Archive for the ‘our new album!’ Category

So I’m counting on your fingers…

Friday, October 23rd, 2009

We have completely finished tracking our new album, unceremoniously and amongst some rushed vocal takes and squabbling over money. Ah well… at least we’re done. And you have no idea what a relief it is to say that.

We are done.

It’s an immense burden off of our collective shoulders. Records are a wonderful thing and to have the opportunity to make a record is an incredible experience. But I feel safe in saying we took it a bit too far this time. We aren’t full time artists. We aren’t paid to be, and thus we shouldn’t act like we are. No one should have to torment themselves in the way we did for that long, fighting for every little ounce of attainable perfection on things that probably don’t matter. Stacked up next the whole of what you’re fighting against, it’s hard to see how it’s worth it. At least for me personally, I can say that I’m glad this is over. I know that I owe some apologies to some people for some of the things that this album made me out to be. But I feel as though in completing it, I have exercised from me a sort of demonic persona that took up residence and actually became a pretty permanent part of me. Almost like a fever, where your body has to turn on itself in order to expel the sickness. I apparently had to turn on the my life in order to force these songs out. And it makes sense. I mean, the entire album is about things that I don’t want to talk about anymore. And I put myself in the position where the only way I could be through with them is to really, truly be through with them. I think I knew that all along. Which is part of the reason I fought against this for the last two years. At least I know what all this means now.

So I suppose an update is in order.

We are very much planning on putting this album out into the world for everyone to hear. We have no set plans on how to do so at this time. If any interested recording labels or industry moguls happen to be reading this, please feel free to send us a contract, congratulatory email and a check… in whichever order you see fit. We are pretty much just playing this by ear. And why not? We went into it without a plan. Why should we have one for getting out of it? Of the 15 tracks that ended up making the final cut for this album, about half of those songs that have been mixed. Of those, half of them are final mixes. Of those, maybe half will stay final mixes.

I just want you to hear it. You, who are reading this. If there is anyone reading this.

I now have to go play some of these songs acoustic with Dustin for an unsuspecting audience of bar patrons who are hopefully up for some deep, spiritual, soul-searching type listening.

-marky

New Song & Video Posted at Myspace…

Thursday, August 21st, 2008

From the preproduction demos that we recorded way back in July of ‘07, the track “Our Holy Ghosts” is now up on our myspace. This is NOT the track that will be going on the new album, but rather an early, rough demo of the song in it’s infant stages. It didn’t change much, but hopefully you’ll enjoy hearing the differences in the actual recording when it comes out. and i promise you, we’ll have a release date for you soon enough.

There’s also a new video update with a bunch of footage from the studio, including us tracking the beginning of “Mutiny”.

Enjoy!

-marky

Points of interest from this week-

Tuesday, July 29th, 2008

Significant progress was made on the album for the first time in 3 months.

The first five tracks are pretty much all said and done, save for mixes.

This weekend we tracked guitar, vocals, sleigh bells, pump organ, car keys, finger snaps, mandolin and a box. And a faucet.

Chris from They Found Me, They Named Me is good at drawing weird phallic creatures in under two minutes.

Peter from The Good Luck Joes is the best studio intern ever (but he’s still no baby engineer).

Tracking songs live is a visceral experience that rivals a first date with a new love… you only get one shot and that’s how it’s gonna be remembered forever. You also have all the same performance anxiety and anticipation, as well as the contentment that comes with the knowledge that you did alright. If you did alright.

We need to buy an Orange head, an Emperor cab and sometimes Dustin gets cranky and has to go to sleep. These things are unrelated.

Colour Revolt have one of the most soulfully inspiring live performances that I’ve seen in a long while.

Dustin writes awesome guitar solos and I’m starting to lose my hearing.

The squeaks aren’t that noticeable.

