
Snake Alley Band

A better conversation about music, with David Loftis and Peter Bulanow
By Pete Bulanow
By Pete Bulanow
By Pete Bulanow
By Pete Bulanow
By Pete Bulanow
unseemly guitar pedals by Pete Bulanow
~ Not 1 Corinthians 12
By Pete Bulanow
By Pete Bulanow
He’s got two percussionists, he’s got Jason playing the acoustic piano, Kipper playing the keyboards, and Jeff playing the organ, electric bass and acoustic bass, and guitar. He has all these elements going on at the same time, and it’s working, and it’s very soft, it’s very sensitive. And that was probably the most surprising thing, because on some nights my band is way louder than this and there’s only four guys, and it made me think, hmmm, maybe I better rethink some things when I go home. ~ Christian McBrideand
Songs have to be simple. They can have a subtext that you can find, but you shouldn’t be singing about an issue. You shouldn’t be saying, down with this or down with that, that’s just journalism. Art is something else, something veiled. And I often feel like songwriting is something like putting yourself into a state of receptivity, or to be more cosmic about it, a state of grace where the song can reveal itself to you. And I think you’re lucky if you can be in a beautiful place, because nature is full of stories, full of images. Powerful, healing images. ~ StingUltimately, one of the greatest gifts of this project is the new rendition of the song “Fragile,” developed just days before the concert. Absolutely breath-taking, and hauntingly prescient:
If blood will flow when flesh and steel are one Drying in the color of the evening sun Tomorrow’s rain will wash the stains away But something in our minds will always stay Perhaps this final act was meant To clinch a lifetime’s argument That nothing comes from violence and nothing ever could For all those born beneath an angry star Lest we forget how fragile we are On and on the rain will fall Like tears from a star like tears from a star On and on the rain will say How fragile we are how fragile we are How fragile we are how fragile we are
By Pete Bulanow
Let’s say you’re in the key of G, and the progression you’re playing is G C Em7 D. That’s a 1 4 6 5, by the way.So if you put your pinky on the G, you can play the progression with the following inversions: G – 1st inversion C – root Em7 – 2nd inversion (or Em – 2nd inversion) D -2nd inversion, with a G on top, making it a D4 chord If you put your pinky on the D, you could play the progression with the following inversions: G – root C – 1st inversion, with a D on top, making it a C2 chord Em7 – root D -root This is something I do kind of instinctively, and then work my way up or down the keyboard to build or release tension, but it’s pretty cool to see it all written out the way Ed did. Stop by and leave him some love ( that is, some comments) on his site!
By Pete Bulanow
By Pete Bulanow
Dave Brubeck, Take 5 – 5/4 Radiohead, 15 step – 5/4 Seven Days, Sting – 5/4 Brought to my Senses, Sting – 7/4 (after the a tempo) Dreaming in Metaphors, Seal – 7/4 Pat Metheny, The First Circle, 11/4The above songs were selected because they keep the meter consistent for the entire song. Whereas there are a lot more songs with change-ups that alter the time signature (or meter) throughout the song. I want to talk about one of those with a (now) simple change-up in an otherwise straight forward song. My whole reason for doing this blog post is, selfishly, because I really like the 5/8 bar in the otherwise 6/8 song halfway through the chorus of Famous One! I’ve played with more bands than not that skip that little detail, and it’s because getting the feel of that measure is pretty hard without having the shorthand of knowing how to count. Also, the band really needs to nail the 5/8 feel in the first measure break (right when they sing “Aaaalll the Earth”), so that the 6/8 measure in the break can reset everyone to find the entrance of the second half of the chorus. Bands that get sloppy, that can’t nail that down, end up transmitting a hesitancy to the congregation. At that point the producer is right to kill the 5/8 measure and play it all in 6/8. But with it in there, man it adds that extra little freshness and urgency. To me, it just elevates that song to one of my all-time favorites.
Creation Sings by Keith Getty – Verses in 5/4, Choruses in 3/4 Little Town by Amy Grant – Mostly 4/4, with some 2/4, 3/4 and 5/4 barsCan anyone suggest any other favorites in odd or changing meters?