Be the Man

In January 2020, just as there were concerns being raised about an emerging viral pandemic that would ultimately shred so many lives, we, The Tyrannochorus choir, were rehearsing hard for a couple of big concerts we had been planning for months. They were the “Love Concerts”. Songs about love and faith in humanity. Ultimately, we raised several thousand pounds for a couple of major charities with the pair of events.

Anyway, I was in my usual bass/baritone sometimes tenor slot for most of the songs we would sing but was accompanying on guitar on one tune and singing the lead solo on The Young ‘uns song Be the Man. I knew it pretty much off-by-heart, had all my inflections and emotions bedded down into it so I could sing it as best I could without choking up.

It’s a song of a young man who takes his own life following rejection by his family and leaving behind his widower to somehow come to turns with that death and the aftermath, and to somehow find a way to reconcile the family’s bigotry with the love he felt.

When it came to the first concert, I was mic’ed up, guitar was on, my two harmony fellows were alongside, we’d had plenty of chance to practice, it went well. I was tasked with coordinating and wiring up the PA for the second concert as well endeavouring to prep for the second run of Be the Man with a planned substitute harmony wingman.

I started the song solo, just me and guitar. We had no elevated staging and the front-row seats in the venue were very close. I  could definitely see the whites of their eyes and they mine…I felt quite exposed. It’s a raw song. Started well, usual audience response at this point in a song, expectant, listening, attentive, not sure where the song is going, probably not recognising it…best not to overthink things while you perform. Focus on the notes and chords…

“Matthew Ogston is my name and you’ll not hear me mourn…I will never live in shame, I will not walk alone.

For though my love took his own life because of bigotry I’ll be the man, be the man”

Oh…raised eyebrow from the stoic old gent in the front row as he clocked that line. A man singing “my love took his own life”. Now, was it that reference that raised that eyebrow or the reference to suicide? I’ve no idea…I kept going.

“…because of bigotry I’ll be the man, be the man, be the man I was born to be I was born to be.”

No more raised eyebrow, but stoic man seemed to have switched off. Second verse, first harmony and piano enter.

“And my love, he was warm and kind, and my love, he was strong
And when his brown eyes first met mine, I knew he was the one”

Sturdy-looking woman three rows back scowls, was I bit pitchy there, did the guitar clash a little against the piano, was I a bit out of kilter with the choir…who are supposed to be following me…but have to take their beat from Siobhan our choir leader? Or, was it the words, those words? I don’t know. Did she know I was telling a story in the song, maybe she thought it was my song…

The show must go on. The song builds, classic modern folk, but with a rapturous choir belting it out and me throwing in a bit of the old northern twang to match the style of the original (the band hail from a town not 40 miles from where I grew up). I put my all into this second performance of the song, generous members of the choir told me it wasn’t too bad at all.

Stoic Man and Sturdy Woman seemed to be bouncing along with it on the choruses, maybe I’d misjudged their eyebrows and scowls, they weren’t confused nor bemused by the lyrics, they just didn’t know the song, but recognised they could tap their feet once we got to the rousing refrains.

I felt happier as we progressed through the bars. Singing and strumming with confidence, harmony wingmen belting it out as a trio with me. I even managed a controlled emotional crack in my voice as I sang the final line to the last strains of my fading guitar chord, there were some who thought maybe I was about to cry, but like I say I’d bedded down that emotion…mainly through endless solo rehearsals out on the fens walking the dog. I glanced across to Siobhan just to check I was still somehow leading behind her and it was all going to be okay…

“Be the man, be the man I was born to be, I..was…born……to be”

Long pause. Much applause…gratefully received.

We later learned from a choir member who spoke to an audience member from that second concert some weeks later, but before lockdown 1, that they’d thought the whole show was wonderful. Apparently, they added how lucky the choir is to be able to recruit professional singers for the solo parts…now…I think I did okay, but I just know they weren’t talking about me, they were talking about Patrick’s sublime rendition of Neil Diamond’s Walk on Water and the fabulous performance of our female soloist.

Rachel did a stupendous version of the Joni Mitchell song A case of you which had raised my eyebrows in a good way when we did the soundcheck and I was tweaking mic placement and EQ. There were no sturdy scowls or bemused eyebrows raised among the audience though when she sang that song…I know, I was there, and I could see the whites of their eyes.

