Wednesday, May 17, 2017

Top 5 Musical Instruments You Need Laying Around Your Home

Being a musician for over 40 years I decided to compile my list of the top 5 musical instruments that I would have in my around the house collection.

Musical instruments are great to have readily available at your home. This is a great way for your kids to decide to pick up an instrument or when you have inspiration you can grab one or when you have a party there's instruments there for folks to play! Even if you don't know how to play each instrument then what better way to open the door to the possibility of learning an instrument?

1. Drums - Hand Drums are great for around the house. Not too loud and anyone can play them. Bongos, Djembe, congas, egg shakers, cajons, bells and any other percussion instrument you can think of! Not too loud and always playable. If you have a large house or separate room then a drumset is always  an option.

2. Acoustic Guitar - Acoustic guitars are a necessity. Leave it out on a stand readily available to pick up and play.


3. Piano or Electric Keyboard - If you have room for an acoustic piano that's great! If not, an electronic keyboard is always good. They are small and fairly inexpensive. A band in a box.
Keyboards
4. Ukulele - Ukulele's are small and inexpensive. They are easily played by anyone who knows a chord or two.
Ukuleles
5. Bass Guitar - Acoustic/Electric bass or electric bass with a small amp. As a musician I  find a bass guitar essential to have around my house. I like to compose a bass line and build on a song from there.
Bass Guitars
So, there you have it. 5 Essential musical instruments you need laying around your house. They will enhance your life and if you have children they will enhance the lives of your children. They will also also add life to any party! Carry on!

Monday, May 1, 2017

The Making of Kendrick Lamar's Damn. Number One Album

Article by David Browne Originally from Rolling Stone magazine.

When it came to a new Kendrick Lamar track called "Lust," producer DJ Dahi thought work had been wrapped. After all, he'd heard an early incarnation built around BadBadNotGood, the Canadian jazz-fusion band, and then watched as the track went through change after change over two months. "It's a little unorthodox in the way it flows and changes," says Dahi (a.k.a. Dacoury Natche), the L.A. producer whose work was showcased on Lamar's "Money Trees" in 2012. "When you first hear it, you don't know why it's this or that, but it's really musical. That was the standard – to have the other records have a taste of that." But when Lamar's Damn. dropped on April 14th, Dahi finally heard the finished take – and was surprised again. "I hadn't even heard the third verse," he says. "And I was in there almost every day. With Kendrick, nothing is done until it's done. He waits until the last minute when the album has to be turned in."

Based on conversations with some of the many contributors to Damn., Dahi's story isn't the exception. One of the year's most lauded and analyzed albums – currently sitting atop the Billboard chart for the second week in a row – with a range of musical, political and emotional textures that will leave fans peeling back its layers for months to come, Damn. features a huge cast: guest artists Bono, Rihanna, James Blake, Kid Capri and bassist Thundercat, along with a wide-ranging list of co-producers (from Lamar regulars like Sounwave and Dahi to Greg Kurstin, best known for Adele's "Hello"). Given all those contributors, not to mention the pressure of following up 2015's To Pimp a Butterfly, Damn. was constantly morphing and changing. As Dahi says, "If you missed a day, you missed a whole new idea."

Inspiration arrived from many sources. During a trip to New York last August, Lamar and some of his creative posse spent a day listening almost exclusively to Frank Ocean's Blonde, which had just dropped on iTunes. A jam session led by Sounwave and Dahi followed, eventually resulting in the slinky "Yah." Lamar and Bono had been talking about collaborating in one form or another for a while, but finally Bono sent in a slew of song ideas and vocals that Lamar and some of his producers picked apart until they found just the right moments, then built a track around it. (Article Continues Below)

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Lamar, his label A&R man and some of the producers would regularly trade intensive texts about revising songs, especially if they played one for friends or taste makers who weren't feeling it. Some cuts, like "Pride," were in the works for over a year. "Element" went through as many as 25 different versions. "It was one of the most important songs on the album," says Dahi. "It was a statement of his place in the game."

Typical for this project, Blake's piano part on that song arrived late in the process, subtly altering the song's tone. Even the contributors didn't always know if or what they would be contributing. Take R&B singer-songwriter Zacari Pacaldo, known simply as Zacari, who was invited to play some of his own upcoming album for Lamar. Last fall, Zacari visited the home-base studio in Santa Monica where Lamar was working and found Lamar recording vocals on a couch, microphones at the ready. "It was really comfortable," Zacari says. "You never got a 'not welcoming' vibe from his camp." As a way to exchange ideas, Lamar played Zacari "DNA" along with a few tracks that didn't make Damn. "I thought, 'Oh, my God, he's going crazy,'" revels Zacari. "He would record the beat and then redo the whole beat multiple times." (Like others, Zacari declines comment on whether he had to sign a non-disclosure agreement while visiting the studio.) "I went in there not knowing what would happen," Zacari says. "I knew I wanted to play him some of my music and hear what he thought." During one track, Lamar quieted down, listened intently, and said, "Yo, send me that." The track was "Love," inspired by a turbulent relationship in Zacari's life. Returning to the studio later, just weeks before Damn. dropped, Lamar played Zacari a surprise: the new incarnation of "Love," with Zacari's beats and hook supplemented by added Lamar production and his own singing and rhyming replacing Zacari's parts in the verses. "He filled in the spaces perfectly," Zacari says. "He sang over the hook, so it's almost a call-and-response between us. It was an unusual process for sure, but I love what he did with it." As for why Lamar chose that track, Zacari can only guess. "He's really in love [Lamar is engaged to Whitney Alford], so it could be nothing more than that." "It was really comfortable. You never got a 'not welcoming' vibe from his camp." –Zacari

That newly emotional side of Lamar also came through when he reached out to Anna Wise, the Brooklyn-based pop artist featured on two earlier Lamar cuts, "These Walls" and "Real." Wise recently released two enchanting records, The Feminine: Act I and The Feminine: Act II, but her contribution to "Pride" on Damn. emerged when she and producer Stave Lacy laid down a vocal part – "Maybe I wasn't there, maybe I wasn't there" – that Lacy then played for Lamar. "He reached out super-excited about it and wanted to understand my point of view in the lyric," Wise says. As with DJ Dahi, Wise didn't experience the final results of her input until Damn. was made public and she finally heard "Pride." "It's going to sound corny, but I started crying," she says. "He's singing my harmonies. I'm proud of him sounding so damn beautiful on that track, hearing him be so emotional." Wise thinks it isn't accidental that Lamar opened up more on his album: "The songs are upfront and more accessible. He must have known, somewhere in his brain that it was the right idea to go a little less out [there] on this record."

Although Damn. is less than three weeks old, the work for Lamar continues. Dahi says he and Lamar were in touch again after Lamar appeared at a certain brand-name festival. "We got on text and I said, 'Great show at Coachella,'" Dahi says, "and he wrote back,
'What's next?'"