Posts tagged ‘Minneapolis’

Vol. Five: Midnight Train

June 2nd, 2009

Written: 06.01.09 / Nashville, TN
First Recorded: 06.01.09/ Nashville, TN / Fatherland St.
Appears on: Previously Unreleased

The Irving Sessions // Vol. Five: Midnight Train
06.01.09 / Nashville, TN

Video:

Audio:

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And, we’re back!  Sorry for the three month delay since my last post.  In many ways it feels like it’s been a year, maybe two, and yet it also feels like I was recording just a few weeks ago.  A lot has changed since the end of February.  Most notably, I resigned from Target at the beginning of April to take an amazing opportunity with Love Everybody back in Music City, USA.  It’s great to be back in Nashville, back in my condo, and back in music.  I can’t really explain the difference in my overall well-being when I’m surrounded by creativity, entrepreneurship, and most importantly, music/film/media.  There are certain aspects to Minneapolis that I will definitely miss — living with fantastic roommates, a great group of friends, constant contact with motivated & career-driven individuals, the warehouse district, BarbetteMetro Transit, traversing via foot, and Lake of the Isles, to name a few — and Target was a great company to work for.  Nashville, however, feels like home.  I couldn’t be happier about this chapter.  It feels right and I feel a new sense of purpose and motivation.

After only four volumes (I love how the word “volume” makes it sound like I have amassed a much larger collection than I could actually bring to the table at this point), the name The Irving Sessions is technically no longer appropriate for this project.  However, despite the fact that my studio has relocated some five states south to Fatherland St., I’m going to keep the name and keep the project moving forward.  With that said I’m happy to announce a first…

Vol. Five features a song written and recorded all on the same day — today (well, technically, last night)!  In fact, this song is so new that the lyrics have not even made their way to paper.  Perhaps it’s best to think of “Midnight Train” as a new recipe with which the chef is experimenting in front of a small number of guests or an automobile prototype much more imaginative than the production version that will be distributed in mass quantities at a later date.  What you have below is about the seventh or eighth take of this song, ever.  I recorded each version after the initial melody idea came together, and this one felt the most natural to share.  It felt the most like early morning hours.  The most like it’s lyrical intent:

I’m waitin’ on a midnight train // I’m waitin’ on the world to change // I’m waitin’ on a midnight train // to carry us home.

Version 1 / 06.01.09/ Nashville, TN / Fatherland St.

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Vol. Four: Untitled #3

February 24th, 2009

Written: 2006 / Nashville, TN
First Recorded: 08.01.06/ Nashville, TN / Justin Saunders’ Studio
Appears on: Previously Unreleased

The Irving Sessions // Vol. Four: Untitled #3
02.23.2009 / Minneapolis, MN

Video:

Untitled #3 (The Irving Sessions) from David Alan Wright on Vimeo.

Audio:

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Hello, and happy Tuesday. And what a good Tuesday it is: The Cavs just beat the Grizzlies and the Buckeyes took care of Penn State a little earlier on ESPN. A good time to be a sports fan from Ohio. First, a few updates to the site…

One: I came across an awesome plugin for the blogging platform Tumblr called Streampad as I was browsing Aaron Jamison’s blog With A Shout. The plugin looks for MP3s within a site and references the links for collective playback at the bottom of the page. Thinking to myself, “how cool would it be if this were available for Wordpress,” I soon discovered while reading their blog that, sure enough, a beta plugin was just released. So, I’m happy to say that you can now stream all of my music via the play button at the bottom of the screen, or, if you prefer, you can open the player – we’ll unofficially call it dWriTunes – in a new window while heading elsewhere on the Web (special thanks to Dan and Gregory for getting me all setup).

Two: You can now download MP3s of the songs for easy iPod listening here. Just right click on the links that say “MP3″, select “save link as”, and you should be good to go. Rock out to acoustic guitar-based tracks while working out! On the go! Or, while at work!

Three: I’ve added a page with some links to artists with whom I’ve either had the privilege of working or are friends of mine that you should definitely check out.

Four: I bought a new microphone and I’m pumped to see where my recordings can go as a result (recording these sessions live and trying to get together a basic mix on the same night can be a bit of a challenge, so every little step helps).

