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The past few months

The past few months

So the past few months have been quite interesting. I moved in with my lovely girlfriend Erin, which has been great. I played some weird-and-awesome fill-in gigs, I “joined” then quit a band (I’ll explain the quotes in a bit), and I discovered I have some issues with how I’ve been relating to music and gigging, and in general have done a lot of self-reflection.

On to the first part – The move went really well and I’ve set up a nice studio in the upstairs loft area, with my electronic drumset to one side of the studio desk, and my keyboard controller and guitars lined up to the other side. The room has a lot of reflections, so I’m going to have to figure out some ways to make it deader for any voiceovers or singing I might want to do, but that’s all in the works.

I played some fill-in gigs, in various configurations, with a band (Texas Players) that features Roman Holiday drummer, and my brother-from-another-mother Lee Thompson on drums. The gigs were crazy but fun in their own way – something I didn’t think was possible with that particular band. I may have these out of order chronologically, but I’ll share them anyway. First was filling in on bass with a second guitarist (Paul Lidel, who is awesome) instead of the usual keyboardist (my friend Shelley), and that gig went AMAZING. We sounded great with minimal trainwrecks and it was super fun. Then I filled in as the guitarist with the usual keyboardist, which was nerve-wracking (more about this later in the “guitar freaks me the fuck out” part of this post in part three below), but ultimately ended up working out, and apparently we sounded good. Then we had a last-minute gig where I insisted on being the bassist, and we found another guy (another friend, David Houston, who gigs more as a bassist these days) to play guitar with Lee and Shelley and me. This one was sort of all over the place, but as the night wore on it became truly fun. Eventually I grabbed David’s guitar and he played my bass and we did all kinds of weird things, including a fun version of Rush’s “Working Man” where I tried to recall all the parts of the guitar solo while I played the song. The crowd seemed to enjoy themselves a LOT, which was good, because I don’t think we sounded that awesome overall, but we did our best on short notice! Three fun gigs with TP in a row. About 6 months ago I could never imagine that being the case (I was frustrated with the experience of filling in with them even though I liked them personally).

Part three involved my experience with a well-equipped, well-booked cover band that I won’t name because I’m afraid people will get the wrong idea about them based on my individual perspective and experience (don’t want the search terms directing people here). I met with them mid-January to say I’d cover some upcoming shows for them so they wouldn’t have to cancel, and for some reason they interpreted my covering the shows as joining the band. Which was weird, because I hadn’t joined (and I didn’t see that they’d posted my joining to their Facebook page until almost a week later, so I was shocked and a little annoyed), but I liked the guys, so I didn’t say anything about it. Then we got into the rehearsal room, and I was even more shocked to discover that they didn’t really even know their own song list very well. This is something I can’t fathom. They had been a band for a WHILE and very few of the songs were outside of the “cover band standards” realm, and none of them were difficult to play. It is extraordinarily hard to get involved with a group when they haven’t even invested in their own material and you’re expected to slot in. The guitarist knew what he was doing, so that made it slightly easier for me coming in as lead guitarist, but the bassist and drummer were completely inconsistent with what they knew and/or could pull off. And it completely put me off from the start. Two strikes and we’d only played together one time.

Because I was in the process of moving, I wasn’t really available for rehearsals, and there were many discussions via email about what songs to play, and as we inched closer to a list that was long enough for covering a 4-hour bar gig, no one seemed to want to say, “THIS IS WHAT WE’RE DOING”. I think this is fairly common in bands, because no one wants to be the source of any butthurt in their bandmates, but I just couldn’t believe they didn’t have a set repertoire already and ready to go that I could just work from. Stuff would be added and removed, pointless songs that have no public traction anymore deleted from the list, tired-but-workable classics added with whining pretty much every time one was suggested. It was irritating, and that further soured my experience with the group. But I liked the idea of being lead guitarist and lead singer on most of the material, so I hunkered down and started woodshedding.

Let’s jump to an aside here for a moment. I have issues with being a guitarist in a band. It has more to do with wanting to be awesome even though I’m pretty inexperienced at getting a consistent good live tone. I have nothing but confidence as a bassist, having the experience of gigging regularly in that role in a variety of situations for 20-plus years. But as a guitarist, I had one little time between 2005-2006 and one little time in 2014 when I had done it, and that was about it. So being the “quality above all” musician I try to be, I know I can bring “teh suck” with my live sound sometimes, and that uncertainty and lack of preparation sets me up for serious anxiety. I always want to be awesome. I always want to impress people. I remember a quote from Joe Dimaggio when a reporter asked why he played so hard all the time, and it stuck with me: “Because there might have been somebody in the stands today who’d never seen my play before, and might never see me again.” I guess it might be rooted a little in my ego, but I’m like that about being kind to people, too, so maybe it’s just the unquenchable thirst for external approval of me as a person. I desperately need to be liked. And on that, like many people, I create fantasies of people hating me because of things they probably don’t even notice. It’s ridiculous and I’ve worked on ways to not let this sort of destructive thinking ruin experiences for me, but it’s a work in progress. Speaking of which…

