Monday, November 6, 2017

new single for Felsen.

We're excited to announce to you that we have a new single out today.  This is the first tune we're putting out there from our soon-to-be released and eagerly-anticipated new LP Blood Orange Moon.  The tune is called "Vultures on Your Bones" and we're really proud of it. 

I made about 6 different attempts to record this.  I tried it in the key of G, E, F, F# and finally landed in D.  I rewrote it several times.  For a period of time it was called "Fall of the House of Zuckerberg" and then it was "Underachievers Anonymous". Both good titles (don't even think about it you songwriters out there), but something just wasn't right.  Toying around with the chords and the words and rhythm and the key and the tempo until something finally made it stick and I'm proud to report I'm content here and would love for you to listen.  enjoy it dear friends.




I wanna live where culture kills machines
and decent melodies will haunt you in your dreams.
I wanna laugh once again before I die.
Do you think that you could try?
Do you need a reason why?

From the cradle to the amp to the grave
who’s life tonight will be saved.
If there’s vultures on your bones
but they just won’t leave you alone,
they just won’t leave you alone.

I believe in you, can you believe in me
when junk technology is the new mythology?
I’ve written you a song.
If you’d like to sing along
trust your feelings they’re not wrong.
Once you hear it then it’s gone.

From the cradle to the amp to the grave
who’s life tonight will be saved.
If there’s vultures on your bones
but they just won’t leave you alone,
they just won’t leave you alone.

If my afterlife
has got a lazy undertow,
you can feel my tempo slow,
feel the windy tarmac blow.
Like leaves on the breeze
beneath the rubble and debris,
broken glass, swarm of bees
we’re stardust you and me.

From the cradle to the amp to the grave
who’s life tonight will be saved.
If there’s vultures on your bones
but they just won’t leave you alone,

they just won’t leave you alone.

Monday, October 16, 2017

LPs for me and for you...


I just took possession of a few test pressings of Felsen's new LP sent to me directly from the factory in the Czech Republic.  It's been really fun listening at the homes of friends and on my own super lo-fi turntable here at stately Griffin Manor in Alameda, CA.  


Over many long years, I've made lots of recordings as both a session drummer for hire, drummer band member and more recently as the creative benign benevolent dictator at Felsen inc (this will be our 5th release thankyouverymuch). Some of those recordings never really saw the light of day so-to-speak, while others came out on CD and way back, even as cassette tape (remember those?) releases. But this will be my first time making an actual LP.  On Friday I had the very, very deeply satisfying experience of listening to the LP test pressing from start to finish at my dear old friend Pie's house on his KILLER stereo.  Giant speakers, super high end turntable, tube amplifier, listening at a pretty high volume.  It was all very intoxicating for me. I realized how great a job Allen Clapp did mixing this sucker.  (Cudos to Myles Boisen for a stellar mastering job as well).  From the get go I told Allen this would be coming out on LP and I really believe he mixed with that in mind.  The CD version of this new Felsen release sounds really good too, BUT the LP sounds really tremendous. I realized Friday that Blood Orange Moon is really intended to be listened to on LP and really should be listened to from start to finish, digested in one sitting.  Kind of a tall order in this insane, hectic time when the collective attention span has been progressively whittled away.  (Have you even made it this far in my blog?)  I asked my brother, who is a professional symphonic musician if he listens to much music, "Nope. Too busy, too distracted" he said.  Yikes. Not boding well for me trying to get this album out into the universe.  I get it people.  Enjoy Blood Orange Moon on your computer while you're working, or at home making dinner, or making love, or in the bath, or in your earbuds when you're at the gym working out on the treadmill.  However you want to do it , ultimately is fine with me, BUT if you do get the beautiful opportunity to actually listen to the LP, alone when the house is otherwise quiet and you've silenced your phone and slowed down your heart rate and your lying still for 44 minutes, I think you'll really get it and love it.  I promise.  #sodamnworthit   Preorder your Blood Orange Moon LP Now.

