June 2011

I did a series of posters for The Empty Spaces’ 2011 summer tour, affectionately nicknamed “soccer tour 2k11” after the soccer camp van we rented for transportation. They’re all slight revisions of a poster I did a while back that didn’t get much exposure. The illustration depicts what it would look like if aliens came to Earth and dumped a bunch of pink bubbly goo on some houses.

The Empty Spaces Summer Tour 2011 Posters

I’ve been playing with Mat and Will for a while in a band called The Empty Spaces, morphing out of Mat’s solo project. We recently recorded a four song EP that is now available from Golden Sound Records. I played drums, engineered, and mastered it.

The Empty Spaces - Low Noise

We recorded it live straight to an Otari 1/4” 2-track tape machine. It was my first real experience working with tape, but after a reel and a half of unspooled mess I started to get the hang of it. All tracks were mixed through an Allen & Heath Mixwizard WZ2 16:2 board. Mat’s vocals ran through a JOEMEEK TwinQ with some slap-back delay from a Roland RE-501.

I played my Gretsch Catalina club kit with my Tama Starclassic snare. All drums were fitted with Aquarian Modern Vintage heads except the kick drum, which sported a Remo Coated Ambassador on the batter side and a stock resonant head. I placed sheets of paper over the snare and floor tom heads for a little extra dampening and high frequency attack. The cymbals were a 21” Zildjan Sweet ride, an 18” Istanbul Mehmet Sultan Flat Ride, and 13” Zildjan K Custom Dark hats.

Gretsch kit

The kit was miked with a Cascade X-15 stereo ribbon mic overhead. I did have to boost some 12-15k for some high end (15k is as high as the MixWizard’s EQ goes) but I was really pleased with the self compression and beefiness of this mic. The kick drum was captured by an AKG D112, and the snare a good ol’ SM57, both running through dbx 163’s with a considerable amount of compression.

The bass was played through a Gibson G100-B 2x15” amp and miked with a Cascade Fat Head about a foot and a half away.

The stereo output of the mixer was routed to the ins of the Otari and we monitored from there, doing takes of the songs until we had ones we liked. The tape was hit pretty hard; you can really hear it on the snare. It made us a little nervous to throw down live takes straight to tape without someone actively listening to the mix in another room. There’s no mixing post 2-track, so we had to get it right before we recorded. I’m happy with what we ended up with, but it’s definitely one of those EPs where you can tell the drummer engineered it.

As a tribute to our experience, we laid out the packaging to look like the boxes the reels of Quantegy tape came in. The disc looks like a little reel of tape. It’s entertaining so the music doesn’t have to be.

We go on a week-long tour starting this weekend, hoping to sell copies and have some fun. It’s my goal to achieve at least one of those. Dates are up on the website. You can download a digital copy or order a CD from Golden Sound Records for $4/$5.

I’ve redesigned my website several times and have spent the past few years running Chyrp, a lightweight PHP blogging/tumblogging engine. After I learned the lead developer would no longer actively develop Chyrp1, I stopped watching the community and kind of let my site rot. I was busy doing Relatively Early work where I was exposed to Harmony and I instantly fell in love with it. Building and maintaining client sites on it is a breeze, and it’s fun to do. After learning what I could do with it I decided to port my site over, wanting to simplify things anyway.

Although I will miss being involved in the development community of an open-source blogging engine, moving to Harmony provides me with lots of data flexibility and options without the hassle of maintaining my own software installation. The guys at Ordered List keep rolling out awesome new features. No, it’s not free, but the monthly cost of hosting + a killer CMS is very fair.

As for the site structure, I wanted a simple blog where I could highlight some projects I’ve worked on without feeling like I was juggling a bunch of pages or splitting things up into categories. The home page is just a blog where you can access tags and archives at the bottom or from article headers.

To highlight projects I thought were significant I threw together the campily-named “Lifetime Achievements” section. Clicking on the tagline in the page header reveals an icon grid of blog posts about big projects. I had a little too much fun with CSS3 animations and transitions. The name/date sorting functionality is made possible with Quicksand. I think it will be a fun and fairly painless way to document things I’ve worked on.

The overall design and colors are based on my favorite shirt:

The shirt of Inspiration!

I’ve moved most of my old posts over, but this is more of a fresh start. A webby do-over!


1 Although it seems that semi-recently Chyrp was kicked into active development again and released a 2.1.

About

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I like making things on the internet with Cremalab and music with Fullbloods, The ACBs, and Golden Sound Records. I live in Kansas City and enjoy food and drink.