Wednesday, December 19, 2007

yeah,yeah, it's the holidays

I wrote and recorded a Christmas song for a well intentioned compilation record that never saw the light of the ornaments. We (Matt and I) recorded it with the Booker Lee boys and the Compound Choir up in Gettysburg. It's been posted to our myspace page (myspace.com/lawnchair) where it's available for listening and download. Here are the lyrics:

"Even Us"

The steps they're all icy
Every row home on the avenue.
The lights are strung all over town
And who's front door did she walk through.

First white Christmas we've had in years.
The snow quiets everything to a hush.
Peace on earth, good will to man
To everyone, but us.

We've both got closets full of skeletons.
We've both gone down some bumpy roads.
In the glare of the tinsel and the blinking lights
(Well) all those hard times sure do show.

First white Christmas we've had in years.
The snow quiets everything to a hush.
Peace on earth, good will to man
To everyone, but us.

Let's put it all aside for just one night.
Come a little closer let's thaw out our hearts.
Wrap up the bad blood between us
It seems like a good time for a new start.

First white Christmas we've had in years.
The snow quiets everything to a hush.
Peace on earth, good will to man
To everyone, even us.

Friday, December 14, 2007

WTF!?!

Yeah, so we played a show last night that... prior to getting into it... was a complete cluster fuck. The show was double booked then rebooked, but for a different room than we thought. Then, after wrangling everyone and the proper equipment and sound checking, our buddy Andrew Grimm played some songs to kick off the festivities. Grimm was playing through my guitar rig when my amp went up.

As if the night was not fucked up enough, my amp shit the bed. Well, Grimm is a pro and he got through it - all lit up for the holidays. The dude is a great writer and musician. Sorry about the whole mess, Grimm.

I was boiling from the entire fiasco. So we got rolling, but my head was swimming. I (we) struggled through the first couple of songs, but things pulled together as we went. Thanks to all the folks who came out and had fun with us. All in all I had fun playing... I pretty much always do. The boys are great and thank god we've got things back on track personnel-wise after a shaky fall. As the night drew to a close, folks were really into it, dancing and hollering and spilling beer. We had to shut down at midnight in the room we were in which bummed me out because I had finally shaken the baggage of the whole night, the boys were really tightening up and I could have played all night. We shut her down though, took a breath, and realized we came out of it alive and well and feeling better for it.

No, Mr. Grimm, we did not all die.... we came out alive. Maybe a little part of me is dead, but most of me is alive. Then of course it was a full-on scene trying to get out of there. Today I'm drained. Emotionally, physically. Everything does not have to be so fucking hard man. It really doesn't.

Wednesday, December 12, 2007

Old Yellow House

The night before our buddy who engineered the recording of Hard to Swallow came to my house (where we would record all of the live tracks over the next two days), I was sitting around playing and this song just fell out. Songs seem to happen this way more than not. If the words and music just spill out, the song is generally a keeper. Conversely, I find that songs that take rewrite after rewrite never see the light of day. Well, that is, until just recently but that's a topic for an entirely different post.

Anyway - I live in "Old Yellow House." It is a row home built in 1920 that spent a large chunk of its life as a bar... and from what I understand, a damn rowdy one at that. When I'm home alone and things are still, I can hear the stories damn near coming through the spaces between the floor boards. It's not in a haunted/ghostly way, just its own personality with too much to tell. I spend hours wondering about the drunken fights and drunken love and broken hearts drowning the pain in the same room where I spend most of my time.

Whatever it was/is that spoke/speaks to me on those quiet nights... it worked. We played that song, without a drummer, to get a feel for the room and the placement of the mics. We didn't even know that Colin was rolling as we played. Matt and Eric hadn't even heard the song before, but it all came together. We wound up using the first take. And from that take on, the next 48 hours of recording went smoother than any of us could have hoped.

Friday, December 7, 2007

Billy McCoy

I grew up a son of a gear head. As a child I could discern a passing classic as a '55 or '56 Chevy (the front end parking lights are the giveaway) at 60 plus miles per hour in the opposite direction. My early TV memories include sprinting to the tube every time I heard the growling sax riff that opened the Capital Raceway drag strip commercial... Sunday Sunday Sunday! The images funny cars spitting flames and lurching back onto the wheelie bars danced in my head.

So, many years later, I woke up one hungover Sunday morning with this tale of a small town racer done good (and bad) in my head. Nothing seems more rural than dirt track racing, and who doesn't love a story about someone selling their soul to the devil. I locked myself in our spare bedroom in the old apartment and banged out the chords 'till they went together. Add Billy McCoy to the ever-growing list of LAWNCHAIR songs that reference hookers... I have no clue why. Seriously.

Then, months later, I went to see the Drive By Truckers. The Stroker Ace himself Mike Cooley stepped to the mic to sing his first tune of the night- he slammed into "Daddy's Cup" a, then unreleased, song about small town auto racing. Damn! Ever since I've felt compelled to defend the fact that I wrote Billy McCoy months before I ever heard that song.

Thursday, December 6, 2007

Faded Postcards

Faded Postcards was conceived in a dream-like state driving from my grandmother's funeral to a gig at the Cat's Eye in Fells Point. Talk about an evening of emotional extremes. I went from sad grieving to exercising the demon of loss out of my body and mind. Shaking it wildly and dowsing it with alcohol. As I drove past the hulking hulls of cargo ships, the sky had gone from Blood Red to Black and lightening was breaking horizontal across the sky. With with all that "fantastic light", I swear there was no thunder.

This strange phenomenon had my mind racing with all the things that children are told to be true... like, "Where there's thunder there's lightening." Shouldn't such things be true in reverse?!? And if not, what other mis-truths had I been told?

Thus, I was set "lookin' for some truth".