-marky

There’s a light ahead…

Tuesday, April 8th, 2008

wow. for the first time since we started tracking last year, i feel as though we might actually finish this album. after a healthy break from recording, we have officially finalized 100% the tracking for the lead-off song entitled “New Home Life”. it’s one of those songs that i immediately grew very attached to while writing it, and i’d even go so far as to say it’s my favorite culpa performance ever put to tape. it’s almost eight minutes long, an epic of sorts… tons of instruments playing different important roles in the song at various times. we had our good friend Ben come in and lay down some brass parts, and we even had an unintentional performance by a beloved Londoner lifted from a train ride that happened months ago accidentally fall in place in the middle of the song. you’ll understand later. or maybe you won’t. either way, it’ll be there.

from here on out, we’re planning on finishing up the tracking and mixing for the rest of the songs on the album individually, in sequential order, which is a rather unusual way of doing it, but appropriate for this project i think. i mean, we’ve done everything else on this record against the grain, so why not? all is going well, none the less. against the grain apparently seems to suit us. i decided i’m at peace with us taking our time, after seeing the results. i’m just even more anxious to share them all with you.

so, to give you an update on where we’re at with the album as a whole, we have all of the rhythm (drums, bass, guitars) recorded for all 15 songs and everything (everything) tracked for the first three songs, save for the final vocals. i’m going back in this weekend to finish that up, so if all goes to plan (which it rarely does) we shall have the first three songs entirely completed by this weekend. wow. it feels like i’m making it up, but it’s true.

anyway, here’s some pictures and video from this last weekend-

here’s us performing the beginning of track 1, “New Home Life”… if you look closely, you can see the Sony Clearvoice Plus hand-held tape recorder that we recorded it to on the piano bench next to me-
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guitar tracking with jeffro at the helm-
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vocal tracking-
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percussion tracking in the huge, cavernous foyer-
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more guitar tracking-
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someone’s sleepy-
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some piano tracking, and the Sony Clearvoice Plus (warning, the video is a bit dark and jeffro has a mouth like a sailor)-

-marky

Scene 4, Take 2

Wednesday, April 2nd, 2008

We’ve returned to the studio!

We began a new/revisited an old leg of our recording journey this week. Back at the Exchange in Milwaukee, we’ve started work on some different guitar tones, committed to some beautiful piano sounds via a Yamaha C7 grand piano [and the careful hands of Dustin Currier], and made some fresh to-do lists to make sure we stay on track. Our motivation is in full force and excitement levels in the studio have only boosted with every fresh take on every new idea.

We’re back in action and, my God, does this feel good.
(more to come…)

xoxo,
- Tristan | the Culpa -

slowly, slowly…

Wednesday, December 19th, 2007

recording journal, we have not forgotten about you. alas, we have just been out of the studio for a while. it’s actually been rather frustrating, but what more can you expect from 4 extremely family oriented people around the hustle and bustle of the holiday season. that and we’ve run out of available recording money, but i digress…

i did manage to get in a late night session with jeffro where we recorded some scratch vocal tracks. it made me realize just how incomplete a lot of the vocal ideas are, both lyrically and melodically. i think i just keep hoping that there will be some grand, inspiring event that will cause everything to come together. i guess we’ll see.

we’ve been playing a few of the new songs out live quite regularly and the response has been overwhelmingly positive. so, thanks everyone for that. we’ve also been working out some new arrangements for some of the older material, which we’ve (believe it or not) found time to record & mix away from this upcoming full length. we’re actually working out the details of getting that stuff released as well. that will probably end up happening before this full length, very possibly even as a bundled prerelease of sorts. so yeah, you heard it here first kids.

also in new release land, there have been rumblings of a vinyl-only split (with Chicago area dance contest champions Inspector Owl) to be released by our friends at Common Cloud Records in the first quarter of this new year. we’ll have more details on that as they come up. we’ll probably pick 2 or 3 of our favorite tracks that didn’t make the final cut for this new full length and give them a proper release. i really hope that this one comes to fruition. we ended up cutting more songs than i would’ve liked in order to not have this album delve into double album territory, which it definitely could’ve.

so anyway, i know i speak on behalf of everyone here when i say i hope you all have a safe and merry christmas and we’ll be seeing you next year. tell gandma hi and kiss the kids from us. and if anyone has a suggestion for an album title other than “Island of the Aqua Blue Dolphins”, we’re open.

-marky

ps. we got our van back. again.

scratch tracks.

Thursday, November 15th, 2007

sometimes i hate tracking guitar.  like today.

somebody ask jeffro why his knee hurts.

