Love honestly… Kenny Schick ONE

New Single ONE

It was born quickly from an intense flood of emotions that hit me one day in the early spring (last year) just after our first Tennessee winter… poetically, I was walking through a cemetery… how goth of me.

The new single is called ‘One’, and is the first song I wrote here in Nashville. It is the first piece of solo music I’ve released since my 5th album in 2013.

Since starting Basement3Productions back in 2008, and working pretty much 7 days a week for years producing music for others, I was getting plenty of opportunity to create music (be creative), and I am blessed to be able to make a living in this way. It did dawn on me however that I’d learned the process of recording over many decades with one main goal, and that was simply so I could create my own music—it was my private escape from the world to hull up in my studio making anti-mainstream music—lol.

Being here in Nashville around so many artists perhaps reminded me that there is something fulfilling about creating a song from scratch in your own voice. Music has always been more about art and self-expression to me than a commercial endeavor to create product. I suppose there is a cathartic release in realizing an emotion through a creation, be it a song, a photograph, a painting. I missed that… so here we go!

We even went big and did a video! Thank you to Sabine for the filming and Adapted Creations in Australia for the editing!

I’ll be releasing singles for the time being, as all my song ideas right now are very different… I already have another single complete, and it’s totally different! We are concentrating more on videos and our YouTube channel, so please take a few seconds to go SUBSCRIBE to our channel… we’ll be putting out some cool stuff! Also…if you dig this, please SHARE the video with those you think would dig it… the song is also available on all the streaming places, it’s for sale, etc… sharing, buying, liking, subscribing… it all helps us. I hope you enjoy the music!

This song is available to listen or purchase wherever you like to listen to music LINKS BELOW
Apple Music: https://music.apple.com/us/album/one-…
Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/album/1mhmwZ…
Amazon Music: https://www.amazon.com/One-kenny-schi…
Pandora: https://www.pandora.com/artist/kenny-…
Google Music: https://play.google.com/store/music/a…
Band Camp: https://kennyschick.bandcamp.com/albu…

Our Production Studio B3PMusic.com
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A road trip to the Bluegrass State, Kentucky!

Where we were seduced by it’s extreme beauty!

 

Kentucky!
This past weekend, Sabine and I were visited here in Nashville by our great friends Lori and Pete. We showed them a bit of Nashville for a day and a half, and then we went on a road trip to the Bluegrass State, Kentucky. We were seduced by it’s extreme beauty—vast fields of lush grass and rolling hills covered in broad leaf forests.

Distilleries!
This was just icing on the cake, as our journey was really about bourbon and music. We toured the Four Roses Distillery, and the really historic Buffalo Trace Distillery… so much information and top notch Bourbon!

our journey was really about bourbon and music

Willie Watson!
Now Lori and Pete have become completely obsessed with songwriter/musician Willy Watson. Though I didn’t immediately recognize the name, I’ve know of him for years as it turns out. Watson was a founding member of Old Crow Medicine Show, and is also a member of Dave Rawlings Machine with Dave and Gillian Welch.

Buster Scruggs!
Many of y’all probably know him now too, as he was in Joel and Ethan Cohen’s recent film, ‘The Ballad Of Buster Scruggs’. He plays ‘The Kid’, who guns down Buster Scruggs (Tim Blake Nelson) at the end of the first old western tale in this film. He also sings the song ‘When A Cowboy Trades His Wings For Spurs’, penned by his colleagues Gillian Welch and Dave Rawlings. So see…you DO know him… 🙂

‘The Ballad Of Buster Scruggs’

The Burl!
Willie’s solo performance was wonderful, and the venue, The Burl, was an amazing old wood building sitting across from a distillery in Lexington, KY. Built in 1926 as a loading dock and hub for Texaco, it is a long room with porches flanking each side. The venue is right by the train tracks and has a ton of vibe. This performance was part of a weekend festival at The Burl called The Rail Roots Festival. We only went on the Sunday but now wish we’d gone the whole weekend!

The Rail Roots Festival – Willy Watson – Lera Lynn….

