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Interview with Jake Hanner of Donora

on Tue, 2011-10-04 15:47

After reviewing the Donora record for Burghsounds.com, Jake Hanner and I exchanged some e-mails about the production of the album. Look below for some insight!

Can you talk about any goals or rules for the production for this album? 

The first 2 songs we recorded for the album were "if you see my boyfriend" and "story".  Around the same time we were writing "happily ever after".  We thought it would be a fun idea to play off those songs and create kind of a story book/ fairy tale vibe for the album.  I had found this great record at jerry's a while back that had all these harp runs, all in different keys.  I started sampling them with my casio sk-5 (a low-fi 8 bit sampler) and working them in whenever i could.  I tried to have them make an appearance in all the songs, but i may have missed one or two.

As far as rules for production... I try not to get tied to any one rule or idea.  I know that limitation forces creativity, but at the same time i don't want to let a pre-conceived idea get in the way and keep creative moments from happening.

In the album review, I mistakenly refer to synths being used throughout the album. Can you list some of the techniques that you used to create some of the non-guitar sounds? Maybe those in "And Then The Girls"?

Ya, we didn't use any synths on the record.  Not that I have anything against them, I just never got into them.  I've always been into manipulating organic instruments and trying to create my own "unique" sound.  A lot of the time it ends up sounding like a synth patch, but it always feels more precious to me because of the fun i had making that sound.  I use the sk-5 a lot for that and it doesn't have long term memory, so I never save any of the sounds I make.  At first that frustrated me, but then I realized that's kind of the greatest thing about it is that it has limitations.  It's just like a toy that you can only do so much with so it forces you to be creative, but the simple sampling functions allow you to work fast.  So fast in fact that a lot of the time when I go back and listen to the tracks I can't remember what that sound started as.  I think John Cale said something like "working fast and cheap is the best way to get somewhere no one else has been".  I may be mistaken but if it wasn't him it sounds like something he would say. Ha

The vocal layers on the album are pretty impressive. When layering the vocals did you use multiple microphones or different singer to microphone distances?

All the mono vocals were recorded with an akg c-414 with a c12 capsule.  That's a great ldc mic. It's like a non tube version of the c12 mic.  In the 70's or 80's, they started replacing the capsules with cheaper versions but never changed the model number on the mic, so if you find on old one you have to open it up to see what capsule you have.

When we wanted to get a "chanty" sounding vocal Casey would stand about 2 feet from the mic with it pointed down at her, and I would actually stand a couple feet over her shoulder and we would sing in unison.  I would just move in or out until it sounded right.  For the songs where we'd want to get a more intimate sounding vocal, we would record that in a smaller room and play around with the distance.  Most of the ambiance on the vocals was a combination of mic distance and an old mxr analog delay pedal.  That delay works really well on Casey's voice.  For "and then the girls" and "untouchables" though, we recorded casey's vocal in the kitchen and used an spl transient designer to get all the room sound we could while still getting some presence and proximity out of her voice.

When we recorded larger group singing or wanted to get a stereo vocal sound we would use a U87 with the 414 in a large room with a vaulted ceiling.

The album definitely sounds like a whole, but some of the drums and vocals vary in sound from song to song. Were basic tracks recorded at the same time or was the album conceived over a longer period, coinciding with the writing?

In general, I just try to do what is best for the song.  I'm not all that concerned about subtle differences because in the end it's all going to sound cohesive because it's all coming from us.  And the three of us making music together is what donora's sound is no matter how much I may try to push it in a particular direction.

There are actually 2 drastically different recording approaches on this album. The main approach came from the fact that a good number of the tracks on this album started as demos.  When we started to record the songs "for real" we just kept going back to the demos and finding them more interesting, so we'd just finish the demo.  After figuring that out, we wrote and recorded a couple more with that same "demo" approach.

The second approach and what was actually the beginning of recording for this album was that we made a decision for 3 songs (story, champion, if you see my boyfriend) to hire our dad as our multi instrumentalist and to go into the larger tracking space with the basics of the song and just started working on arrangement ideas.  We'd practice the song until everyone had their part figured out and we thought we had a good arrangement and then we tracked it live. We kept the live vocal takes and embraced the bleed. Two of the three turned out completely different than I would have ever imagined.

I didn't see any reference to other album formats. Is the album mp3 only? Did you have any concerns with mp3 sound quality? (Editor's note: here is where I show my ignorance for what iTunes offers in download formats)

Do you mean that you can't purchase the album on itunes in wav file format?  That would actually be news to me?  and I would have concerns with that.  or do you mean that you only saw it available on itunes?  We have cds that we sell at shows, but only a digital distributor.  I don't know if very much of our fan base would listen to vinyl, but if it was ever in demand, I would like to print some vinyl. If only for the hope that a single copy would end up sitting in Jerry's Records 20 years from now.  Ha. I listen to a lot of vinyl, but only because I enjoy having to turn the record over.  It forces me to pay attention and think about what i'm going to listen to next. Instead of just having an endless loop of songs playing in the background. That and I like making trips to Jerry's and Mineos and getting into all the music I missed the first time around.

