No Apology
This song would be rewritten as “Tellina Lie” and performed band-style. Vocals in bridge just had to go.
This song would be rewritten as “Tellina Lie” and performed band-style. Vocals in bridge just had to go.
This song developed as it went, and gathered meaning in its abstract nature like a snowball rolling downhill. At an epic length of almost six minutes it was our longest track, it kept growing organically until some kind of bizarre feedback-drenched guitar solo came out the other end.
This must be my third or fourth take on this song, now with an actual band. It’s certainly well-developed at this point.
Didn’t dive too deep; came up jaunty. It wasn’t easy to fit “inevitable” in like that but if Dylan can do it, so could I.
On a bit of a whim, Lee Armstrong and I ended up making a hip hop album in 2002. I had been playing around with making some beats in Reason, but didn’t have much of a direction. We decided to use the equipment and beats that were sitting around to some good use. We recorded…
It all happened so quickly. This was the only phrase I remembered…