The making of “Relics ’16-17″
I have decided to combine my three independently produced seven-song EPs into one album to represent 2016-2017, which I will name Relics ’16-17. Fourteen of the twenty-one tunes have been selected, and this collection will take the place of my homemade EPs over the last two years on my merch table. These are home recordings, in a home studio (a garage??)…but they don’t sound like it. They turned out pretty artsy! How?
Well, I’ll tell you.
First off, I was sponsored and pushed by my dear friend Kris Farm over a decade ago to learn, and fail, and learn again, how to produce quality tracks in a home studio. I was tutored by my amazing friend Ryan Ferris for several years on techniques and tricks. When I was lucky enough to find myself in a “real studio” with a “real engineer”, I paid more careful attention to the technical things going on than Anyone else suspected. Obviously it is expensive for studio rental time, plus a producer, a studio engineer, a mastering engineer, a disc replication company and a promotions expert…in order to produce and share the Newest Songs…and is that investment worth anything more than personal vanity, if the record doesn’t “connect” with an audience “somewhere out there…”?
I’ve got songs, and I believe in them, so here’s what I do to get them produced at home. Thanks for reading my blog!
I start as soon as I first imagine a new tune. It comes out of nowhere, and I get obsessed with it. We make it to the demo stage after an aspect or two of it gets stuck in my head for around twelve hours. Not every song idea gets to this stage!
The drafting happens all inside my head, rolling through the hooks and turning over and over again in a meditative fog until they start to congeal into progressive parts. Then, it is time to attempt to record a demo.
I bide my time, imagining and drafting, until I come upon a day where I know I have a minimum of eight hours to myself.
I clean The Space.
I pull out all the instruments I think I might need.
I pull out microphones, cables. I wire everything up, create a computer file, link up all my inputs.
I try to relax, and let the music flow out of me. By the time the first studio performance is done, I have a pretty good idea whether I should leave it as a solo performance piece, a raw piece...or spend some time layering it with various supporting instruments. If I have enough time left in my "time block", I start This following process:
Tracking parts, first.
Not worrying about "how they will settle in the overall, eventual, theoretical future mix"...just playing music, free and clear and as close to the original hauntings as I can muster.
By the time I get through a few of these bursts, even for a three-minute song, my time block is usually up. So I tear down, clean up entirely, and rest.
And reflect.
I imagine even more.
I try to relax.
If the tune is good enough, the intrinsic hooks continue to constantly pound in my head. Sometimes, going through the initial demo process teaches me that the song idea itself is actually pretty dumb, and I abandon it!
I wait patiently for my next chance to do more work. Maybe I burn a CD with whatever I have so far...and drive around listening to it both first thing in the morning on my drive to New Seasons, later at night, lots of various situations and in various moods, by myself. Trying to get a grasp on whether or not I am on the right path with communicating this particular idea.
In the few and best of cases, my original recording is built upon, layered, added to, explored with mixing techniques, and turned into something that I self-master and add to an EP that I give away at shows. In many cases, something goes creatively wrong or gets lost in translation, and I face the daunting emotional task of STARTING OVER (OH GOD...this involves more waiting, the worst of all scenarios);
OR
adding to, re-adjusting, re-balancing, trying to work with that soon-to-be-elusive original "vision" and trying to make some kind of two to six minute "listening experience" that makes me "feel good"...like I have accomplished something, Done something, made my momentary existence worthwhile.
When I get to a stage where I feel like the recording itself makes sense to me, in a recorded, independent-listening, any-mood situation, I painstakingly remove all the technical errors, one by one, very carefully, as far as my knowledge will allow.
I create artwork somehow, print it all up, and share. Then, I spend the rest of my life second-guessing every aspect of the mix! Each of the seven-song EPs from the past two years took about 4 months to track, mix, and finalize.
Thus, does the music advertised as “…Sessions” come to be found on a table labeled "make a small donation and take a free CD" or "Support Local Music" or some such wordage at a live performance of mine.
"to Keep Us Close" (spring 2016)
"The Baron Ward Spring 2016 EP"
"Wherever I've Been, Wherever I Go" (fall 2016)
"About What You'd Expect" (March 2017)
“Relics ’16-17” —> (coming February 2018) (preview at https://soundcloud.com/chrisbaronmusic)
And Now:
This home-production effort was a valuable and rewarding experience. Tunnel-vision artistry can (eventually) be appreciated. However, there is something Great to be said for having an outside influence during the creative process...a balancing act...an attuned and Objective ear...Thus, I decided to kickstart my 2018 solo album with James Book, and Ninkasi Studios in Eugene. Mr JB is mixing our tracks now! The final full-length album will be rounded out with several traditional home-style tracks and released by Spring 2018...














