– Home Page –

Charlie Barnett, composer, writer, musician and now Emcee

Charlie Barnett, composer, writer, musician and now Emcee

GSSCC’s 2012 Awards & Installation Dinner Was A Huge Success!

GSSCC sincerely thanks the sponsors and members who supported the 2012 Awards & Installation Dinner this past Wednesday, one of the Chambers most important fundraising events of the year. The money raised through these events is critical to the Chamber’s ability to adequately serve our members.

Silver Spring Chamber of Commerce Gala

Mixing

I just finished up two days of mixing with engineer Ken Schubert.  We were two guys sitting at a console staring at a screen of ProTools information with two very good speakers on either side – and not talking much for 8 hours a day.  That is some guys’ idea of a great day.   I guess it is mine.   It reminds me of a story about the famous pilot, Chuck Yeager, flying in tandem with another pilot  across the entire country, speaking only a dozen words during the whole trip and feeling like they had a hell of time at the end of the day.    I’m not sure if this is a particularly male trait or not.  But I have only had these experiences with guys.  We sit and listen…. and listen again. then one guy says:” Do you think the guitar is a little wet? ” or  “Let’s lose the piano until the bridge.”  The other guy answers with ” Hmmm… we could try it?”  This would be followed by another half hour of sitting, listening and staring. In two days we mixed three songs and ended up thinking we were flying right along on this project.

       At the same time I had to listen to the masters of the new Chaise Lounge Christmas album,  “A Very Chaise Lounge Christmas”.  Mastering is a completely different level, a much deeper level of listening that I am not capable of.  Greg Lukens and Bill Wolf are the two “master”minds ( pun intended) involved here.  They also sit in a dark room surrounded by audio gear and mumble about “shelves” and say things like ” Is that getting a little tubby ?”   In the end they took an album of 10 songs that were mixed over the course of nine months, and had a variety of instrumentations,  and made them sound like they all truly belonged on the same record.   

This is not my favorite part of my job, but it is one that is odd and peculiar to this craft of recording music.  In some ways I owe my career to the various engineers who have looked at me and said in all sincerity ” for the love of God, can we pull some of the big room back… please?”

Mnemonics and music and Skype

Yesterday I had a Skype session with the Clemson University orchestra, courtesy of Dr. Andrew Levin.  They are playing “The Blue Chevrolet”

What totally surprising questions!  One question that a cellist asked:  “What are your thoughts on translating memory into music?”  He was not referring to songwriting or anything with lyrical content, He was talking about the completely abstract orchestral piece that they are playing. A far more difficult question.  Yes, “The Blue Chevrolet” is unabashedly autobiographical.  But I have never been so confronted by the clear evidence of this process, and my nearly complete lack of understanding of how I do this.  There is probably a very good doctoral thesis in just that one question.   Maybe abstract painters have a better handle on this?  I wish I could have come up with a slick answer to this.  As it is, I will be thinking about this for the next three years.  I will get back to you on this. 

I wish I could be there to hear the performance.  Good luck to the orchestra and thank you again to Maestro Levin for playing this.