Tag: Improvisation

  • Band of Strangers

    Band of Strangers

    A Night at the Grape Room Jam

    In April, 2022, the world was opening back up. Although The Grape Room was a music venue that I was able to go to in late 2021 without covid restrictions, I only made it there once, I think. And their weekly open jam was not back in effect.

    Eventually though, in March they reopened the jam. I learned about it in April, attended, and was extremely grateful that this thing existed. I needed to play with other musicians and didn’t find my scene yet. I was rough on the drums, but I’ve gotten substantially better since then.

    One year later, almost to the week on April 12, 2023, I was producing the stage recordings for this documentary. The interviews all took place from that day though August. The sound check intro was recorded April 19. I did a little bit of editing trickery there.

    Ethan Cain and Ryan Daugherty are the current co-hosts of the jam, alternating from week to week. I make it look more like they co-host together every week, because they often attend each other’s nights.

    This is about the jam and the experience of being in that room and on that stage. I wanted to capture the experience of the jam and overlay it with the thoughts of musicians and audience members.

    At first, the idea was to be a chronicling, perhaps with multiple nights of stage recordings, and a focus on the history of the jam, the hosts, and the venue. But that seemed too obvious, and frankly, laborious.

    My music scene is varied (because I like creating and listening to a wide variety of music) so there isn’t really a single place for me anywhere. The closest I can get to is this jam. Admittedly, the players who come here aren’t very experimental. My identity formed around that notion of always pushing boundaries. Thankfully, that artistic ego is more fluid now.

    Usually someone brings a riff, but I’m much more into it when someone just messes around until I can provide enough beat to build on, and it goes somewhere. Whenever someone brings some progression, it gets stuck there. Very hard to break out of a box when you start with one, easier to remain fluid when you start that way.

    This idea is streamlined, it’s one night of stage recordings, in fact, just 90 minutes of what is usually three hours, all condensed into a mashup of less than 10 minutes.

    I asked everyone a few simple but open ended questions, to allow them to riff on ideas. What is improvisation? What is the difference between an open mic and an open jam? How has the jam impacted you as a musician? Then some follow ups like why it’s important to them, when did they start coming or hosting? I improvised my questioning after the first two.

    The result, I admit, is fluffy. This is a zero drama story. What works though is the tension and release within the music. There is a tiny bit of tension in the narrative, but it basically just remains positive. I knew this could become an infomercial.

    This is not objective in that sense. It’s a place and a community that I care about, so I did my best to convey that while remembering this is a film for the public to enjoy. It has to be good for everyone.

    It’s also G-rated material. Super family friendly content.

    I’m proud of Band of Strangers. And THRU Media is my baby. I’m using that brand to publish content again, and I’m brazenly moving forward on a value-for-value basis. It’s an experiment. If people join the crew, it will be successful, but if it remains myself, it’s not going to work.

    I can always keep publishing under the brand, but I really want to make it a unique, artist-driven company, as it was always envisioned.

  • Drum’n Demo Series

    Drum’n Demo Series

    Interpreting “Reckoner”

    Three dual-camera videos to demonstrate that, to at least a presentable level, A) I can play the drums B) produce the drum tracks and C) cut multi-cam video for whatever purpose.

    The first of these three videos came out the best. It is a jazz interpretation of “Reckoner” by my favorite rock/pop act Radiohead. This is one of my favorite songs and even they struggle to capture what they did in the studio with this song.

    Someday, it could almost be done with this drum take and different musicians dubbing in the music, I would like to cover the song with a complete band live. This video should help illustrate to people what I want to produce.

    Covering a few songs.

    The next is a few songs that I’ve butted up together to show a range. It’s all rock, but it’s a range, and these are songs that I practice regularly, amidst roughly thirty songs that I’ve been learning.

    The editing is not as good as I’d like, the playing is not as good as I’d like, and those go hand in hand. Part of this is to show that I can edit mistakes seamlessly into a Multicam situation. The average viewer can’t spot each jump in the song, but good players and editors will see it immediately.

    One problem is that I threw out two complete sessions because the iPhone video was somehow lost. This one is honestly the third coming back from a trip and not having played drums for a week.

    The songs are “Y Control” by the Yeah Yeah Yeahs, “Manic Depression” by Jimi Hendrix Experience, and “Achilles Last Stand by Led Zeppelin.

    Improvising a little bit.

    Finally, it’s just me. What is interesting is that I used to be a total improviser. I barely have discipline now. I should take all of these songs and transcribe the core drum parts as well as the musical sections and have them on my music stand.

    I don’t even run the fundamentals like I did when I improvised. I’m very weird like that. All I do now is sit down and start playing my playlists, and I almost never play a song twice. It’s like I’m forcing myself to know what it means to be prepared to play at any moment.

    Something else that has been good for that and has accelerated my playing has been the open jams at The Grape Room in the Manayunk neighborhood. You can find me there many Wednesday nights just jumping on stage and facing whatever the players throw at me.

    No doubt, by the end of the year, I’ll run another round of these with my new camera, giving me three angles and a much higher quality camera.

    The drum session can be opened up and tweaked as well, rather than rebuilt from scratch. I hear a gate that’s releasing to abruptly on the mid tom. Not awful but it’s there and I’ll have to fix it.

  • OHS Sessions Volume One

    OHS Sessions Volume One

    In 2017, when I had settled into the THRU Media studio, I began to host music sessions of my own for the first time in years. I asked my friends Jerry Soga and Doug Haning to come over and do some good old “free jazz” with me.

    Jerry played acoustic bass. Doug played reed instruments, and a little bit of electric piano. I played drums. We didn’t have a band name, I just wanted to produce some sessions. In the end, I have called it Ongley, Haning, and Soga (OHS).

    Each volume consists of two sessions. Each session was combed through for pieces that could be recognized as having an organic start and end point. Each piece was labeled by sequence: sessions 1-6, cuts 1-xx.

    After isolating those cuts, I mixed and mastered them. Once I had the complete sessions, I listened through all five and a half hours of content to slim it down by half.

    The result is three volumes in diminishing length. The first is out now and the remaining are being staged for monthly release.

    It is interesting to hear how we progress over those sessions. By the end, we have a band with a certain kind of sound. My drumming tightened up, but it’s still sloppy, and difficult because we play outside of time. Sometimes we are united by tempo and rhythm, sometimes we each have a different sense of it, but we’re always listening.