Lera Lynn!
Also on the bill for this festival was one of our local Nashville favorites Lera Lynn. She plays some dark, brooding post-Americana, just like Sabine and I like. She put on a stellar set as well—her guitarist, whose name I can’t find anywhere, is a great support to her songs.

Every piece of this road trip was magical, and I’ve fallen in love with state of Kentucky. Sabine and I will visit again soon for sure! Thank you to Lori and Pete Chaplin!

See other photography by Kenny Schick

Kenny Schick solo music project

 

 

Producing and recording ArtemesiaBlack’s new album, Gravity, was a very different process from the first two albums.

This is the chronology of the 3 very different ArtemesiaBlack albums and the way they came together —one can’t simply explain Gravity.

 

BANDCAMP  |  ITUNES  |PANDORA  |  SPOTIFY  | AMAZON MUSIC

 

Sabine and Her Music – the Birth of ArtemesiaBlack

 

Unlike most people who create music, Sabine made music for the pure love of making music—and she made it literally only for herself. In her mind, she did not care a bit if the world ever heard it, and in fact, she did not want the world to hear it; nobody had ever heard her music until she made the brave decision to share it with me. I can’t really stress enough that music was a purely private escape for Sabine—she even played it very quietly in part so her roommates would not hear her.

 

We met in 2006, not in person, but having conversations about music online, and that turned into phone calls, and eventually into much more, obviously. As she recalls, she told me she wrote songs and immediately wished she could put the words back in her mouth. But the cat was out of the bag, and so one day, a cassette tape from Australia arrived. Given how she described her relationship with her music, I was sort of expecting some awkward, quirky, precariously performed songs—but from the moment the warble-y cassette(obviously, the recorder she used had not been cleaned in..well ever)started, my jaw sort of dropped! The vocals were in tune and the tone was amazing. The guitar, though played with a simple finger picking technique, felt deep with a certain harmonic complexity—it was not the typical strumy-strum you hear with a lot songwriters. I told her we were going to make an album of her songs when I got there—I think she was terrified.

 

Going to Australia – Americana Gothic Swamp Lullabies

 

I assembled my first mobile recording rig when I went to Australia: it was a G4 laptop, a Digidesign Mbox 2(a prototype that didn’t even have writing/labels on it), and 3 microphones: a Blue Dragonfly, an AKG 451, and a Shinybox ribbon mic that all fit neatly into one case. I didn’t know it at the time, but this mobile rig was the beginning of Basement 3 Productions and recording people other than just myself.

 

Sabine had a good feel and naturally good time, so I thought we’d record her to a click track, guitar and vocals separate, to give me more editing flexibility—nope—wasn’t going to happen. Sabine was used to recording herself, but to have me in the room, and to be recording a detailed version of her songs with the thought that others would hear this…well, that was another thing all together and it made her extremely uncomfortable. Trying to get her to play to that click was just killing her performance, so I made the decision to just put one or 2 mics up in front of her and just let her go. It was a matter of making her as comfortable as possible and not trying to force her into a way of working that was certainly going to negatively impact her performance.

 

It was great to learn early on that working with others requires flexibility and the willingness to switch gears on a dime in order to achieve a good capture of a song. My years of experience didn’t matter in the least if the methods i was hoping to use killed the art. Me and most of the musicians I’d ever worked with had quite a bit of analysis combined with feeling when we did studio work, and we were fine with doing things over and over until we got the ‘right’ take. Sabine was all feeling, and if she didn’t get a good performance in about 3 takes, it wasn’t going to happen that day.

 

working with others requires flexibility and the willingness to switch gears on a dime in order to achieve a good capture of a song

 

 

So that’s how we rolled: I’d capture her songs as a live take, both guitar and vocal all at once, and then I’d build around that performance. Sabine’s feel was good, but the time definitely moved around a bit, which made adding parts a bit more challenging, but that’s where my determination and analytical skills came in really handy. She’d come home from work and hear what I’d done, and she’d get a big smile on her face—it was fun to watch the thrill of creating produced songs excite her imagination, and soon she was coming up with plenty of ideas to throw in the pot. Aside from adding my (acoustic) guitar parts and back up vocals, I added some percussion elements using both actual percussion(shaker and dumbek) as well as found objects—including the washing machine(good bass drum).