They say our feet were meant for dirt

Wednesday, November 14th, 2007

the tally so far-

drums - 100% tracked.

bass guitars - 90% tracked.

electric guitars - about 59% tracked, but we’re scheduled to (hopefully) finish them up on thursday.

acoustic guitars - 0% tracked.

vocals - 1% tracked (i did a one-take scratch track to a song, so really 0%).

keys & piano - 0% tracked.

everything else - 0% tracked.

so, daunting but not bad. right on schedule actually. we’ll keep updating those tallies as things progress.

ok, so story time. upon logging into our myspace account recently, i came accross this new sales channel called “snowcap” which displayed itself prominently on our page right below our music player, boasting our entire back catalog on sale for $.99 a song. i thought to myself “oh, one of my bandmates must have gone ahead and set us up with a snowcap account.” in talking with my other bandmates we all discovered that no one in the band had any idea of how it got there. we hadn’t signed up for it. we came to the conclusion that it must have been a move by our friends at the Common Cloud label in an attempt to boost the sales of our older CDs. i gave my friend Jay at CC a call, and asked him if he knew about the snowcap deal. he had never heard of it and had no idea how it got there, but assured me that he was going to look into it.

now, the reason this is all so terribly interesting is because this snowcap storefront is selling an intellectual property that we own and that our label is in charge of distributing, both physically and digitally without anyone’s consent or knowledge. now, i’m sure it’s all legit and on the up and up with some facet of Common Cloud’s online distro, but it got me thinking about this whole internet piracy issue that is so unbelievably convoluted and confusing right now, especially for the bigger artists who are so mercilessly tied to their labels. i don’t have a real formulated opinion yet, other than we should probably embrace the cultural changes that are happening and rejoice in the fact that so many people (50 some million) are now able to instantaneously access and enjoy products that they more than likely wouldn’t seek out, rather than punishing those individuals in the form of lawsuits and fines, merely for loving a product that is being offered to them (albeit in a technically illegally format). in short, i agree with this guy when he says that major labels should get off their high horse, get their heads out of their grumpy, greedy asses and start steering the train or get out of the way. they have to figure out a way to embrace this new medium, rather than lambasting the pioneers and punishing their loyal listeners for (gasp) actively seeking out the product the labels themselves endorse. they still want everybody to play by their rules when they don’t even realize that the game is over.

take this for instance… the leading music retailer in the world is wal-mart. and honestly, i think the reason they can lay claim to that title is because most discerning music lovers (who are looking for culturally inspiring, relevant art rather than mass-entertainment/distraction) know better than to step foot in that store with the intent of purchasing music. not only can they get an entire world of selection online that they can’t find within the confines of a department store, but they know that their money isn’t going through a massive, evil monster of a corporation before their meager fraction of it gets to the artist they are investing in.

let’s be honest… wal-mart depends on customers who are culturally still one step behind. meaning they don’t know any better than to rely on the idea of a pre-selected physical offering of regurgitated major label enertaina-tripe being all that’s out there. that’s not the best that the world has to offer. these are the same people who take take comfort knowing they don’t have to think about when or why their pre-chewed shit meal is going to be lovingly dumped down their collective populous throats (generally speaking). either that or they don’t know that they can actually expect more for themselves and their eyes and ears than what has been over-hyped and uber-advertised to them by the general mass media circus that lives in our airwaves, billboards, newspaper pages and well, everywhere else.

now I’m fully aware that i’m only talking about the greater middle class here. there are many homes in america where a computer is not in the realm of possibility, much less a broadband internet connection capable of allowing a family to digitally acquire their entire library of music. but, really who is wal-mart’s target market? and honestly, this is where our culture is headed, and in turn that’s where wal-mart’s customers are headed. to look the other way and pretend that in a few years our culture will still want to browse through a few hundred pre-selected CDs and call it a day is close minded. it’s like trying to choose your favorite constellation from a one window apartment. and basically the major labels are satisfied with chains like wal-mart being their leading stream of revenue in a dying market, and attacking those who try to establish the next viable market, even when it encompasses the sales of THEIR music. it’s like they’re winning the race by standing at the starting line shooting rounds at the other runners instead of picking up their feet and running themselves. and these are the people whose good graces we as artists are supposed to be aspiring to attain? who cares. let them stand there and die in their old ways. pretty soon the other runners will be out of range.

anyway, all that to say that i think we should probably try and embrace cultural change, especially when the ramifications could be so positive to everyone involved.

