my little band, told me he’d bought Tarkus, the latest ELP album. He allowed, rightly, that the music therein was light years ahead of ELP’s first recording. When I asked to borrow the record, I was surprised that he allowed it. In fact, he brought the album to my house and handed it over personally (his girlfriend lived next door). I tabled it on my little GE Wildcat, expecting the world after my friend’s accolades, and was not only totally bowled over by the music, but knew I had to somehow get my hands on a synthesizer. Visions of conquering the known world danced like sugarplums inside my skull. When Tarkus was returned to my friend, the grooves must have been thinned beyond a normal play rotation, for I listened to little else before it went back.
            Following a Christmas dance, my little band became largely inactive for the whole of basketball season. Everything picked up again in the spring, though it was the last hurrah since most of the members graduated, and the band, like nearly all before it, dissolved. Two members of the group began playing with another band at college. I stumbled through my senior year concentrating on my girlfriend and playing basketball. There were not enough players to form another combo, so I sold my rig, and, except for listening, pretty much left keyboard playing behind. A couple of former band mates and I occasionally performed on acoustic guitars and banjo as accompaniment to songs I had written.
            One day in early spring, while skipping school with a carload of friends, we stopped, for some reason, at a music store. Most of the crew were high, but we went inside anyway. The place was known for selling and renting marching band instruments, though they also carried a limited assortment of guitars and other combo equipment. One of the guys and I went into a room where a Mini-Moog sat lonely and neglected. I literally developed a lump in my throat when I saw it, and stood gawking as if looking at a flying saucer or a visiting deity. The Moog wasn’t connected to power or amplification. I asked one of the salespeople if I could play it, but was rejected. I dreamed about the instrument for a long time.
            While booked to compete at a talent show, I was asked to sit-in with a group. The band members pretty much kicked out the guy who had practiced with them, and whose keyboard I was to play, so that I could share the spotlight. I still feel horrible for the poor kid. He was a very young fellow and I’m sure felt abused. Nonetheless, the one song we played brought back the desire to again become a keyboardist.
            The problem, just like the first time around, centered on how to purchase another rig. A friend of mine informed me that the guy I had sold my rig to was willing to let it go at a little less than he’d paid, so I got a pretty good deal (I don’t remember where the money came from) and repurchased the Gem. All was great except that the guy who had owned it was a bit of a jackoff (a Methodist minister now), and had lost a piece of the legs, the support carrying case, and had also, without any revelation, removed the fuse to put into his stereo amp. I took the keyboard directly to a gig, but was unable to play without the fuse. That’s showbiz.
            The first synthesizer I saw in the wild was owned by the keyboard player from a rival band. The band was setting up for a Skateland gig, so I went up to ask him about the synth. The instrument was an organ/synthesizer combo, a Cordovox, the CDX-0652, a double manual organ with an on-board altered version of the Moog Satellite which shared the upper keyboard with the organ (and could be played in unison or separately). I didn’t know such equipment existed. The entire concept seemed like a great idea, but something about it bothered me. Moogs were sacred, and this machine purported to be a Moog, except it seemed a little too canned. Instead of the programming power of a Minimoog, the CDX-0652 was all about presets, not unlike the organ itself. The Satellite has been compared to the Arp Pro Soloist, but the Pro Soloist was far more powerful and ballsy sounding, as the Satellite had a thinner sound without the expressive qualities of the Arp. That’s not to say I wouldn’t have killed for one, because I probably would have.
            I was finally able to purchase my first synthesizer a few months after the Skateland encounter. That meant, of course, that prices of synthesizers had finally fallen to a level that a guy like me could afford one. The instrument that caught my eye was a mini Korg 700, a pretty powerful little box for a mere $500. Ok, I really didn’t have $500 lying about, but my local bank agreed to finance the purchase for 24 months at $27 per month. Again, though I know terms like those, or even the idea that a bank would loan such a pitiful amount, are foreign now, they were more the rule than the exception to loans in 1974.
            The mini Korg was quite a sweet little instrument whose sturdy outer shell was constructed of wooden sides and an eighth inch thick meal that housed and protected the keyboard and inner electronics. Two holes, about ten inches apart and reinforced by metal bolts in the middle of the top, were included to accommodate a metal music stand, just like many combo organs. With the exception of the Moog Satellite, the 700 is the only synthesizer I remember as having controls situated under the keyboard. As awkward as that seemed, it worked out just fine in practice and execution.