 

 

Musical Rushalikes

Twelve of my original songs stretching back through the last decade and all taking more than a little pinch of inspiration from my favourite band, Rush, the band that inspired me to take up guitar in my early teens back in the late 70s. There’s a more detailed description of each song on the Soundcloud page as well as full credits. Some of them are flagrantly Rush pastiches, others simply inspired by the band as well as others, such as Genesis, Pink Floyd, Yes, Led Zeppelin, Simple Minds, U2, The Police etc. More importantly, there’s a link to the BandCamp page for each track so you can download them to keep and treasure for all time…

All words and music, arrangements, electric and acoustic guitars, bass guitar, 12-string guitar, vocals, percussion, loop mixing, recording, and production by yours truly except where stated otherwise on a per track basis. Artwork adapted from an original photo of a brain coral on a beach taken by Tirthankar Gupta entitled “Brain Waves” and used here under a CC license.

Give my love to the waves

Almost a decade ago, a small group of us established a local Arts Night where we’d share songs, poetry, and philosophize on the proverbial life, the universe, and everything..and eat too many biscuits and drink too much late-night caffeine. There were a lot of laughs and some serious sing-writing. We put on a few public performances in various places, members of the club came and went, but the Arts Night was also the birth place of my group C5 the band. Without those Arts Night, there would be no Clive-upon-Sea in the shape and form we know him today either.

I think the first Arts Night was April 2012 with a Simon, two Adrians, and a Dave, but by September of the next year, these old stalwarts had put together quite a few songs and been joined by various others – Andrea, Steph, Matt, Ray, Rog, Jo, Rich, another Jo, another Rog.

One of those songs was my land-locked lament to the sea…I believe this is the original electric demo recording I did for Arts Night that month, I’ve just put it on Soundcloud. The song developed lyrically and musically over the following weeks and I played it live several times solo and once or twice with an early incarnation of C5 in ensuing years. We even jammed a heavy rock version at one rehearsal at the suggestion of drummer Adam.

There are versions online where I dueted with our DJ daughter Beth and another with the Yorkshire Kate Bush, Emmazen

Give my love to the waves

Give my love to the waves
Send me home, on a wind that saves
If I ride the sea, or sail away
Will you carry me back, home again?

Give my time, to the pain
If I miss you, would you sail with me again?
Give my love, to the water
Then I can find my way back to where I ought to be

You will know me
Call me by name
Know how much I fear
It’s always the same

I’m floating in the wake of trouble.
I wish you wary on your way
Send my love to the waves,
get me out of this trouble,
or sail me to Hell all the way

Give my love, to the waves
Send me home, on a wind that saves

Floating in the wake of trouble
I wish you wary on your way
I wish you on the waves out of trouble
Don’t sail me to Hell, at least not today

Words and Music by David Bradley
Electric guitar and vocals dB/

There is no beatboxing nor drum nor bass in this version.

Finding Shanti in Sea Shanties

If you’ve not been on social media recently* you may have missed the hooray rise of the sea shantie. These seafaring songs are being discussed as the antidote to land-locked, lockdown cabin fever. People coming together with a shared cause to sing simple tunes together, in harmony, with the option to dance. The greatest hit has to be one known colloquially as “Wellerman” and we’re waiting with baited breath to hear whether Paul joins in. Check out The Longest Johns.

*What did you find to do with all those hours in the day instead?

I’ve written a couple of folk tunes about the fishing village where I grew up. Not claiming them as shanties, but Spate Gatherers is in a similar vein:

The Spate Gatherers

The Stormy Petrels

Meet me half way

One fan described this song as “the anthem for our lockdown anxieties…a fabulous bit of art”, decide for yourself. Published under the pseudonym of Henning Gintryx.

When you realize that there’s no prize to take away
Got to compromise, you’ve got to meet me halfway

There was a time when I was forgiving
I turned my cheek, my feelings hidden
But, something changed, and I’m just not living
And I don’t know what to say

Well, here they are, my own misgivings
I’ve turned them round and I’m not reliving
Though nothing’s changed I’m all for giving
Now, I know just what to say

So, here I am, am I not forgiven?
I turned it down but you’ve got misgivings
Tell me now, are we barely living?
Did you want to fade away?

There was I time when I stayed hidden
Now, I’ve cleared my head and I’m reliving
I took the blame but I’ll be forgiving
Did you have to turn away?

 

Words and Music – David Bradley

Vocals, Fender Telecaster, Ibanez RG
electric guitars, Yamaha bass, and
percussion mix – David Bradley

Drums c/o Klaus Tropp, dubbed after
the main song was recorded with a clicktrack

Recorded and produced by David Bradley

Too much, too soon

The intro to this new song is a bit of a curveball, almost an accidental hint of a funked-up White Stripes, but it quickly pans out into something of a blue-eyed funk rocker with hints of The Police, Chic, Santana, and even the Red Hot Chili Peppers.