This cover band had its first gig with me at a nice pool hall (not an oxymoron – it actually is a nice place) way up north in town. They used in-ear monitors, which I have not had very good luck with in the past. Despite not being able to hear myself most of the show, I didn’t completely eat shit, and that had a lot to do with working so damn hard on the material even though every time I tried to sit with it and work things out I desperately wanted to be doing something else. I haven’t quite figured out the psychology of this. Like I said before, this is a well-equipped, well-booked band with guys that I like in it. But doing anything for it made me anxious and frustrated. Partially because I felt like I was getting nothing from anyone in the band in terms of a cohesive direction with the material, and partially because when we’d get together to practice, only one of the three guys seemed to have actually done outside practice. I was HATING my experience.

I was ready to quit after the first gig, but I didn’t want to fuck them over, so I figured I’d tell them, “hey, I’ll do the March show, and then I’m done”, and then two more shows were booked in March. One of them completely without my knowledge. So I soldiered on, trying to accept the awkward reality of the half-assed, well-equipped, well-booked cover band full of guys I liked personally but who didn’t seem to work very hard on learning the songs. I figured at least it’d give me more guitar experience. I played the first March gig – again at the same nice pool hall up north. It went okay – I had better luck with the in-ears. Clips of my singing/playing showed me I was pretty good at this crap. But my frustration continued to grow. Then about a week before the show on 3-25, we noticed another one had been booked for 3-26 by the drummer without half the band’s knowledge. This was it for me. First they join me in the band without my consent, now they’re booking gigs and not even telling me? FUCK THAT SHIT. The week we were to play the gig on the 25th, they booked another show on 4-15, and that’s when I decided that if I didn’t have a complete blast playing the 3-25 and 3-26 shows, I was quitting the band as of the 4-15 show which would give the guys enough notice to find someone to cover the shows in May.

Well, that show was this past Friday night. And I played really well. I actually sort of had fun with it, and the fact that it was at the same venue where I first met with the guys and talked about covering shows was a nice completion of the circle for me. I appreciate that they gave me a shot, and I hope they don’t hate me for bailing on them or sharing my perspective here, but if they really want to compete with the Suedes of this town, they are going to need to improve a lot about the band. I’m not terribly sorry to not be a part of that improvement (and I know I definitely was, based on things I heard from most everyone connected to the band who had seen other versions of it), but I do wish them well.

So now that it’s over, I’m happy to have had the experience. It SUCKED for me, but it taught me things and drove me inside for some serious emotional inventory. Like that I miss Roman Holiday and want a band like that again, or at least something like that (“something like that” is currently brewing, and I’m really hoping we are able to make it happen). I’m going to learn how to be pushy and try to book gigs for my solo show and for this new band, once it’s up and running. As much as working with a well-equipped, well-booked band can be nice, for me it’s not worth it if it’s not fun. And I hated being an obstacle to booking because of my weird schedule. I feel that if I’m in charge, it’ll be much easier to manage with my availability.

And back to the new home stuff – now that I have a studio set up at the house, I WILL be producing more content. I will also be doing live performances of songs and maybe even some live “vlogging” (hello, 2007 terminology) on Facebook Live, which is pretty awesome if you ask me. So watch out for that.

I’m hoping for all good things in the music realm from now on, Connecting with my music more emotionally, performing with heart and spirit and really driving a party both as a solo and with the new trio, and hopefully finding a way to get all my music recorded so I can share it with the world. If I write new stuff, awesome, but I think just going through and recording what I’ve already written will be a good start.

Thank you for reading my ramblings, and thank you to the guys in the well-equipped, well-booked cover band for giving me a learning experience and being nice to me through it. Onward and outward (and hopefully upward)!

Peace be the journey!
TMS

So the progress continues…

So the progress continues…

Last night I was able to work up most of my song called “Miserable Bastard” into a full-band arrangement. The bass parts and vocals are just scratch versions at this point and everything needs more work (I want to compose a better bass part that has some more “movement”), but I’m satisfied with how things are progressing.

There’s another song I just wrote (a couple of days after “Way Too Long Of A While”) that I’m still working on, and that one might be next to be recorded…but there are others I still want to finish or rework, so who knows.