 

Our Very First Song We Wrote Together

 

Trying to write at the same time didn’t work…. Sabine has to go write her words, get a melody(and general chords, though this song was only one chord), and then bring it to me to orchestrate. That is still pretty much how it goes, only the orchestration process is much more elaborate.

 

Our first collaboration/co-write was a song called ’Shipwreck’(a song she wrote that day inspired by shipwrecks at Cape Otway), and we recorded it in a cabin along The Great Ocean Road(Johanna), using the sounds of the wood fire and driftwood for creepy ambience. The initial track was recorded with both of us on either side of the Shinybox ribbon mic…me on guitar, being louder, much further away, and her with her quiet vocals up close…the old wood cabin sounded really cool. This song was also a prelude to the ‘ghost stories’ she would tell at shows later on. It also showed us how we would work best, and still work, in terms of writing, today. Trying to write at the same time didn’t work…. Sabine has to go write her words, get a melody(and general chords, though this song was only one chord), and then bring it to me to orchestrate. That is still pretty much how it goes, only the orchestration process is much more elaborate.

 

 

One thing that came up early on is that writing with a significant other has some some emotional challenges—my time in Australia was fraught with fear of the unknown, self doubt, and indecision—this certainly had a profound effect on a sensitive soul like Sabine, and as she wrote, though it wasn’t directly obvious, I could hear her struggles(that I was causing) in her lyrics, and the songs were beautiful, but difficult at times to work on and listen to over and over… of course, this theme would and will always be part of working with her…within the deeply felt songs she writes are reflections of her flaws and struggles, but also my flaws and the pain I sometimes cause her too, which I often don’t want to face.

 

I could hear her struggles(that I was causing) in her lyrics, and the songs were beautiful, but difficult at times to work on…

 

Ghost Stories

 

 

Sabine came to the US in 2008 and immediately, we got in my car and drove across the US and
back for 2 months—I’d booked shows all along the way centered around a show I got at the Bluebird Cafe in what is now our home town, Nashville. Sabine had played exactly 2 performances in Australia(which terrified her), so this was kind of her worst nightmare come true in a way. But she did it, and did it well, though I couldn’t help but notice that the whole process of ‘being a musician’ was perhaps killing the spirit of what music meant to her. Yet on we went, and she came back from the trip with new songs, mostly inspired by our time driving through the south.

 

Sabine had played exactly 2 performances in Australia(which terrified her), so this was kind of her worst nightmare come true in a way. But she did it, and did it well,

 

A year or so after the tour, we started a band with upright bassist David Sierra and percussionist Rain Cruz—we’d later add drummer Mike Freitas. This was a different era—Sabine had become more comfortable with the recording process and having her songs ‘out in the world’. The band was a fun experience in that others brought their own creative ideas to the table–it brought in ideas we may not have had and the old songs took on a new life while new ones were born of this band dynamic. We had enough songs for an album, so we set up In Hans Heim’s Studio B in the lovely mountains outside Santa Cruz, CA.

 

We cut the basic tracks with the band live, but on most songs, we did it sans vocals so we could do them separately. This album, though still mostly acoustic, started to see me overdubbing electric guitar parts and some woodwind parts. A few experimental elements started to make their way in, and album 2, ‘Ghost Stories’, was born—quite a different experience from the first album.

 



The Apple Falls – Gravity

 

After gigging for a few years, band members moved on as they often do, and Sabine and I were back to being a duo. This gave us a blank canvas again to redefine what we wanted to do. Working with artists and helping them create their dream recordings with Basement 3 Productions had led me down a lot of new musical paths, and I was eager to try some of the things I developed/discovered for other artists on our music—and take those discoveries even further.