Given the chord progression, there’s a significant nod to the 1971 live version of one of my favourite songs (“It’s too late”, by Carole King) with a little musical reference to that at the end of the middle-8, and the title itself was an extension of that song title. It all ends with a digitally delayed twist on the Manic Street Preachers who were, at the time, nodding to Rush

Too much, too soon

There is a comforting solution
To all the threats we face today
We have to trust in our salvation
Trust ourselves to find a way

Making a case for all the answers
Never let them slip away

Too much, too soon
We won’t be saved by old traditions
Got to stand up to the fools
Throw them out at the next auditions

There is comfort in solution
Never let them slip away

Words and music by dB/
Vocals, guitars, and bass dB/
Chopped up iRealPro drum track and organ

Available to stream via the Sciencebase Soundcloud and to stream or download on BandCamp at part of my Lockdown LP

 

Oh, and there will soon be a little bonus for people who care about such things…I’ve disabled all the effects (guitar overdrive), reverb, delays, EQ, compression etc and done what you might think of as a “rehearsal-room mix” with just the raw instruments direct into the desk. Busy rendering the mix to share here…watch this space.

Sciencebase in the time of Covid

Up front: Nothing much has changed for my working practices since the coronavirus pandemic struck and we were all put into varying degrees of lockdown and social distancing. I’ve carried on with regular clients covering science news across a wide range of disciplines for the outlets that have all been mentioned here on numerous occasions over the last 25 years of this website…

As a household, we never did run out of loo roll nor any other essentials despite not stockpiling nor panic buying…

Lockdown did mean more “at home” time, no choir nor band rehearsals, only in-the-house solo music creation and broadcasts and a couple of online collaborations which I’d done often enough in normal times long before the so-called new normal. My Lockdown EP is almost a mini-album now with eight tracks. As for everyone lots of interactions with friends, family, colleagues, and collaborators via video chat servers, which is entertaining enough but tiring on the eyes.

There were lots of garden-based and very local photographic and video opportunities: PondWatch, GardenWatch, even ShedWatch on Facebook and the expansion of Lepidopteral diversity in the garden as the spring turned to summer. Indeed, anything of biological could quickly become a major focus for a blog post and I quickly add photographic specimens to Instagram and Imaging Storm. Then, there’s AllotmentLife to be taken care of…

If you need to drill down into any of this stuff there is a whole category structure within the Sciencebase website that has evolved over the years:

Photography,  Classic Chords, Chemistry, Social Media etc

 

That’s okay, tonight – vocal remix

I can’t leave a finished thing alone…the “instrumental” I wrote and recorded and blogged about last week now has a vocal…

Words and Music by David Bradley

Vocals, six-string Taylor acoustic guitar, Fender Telecaster, electric guitar, and Yamaha bass, harmony vocals, and production by dB. Drums by Klaus Tropp. Video derived from a “C0” Creative Commons montage of Hong Kong filmed from the air at night. Annotations by dB.

That’s okay, tonight

Step up to the light, learn you’re not the only dreamer
Find a place for you to shine
Try as you might, you won’t find another schemer
Who twists the knife like you’re not mine

…and I’m telling you…
You were the calm before the storm,
You told the lies that kept me warm
And you had it all, though I could’ve sworn you’d thrown it all away

No, I don’t want another fight
I’ll see you in the glare of the morning light
No need to cry tonight
No, I don’t want another fight
We’re okay for tonight

Is that okay tonight?

I suspect most Sciencebase readers are not particularly interested in my songwriting process, but I’ve been posting different strands of my songs, snaps, and science for so long now that if you’re still with me, then you’re still with me and I thank you for your patience and loyalty!

Anyway, I talked about the process of a new track – “That’s okay, tonight” – a few days ago, it was always on the cards, though I was in denial, that what was an annotated instrumental would inevitably become a song.

That’s okay, tonight

Step up to the light, learn you’re not the only dreamer
Find a place for you to shine
Try as you might, you won’t find another schemer
Who twists the knife like you’re not mine

…and I’m telling you…
You were the calm before the storm,
You told the lies that kept me warm
And you had it all, though I could’ve sworn you’d thrown it all away

No, I don’t want another fight
I’ll see you in the glare of the morning light
No need to cry tonight
No, I don’t want another fight
We’re okay for tonight