it makes me glad we’re not on a big label. i’ve never been comfortable with the idea in it’s entirety. i’m not actually sure what i want to do when it comes time to release this CD. we’ve always said that we’d like some help getting our music into larger markets, but the more i think about it, it seems as though there are already enough DIY channels out there that a band like us could get away with putting out an album completely independently. it’d be hard work, but i’d like to think that we would be able to survive outside the system that’s in place. and not just survive, but thrive. and have it actually mean more, because it was based off of the work of our own hands. it just makes me wonder why everyone fights so hard to be part of a system that really doesn’t care about them at all. and i’m not just talking about the big, evil majors. most of the bigger indie labels seem to have adopted the same lines of thought as the majors. and we’re all rushing headfirst, blindfolded, trying to grab that label prize. do we even know what the prize is?

i think there-in lies a major difference between art and entertainment, artists and entertainers. i have this sinking feeling that that distinction has been lost somewhere in and around my generation and their idea of the “rock star”. most younger musicians/kids on the whole don’t even realize what it is that they think they want, or why the should want it. they just know that they do. and that’s really scary to think that we as artists can be conditioned to want something that we don’t even understand by people who have nothing to do with our art’s existence. music would and will continue to exist without labels and a label contract should not be the end goal for a musician. maybe for an entertainer, but definitely not an artist. and most musicians i know would rather classify themselves as artists. i know i would, regardless of what people think of the music i make. if i made it for them, it wouldn’t be art. it would be entertainment.

not to say entertainment is a bad thing. quite the contrary, really. if you are genuinely entertained by what i make, than “fuckin’ rad,” says i. but does one’s perception of an artistic expression determine its existence, or is it and will it always exist as the creator intended it? damn. philosophy and shit.

i’ve determined by my facebook virtual bookshelf that i need to read more.

-marky

we moon each other in the studio.

Wednesday, November 7th, 2007

congratulations, you’re reading our blog!

okay, ladies and gents, we’ve (Jeffro, Marky and Dustin) been hard at work tracking guitars for the album. we’ve run into problems here and there (a favourite Culpa past time), but we’ve gotten some absolutely gorgeous guitar tones the last few days and we couldn’t be happier.

after 2 1/2 days of tracking, we actually have more work ahead of us than we did when we arrived on scene. each performance in each song seems to be bringing about new ideas for new tones… and coupled with the fact that we tend to pick everything apart in the studio (for the sake of the song/album), we’re giving ourselves quite a list of tasks to be accomplished.

my current amount of drinking, partnered with my need to pee, will make for a shorter update than I had originally anticipated…
however…
I hope that everyone reading this understands how unbelievably excited we are to be making this album - for you and for ourselves.

this truly is the proudest I’ve ever been of something I’ve created in my life. and I couldn’t be happier than to be creating it with the most important people in my life.

I (and we) love each and every one of you - for your continued support and for your continuing expressed excitement toward the release of this album. please be patient.
we’re trying to make this album the best that we can. =]

here’s marky tracking some stuff:
Marky tracks guitar

Dustin just waking up from a nap:
Sleepy Beef

and a pan-o-ramic of part of the live room for studio A:
pan-o-ramic!

(sorry for the quality - these were taken with my phone. haha)

I hope you have an amazing week and we’ll be back with more updates as soon as possible, okay?

xoxo,
- Tristan -

hooray for me!

Monday, October 29th, 2007

HI!

So I’m in an incredibly elated mood as of last night.
We spent roughly 3-4 hours working out kinks and making sure we got the bass tone that we were looking for.
*-note: Sometime in Feb of ‘07 (this year, for those of you that are a little slow) I invented what has since been referred to as “the burning alligator” bass tone.

After the desired tone was achieved, it was time to track the album. I honestly expected to have to take a full day or two on my bass parts to be happy with all of the performances, but some kind of miracle graced my life yesterday and enabled me to knock out all 15 tracks in just a few hours. I hope that doesn’t sound cocky? I’m just happy. very happy.
with every visit to the studio, I’m becoming increasingly more excited to have the end result see the light of day.
are you guys excited? I hope so! we seriously can’t wait to share this with all of you.

we’ll have some pictures (and possibly another video) for you guys fairly soon, ok?

Please take care of yourselves… by doing the following:
1 - head to Helen Earth’s myspace page and listen to the new song they posted.
2 - get on youtube and search for “old man falls up an escalator”
3 - go see the Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford
4 - go see Gone Baby Gone
5 - buy Daywatch on DVD tomorrow
6 - record a new album with your closest friends.

thanks for visiting!
xoxo,
- Tristan -

ps - exact quote (purposely taken out of context) from Jeffro - “I think I want to start experimenting with other guys!”