We - Helen and The Neighbourhood Dogs - are not, it
should be stressed, a band of independent means. Our fragmented touring schedule
(we are not the most hawkish of gig-mongers) means that since we don’t play
much* our concert-related income stream does not stretch to budgeting for a
week’s recording in the country, two days’ mixing and a subsequent mastering
session with a devoted engineer, even at mate’s rates. Hence we are pleased and
grateful that our munificent benefactors Sam Inglis and Fenton Steve are the
sort of chaps who enjoy nothing more than spending a bucolic Saturday looking
concernedly at a whirring laptop, making sure we don’t knock over absurdly
expensive microphones, marking out soundtastic sweet spots with masking tape,
and making endless cups of tea for us (see blogs passim).
Our latest foray into standing in a big room and
playing a song from start to finish, all at the same time, and hoping no-one
lets off fireworks in the car park has been lovingly curated once again by our
benevolent uncles from darkest Cambridgeshire, and we think it’s the best one
so far. Three songs – one of which I distinctly remember demoing with The World
Service in the function room of a pub that Google informs me was decommissioned
in 1997 – wherein everybody gets a bit of a play, most of us have a sing, and the
majority of folk are happy with their arrangements. Fiddly likes to prepare
meticulously and has his own form of impenetrable musical notation which future
etymologists are more than welcome to try to deconstruct whereas by contrast
Gibbon (on bass) is far more of an improviser and a wing-it kind of guy, and so
to get a take with which both are happy can be quite the calendar event.As I say, we recorded these songs live - mainly around one magnificent Soundfield, with additional booster microphones for those elements which were getting slightly lost when fighting against the sound of Mr. Wendell’s mighty room-swamping Gibson acoustic. Meticulous attention to detail was then applied to the soundscapes by Steve (a considerable step or two beyond my contribution of “Could you tweak the banjo a bit?”) who passed on his thoughts to Sam, who then curated the finished objets. Our continued thanks for outside audio perspective, chapel wrangling, and biscuit provision are once again well overdue.
Please have a listen, enjoy if you can, and share at
will. We truly appreciate it.
*After the last recording session we did we
immediately started looking to the next one. The first date that all six band
members were available on the same day was five months hence.
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