            A friend of mine once remarked that my Korg was more like an organ than a synthesizer. He was right. Like the Moog Satellite, many of the sounds came from combinations of presets with modulation and other alterations available, but organs did, too, and were polyphonic, though only a few synthesizers had that capability. My lowly Korg, the Satellite, the MiniMoog, the Arp Axe, almost all synthesizer equipment developed prior to the 70’s produced monophonic signals. Polyphonic capabilities aside, organs could not produce the sounds possible from even a simple synthesizer, which allowed variation in basic waves, attack and release, modulation control, and even some repetitive possibilities. I always thought that the mini Korg 700 had a thicker and better sound than the Moog Satellite. In fact, I thought the Korg’s basic sound was comparable to the Arp Odyssey, though the Odyssey had duo note polyphony, and a sound creating arsenal more comparable to a MiniMoog than my box.
            Having a new instrument was good for my playing in that it enhanced the depth of my feeble skills. Using the great power of the synthesizer, the little five note modal passages I played often sounded totally different with each new patch and its manipulation. Sometimes the slightest alteration of a slider or the throwing of a switch on the fly while soloing, or even in accompaniment, could quickly alter the sound of a tank into that of a screaming bird. I was influenced by the many synthesizer jockeys who were playing screaming guitar like leads. And yet, as I acquired greater power, I became more interested in subtle synth fare.
            The apex of what I had wanted to do was realized in late 1974 when a friend and rival keyboard player loaned me his Fender Rhodes and Leslie cabinet while he was away at college. It was the rig I’d always dreamed of. Even though my organ was the same cheesy little 49 key Gem I’d always had, the Leslie cabinet made it sound like a Hammond. There were all kinds of things the Rhodes allowed, and I still had the synthesizer. The integration of the new equipment gave the band I played in a much thicker sound, and, at least in theory, was sort of a top of the line in a poor boy keyboard rig.
            That arrangement didn’t last long, and by the beginning of 1975 I was back to the cheesy Gem organ and the Korg. By spring of that year the band had crumbled and I had decided to move off to ETSU in Johnson City, Tennessee. Some friends and I started a band, but played a single impromptu gig at a frat house. I sold all my equipment by the spring of 1976 and went west for diversion and adventure.
*
            During the spring and into the fall of 1978 I played in a country band that always had a steady gig. I owned a Hammond Porta B organ and Leslie cabinet. The Porta B was a very fine instrument and I loved playing it, even though the moribund playlist of The Steamrollers didn’t exactly turn me on. But that didn’t matter because I made nearly enough to live on each month. Guys I knew in bands far better than mine were barely scrapping by on occasional decent paying one-nighters, or playing for a big local radio show at an incredible auditorium in Sweetwater for $30 per man per week. I was knocking down about $100 a week playing in a dive, so any criticism from my friends in other bands fell largely on deaf ears.
            My professional experience vanished after midnight of Halloween when some creep burned down the dive where The Steamrollers played. The drummer found his cowbell in good condition, but that was the only surviving instrument. I’d also lost my day job, so I was kind of up the creek without a single keyboard. I wasn’t sure financial recovery sufficient to purchase another rig was possible, and after the fire didn’t think there was even a reason to care. I had a spare Cordovox keyboard, but traded it in 1979 for a saxophone I never learned to play.
*
            By mid 1980 the yearning for new equipment overwhelmed me. I’d been listening to what for me were entirely new types of music and sound. The performers who made this music, from groups like Kraftwerk, The Residents, Devo, and Tuxedomoon, and like me, loved synthesizers, and used them in new and interesting ways, often quite outside the confines of the rock or pop combo format. Kraftwerk’s The Man-Machine, and The Residents’ Eskimo, Duck Stab/Buster & Glen, and The Third Reich ‘n Roll twisted my brain all the way around inside my skull. These bands, and others I would later discover, had an entirely different approach to the way they utilized synthesizers in that unlike Keith Emerson, Rick Wakeman, or Jan Hammer, who more or less used synthesizers as soloing instruments, not unlike the use of guitars or saxophones, in a more or less linear manner, seemed largely uninterested in that type of playing and more concerned with how the sounds coaxed from their instruments added to the ambience and mood of a piece. That’s not to say that the linear elements disappeared altogether, but that they were no more important than the sound created. For instance, The Residents’ Krafty Cheese took a very simple riff and built a wall of wild and fresh sound around it to create the song. On the album Eskimo, the band, with help from former Zappa and Leo Sayer synth master Don Preston, shows the full possibilities of that approach when the wall of sound became the snow, wind, hunting instruments, and cracking ice of the Arctic. In a way, these bands and others were the second generation of musicians playing psychedelic music, and I wanted in there.
