Sounds like…. 

Sounds like…. 

One sound. A few years back I was playing around with G major, such a core sound that Apple made it what you hear when you turned on your Macintosh / plus / iMac etc. so billions of people know what it sounds like.  When composing, you start with a note / chord and then you have 3 choices: 1) repeat that note, b) go up from that note, or c) go down from that note. Then, if you choose (a) and repeat, you can stay on the note but actually shift it to a different chord so it doesn’t sound like G - it could be to E minor, especially as both have the same key signature, but sound quite different. And so on for (b) and (c). This sounds a little prescriptive and formulaic but in practice it’s just what you do, either with your hands on the keys of the piano / strings of a guitar etc., or on a blank sheet music page or, better still, on notation software which saves lots of rubbing out on paper!

On this occasion I went for (c), but going down a half note (more precisely, a half-tone or half-step); that is, to the next key down: from G it is a raised ‘black note’ = F sharp). This changes the chord to D major, but I held the G note in the bass, which provided a seamless and slight shift in tone; sort of mixing the two. You have lots of choices on a piano keyboard: the 8 notes up/down from ‘middle C’ are repeated 10 times on a piano keyboard and there are 12 semitones. This always reminds me of a wonderful record shop on Reykjavik called “12 Tonar" 12tonar.company.site and a great coffee shop a bit further down the hill called “Mokka” — on a snowy April day a few years back, I had warm and encouraging conversations in both places with Johannes Augustsson, owner and co-founder of “12 Tonar”. Before leaving, I had a bundle of ‘Sigor Ros’ type Icelandic albums I’d bought for my sons, chosen with help from the staff from 100s on offer. At “12 Tonar”, the love and kindness begins a few moments after customers walk in the door, with the offer of a free cup of espresso and encyclopaedic staff knowledge — for a review see: chloejakiela.com/12-tonar

Back to G major. What I came up with that day I was happy with as a nicely shaped chord progression mixing major and minor, nothing more. I was about to record my 2nd album, “Trespass”, with Heath Cullen heathcullen.com producing, on a grand piano at a bush location just inland from the south coast of NSW so I sent the sound file to Heath as a taster of what I might try to record. He came back and said it has a lovely melody line so I filled it out a bit with pauses, trills and some repeated phrases. On the day, we recorded it in one take, capturing (as often happens) the mood and texture best before repetition can wear down what a song sounds like to something tired and mechanical. So this is what my solo piano version sounds like (Under “iPhone Blues”) at soundcloud.com/stevecrumpmusic


Lots of sounds.
When I was young, pre-teens even, my mother took me to hear the Sydney Symphony Orchestra at Sydney Town Hall (there was no Opera House yet). They were fun escapades away from the rest of the family, travelling on a Sydney Harbour Ferry in the early evening, then train from Circular Quay, sharing an “Old Gold” Cadbury’s chocolate bar there and back. But, of course, the music is what we went for and it seeped into my consciousness unlike anything else in my childhood except perhaps the freedom of growing up near beach and bushland. So when I play something, like “iPhone Blues”, I can’t but help hear lots of orchestral instruments ‘playing along’ with me. 

Serendipitously, in 2021 I bumped into Jabra Latham jabralathammusic.com at a Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra event - that “bump” is quite a story in itself but for another day. We knew a little, but not a lot, about each other. Mainly, I admired the arrangements he had done for the recently released Monique Brumby moniquebrumby.com album with the TSO. We organised to meet up over coffee and clicked. The result is we’re working on about 12 of my pieces for arrangements and hopefully recording orchestra-style later in 2022. Jabra is incredibly respectful of my piano line melody, tonal shifts and dynamics / pauses - i.e., the way I compose and play that makes my compositions “me” - whilst extending and elaborating on them in a way that makes them richer and textured through the interplay of ensemble instruments.

