'How will you know when you know' is a song about being in a band and hitting the wall of realisation that you are probably not going to be the next U2. In the first verse, there is excitement and optimism as the musicians plan for another adventure, loading up their van for a gig (in the exotic location of Aberdeen). The second verse is written from the perspective of the morning after the night before, grinding through the daily routine and trying to analyse events through the enervating fog of sleep deprivation. What was last night all about? Why did we do it? Was it really a good use of our time? The video was produced by Eddie Macarthur at Stealth Studio in Glasgow.
Tuesday, 24 January 2023
Saturday, 14 January 2023
My Gang
My modus operandi when composing is to sit and strum, pluck or plonk with no particular aim in mind, other than to go in the direction the music seems to want to go. Of course, this will be influenced by how I'm feeling, whether I'm playing loudly or quietly, whether I'm forming chords or picking out single notes and so on. On this occasion, once I found the opening chord and a rhythm that felt right, the forward momentum became irresistible. The sequence and structure arrived within a couple of minutes because the 'song', even in its nascent form, knew where it wanted to go. Within moments, I had a working title and an idea of what the lyric would be about. The subject of political polarization interests me and I wanted to explore a landscape wherein dialogue between opposing sides isn’t just frowned upon or rejected; it is taken to be undesirable.
There are other ways to write songs; I’ve got material that has been in development for years because I don’t know how to finish it, or haven’t devoted the energy necessary to achieve closure. But this one was signed, sealed delivered in a very short space of time. I believe ‘My Gang’ is a well-written and a well-executed song. It’s not original and it’s not going to change the world, but in three minutes or so, it encapsulated some of the things I wanted to say about what passes for political discourse in the 21st century. The video was splendidly produced, as ever, by Eddie Macarthur at Stealth Studio in Glasgow.
So … here’s the next blow in my continuing war of
attrition with the record-buying public. 2 million CDs (a) take up a lot of
space and (b) weigh a ton. Please buy one, because structural damage to one’s
house is no laughing matter. ‘Judge a man by the company he keeps’ is available
on Bandcamp, Spotify, iTunes, CD Baby and all the usual sources.