            As always, the reality of expense weighed heavily on any possibility of a purchase. Synthesizers were a major investment, or so I thought, until I went on a day trip to Atlanta with some friends, one of whom was set to purchase a new bass guitar and amp. While he haggled with a salesman, I wandered into the keyboard section of the store. A couple of employees were messing around with a new fully polyphonic Arp. I had no idea such an animal existed, though I had heard of the PolyMoog. Wandering around the room, several instruments caught my eye. One was a new instrument called the MicroMoog, a nice looking monophonic synthesizer. The other was a Yamaha CS50, a 100 pound contraption offering a 61 key manual, full programmability, four note polyphony, and a row of helpful presets that could be altered via the programmable controls. It also had a handy set of controls to the left of the keyboard called a sub oscillator that allowed live alterations of modulation, waveforms, portamento, tuning, and the addition of white or pink noise. The real kicker was that both Moog and Yamaha could be purchased for a combined total of $1,600.00, or about the same price as a MiniMoog.
            I made my mind then and there to have those synthesizers for my own. Two factors played in my favor: I had a stable job, and one of my best friends and former bandmate worked for a finance company. Getting straight to work, I pulled all my strings and within a week had those two wonderful instruments squeaking and chirping in my living room. I thought I was in heaven.
            The learning curve was longer than I had expected, but I was eventually able to generate and create new sounds, some of which were converted into simple compositions. One afternoon I improvised about twelve minutes of partially realized songs and unconnected fragments onto a cassette tape. As much as anything I was merely trying to see how the CS50 sounded to me while not having to play. Let’s face it, the tape contained something of an explosion of energy and pent up experimentation, and was meant as nothing more than a study. One day while sitting around with a former guitarist and good friend, I got the courage to play the tape, all the time aware that he might just laugh and say what shit it was. I wasn’t encouraged by the look on his face, a little shocked and whiter than usual, as we listened, and when it was over he said nothing. “Well?”I said.
            “I don’t know what to say,” he said. “I’ve never heard anything like it.”
            “You mean it sucks?”
            “No, no, it’s incredible. I mean, I’ve never heard anything like it. It’s totally original. You ought to call Robert Fripp.”
            “Why?”
            “I think he’d see it for what it is. I think he’d appreciate what you do.”
            I’d like to say he was right, but of course he wasn’t. Still, it was a nice thing to say, and I was encouraged that I was, if not on the right track, on a track that might possibly find some appreciation, at least with friends.
            Over the next two years I played as much as possible, mostly at home. Playing at home wasn’t bad, really, because the house where I lived was so unusual. The house had been moved to my town from the Oak Ridge nuclear facility where it had housed some of the people associated with the enrichment of uranium during WWII. The place had a pre-fab look and feel, but had great acoustics, and because of its tiny size and layout, made it possible for musicians to play in separate rooms and still be able to communicate with each other on the fly. In a way it was kind of like a recording studio, and was used in the smallest way as such during several amateurish sessions involving two cassette recorders linked together to create a primitive sound on sound device.
            I practiced in a band with several friends and other guys I’d met, and mostly enjoyed the experience. One of the guys in the group had been a model for a feature in an arts paper another friend and I had concocted and directed. The guy was a member of the band and the only one among them who had enough creative spirit to improvise. Our practice area was a basement across the street from the First Baptist Church, and one Wednesday evening, during church service, and during a rehearsal lull, I began to build a hissing, shifting wall of sound from the CS50. Without additional prompting, the guy grabbed a mic and started making orgasmic sounds punctuated by “Oh, God,” at absolutely perfect moments. No matter what my synth produced, he matched it to the phrase, responding in kind to the shifts in the dynamics of the improvisation. After six or seven minutes, and worried about getting raided by police (since many of the town’s wealthy citizens and business owners worshiped there, I figured the church had the clout to bring the full weight of police harassment down upon us if it desired), I eventually ended the piece. Damned if it wasn’t great.
