10.10.2011

Ransomed Soul 20th Anniversary Video

Our 20th Anniversary Concert, mentioned in an earlier blog post, went down on June 11 - 20 years, almost to the day (June 6) after our very first public performance as a band, at Bonnie's Roxx in Atco NJ (long since closed down, razed to a parking lot, and remembered as a much better venue than it actually was.) The concert was held at the Auction House Arts and Music Center in Audubon, New Jersey - an excellent venue run by some very cool folks!

We played just about every song we ever wrote together, including a few that had only been played live one or two times, so they were "new" to even some of our most dedicated fans. Among the relatively unheard songs were Father and Buried in the Bottle. We also brought along a sampler, which allowed us to play old audio clips from the archives, including introductions from our friends Mark and Cheryl (lifted from when they played our song on their college radio station), and clips from call-ins to when we were on the radio at GSC (Rowan) - several people who were in the audience for the concert were surprised to hear their voice from almost 20 years ago!

We also used the sampler for our new intro clips for our song Liquid Faith, featuring some of the many insane statements of Glenn Beck (his lunacy replaced that of Robert Tilton, whom we had samples of back in 1993-94, carefully timed on an audio-cassette to sync up to our live performance). Finally, we had a couple random "Easter Eggs," like the original "I did that on purpose!" ending for Break Down the Wall - a humorous outtake that appeared on our original 5-song "Seeds of Time" cassette -- but was omitted on "Timeline."

Another fun moment - one of our last songs featured a surprise cameo by our friend Kevin, who performed the whispered "Goodbye" on the studio version of The Hunt - we got him to reprise if for the concert (though he didn't know it was coming.)

A playlist of our entire 2 hour concert is posted at YouTube across several separate videos, linked together for ease of watching uninterrupted. Enjoy!

(We sure did!)

10.06.2011

On Selling Your Stuff (aka regrets)

When I was 16 years old, my parents got together and purchased an electric bass for me as my combined Christmas/Birthday present (my birthday is two weeks before Christmas). It was a big deal; we weren't "made of money" by any stretch, so it meant a lot to me - and changed my life, musically. My dad is also a bassist, so he was able to "vet" the purchase with knowledge of getting a "good" bass for the money. It was an Epiphone (by Gibson) Rock Bass, a four-banger with J-bass pickups and a slim neck. While a relatively humble instrument, Dad picked out a really good one with excellent resonance, clean electronics, and he set it up to play well. I played that bass for many years, onstage and in rehearsal, with several different bands. Some songs I wrote during the period only felt "right" on that bass. I later upgraded it with a set of EMG pickups and it sounded amazing.

When I felt like making the jump to a five string, I found a fiver made by an (at the time) unknown brand called "Samick" at a local music store for $350. It was nifty, with a modern body style, J/P config active pickups, a pearlescent white paint job, and cool Saturn inlays on the fretboard. Again, played the hell out of that bass, and also upgraded to EMGs, this time with 18v electronics and their BTC circuit. Sounded, played killer.

In times of low income, or desire for new gear, regretfully I sold these "firsties" to other folks. They both went to good homes - the four-string went to a co-worker who wanted to learn to play bass, and the five-string to an online bass forum friend, who bought it as a backup bass (but later admitted that it took first-call duties over his formerly "main" axe because it played and sounded so good.)

Now that I'm older and have a bit more spendable cash, I really wish I had both of those basses back. I almost have contact with the old co-worker (I'm friends with his friend and have emailed his spouse on Facebook, but not gotten directly in touch with him) and I've tried to locate the email address of the guy who bought the Samick (but lost the original email trail in a computer crash several years ago).

Recently, the band where both basses got lots of play re-formed for an anniversary concert (see my last blog entry for details). The show was a great time for both us and the audience; I'll post links to the YouTube clips soon. I really would have loved to have both of those basses for the show, but I had neither. So I recreated them; I got a black Epiphone just like my old one (but not quite as good) and found a Samick that was pretty close; I played the Samick for the show. It had the feel and sound of the old white one, but I still wish I had the old one back.

I went through all that to say this: gear has to be sold to make way for new gear. But if at all possible, try to hang on to your substantial "firsts," even if they're cheap Epiphones, Samicks, or otherwise inexpensively obtained instruments. I can say from experience that you'll probably regret it.