With our updates out of the way, that brings us to Vol. Four: Untitled #3, a song I wrote in late spring/early summer of 2006. It was written either shortly before or after an incredible three-week trip to Europe, and right around the time of my graduation from Belmont. Though I originally intended to add words to this composition, this song is special to me as is, as an instrumental piece. I wrote this song on a guitar that was given to me as a gift in remembrance of my grandmother (my dad’s mom), and shortly after it was written it turned into a song to celebrate the life of my grandpa (my mom’s dad) as I performed it for his Memorial on July 22nd, 2006. It’s the only performance during which I remember not being able to tell my hands what to do as they shakily made their way up and down the fretboard. It’s something I’ll never forget, and as a result, this song will always be special to me.

Two weeks later I sat down in Justin Saunders’ Nashville studio to record an acoustic version to send to my grandma (my mom’s mom; that version is below), and it hasn’t been recorded or performed live since. This song is about reconciliation to me. About paths that re-converge and the journey we take to reach that point. I also find the melody to hint at hope.

On a side note, the shirt I’m rocking in this video is from the company I helped start prior to joining Target, Speakerheart. Our invite code during our beta phase was “Orange” and you might see an artist or two sporting the same model out and about in Nashville.

Version 1 / Recorded 08.01.06, Nashville, TN

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Version 2 / Recorded 02.23.09, Minneapolis, MN

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Now in 17 states (+ Canada & France)!

February 17th, 2009

We have seen a 20% pickup in state activity since last Tuesday as the domestic reach of davidalanwright.com has now equaled 34% from coast to coast.  This brings us to the part where we announce the winner’s from last week’s inaugural contest.  We saw incremental visits from, in order, (15th) Arizona, (16th) Oregon and (17th) Louisiana.  The lucky winners who correctly guessed the next stop on the David-Alan-Wright-Digital-Manifest-Destiny-Train are:

Jennifer Jaworski and Krissy McKay who both correctly guessed Arizona, and James Pierce, who guessed Canada while browsing from his BlackBerry, which, although technically not a state, was the next region to send a visitor my way.  He of course was said visitor, but there is no penalty for creativity and as a result I’m letting him share the crown.

This week’s map breaks out visits by city (the grand total of which is now 49, as a side note, thanks to Google finding about seven ways to classify the Twin Cities) just to mix things up.  And, no, I won’t try to pass these “How Many States?” updates off as volumes within the Irving Sessions collection.  Vol. Four will be headed your way later this week.

Visitors by City as of Feb 16, 2009

Visitors by City as of Feb 16, 2009

Now in 14 States!

February 10th, 2009

Here’s a new little segment for you called “How many states?” that we’re rolling out tonight as a test run.  I’m happy to announce that 28% of America has now been introduced to the lovely melodies and hilarious banter that can only be delivered via davidalanwright.com (hey, I’m an analyst, I speak to the numbers).  That’s right, as of February 9th, 2009, our servers have been (very mildly) rocked by visits from sea to shining sea, as we’ve received hits from 14 states.

Visitors by State as of Feb 09, 2009

Visitors by State as of Feb 09, 2009

Now comes the interactive portion where you get to guess which state’s constituents will be next to feel the beat and stomp their feet. Introducing…

Vol. Three: Contact

February 6th, 2009

Written: 09.14.05 / Nashville, TN
First Recorded: 2005 / Nashville, TN / Acklen Ave.
Appears on: Previously Unreleased

The Irving Sessions // Vol. Three: Contact
02.06.2009 / Minneapolis, MN

Video:


Contact (The Irving Sessions) from David Alan Wright on Vimeo.
Audio:

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Vol. Three brings us to an interesting place complete with a new milestone.  My birthday was three days ago, and to mark a quarter century worth of living, I opted to wear a different sweatshirt (which, as it turns out, happens to be a thoughtful birthday present).  Besides being generally cleaner this time around, I also come bearing a song yet to be debuted to the world.  Though not a new composition, I couldn’t find an archived set list with this song included.  I wrote this song in September of 2005 and recorded it shortly afterward, but I’m not sure of the exact date as it was captured on my standalone Boss BR-532 and I no longer have the original session.  I know I dumped it into GarageBand in July of ‘07 to get rid of an unusually long introduction, but it was recorded much earlier.