Here's a sneak preview of one of the new tunes.  Enjoy!  

In the meantime, we have a few really fun live and local shows coming up around Halloween weekend.  We headline the Ivy Room on Friday Oct 27.  It's Thriller Flash Mob.  What?  A Thriller-themed Halloween Show (dress up y'all).  3 great local bands will each be playing a hit from MJ's Thriller album in their set and then a grand finale of all the bands crammed together on the Ivy's stage playing the tune "Thriller" while you'll be out in the audience doing the Thriller dance.   That's right.  Super Sexy DJ Huggaboot will be spinning old school funk and soul before and after.  Arrive early, stay late.


And then Sunday Oct 29 we have a beautiful house concert in Alameda at the home of Felsenista Numero Uno, Laurie Wagner.  This will be our 3rd time rocking her backyard.  Each time has been truly magical.  How bout some vimeo from the last time we played at Laurie's 27 Powers House Concert?   Get your tickets in advance.  (It really helps)


Thanks y'all.

xoxo
felsen


Friday, August 4, 2017

Blood Orange Moon

Oh my.  It has been a very long time since I've posted anything to this blog.  OK here goes...

Felsen's long-overdue 5th album is finally recorded, mixed and mastered.  It's been two years of many obstacles, many false starts and many blind excursions down musical dead ends, but I feel like I got out alive and emerged with something beautiful to share.  I had a strong desire to depart from previous Felsen albums; easier said than done.  

One big difference is Allen Clapp's mix of this album.  A few years ago, I was reading a 1971 review of George Harrison's then new album, All This Must Pass and the reviewer described it as "music for mountain tops".  I loved that.  And I love that album.  I was also greatly under the musical narcosis of Beck's twin albums Sea Change and Morning Phase as well as Songs for a Blue Guitar by Red House Painters.  I wanted something bigger, more expansive--music for mountaintops.  Allen has a special understanding of reverb and this album needed tons.  Of course he got what I wanted to achieve--he and his studio reside on a mountain.  

If you gotta mix an album, it might as well be here, in the Santa Cruz mountains, sitting on a bench made out of felled wood, and drinking a beer at 11am. 


The tunes too are different, tempos slower, less of the amped-up rockers of Felsen past. I'm often singing in a lower register of my voice.  The tunes are often quieter.  My 10 year old son said they're more meaningful (whatever that may mean to a 10 year old), I'll go with that.  Felsen's last album, I Don't Know How to Talk Anymore is all about feeling displaced by technology while trying to remain human.  This album is about direct (and indirect) communication, desire, loss, cutting through the BS, wanting to be with you and wanting to sing right into your ear.  I think you'll like it. I think you'll get it.  The album's called Blood Orange Moon.  Hey, some good news: We'll be releasing this one on Allen's Mystery Lawn Music record label.  Pretty cool, huh?

So here it is...you're first look at our new album cover.  This was from my all time fav Felsen photo shoot.  We spent an afternoon at the home of gal pal numero uno, KC Rosenberg's lovely home in Alameda and shot the front and back album covers as well as a bunch of band PR shots. Photos by Stephanie Williamson.   


  
Felsen is in a fun phase now of learning how to play the new material and road testing it. We booked a little tour for the last weekend of July.  This was the first time on the road, so-to-speak in quite some time.   We had a lot of fun, drank some good coffee, ate really well, played great, jelled as a band and made some new fans.  How bout a little recap cobbled together from my Facebook status updates...

Day One was all about the last minute transpo issues. Scrambling to figure out what to do and as usual, Felsen is operating on pretty much zero budget. Why have rental prices on vans more than doubled since the last time felsen rented one 3 years ago? we're touring commando this time around. 4 Dudes, 1 SUV. Minimal gear and borrowing what we need from the other most helpful bands were performing with. (Thank you fellow rockers.) This is contrary to a band's usual power move: arriving at venue in cool big van, unloading shit ton of gear with band's name "Decryptitude" stenciled in impossible to read Gothic font on recently purchased from from Guitar Center road cases. "Wow they must be great with all that gear. Stenciled names? That's next level." Felsen's power move: arrive with nothing and proceed to throw down mightily. Def our most MacGyver-esque, Stealthy Ninja Commando raid of a tour. Our other huge power move...our sexy bass player Bryan Dean is less than 2 months out from a very successful cancer surgery. Bryan's come back tour? The Bryan Dean kicks cancer's sweet ass Tour of 2017? You'd never know based on how he played. Such a pleasure to rock with him.