I’m just happy I’m getting things together for once. Now I have to get some acoustic gigs and get a new power trio together with Lee (Roman Holiday bandmate/drummer). I miss fronting an actual band.

Thanks for keeping up and HAPPY NEW YEAR! I hope you all have a prosperous and wonderful 2016.
TMS

Slaphappy Reunion Show at Brickstone Pizza 29 July 2015

Slaphappy Reunion Show at Brickstone Pizza 29 July 2015

I just wanted to post the audio from this so people who couldn’t be there could enjoy it.

It’s a little dodgy at times, because we didn’t rehearse beforehand and hadn’t played together in more than ten years, but mostly captures the genuine fun of this band. Thanks to Dennis, Brent, and Jon for making it happen, and to everyone who came out!

Set 1:

Set 2 Part 1:

Set 2 Part 2:

Set 3:

Setlist follows…

Set 1:
867-5309/Jenny
Bad Moon Rising
Stray Cat Strut
Get Ready
Hard To Handle
Can’t Get Enough
Hurts So Good
Some Kind Of Wonderful
Wooly Bully
Louie Louie
Escape (The Piña Colada Song)
What I Got
New Age Girl
Working For The Weekend
Mustang Sally

Set 2 Part 1:
No Matter What
Hot Legs
Superstition
Easy
Honky Tonk Women
You Shook Me All Night Long
You Give Love A Bad Name
Jessie’s Girl
Summer Of 69
Just Like Heaven

Set 2 Part 2:
Hungry Like The Wolf (Dennis drums)
My Own Worst Enemy (Chris Condon drums – Mike Craig vocals)
Man In The Box (Chris Condon drums – Mike Craig vocals)
Always Something There To Remind Me
Panama
Crazy Train
I Want You To Want Me

Set 3:
Play That Funky Music medley
Brick House (and jam/solos)
Tush
Roadhouse Blues
Sunshine Of Your Love
Tainted Love
What I Like About You
Kryptonite
Santeria

So since the last time we talked…

So since the last time we talked…

…I’ve had spurts of being busy but mostly have been doing almost nothing musically. I played a solo show back in early July, and before that was filling in with Capital Suspects and Chandler here and there. All that was fun. Then at the end of July I took my annual trip back to Florida and played a reunion show with my old band Slaphappy. It was a really fun experience playing with the fellas again, and I’ll post audio from it at some point.

When I returned from vacation I quickly booked two solo shows in August, which went pretty well (though the first of the two was a really tough one because it was outside in the August heat). I have another show coming up on September 26th and I’m quite excited about that one because I’m adding a bunch of songs to the repertoire. I’m also making sure I don’t forget to play more of my original songs in there. It should be a really fun show, so if you’re around, come see me in Round Rock at 121 On Main that night – I start at 8pm and play until 11pm.

I also went to see an amazing show at Threadgills – Travis Larson Band opening for The Aristocrats. It was an amazing night of melodic (and sometimes very unmelodic) shredding. SO MUCH TALENT…

The next phase of the musical life of Le Schizo will involve continuing to grow my acoustic solo show thing, which I’m really enjoying, and starting to properly record some of my own music. I’ve said it over and over again on here, but now is truly the time for me to make it happen. I’m going to reconfigure my home studio to make it more amenable to easily getting the ideas down in the computer and really get good tracks recorded. I’ll get the best stuff done first, but then go through and record everything that’s at some level of completeness so they’re all updated with my current level of competence.

That should make for some exciting times on this site. Hopefully getting the studio together will inspire me to create NEW songs that relate more to my experience over the past few years, since I feel there’s a lot of “songwriting potential energy” there that hasn’t been spent. But we shall see.

I told a friend of mine recently that creatives create because we have to…and it reminded me how much of a I really have not been a creative in the songwriting sense. It’s come to the point where I actually cringe when I refer to myself as a songwriter. It is a fact that I have written songs, but it is not a fact that I write them. I haven’t really written or recorded one in a long time – I did fashion a chord progression into a song experiment back in late November of last year, but that’s been it. I haven’t even been writing music, though I’ve been playing guitar all the time at home.

Not much more to report. If you read this and can come, please check out my show on 9/26. I’ll make an event post soon on the ol’ Facebook page, as well as the dedicated page I have set up for the solo acoustic thing.

I do promise one thing: NEW BATHROOM SCHIZO VIDEOS ARE COMING!

Take care, be nice, and be happy!

TMS

SOLO ACOUSTIC SHOW? Check.

SOLO ACOUSTIC SHOW? Check.