I never played this song live because it’s one of the more difficult ones to get right.  In fact, until recording this version for The Irving Sessions, I really didn’t have a good grasp of how many measures to use in certain places.  Nor could I figure out whether it was better to play with a click track or without.  I decided to go sans click for the new version and I think it turned out quite alright.

There were a few firsts for Vol. Three that I’d like to call out:

(a) I ended up keeping my first take, which definitely fits the spirit and purpose of these sessions.  My goal is to record the sessions live – audio and video – and avoid overdubs altogether.  Though I try to start and finish each volume in one night, the first two songs required a few attempts before I got them right.  Improvement on V3?  Perhaps.  Laziness overflowing?  Hard to say, but see (c) below.

(b) I had a few technical difficulties that resulted in a stop at Target on the way home from work and a trip to Guitar Center before the session was officially underway.  See, I have yet to invest in a couple of solid microphones, which makes recording live tracks a bit problematic.  For “Contact” I decided to run my guitar through a 1/4″ cable directly into the recorder but I was soon thrown off by a low humming noise to which I couldn’t quite pin down the source.  Unable to locate my spare 1/4″ cable, I decided to pick up a new one (hence the Target run heading home from the office).  Problem unsolved.  Next, after consulting my friend Justin, I decided a DI box might just do the trick.  Realizing I couldn’t make it to Guitar Center by the time they closed their doors for the night, I called ahead and they set aside a Radial ProDI for me and, believe it or not, agreed to wait a few extra minutes for me to arrive.  (They just turned me into a loyal customer and advocate).  Excited to give the new setup a whirl, I plugged everything in…and…the buzz was still there.  Next I borrowed a ground lift from downstairs – the $.99 solution rather than $99, mind you – and still, a buzz.  Baffled, I swapped guitars and sure enough, that did the trick.  So, two hours later I was ready to rock n’ roll after discovering I might need to take one of my guitars into the shop.

(c) I fell asleep on my office floor while mixing the song.  Though, as noted in (a) above, just one take was required to capture the song, I managed to wear myself out enough to fall asleep on the hardwood for almost an hour.

So, what you find here is a two-day effort, which, I believe makes it all the more special.  Below you’ll find the rough demo version I recorded sometime in 2005 for the sake of comparison.  The tempos, structure, etc. are fairly similar, but hopefully you feel the ‘09 version is a bit more polished and complete.  I would love to hear your thoughts on either take.

Version 1 / Recorded 2005, Nashville, TN

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Version 2 / Recorded 02.06.09, Minneapolis, MN

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Vol. Two: Rhythm of Falling

January 22nd, 2009

Written: 11.07.03 / Nashville, TN
First Recorded: 12.03.03 / Nashville, TN / Belmont University, Mike Curb School of Music Business (now Mike Curb College of Entertainment and Music Business), Studio C
Appears on: Previously Unreleased

The Irving Sessions // Vol. Two: Rhythm of Falling
01.22.2009 / Minneapolis, MN

Video:


Rhythm of Falling (Irving Sessions) from David Wright on Vimeo.

Audio:

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I thought it would be fitting to follow “Divin’ In” with a song recorded exactly one year later, to the day, in Studio C at Belmont University.  Studio C is the smallest of the three main studios on campus, as the A-Z hierarchy tends to hold up in most complexes, and my friend Justin and I were just completing our Audio One course which granted us access to the studios for personal projects.  While this introduction was as far as I would attempt to take my hands-on engineering skills, Justin has gone on to work with artists like Mat Kearney, Rachael Yamagata, Sara Bareilles, Josh Kelley, Butterfly Boucher and Jeremy Lister.  Justin’s been through Minneapolis twice now since my transition to the cities in March, once with Bareilles and once with Yamagata, running lighting for the former and  rocking out with the latter (it was a few nights after his stop at the Fine Line he could be found holding down the back of stage left on Leno, singing BGVs and playing percussion and keyboard for Yamagata).  It’s friends like Justin and the joy they get out of their craft that push me to keep doing this in some capacity.