 

…we just wanted to make music that we, and our friends, would like to listen to…

 

Sabine and I also wanted to remove the limitations of ‘what could be done live’—we just wanted to make music that we, and our friends, would like to listen to. As we’d also been making music for licensing, we’d come up with a few songs written with inspiration coming from sources outside our own thoughts, and we found a few of these songs were actually really great ArtemesiaBlack songs. Though a few of the ‘ghost stories’ still remained, we found the scope was quite a bit broader this time around. Our normal way of writing had been to figure out how to perform the songs Sabine had written, and then augment the live versions, but this time, we learned the songs just enough to get a basic demo, and most often, the initial part(acoustic guitar) used to start building was totally stripped from the song.

 

…there was also a lot more experimentation with sonics, as I’d built up quite a nice sound library of virtual instruments and odd sounds as needed working with so many diverse clients in the production business…

 

As with so many of the artists I’d worked with, I approached the song simply trying to figure out what might sound cool and unique—there was also a lot more experimentation with sonics, as I’d built up quite a nice sound library of virtual instruments and odd sounds as needed working with so many diverse clients in the production business.

 

Artemesiablack Gravity Sabine Heusler-Schick & Kenny Schick

 

New technology in recording and mixing has made it possible to do things I would not have been able to accomplish 12 years ago when we started Basement 3 Productions. Growing the business and keeping up with technological advances has provided me with amazing tools that are now at my disposal for ArtemesiaBlack—it’s a whole new palette to draw from.

 

Of all the albums I’ve played on(music that I wrote or co-wrote that is), which is so many now, this is the album that I’m most proud of artistically and technically.

 

Early in 2018, we’d completed all the parts, and began mixing the new songs. I also wanted to remix the first songs I had already finished to incorporate new mixing tricks and sounds I’d picked up over the years. Of all the albums I’ve played on(music that I wrote or co-wrote that is), which is so many now, this is the album that I’m most proud of artistically and technically. Even though I’ve heard these songs hundreds of times, I still really enjoy listening to this album because of the great amount of heart and spirit Sabine’s songs embody.

 

It’s all just Geekery to me

 

Some geekery in terms of mixing and mastering the new album: Because so many people are streaming music now, and because streaming services are using volume normalization, a loudness cap for an easier way to understand it, the need to make songs so loud is disappearing, and in fact, is detrimental to how it sounds on streaming. I always disliked what was termed the ‘loudness war’—the competition to make your song louder than the next so it stands out(think annoying loud-ass commercials on TV), so having the ability to leave dynamics in the music, especially this music which is very dynamic, was exciting. A lot of engineers and mastering folks aren’t quite letting go of the ‘loud’ thing, so I made Gravity a touch louder than I might a few years from now, but it was really a pleasure to work knowing I didn’t have to ‘compete’ in a way that was detrimental to the music. I’ve been using this same ‘less loud’ approach with artists I work with both in mixing and mastering, and they have really been enjoying the results.

 

We are really proud of ‘Gravity’. As artists, we continually strive to learn and progress our craft(s), and we are happy this album makes quite a step forward. We wanted to put something a little different into the world—something that can be enjoyed by those seeking new perspectives to inspire them. We hope this will satisfy those with a hunger for artistic heartfelt music as well as audiophiles who like to immerse themselves in sonic landscapes. We hope you will listen and just float free…..

 

 

Photography by Kenny Schick – Kenny Schick is a Music Producer, engineer, singer songwriter & professional photographer, living in Nashville TN (from the Bay Area CA)  (see more photos here)

 

“How can it have a title when it has so many personalities?”

Photo by Kenny Schick – see more photos

I had the privilege to work on this amazing album by DB Walker and his band, a well known and loved figure in the Bay Area Blues Scene!

Photography by Kenny Schick – Kenny Schick is a Music Producer, engineer, singer songwriter & professional photographer, living in Nashville TN (from the Bay Area CA)  (see more photos here)

It was some time in the early 2000’s when I met David ‘DB’ Walker. I was in the house band for a local Bay Area TV show called ‘Stand Up, It’s Thursday Night’, a comedy sketch/music TV show much like Saturday Night Live. We filmed in front of a live studio audience every Thursday night, first from KRON studios in San Jose, then from UPN studios in San Francisco the following season. 