I FINALLY DID IT! I played a solo show this past Saturday. I’m quite excited about it. I had a pile of people come see me, and I recorded the whole thing on cruddy video (but good audio), so I will be posting clips here at some point. I played a broad mix of pop and rock stuff and it was very well-received by the audience. The owners of the place I played were very happy and said I did a great job. So, does this mean it’s going to happen on a regular basis now? I certainly hope so. Time to go build a website for this new endeavor…

I’ll write more later. I’m just excited.
TMS

Back as a solo act…

Back as a solo act…

So my time with Nudge has come to an end. I won’t go into gory details publicly of my displeasure with how the situation was handled, but it basically came down to scheduling issues that I created by demanding that my weekends with my kids are free. Priorities, you know? I do wish them well…

The good thing is it frees me up for finally having more ownership in my musical endeavors. Whether that’s a new power trio with me back on bass with my buddies from The Extractors Ed and Lee, a bunch of solo acoustic gigs, an acoustic duo of some sort, or finally working on my album, it’s a brave new world, and this time, it’s going to be MINE.

I have to start making shit instead of just talking about it or regurgitating it. Talking about it makes you an entertainer, agent or a critic. Making it makes you an artist. And I’m tired of not being an artist. (Though I won’t stop being an entertainer, too, because that pays…)

And that’s all for now.
TMS

So things with Nudge are kind of taking off!

So things with Nudge are kind of taking off!

In a pleasant turn of events, the new band is doing great! Even with summer vacations mucking things up and the occasional on-stage brain fart, we’ve managed to string together some truly decent shows and are being booked back at all the places we’ve played, which is fantastic.

Progress is being made in the repertoire department as well, as we’re adding eight new songs for the next show. As a special treat to my loyal readership, here is the list of songs we’re working up:
*All Star – Smash Mouth
*Harder To Breathe – Maroon 5
Epic – Faith No More
*Lithium – Nirvana
Psycho – Puddle of Mudd
Somebody To Shove – Soul Asylum
Everlong – Foo Fighters
Song 2 – Blur

Kind of an eclectic list, but all 90s and newer, as is the Nudge way.

I’m especially jazzed about playing “Epic” because I got to come up with some effects to cover the guitar harmonies in the solo. It’s pretty dang neato.

We’ve got a little chunk of BUSY coming up, so here’s the list of upcoming shows (COME SEE US!):
Friday, July 25th – Fast Eddie’s at 620 and 183
Saturday, August 2nd – Baby A’s Stonelake
Thursday, August 7th – Blind Pig Pub (on 6th Street)
Friday, August 8th – Shooters Billiards on 620

Then I go on vacation.

Like us on Facebook!

Hopefully you are having a wonderful summer!
TMS

Reflections on guitar…

Reflections on guitar…

So I really love playing guitar. It somehow manages to excite me, infuriate me, please me, challenge me, inspire me, and calm me all in the span of whatever stretch of time I’m playing. For the past 15 years, since I’ve been regularly gigging in cover bands, I’ve played a whole lot more bass than guitar, and though I absolutely love that, too, there’s something about returning “home” to guitar, which was my original “serious” instrument, even if it wasn’t the first one I wanted to play (I wanted to double on keyboards and bass – being John Paul Jones before I even knew who that was).

So as I said in the last post, I’ve joined a new band called “Nudge” as a guitarist and doing some singing. It’s been a really interesting and inspiring experience. Kind of like going back and revisiting an earlier part of your life, but with the added knowledge gained from years of additional experience.

The last time I played guitar in bands was from 2005-2006, before my move to Austin. It was a few mixed experiences. The main gigging band I ended up playing with had just come off their most successful lineup when they lost a critical founding member at the end of 2004 – their singer/guitarist. I auditioned for the job and it went very well, including an incredible jam on Stairway To Heaven. But they replaced the singer/guitarist with a person that had been previously fired from the band instead of picking me. I found out later it had less to do with my ability as a singer/guitarist and more to do with my image/perceived “coolness” and worries about whether I’d be available because at the time I was still playing bass in Slaphappy (little did any of us know that that band would be defunct less than a month after they made their choice). So they brought the new old guy in and he did okay, but within months, the rest of the band was falling apart and burned out. The lead guitarist was leaving the “band lifestyle” behind to start a business and a family, and the bassist was completely tired of the grind and wanted to do something more creative and original. So I got the call. After having me fill in for one show on bass with the old guitarist, which was FUN, they found a new bassist and I slotted into the singer/guitarist role vacated by the MONSTER guitarist they had previously had in the band. We agreed to split vocals and lead guitar duties 50/50, and we were on our way, playing much of the same exact music I’m now playing with Nudge. It was quite a challenge learning that many songs, that many lead parts, in such a short time frame, but I did it. And I was beginning to shine as a singer, too. This became a problem because the other guitarist/vocalist fancied himself the de facto lead singer, which was weird because of the agreement that was reached when I joined the band. He kept shifting lead guitar duties off to me and taking vocals away – which was only annoying to me because it wasn’t improving the sound of the band to have him sing the songs. We actually received complaints about his singing on numerous occasions, so if anyone was going to be vocally marginalized, it probably should have been him, not me. This led to some serious drama and his eventual departure from the band. I take responsibility for making it dramatic, too. It was a lesson I needed to learn – how to stick up for myself without just being a dick. But anyway, through all that, I learned how to sound good as a guitarist live. I still believe that if they had chosen me in the first place, the band would have continued and had its most incredible lineup ever, but we don’t know because that “Alternate 2005” never happened.