            On another occasion, the friend who had listened to my synth improve cassette showed up at my house and told me he’d help gather my equipment and sit in on a restaurant gig his band was playing that night. The band had already played a set when we arrived. Once I was up and running he was ready to launch into a song. I asked what he wanted me to do.
            “Start playing,” he said.
            “Playing what?” I said.
            “The song,” he answered. “It’s in A.”
            “What else?”
            Without an answer, the band launched in. Ok, so I’m in A. Now what? The song went through several chord changes. I looked at him. “Play,” he said. What the hell. I just started trying to play along. That wasn’t working, so I began to fiddle with the controls until I found something that sounded good in the song and sort of tried to feel my way along via the sounds and their manipulation. When the song was over, my friend told me to apply some strings. What else? No further instructions. We played. Over the next hour that’s how things went. I got quite a few compliments from some of the musicians and roadies.
            “My god, that’s the most incredible improvisation I’ve ever heard. How do you do it?” a roadie, brother of the bass player, said.
            You know, I had no answer for him then and I have none now. I don’t know if it was good or not. The guys in the band seemed positive, and I thought it sounded all right, but let there be no misconception, compared to a musician who can really play and improvise, I’m sure my playing was probably fifth rate, but I’ve also heard plenty of musicians who were good at playing set pieces and terrible at improvisation, so I guess it all comes out in the wash. I asked my friend why he put me in that situation and he said that was when I played my best.
            Two friends of mine who were brothers, and played bass and drums between them, and I started a trio and rehearsed some songs we’d written. We got diverted by playing briefly with a young woman and a guitar player for a couple of weeks, but the singer bailed and we piddled away the rest of the summer until the bass player returned to college. The friend who had invited me to sit in with his band was inspired by our arrangement and took the bass player’s place by doing the parts on a Crumar string synthesizer and switching to guitar for leads. Instead of the playing self penned tomes, we rearranged some songs he liked and tried to find a gig. We never did, but it was still great fun. Though I played in three other bands with the guitarist and drummer, two of them dissolved quickly, and I was tossed out of the other.
            My guitar and Crumar playing friend afforded me opportunity to work with him on three other occasions over the period of two years. I auditioned for a band in Cookville, TN, and was actually offered a job with them, but decided against it when I learned that I’d have to give up my house and move into a garage with three of the guys. I just couldn’t do it, and that decision proved wise since the band split before it ever played a gig. Strangely enough, the reason the band wanted me had more to do with my vocals than my synth prowess. While doing a Judas Priest song, we all discovered that the singer’s voice and mine blended perfectly together. It sounded good, but…
            About four or five months later, guitar guy and the drummer (the drumming brother from the three piece band of the summer before) and I attempted to put together a band to try some Gamma (Montrose) material that was heavy with fast guitar and supportive synthesizer parts. I thought the music was good and playing it was fun, and I thought the band was beginning to come around just four practices in, but the rhythm guitar player rolled by one day when I wasn’t home and collected his equipment, and my friend’s echoplex. Nothing is a given. Guitar guy invited me to join another band he had put together, and I did play a couple of engagements with them, but some of the band members hated my guts and insisted I be let go. I was.
            Other than a one-off New Year’s engagement at the Elk Club, I continued to jam with my friends at my house, sometimes during rounds of partying. One night in particular my drummer buddy had a little pocket metronome that we used to put together a sociological repetitive piece not wholly unlike Row, Row, Row Your Boat, with introduction of various instruments, including synth, guitar, bass, metronome, and wine jug percussion building into a sort of anticlimactic payoff at the end. We also put together a couple of other pieces that I believe the bass player recorded on cassette and owns to this day. He played them for me about two years ago. They sounded better than I had remembered. After I married, in mid 1982, I jammed a few times over the course of three years before ditching my equipment and going to graduate school between 1985 and 1987.
*
            After grad school I bummed around for a couple of years before securing a position at a Japanese/American high school near my old hometown. In 1992 I bought two E-Mu synthesizers that I planned to use to manufacture music to go with videos and slideshows. The rig reminded me of previous rig in that the two synths were to function as had the previous gear. Like all of the new digital synthesizers, my E-Mu’s had midi ins and outs to easily interface with computers for sequencing and other functions. Unlike my old rig, the E-Mu synthesizers were fully polyphonic and allowed multitimbra capabilities. It was quite a load for a mere $1,500.