The Dip in Redding was a fun one. The Band sounded great. Really beginning to inhabit some of the new tunes: Telepathic Kind, Private Airline in the Sky, White Denim Jeans.... It was just us fellas last night as we'll meet up later today with the Dara in Medford for the remainder of the shows. We opened for Foxtails Brigade--very interesting band. Def check them out. Small crowd of peeps hanging out for our opening set and then a wall of people arrived JUST IN TIME for their set--such is the fate of the opening band. We def one over a few (Felsen wins fans one at a time). The good people at the venue were kind and supportive and invited us back whenever we're passing through. We had fun. Now getting some extra rest at the RodeRage Inn of Redding. 4 dudes, one room. "Free breakfast" sounds great on the website when you book the room...but in reality, it's usually fairly grim. Styrofoam coffee cups and those weird cereal dispensers, make your own waffle set up, folding chairs, florescent lighting, TV on the wall perpetually turned onto FOX news. Motel life. Next stop Medford. Temp 102 degrees.








We went to check in at the motel in Medford and the nice lady at the counter asked to see all of our IDs. The look on her face was priceless...I assured her all of our criminal records were clean-ish. Who's the most shady? I vote for Dara. She looks straight outta Breaking Bad, cooking meth in a trailer in the desert kinda shady IMHO.





Day 2.  Felsen's Tetris game is bullet proof. 5 musicians, 1 telecaster-black w/ virgin of Guadalupe sticker (what? I'm a recovering  Catholic), 1 mexican Fender Squire Stratocaster, 1 big black Johnson acoustic guitar, 1 schecter PJ5 bass, 1 Fender blues Jr amp (thanks Scarth), 1 small bass amp (thanks Eran), 1 1967 fender pro reverb amp, 1 Ludwig snare, 1 cymbal bag, 1 glockenspiel (thank god she left her MFing didgeridoo at home), CDs, ladies t shirts, 5 backpacks, 1 ladies fanny pak (seriously WTF?) 1 sleeping bag "the cloth missile", assorted cheetos, coffee cups all in 1 mid-sized SUV (nothing mid size here...this shit's small.) Rolling down the highway to 2 shows today in Portland. Savoring memories from last nights crazy fun show at Johnny B's in Medford. So damn fun. TV Heads were amazing. LA friends.. Please, please check them out. They very kindly let us use their drums and bass rig. Bless them. And Johnny & April who ran the club were so damn cool and nice and just true believers in rock and roll. Bands: highly recommend you try and book a gig there. Now listening to Zappa, Bill Withers, the Beatles, Ram Jam and Hocus Pocus by Focus and rollin down the 5 towards Portland... Ready to break some hearts.


Day 3 Portland & Vancouver, WA.  1st stop, an in-store performance at Portland's very hip record shop, Music Millennium.  


Portland's smartest people love Felsen.


They like our band here...so much that they made us this lovely window display.  Love this city, BTW.  You ever been? Worth it.   Good restaurant town.  


And then the litte tour closer at the Thristy Sasquatch in Vancouver, WA.  We were so damn tired, but managed to find the energy, embrace the bunny within, coax the mojo and throw down mightily for the good people of the North. 



Felsen invades your personal space...in a nice way.  


Join us dear friends for a lovely show at our fav SF venue, The Lost Church.  We'll be helping our long-time pal, Rich McCulley celebrate his new CD with a low volume show.   This will be Felsen's 3rd time at the Lost Church.  Each time has been truly magical.  Would you please join us?