During this time, the just-quit bassist from the band and I decided we wanted to try and get something together – less pressure than our previous bands, more focused on stuff we wanted to do rather than what we expected to work, and also to work in originals and all sorts of other cool stuff. We recruited a keyboardist with a great ear and my musical soul brother Jon from Slaphappy and started trying to figure out what we’d become. As time wore on, though, it became less and less what the bassist wanted to do, and he ended up leaving. We sputtered along with a different bassist, even playing a show, but it wasn’t the same, and we lost interest by the end of 2005. I did really work up my singing/playing chops – even learning how to play semi-complicated lead fills while singing, so that was positive.

But then I moved away.

And the only work I found in Austin was as a bassist, so the guitar fell into the background. I played a few songs on guitar in Roman Holiday for a little while, but it always felt forced and I never was fully comfortable because doing both in one show feels really weird.

All those years of being focused on the arrangements, and singing, and more than that, the GROOVE have improved my guitar playing so much that I look back at 2005-2006 and think, “Wow. I really didn’t know shit about playing guitar in a band.” And I’m sure in 8 years I’ll look back to now and think the same thing…but the parts are coming together more and more easily than ever, and it’s so far been a fantastic experience. Let’s hope that continues.

Interesting side note: The last time I grew my hair this long was in 2005-2006, too. I cut it when I moved to Austin. So long hair = playing guitar in a band? 🙂

Shows coming up:
June 14th at Steiner Ranch for the SELF benefit
June 20th at Shooters on 620

All info can be found here: http://www.nudgeatx.com and you can like us on facebook if you like (please do…)

Thanks and peace be the journey…
TMS

NUDGE Me Back To Guitar

NUDGE Me Back To Guitar

Crap grammar aside, it’s my silly way of saying that I have joined a new band – and I’m back on guitar! Yes, I have joined the local 90s-and-more cover band Nudge (www.nudgeatx.com) as guitarist/vocalist. This is big because I haven’t played guitar in a band on any sort of regular basis since my days in Dial-9…and that was over 8 years ago! I’m very excited. I played a great show with them Friday night on minimal rehearsal and it seemed to come together really easy. I look forward with what we’ll be able to accomplish.

Regular readers of this blog might wonder what’s going on with the project I was putting together with Lee – that’s still likely to happen in some form. It will be worked around the new band and hopefully with it I will continue to get to sing a lot of lead (sharing with Lee, of course) and play bass, because I know that’s an itch that I will need to scratch.

For now, I have a lot of guitar to play and a lot of songs to learn. But it’s totally worth it.

Check out www.nudgeatx.com and come see a show. And have a great June!
TMS

It takes two…

It takes two…

And on my baby-steps path to being a solo act, I’m starting a duo with my pal Lee. You may know him from such past MusicalSchizo musical experiences as “The Extractors” and “Roman Holiday”, and if you know him from there, you know he’s a drummer and singer.

But if you really knew him, you’d know he’s a guitarist, too! So Lee and I are starting a crazy duo that will have us playing various instruments (he guitar, percussion (cajon, etc), and singing…me guitar, bass, maybe some foot percussion and singing). We will have a relatively atypical but still very pop-oriented song selection (choosing songs people don’t tend to play). And we will bring the acoustic rock.

It should be a lot of fun once we get it off the ground, and I’m going to exploit some of my new contacts to book shows for this group in addition to the shows I’m planning on trying to get for the full Roman Holiday (because it’s been too damn long since that band’s been playing). Maybe since this is 2/3rds of Roman Holiday, we can call it “Tooth Herds” or something punny like that. I guess we’ll see.

GIG ALERT: ATM (Audio Time Machine) is playing on April 23rd and May 14th. So that’s nice. 🙂

And that’s the update. Have a happy St. Patrick’s Day!
TMS