So this (link below) is what a digital demo ensemble arrangement of “iPhone Blues” sounds like, adding violins, viola. violincello and double bass to the piano. This version includes a melody line composed for voice by Naarah naarah.com.au further enriching the melodies and emotions, based on some lyrics from Pablo Neruda’s poem, “So You Will Hear Me”. You’ll hear a passage where the violins stay on G throughout a whole chord progression, illustrating my point above ‘sounds like’ the same whilst sounding different! And you’ll hear a new bit, a musical ’bridge’ Jabra said it needed ASAP so I stayed on G but added B, D and F sharp to a chord to build a short 4 bar passage and it seemed to fit nicely. Incidentally, to do this I just went down one 1/2 step from G, as in the example above for the solo piano, but this time the chord is B minor.

As this is a copyrighted work-in-progress, please do not share. I’ll put up the “played by humans” ensemble as soon as it is ready

Piano, pianos everywhere = bliss!!

One of the best community creative arts developments that has popped up around the world over the last decade has been placing pianos in public spaces and just leaving them there for anyone to play. There’s always a queue! This happened in Sydney about 10 years ago, with one location being a lovely old upright placed on the pavement between the Queen Victoria Building and Sydney Town Hall. It provided the first opportunity for me to play in public, a song called “Natural High”, and to get some instantaneous feedback (along the lines of “very nice” etc!). I once read that Bob Dylan couldn’t walk past a guitar with picking it up - or maybe it was George Harrison - but the point holds true for most musicians; my fingers itch when they see a keyboard.

Not that I find it easy. At my first, and only, eisteddfod when about 7 years old, stage fright took such a hold of me that, after stepping forward to bow to the audience, I had to be guided to the piano because my feet wouldn’t move. Have you noticed how many big name stars avoid looking at the audience until a few songs in? Stories of throwing up before going on stage are not only real for actors, but also musicians and I’m sure the majority of performers - it’s almost like standing there naked; and is anyone going to clap? Most great artists thrive on the energy overcoming such fears and doubts provide, yet we also see and feel their hurt and pain when the clapping / adulation stops.

My favourite public performance was in Perth in December 2017, when I played an improvised duet with my just-5 year old grandson, both watching each other’s eyes to work out what notes to go to next as we serenaded the lunchtime crowd. He’s cool! 

MUSICAL VARIATIONS

Standing on assembly in senior school I struck up a conversation with a young teacher who I knew was interested in music. We shouldn't have been talking. He should have been patrolling the class groups telling us to be quiet. But, with over 1,000 students standing in the hot sun, our brief chat didn’t attract any attention. That he would talk when meant to be acting out an adult role silencing us boys was what we all liked about him.

And he liked Bob. He was telling me about a Dylan single B side that had a different version to the album version and I was intrigued. I’d already latched on to the full album version of “Just Like A Woman” with it’s long, affectionate and pained harmonica outro that was cut to a few seconds for the single. The song he told me about was a live variation, and Bob’s always said that’s how his songs should be heard, how he hears them.

Variations on a musical theme have been at the core of composition since the Stone Age — either variations throughout a single piece, or variations in the way different people play it, at different times, variations in the instruments used, or variations in how the same person plays it depending on the location, their mood, or a zillion other variables.

We can all cite hundreds of examples of great re-readings of major hits, e.g., by Joni Mitchell (whose songs were never bedded down into a single thing anyway), impressively by Joe Cocker and, my favourite, Bruce Springsteen’s transformation of the (misunderstood as nationalistic) stadium rock anthem “Born In The USA” into a chilling acoustic accusation against those who forget what the values are that made America “great”, values that bound millions of migrants (poor and dispossessed) together on to common ground, symbolised in The Boss’s story of the treatment of a Vietnam veteran.

I’m not sure how to move into this paragraph, because I don’t want to give even a hint of an impression I think I’m in the same galaxy, let alone universe, as the examples above, but I want to give my own example, via “If I Give My Heart To You?”. Quite by surprise, this is (by a long shot) the most listened to of the “Midnight Rain” tracks on my Soundcloud site. This song actually has a long bridge in the middle that you won’t hear on “Midnight Rain” or anywhere else, yet. When I did a run through of this for Heath at Night Train Studios I was worried the bridge made it a bit too long and boring so I didn’t play it. When we sat down and listened to the take he had, we both looked at each other and said “That’s it!” — straight, clear, uncluttered, notes ringing out my declaration of love.