So, imagine a chilly but manageable early winter season in Nashville.  Two-thousand-and-three was winding down, and me, a sophomore this go-round, coming off a busy fall of writing, rehearsing, performing and chasing girls to the best of my abilities, (and having just written and recorded a few songs about such activity), “Rhythm of Falling” sort of came out of nowhere.  A concise song by my standards (I tend to want to state and then restate my point multiple times for emphasis), “Rhythm of Falling” originally clocked in at just under 3 minutes in telling of youthful romance as the air is beginning to turn (“When the breeze is like this / defense stands no chance”).  It was sort of the song I didn’t try to write, coming after a number of songs that included many revisions, many hours in the studio in effort to polish.  Here, instead, we did the song in just a few takes and kept the instrumentation straightforward with vocals and guitar, leaving with the final mix on CD that night.

I particularly like the cadence of the chorus:

Rhythm of Fall / Falling in Love

I didn’t intend for this lyric to mean anything more than simply “falling in love”.  You know, a short and sweet hook that doesn’t have to include a rhyme.  However, 5 years later, I feel the timing attempts to bring in undertones of the Fall season: the changing color of leaves, hooded sweatshirts, cold fingers trying to compose outdoors and feelings of love either starting to actualize or, in contrast, hibernating until greener pastures arrive with thawing weather.  There’s that rush to find someone with whom you can enjoy wearing pea coats and scarves around town while looking at Christmas lights or navigating office dynamics at the obligatory party.  This song is about that part of the early Holiday season.

I think this song might make its way onto the actual album that comes (fingers crossed) from these sessions.  I definitely hear piano, cello, slight percussion and BGVs on the re-re-make.

Version 1 / Recorded 12.03.03, Nashville, TN

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Version 2 / Recorded 01.22.09, Minneapolis, MN

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Vol. One: Divin’ In

January 13th, 2009

Written: 11.13.02 / Nashville, TN
First Recorded: 12.03.02 / Nashville, TN / Belmont University, Mike Curb School of Music Business (now Mike Curb College of Entertainment and Music Business), Studio B & Post Suite
Appears on: Muggswigz Live: Disc One (2003) (out of print), David Alan Wright Demos (2003) (out of print)

The Irving Sessions // Vol. One: Divin’ In
01.12.2009 / Minneapolis, MN

Video:

Divin’ In (The Irving Sessions) from David Wright on Vimeo.

Audio:

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Why “Divin’ In” first?  I don’t have a great answer other than I always felt this song was strong.  I liked the guitar melody on the intro the night I wrote it and I always felt great singing it.  I think every songwriter has a song that while playing and singing they actually transcend into the song itself, the performance.  “Divin’ In” is often that song for me.  It was also an easy place for me to start as far as polishing very rusty Pro Tools skills.

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Original Notebook with lyrics dated 11/13/02 resting on my new M-Audio BX-5a Deluxe stacked on a handful of GOOD magazines.

I wrote “Divin’ In” during the late fall of my freshman year of college at Belmont University in Nashville, TN.  I arrived in Nashville with the intention of writing music for a living.  I arranged to get a business degree at Belmont partly as a backup plan should my aspirations not pan out.  It was also a way for me to surround myself with talented musicians without having to formally study music.

I remember hitting quite a dry spell as far as composing goes that fall.  I wrote and recorded a song entitled “Tomorrow” in early September of ‘02, shortly after arriving in Music City, and though it had its moments, it lacked the type of hook that provides more than five seconds of a pitch in Nashville.  Next I tried my hands at writing and, gasp, singing two country songs – “Paradise” & “Nashville Lights” – both decent, but I remember thinking at the time they lacked the polish of the songs I had written for my high school band 5 Seconds Late.  Then came a creative streak of sorts which turned into a recording session on 12.03.02 at the studios on campus.  First, I wrote “Until Then”.  Ten days later I wrote “Divin’ In”, and between the two songs I thought I was slowly clearing a path toward a publishing deal, just months into my “career”.

I think I was surprised actually when those two songs didn’t receive the type of response I was anticipating.  And I don’t think I really ever understood why until I went to record the ‘09 version for The Irving Sessions last night.

The pace and delivery were never right, not for the original recording and not for the live recording that followed in the summer of ‘03.  So, for this rendition, six years later, I decided to take it much slower.  I told my girlfriend Jenn after hearing John Mayer sing his cover of Tom Petty’s “Free Fallin’” that it was the first time I actually stopped to listen to the lyrics.  And the lyrics are fantastic.  But it took Mayer’s tempo and delivery for the song to have context.  She told me she felt the same way about “Divin’ In” post-six years vs. the youth of my performance at 18.

