Tuesday, 16 August 2016

Latest from my studio... Aerials (System of a Down Cover) and some thoughts on COVER MUSIC.


I'm not great at doing cover versions of songs. For many years, I actually did not learn any new covers. As a guitar player I obviously cut my teeth on learning cover songs, and I will not deny that this is vital for learning an instrument. I quickly got tired of it though, and chose just to try and write my own material. 

I listen to a huge amount of music, and I'm always learning by listening, but as for simply learning to sing and play songs by other bands, in the past I just couldn't be bothered. And maybe I was a bit insecure and afraid of criticism too. And maybe not that good at learning songs properly. Or executing it. (This is a hugely cathartic blog post!) There is also the way people judge how good of a musician you are based on how well you can copy someone else's song, that frustrates me. If that was true, we would probably never have listened to Bob Dylan. 

I have had a bit of an issue with playing covers "exactly so". Carbon copying the original artists, if you may. Steve Hofmeyer, a South African artist, did a cover album of Neil Diamond songs and sold mountains of these things. He certainly has the voice for the material, but the fact that the songs were sung and produced exactly like the originals begs the quesion: why not just buy the original? Nobody sounds more like Neil Diamond than Neil Diamond, surely. I can't argue with CD sales, so obviously there is a need for this type of cover, but I've always looked for artists who interpret songs in new ways.

Take Metallica for example: they pay homage to bands that influenced them by playing at least one cover version per live set, and having brought out an EP and a double album of cover versions, along with tribute projects to Ronnie James Dio, Black Sabbath, Lou Reed (not Lulu, but live versions of "My Sweet Jane") and some more that I can't recall right now. What they do is interpret the  songwriter and original artist's vision and effort with their own set of skills and styles.


They even tackled some more commercial pop and rock songs in this medley performed at a MTV-event. There are many other examples, such as their rendition of "Turn the page" by Bob Seger, or "Whiskey in the Jar" by Thin Lizzy, which in turn is actually a cover of an old Irish folk song. In turn, Metallica's catalogue has been covered many times, by so many different people, and often these versions can bring new appreciation for the song. Just listen to anything by Apocalyptica, or Pat Boone 's version of "Enter Sandman" to appreciate how far you can go with covering a metal song.

Nirvana loved the odd cover as the MTV unplugged album shows us. "The man who sold the world" became my favourite song on the album, originally written and performed by David Bowie. And I don't even much care for Bowie's music. So the new "packaging" actually helped me appreciate Bowie more to some degree. 



 I saw Saron Gas (now known as Seether) cover "How You Remind Me" live, when it was okay for metalheads to like Nickelback. I stage dove on it. I headbanged to it. Don't tell anyone now.

I especially appreciate it if artists can reinterpret songs into completely new genres, or parts of the song, a lick or hook, and almost rewrite the song around that. A client of mine, Loki Rothman, has become an internet hit with his "one man band" covers of well know songs. The fact that he is a prodigy on guitar and does things to strings that should be considered unlawful is part of the draw of this type of cover. And to see him do this live, is quite something. Without creating an alienated version of the song, he re-purposes it, in a matter of speaking. From jazz to pop he puts his own touch on any song. See what I mean below:

  

Ok, I can probably do a thousand page blog post on songs that different bands covered in their own inimitable way. And that is beautiful, and a huge compliment to the songwriter, me thinks. But, I have to make mention of one last artist, that has become an internet phenomenon: Leo from Frog Leap Studios. 

A metal musician, re-purposing pop and more mainstream songs into metal madness has introduced a huge amount of people to heavy music, that normally wouldn't have listened to it. He plays all the instruments bar the odd collaboration with other musicians. Seeing his version of Adele's "Hello" blew my mind wide open. And then Pete Cottrell ripping the hardest solo over the breakdown I have seen in years... I saw the light properly: doing covers can be mad cool. 



So I  really like the song "Aerials" by System of a Down. I would sing it at top volume in my car on many an occasion. All their quirkiness, creativity and commentary is just perfectly distilled in this tune.  I would often wish I could write a song like it. And I still do.


Well, I tried, and I couldn't. I wrote my own songs, and that is great. Inspiration is needed now and again, but I couldn't write my own "Aerials". So, I started jamming it along with them. And I thought, hmmm, some fingerpicking could work...., but I don't do covers...yet. Then I Youtube'd some covers of "Aerials" and the one below showed me that maybe I could bring my own acoustic feel to it. Not like the girl obviously, but do it in line with my own skill-set.