Upon losing our second guitar player in a fairly short amount of time, we were feeling a bit flustered when our drummer brought along a guitarist he knew named DB Walker. We’d really liked our previous guitarist, so we were not super keen on getting going with yet another new one. DB showed up with his waist long dread locks and a big old massive pedal board…we were intrigued by this character… We started playing and knew quickly we’d finally found the perfect member to round out the band—DB was technically skilled for sure, but more importantly, he was creative and fun with a great sense of adventure musically. Our whole schtick was to take cover songs and play them in unlikely styles, and DB was perfect at helping us down our path of tune-twisting. 

DB was technically skilled for sure, but more importantly, he was creative and fun with a great sense of adventure musically

Photo by Kenny Schick – see more photos

DB Walker, as we came to find out, was also a known figure in the Bay Area blues scene, and I’ve been fortunate enough to be a semi-frequent guest at his shows. Consisting of covers and his really great originals, his sets not only include traditional blues styles and songs, but often float off into all sorts of adventurous directions—it is always super fun to see where he’ll go, and we can find ourselves floating between long atmospheric/psychedelic forays that can lead into a Nine Inch Nails tune, then back to road house blues and other really great blues inspired DB Walker originals.

A few years back now, DB decided it was time to release a new album, and it was to be a whole bunch of his songs—16 as it turns out. The initial idea had been to set up at his home studio, record the basic tracks for all the songs over a couple of weekends, mix the puppy, and be done quickly. It was to be both a digital and vinyl release. DB is a pretty meticulous guy, so the initial plans of moving quickly soon gave way to his perfectionist nature—lots of experimenting with cool overdubs and musical ideas ensued.

DB sent along parts to me as he completed them, and I mixed songs over the next several months. As we got close to completion, new experimental songs came along. The album covers a wide range, starting with a more traditional blues vibe, then moving to spacey psychedelic Pink Floyd-like explorations. 

DB is a pretty meticulous guy, so the initial plans of moving quickly soon gave way to his perfectionist nature—lots of experimenting with cool overdubs and musical ideas ensued.

I finished the mixes and DB had to figure out a few versions of the release due to timing issues that wouldn’t allow all the songs to fit on vinyl in their full versions. This task was finally completed, and the album went off to mastering….the masters came back, but then….radio silence. During the ’silent times,’ I’d relocated from California to Nashville, and just a few months ago, I got a call from DB Walker asking if I’d master the songs—so I mastered, thrilled to hear the amazing songs again, sent the masters back to DB, and waited for instructions in regards to changes or tweaks…I didn’t hear back, and soon I saw his release notice on social media—‘no changes’ was my answer!

http://www.dbwalker.com/

The album is an amazing piece of art—DB Walker’s songs are great, his playing is stellar, and the musicians he plays with are always top notch.

Here are DB’s notes for the album and personnel:
“This Record Album Has No Title” Because its more like 3 records in one. It begins with some driving Blues, then edges more into Classic Rock/Blues, takes a stop in Americana then shifts into pounding Hendrix inspired psychedelia before it floats off into a Post Rock/Pink Floyd haze
How can it have a title when it has so many personalities? 

Recorded at Bella Sounds in San Jose
Additional tracking at Basment3Productions Studios 
Mixed at Basement3Productions studios 
All music written by The D.B. Walker Band (Walker, Falzone, Oliver, Kane) (c) 2017 A Wraparound Records Production released November 23, 2018

D.B. Walker: Vocals, Guitar
David Falzone: Bass
Lachlann Kane: Keyboards
Michael Oliver: Drums
Kenny Schick: Producer / Engineering / Mixing / Horns / Guitar / Vocals

Additional Musicians: 
Mumbling Blues; Kenny Schick-Horns 
Wear me down; Kenny Schick-Horns 
Nothings Left; Hershel Yatovitz-Lead Guitar, Kenny Schick-Baritone Guitar, Sabiné Heusler Schick-Background Vocals 
Drive; Kenny Schick, Background Vocals 
A place to rest; Ryan Krage-Drums, Davon Whitehead-Keys 
Coming Down; Sabiné Heusler Schick-Additional voice

Photo by Kenny Schick – see more photos
Photo by Kenny Schick – see more photos