And though it pains the perfectionist inside of me to do this, here are the archives for comparison’s sake.  I guess this is what these sessions are all about.  I would love your feedback:

Version 1 / Recorded 12.03.02, Nashville, TN

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Version 2 / Recorded 07.12.03, Canton, OH

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Version 3 / Recorded 01.12.09, Minneapolis, MN

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The Irving Sessions

January 13th, 2009

It amazes me it’s 2009.

I pulled out my 3-ring binder tonight of archived lyrics and compositions – unfortunately I was not up to speed on the brilliance of the Circa system at the time – and paged through my old thoughts and feelings.  Some of the songs I flipped through have made their way onto cassette tape, some to CD and still others, the lucky/newer ones that is, digital.  Others I wouldn’t be able (or want) to play or sing the melody if I had to.  Those songs will stay simply as lyrics, written on the page by familiar handwriting but with the voice of a stranger.  A few songs are dated from April 1997, others ‘98.  I’m not sure when I wrote my first “song”, but I remember carrying a notebook around with me sometime around fifth grade.  I also remember trying to form a band in fourth grade that included multiple female instrumentalists and BGVs.  Even then I realized my athletic ability was not going to be my calling card to dates in high school (though I forgot for one brief season of football in 6th grade during which I led my elementary school team, “North”, to an 0-5 record as starting QB.  To be fair, I think I led our JV team to a victory or two prior to being elevated to a brief stint in the primetime).

When I writing songs at age 14, modest talent went a lot farther than it does now that I’m 24.  Being a songwriter was a lot cooler.  Writing a half-decent song was easier to stomach.  It used to be fun.

The problem with moving to a city like Nashville, or living in an area like Uptown Minneapolis, it’s more than just a hobby for a lot of would-be listeners.  This forces said writer to second guess, to stop early before the hook is finished and to avoid one’s back-catalogue of rough rhymes, forced themes and overplayed melodies.

A New Year’s resolution of mine is to actually share the music I create.  Being a perfectionist, I tend to hold onto my ideas until they’re already being done elsewhere.  So, I’ve decided in ‘09 that I will attempt the following:

1. Record a rough, iMovie-esque video and/or “live-in-studio” audio version of one song each week.  So, yes by the time 2010 rolls around you will have 52 David Alan Wright gems in glorious moving color, and,

2. Record a studio version of one song each month to arrive at an album’s worth of material by year’s end.

Thus, the relaunch of davidalanwright.com is my way of forcing myself to just play for the fun of it again.  To share songs that may be a few years old and a few chords shy of a masterpiece, but exist nonetheless, and may as well exist outside of my notebook or the rough demos only heard by a few pairs of ears.  Hopefully through sharing I’ll be able to reach people, polish my craft a bit more, reteach myself how to use Pro Tools and eventually work my way back up to the stage in some capacity.

I’m tentatively calling this soon-to-be body of work The Irving Sessions.

I have to admit, I’ve kept the guitars in their cases for long periods of time.  I’ve often gone weeks, months even, without strumming.  I realize it’s possible for me to live without writing and performing, because I’ve done it.  But I have to be honest, I’m not happy without those things.  And so I have to thank you if you fall into any of the following categories:

you’ve been to a show, read lyrics via IM late at night to give me feedback, bought a CD (even if as a favor), wrote an article or review, booked a concert, ran the soundboard, paid me a portion of a cover charge, painted or took my picture while on stage (I’ll prove the former later), created a music video, inspired me with your music, friendship and stories, encouraged me to keep writing, played in my band, let me play in your band, invited us to do a radio talkshow, spun our songs on the radio, recorded with me in the studio, patiently charted out songs on my behalf, sang BGVs, shared your thoughts via email, designed my Website back in the day (there have been multiple iterations), bought a bumper sticker (special props if you actually adhered it to your car!), invited me to share and speak, signed my mailing list, and, perhaps most importantly, let me enjoy life by giving the world a little music.

Thanks for all you’ve done to get me to this point.  I would be selfish to say this is simply about me, because it’s not.  The songs I’ve written and the songs I’m writing today are a reflection of who I am as a person, and that person is directly influenced by all of the above.

So, thanks for listening, and thanks for reading.

I hope you enjoy the music.

dw