            The driver of the new rig was the E-Mu Proteus Orchestral Plus. I chose that synthesizer because it had a 61 key keyboard and a complete library of instruments from the orchestra. The Concert Grand piano, and several of the string settings were the best I’ve heard. There were also plenty of electric combo samples of all types of instruments including drum kits, exotic world instrument sounds, and a section of General Midi patches that duplicated many of the orchestral and combo sounds, but lined up in the same way on every keyboard instrument on which General Midi appeared.
            To compliment the Plus, I chose the E-Mu Classic Keys module, which I drove from the Plus’ keyboard via a midi cable. The Classic Keys had been presented as an omnibus of synthesizers largely sampled from the great analog instruments of the previous generation, so merely by whirling the dial on the CK’s front one could call up Moogs, Arps, mellotrons, organs, and pianos. The CK had the best sounding assortment of Hammond B samples I’ve encountered in that they growled on the bottom and screamed on top. The Leslie simulation was good on slow and high (though not as convincing in the middle) and could be accessed via the mod wheel on the Plus.
            Now my figuring was that between the Plus and the CK all bases were covered, and in one way that was true. No matter how it was diced, my rig had plenty of firepower and all the patches I might want to use, but another reason I had decided on the E-Mu brand was that any of the sounds could be combined with others or altered to satisfaction through the controls. That was what I wanted as much as anything else, but once I began to use the rig I found it to be one of the most painstaking process I had encountered as a synth jockey. The digital controls constituted the slowest, least efficient system devised by humanity. Unlike the analog system where a single tiny twist of a single button might bring the wrath of god, on the E-Mu’s one had to traverse several menu layers to do anything. The system totally eliminated the possibility of accomplishing anything on the fly.
            Problems aside, those instruments served me as well as they could for eight years consisting mostly of farting around, alone, or with friends, in a spare room. Perhaps fortunately, an overflow from a pipe above my school apartment damaged the Plus. The school’s insurance covered the price of a replacement instrument, and I was able to purchase two keyboards, a Yamaha CS2X and a Yamaha DJX from the money. For a couple of years I still owned the Classic Keys, but I eventually dumped it, along with a batch of video equipment, during the late spring of 2002. I also dumped the DJX at around that same time and was down to a single Yamaha synthesizer I never played.
*
            The habit of playing, even just goofing off at the keyboard, slacked to nearly nothing. After a jam at the home of a friend in 2005, I left my rig, PA system, mics, and synthesizer, in his basement for years, playing infrequently with him for tiny amounts of time, almost as though fully retired. I was attempting to write a novel during a large chunk of that time, so I really didn’t even think about playing music.
            Everything changed with a Christmas present from a friend in 2009. He gave me a book, which I had seen a few years before, entitled, Vintage Synthesizers. I was in synth hog heaven. I skipped around and read and reread articles until I had consumed most of the book several times over. O, what memories that tome evoked. Unsurprisingly, I hankered to play and experiment with synthesizers again. I got my CS2X from my friend’s place, and was even able to procure the old DJX I’d sold to the same friend who had given me the Christmas book. After setting up in a spare room, it wasn’t long before I was making some real progress. I wrote a couple of songs for my step daughter, and composed a fragment of religious music which was never completed, but felt I was moving forward.
            As good as I felt about things, I realized that something was missing. I needed a new piece of equipment to round out my playing, and perhaps spark some new ideas or point to a different direction. After months of research, and budgetary evaluations, I purchased a Roland GAIA SH-01. I have enjoyed that synthesizer as much as any other, and consider my current rig, despite two thirds of it being more than a decade old, to be the best, most versatile I’ve owned. The GAIA allows for a similar kind of sound sculpting as an analog instrument, including total flexibility on the fly, and because of its three independently programmable oscillators, is capable of churning up some huge sounds, exactly what I need for what I’m interested in doing now, which is setting a working bed of accompaniment via the DJX and its band-in-a-box capabilities, adding arpeggios from the CS2X, and wailing away or creating atmosphere with the GAIA. I’ve written a goodly number of songs, and have at least as many more in various states of composition, and have recorded some of those, as well as several experimental (experimental, in my case, generally means terrible or rudderless) jams. I don’t know what it means or how things will turn out, but I’m having fun, and that’s really about all I can ask.