Tag: music

  • Naming things

    I’m no expert at making albums. I’m sure there are right ways of doing things that I’m getting horribly wrong, but nonetheless I’m muddling through.

    I’m now at the point with album 5 that I have 13 tracks I’m happy with. I’ve been toying with some ideas for at least one more track, but the total length is already a little over an hour.

    Of course, most of them still haven’t got even a basic mix sorted out, and there will be lots of tweaks and changes to come.

    To that end, I have to keep track of which track is which. Most of the tracks are just numbered at this stage. For the most part, only ones with lyrics are titled. The rest just have a number, a length and a collection of words which sort of describe them.

    As an example, let’s look at a track from Someone Like You. This one was the sixth I started for that album, so for a long time it was called “Song 6.” The description was “nasal synths, bell lead, sense of adventure, harp bridge.”

    During a stream I went through the tracks and gave titles to those which didn’t yet have one. For Song 6 I was particularly caught up on this “sense of adventure” and, trying out various ideas, I kept starting my thoughts with “I wonder if…” and eventually realised it fitted quite nicely. So Song 6 became I Wonder If.

    If you check on the album, you’ll notice that it didn’t end up as track 6 either. It became the first track. (Ordering the tracks is a whole other matter.)

    So back to album 5, itself lacking a name as I write. Eight tracks have names, but I have yet to assign a title to Song 9 (“heavy drums into light guitar/piano-backed, echoey, 6:8, emotive strings, rock guit solo”) among others.

    I’ll tell you about one that did get a name, however. It’s Song 13, Thirty Years of Now. This is based on a MED module I made way back on the Amiga, which had the title NewTech. That old tune only lasted about one-and-a-half minutes, so it needed a lot of new material, and given its age it was hardly “new tech”. Time for a rebrand.

    I thought a bit about its sound, its feeling, but none of that led to a title – but the age, about 30 years, that seemed promising. I typed in “Thirty Years of New” but as I looked at the words, I kept seeing “New” as “Now”, and the paradox of “Thirty Years of Now” really appealed to me.

    I rarely start with a title, and if I do it’s almost always for a song with lyrics: Captain Faded Red was one of those, as were The Second Door on the Left and Bondanavasieta. There’s going to be one on album 5 too, Impersonating an Estate Agent. I don’t know why I thought of that as a concept, but once I started to ask myself why anyone would do it, the words started to come.

    Sometimes I think of a title on its own, without a song to connect it to. I keep a collection of interesting titles and once in a while I’ll find I’ve written something which fits one of them. For instance, I’d had “The Earl Tumult” as a title sitting around for ages, and it was quite late in The Telescope‘s development that I assigned it to Song 10.

    As time goes on I hope to explain a little more about where some of the titles came from. Vague notions, in-jokes, references nobody else will get, anagrams… oh yes, some of them are anagrams. I like a good word puzzle.

  • Blips and bleeps

    I’ve used Spotify links here for convenience. Not everyone likes Spotify. Don’t worry, these tracks are available pretty much everywhere.

    So, it’s been a long time since I updated this site. And I’ve been doing things. Music things.

    I started making music many years ago but as time went on it fizzled out. Real life got in the way.

    Space Voice

    I didn’t give up entirely, though. Once in a blue moon I’d still write a new track. I used a few of them as background music for my YouTube videos.

    Then, in 2015 I made one called Space Voice which got a bit out of hand and ended up at nearly 8 minutes long. I thought, let’s see what happens if I put it out there. So I released Space Voice as a single. It got a few listens, and a couple of friends liked it.

    Shades

    Two years later I was experimenting with some animations on YouTube and made a soundtrack for one of them. It was a bit bass-heavy and weird – honestly, a bit muddy – but the fact I wrote it specifically to put online led me towards making it another single. This was Shades.

    Then, during 2020, everyone at work decided to set ourselves a task to do during lockdown. I set myself the task of making a new EP.

    The Night Wall

    To cut a long story short, I did it. This became The Night Wall. I even got a friend to collaborate on one track: Back in the Box featured KURLY on vocals and guitar, and he did a great job.

    This made me think, why did I stop making music like I used to? I used to be making new stuff non-stop. Is it just a matter of getting older? Or perhaps just too many distractions? What if I disciplined myself to work on music regularly? What if I streamed work on music so people would expect me to do it regularly?

    To my surprise, the rusty gears started to turn again and ideas started to come. I started work on a second EP.

    From the Sky Down

    After a few weeks I had enough tracks for that EP. I didn’t feel like stopping, though, and kept going. The EP became an album: From The Sky Down. It included noises made my home-made synth, SoundMaker, and I revised two tracks from The Night Wall with new vocals1. I hired AlexArtMe to do the cover art, and her design led me to restructure the track listing into a loose concept album. I’ll talk about that another time.

    Life as a Passenger

    At this point I’d got the attention of one or two people online. In particular, Project Dits was (and is) my first big fan. He promoted the album on his streams and was very encouraging for me to continue.

    I began work on another album soon after, and after some months, Life as a Passenger was complete. This included the track Gordon’s Theory, which featured guest appearances from John Panettiere, Project Dits, Aisha Anime, KURLY, Chris McAuley and Elfie Oakwood.

    Someone Like You

    AlexArtMe, as usual, provided the cover art, depicting Gordon as a dragon surrounded by his theories.

    In 2024, I released a third album, Someone Like You, in which I remade and extended one of my earliest music tracks from about 1992, Stratosphere.

    Towards the end of the year, a fourth album came along, The Telescope, once more including a remake of one of my old Amiga tracks, in this case Universe.

    The Telescope

    That brings us up to 2025, and I’m part-way through making a fifth. You can see how it’s coming along most Sundays at 2pm UK time on Twitch.

    1. I can’t stand the sound of my own vocals. I don’t know why I keep letting myself get persuaded to do it. I much prefer hiring other people or using SynthV. ↩︎