Not long after recording that version I sat at my piano at home in a very different mood, this time much more pensive, not even starting out to play this song at all, as you can hear from “new” intro on the sound file attached; this variation only recorded because I must have been hopeing a new song might happen. The sound quality could be a lot better but this is one variation I don’t want to try to, don’t think I could, repeat — reaching, fumbling, hesitant, then gentle, affirming and calm, in hope and trust that the unspoken heart’s answer is also affirmative.

The sheet music for “If I Give My Heart To You?” is now up on my music web page. What variations can you play?

Stay with Bob

When Dylan released “Shadows In The Night” a lot of Dylan fans I know swore they’d never buy it and, going on the poor sales in Australia (compared to #1 in the UK), that’s exactly what happened - people rejected this take on Robert Zimmerman.

Some saw it as a strange way for Bob to spend the twilight years of his career; others saw it as a cop-out, the thing burnt-out stars do when they don’t have any of their own material or when the muse has dried up. Even more saw it as a travesty of the Sinatra legend, Bob’s gravelly voice - they claimed - not up to the textures, cadences and vocal range needed for material that historically was carried by a ‘big band’.

But, as Bob told us himself, he “can’t unring the bell” and for those who have been listening to him anytime since he started, this remarkable collection of so-called “Sinatra” songs was nothing more than a natural extension of Bob’s musicality, another in a long list of statements about his musical heritage, just as much as it was on his very 1st album, just as much as it was on ”Self-Portrait”, just as much as it was on his ‘gospel albums’, and so on; all there for anyone to hear, acknowledging these types of songs have always been in Bob’s repertoire.

Some of them, like “That Lucky Ol’ Sun”, had been performed live over decades. As the closing song on “Shadows”, the final chorus is a revelation and the band - so tuned in and long-serving - sound like they could do it standing on their heads, so effortlessly guiding the melody along to Bob’s heartfelt and aching performance.

This blog is about Bob, but we can be just as thankful that he has had this band at his back for so many years now. I had the huge privilege and pleasure to bump into them at various airports during an Australian tour a few years back. By the 3rd time I got chatting with most of the band, not about Bob but about the music, so that I ended up sitting with them in an airport lounge and getting warm personal signatures. Thanks, thanks.

“The Night We called it a Day”, performed live for David Letterman the night he called it a day, was something for the history books, not only because of Letterman’s influence on shaping public perceptions of so many artists at crucial times of their career [Bob doing “Jokerman”, and the final Warren Zevon performance just before he died - one of the most poignant moments of TV for that decade] but also, for Dylan, a bookend to an era not only of TV but of stars they just don’t make anymore, Bob himself included. 

That Bob performed “Mutineer” live for months after Zevon’s passing, as well as a few others from Warren’s catalogue, just added to the links Bob always makes with the universality, not just American, of the human spirit expressed through song - something that Mavis Staples is again part of in Bob’s orbit for the current tour.

“Stay With Me”, the subject of this YouTube clip, is one of the best examples of what Dylan has done from the word ‘go’ - pick up a standard and make it his own. Is this a love song? Is it a religious song? Is it a supplication? Is it a boast? If a love song who to? If a prayer, which god? I don’t know and don’t care about the answers. The thing for me is that Bob cares, just like he did so tangibly in his gentle and yet searing rendition of “Restless Farewell”, sung to Sinatra himself at his 80th birthday “My Way” celebration concert.

“Fallen Angels” only accentuates all the above, in spades. The early view was that these are outtakes from “Shadows”, a filler album, filling in time before whatever’s to come next. But it didn’t take long before “Fallen Angels” came to be seen as even better than “Shadows”, Bob cantering with joy through “That Old Black Magic” and bowing in reverence through “All The Way”.

Watch this video of “Stay With Me”, listen to his voice, look at his face, stay tuned for the applause and see him still shy and slightly embarrassed about all the attention, a 5 minute standing ovation according to a witness.

If you haven’t stayed with Bob, think again - unring that bell.