So, I decided to go all in. With my own set of skills. My voice, my playing, my own solo written for the song, and my weird instruments. Below is a pic of some of the things  I used.



I really really enjoyed reproducing the song with my own vibes, and here is my effort. Let me know what you think. I'm busy thinking about some more songs that I can cover. Not necessarily in this exact style, but in my own way. Whatever that might be. 

Tuesday, 10 May 2016

Random lyric doodles

Never again
Yet here we are again
Rinse, sin, Repeat
What a waste of energy
Why not skip to the end?
The final play
Won't all this messing around just be remembered for one last play?

Friday, 13 November 2015

Danie Nel - Rainy Days

 Listen to Rainy Days by Danie Nel

A brand new instrumental track is out now! Click on the image to go and listen to it on Jamendo.

I can't recall composing the guitar or piano as such, but recall a jam I played and recorded on my very out of tune Rippen piano onto a 4-track a year or two back. I also seam to recall finding the track on the 4-track and then recording some guitar over it, just to forget about it again.

This week, however, I found it and layed some synths, bass and drums over it, to complete this improvisational instramental piece, perfect for rainy day blues!


Friday, 16 October 2015

The Reaper is OUT and on VIDEO!


Getting "The Reaper" final release ready took a while. I've released it previously in what I now refer to as "demo" or "first pass" version. I basically remixed it and remastered it. 

I've wanted to do a video for a while, but I couldn't quite make time to shoot something elaborate, and shooting and editing and performing and whatnot, by myself, makes it even a tougher task. For some reason I've always like archive images from wars in music videos. Yes, yes, I know it's probably old hat and even cheesy, but I haven't done it, so, it's not a cliche for me. Yet, anyways. 

In the public domain there are some great clips available for use in all sorts of projects, so I got my fill of clips at the Pond 5 Public Domain Project. The lyrics of the song is not directly related to the footage, but it supports the atmosphere, and the gist of the lyrics tie in with the idea of wars: humanist thinking led to war. War in the "name of religion" does not make it God's war. It makes it the war of people, using God as an excuse. 

The song is about standing up and taking a stand the is not philosophically popular, but essential as a Christian. We have to value God's judgements and views above that of common philosophy, pop-psychology and popular opinion. Especially in our post-modern world where having a conviction about something is a worse sin that simply agreeing with everyone. (Till you try and disagree with a post-modern thinker, then you see what true intolerance is!)

Anyways, I also took the opportunity to take some pics for my publicity and online profiles.



I find it very hard to do these "very serious" band pics. I'm more likely to take pics of myself in goofy poses, but I suppose it's time I have some more serious imagery. Here I am shown with my NEL "Angry Bird" Guitar. One of the guitars I built. This one was built with pieces of rubbish pine I had lying around outside, with an extra neck and odds and ends to make this guitar.

Anyways, till the next update. 



Monday, 14 September 2015

Update on Reuse Reduce Recycle

You might've noticed that suddenly "Reuse Reduce Recycle" is no longer available in the links, or in previous posts on Facebook, or in Twitter. Well, I've decided to relook some of the tracks, especially on the mixes, and then to go ahead and release the album in bursts of singles. I'm also typical in my artistic regret, so every now and again I wish I did something differently. Luckily, I can redo things. However, once it is released now, it'll stay released, because through this network it costs money to get it to you.

Part of the reason is that I'd like it to be available on most streaming platforms, like Spotify, Apple Music, Xbox Music, and thousands of radio stations online, Youtube monetisation etc. Yes, it'll help me get the music out there, and in time recoup some of the costs at 0.001 cent a play!

Jamendo is still doing fantastically well for my back catalogue, like "Painting with Light" has proven, with my catalogue having received more that 1.5 million streams already. Certain releases will still fit the Jamendo model better, so I'll continue there.

Once you buy the song on iTunes or wherever, you can even use it for your videos on Youtube. In fact, I'd appreciate it if you do. Through clever micro-sync technology, I'll get paid a micro-cent every time it is played.

So the first remixed, remastered song is the very first from the album, "To where our souls call home". It has been released and should have digested into the the iTunes, Amazon, Spotify and the like's roster in the next 1-4 weeks.

You can already stream or grab it here:

http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/danienel