Thanks Jake!

Find out more about Donora at http://www.donoramusic.com/

Album Review: Donora - Boyfriends, Girlfriends

on Wed, 2011-09-28 05:08

ALBUM REVIEW: Donora - Boyfriends, Girlfriends (Rostrum Records, 2011);

I’ve started this review a few times. One attempt discussed the massive success found by Donora’s Rostrum Records labelmates, Wiz Khalifa and Mac Miller. Rostrum seems to have the right distribution and press channels and is definitely doing something right commercially. Can that success be transferred to Donora, an act that has significantly less raps? It seems like to some extent it has. A previous album song, “The Chorus,” wound up on the Abduction soundtrack, nudging elbows with Train, Lenny Kravitz, and Raphael Saadiq. A few days ago, Teen Vogue blogged and streamed “The Untouchables,” one of the more anthem-ic tracks on Boyfriends, Girlfriends. 

Another start to the review discussed intention in music creation. In the interviews surrounding this release, “fun” seems to be both the main ingredient and the desired outcome. If music was judged solely on intention, this album would be a 10/10 or A+ or what-have-you, allowing the worst mood to lift with a stream of undeniably sweet chord changes. Whether it is inherent to these three musician’s abilities or a concentrated effort, commercial appeal oozes from every second of this release. Take any 30 second interval, and it will surely sell you a car, mobile phone plan, candidate platform, or, hopefully, locally-based initiative. But all of this is a bit irrelevant to the music. So, let’s start now.

When dealing with love and relationships, an idealized pairing or storybook fantasy usually lingers in the background, posing as the standard to which the current relationship is compared. Boyfriends, Girlfriends is structured like a storybook. Opener “The Story” acts as an overture, spelling out some of the reoccurring romantic themes of innocence, hints of love, and expectation. A production vocabulary is also given. Layered vocals, melodic overload, combinations of guitars, synths, and keys. Rhythmic layers and production quirks underpin simple chord patterns and classic song structures. No solos. Closer “Happily Ever After” neatly ties everything up; however, I’d argue that it leaves things on a cynical note, mocking one of many shining knight endings.

Lyrics are kept to a minimum most of the time, favoring repetition over detail. “Mancini’s Dance Hall” literally places boyfriends and girlfriends at a dance hall. The rest is left to one’s imagination. “Champion” admits defeat when striving for the ideal, but offers assurance that perfection is not what is actually desired. Lead single “The World Is Ours” and “The Untouchables” celebrate the self-confidence gained by joining with another. The universality of the themes here lends appeal to Donora’s widespread fan-base. I’d call it the 8 to 80 fan base.

Musically, the base songs are very simple and catchy. After being dressed up in some surprising and delightful production, the songs are still catchy, but now they have a few layers that one can dissect. “The World Is Ours” is a four chord pattern that lasts nearly four minutes. Piano and vocal melodies float in and out, as do backward blips, reverb washes, and rhythm tracks. Throughout all this, you barely notice the repetition. “And Then The Girls” adds synths and drums loops to the organic mix (and maybe a Reason patch?), resulting in a nice contrast between jagged verses and a chorus that is too sweet to resist.

There are definitely a few throwbacks, too. “If You See My Boyfriend” revels in 50s nostalgia through a 70s Grease lens. The throwbacks are complimented with synthesizers and Donora’s patented “yeahs”. “Boom Boom” and “The Untouchables” remind me a good bit of 90s Britpoppers, Sleeper. The one thing that I find endlessly fascinating is the abundance of unwarranted yeah’s, la’s, oh’, ay’s. I usually feel like someone should really work for these non-words. Maybe the Star Search-ization of contemporary R ’n B is to blame for this. Maybe it’s Vampire Weekend.

All in all, this album’s purpose has been served well. Each song is potent. The sequencing works. It just makes you feel good and is admittedly “fun.”

Check out the video for "The World Is Ours" below.

Hugh Twyman, the man behind the camera, First/Last

on Wed, 2011-09-21 03:39

I first met Hugh Twyman in 2004 at The Quiet Storm when Vale and Year was playing with One Star Hotel. Since then he has graciously taken photos of a few of my projects (Assembly, DJ Responsibility, Host Skull "Totally Fatalist" music video (below)). He has been a constant in the Pittsburgh music scene and the internet is ablaze with his local and national music documentation. Definitely check out the growing archive of warm, well-crafted photos on his website.

On the same website, Hugh keeps a First/Last series going on the blog. The series gives a number of folks the chance to indulge in their earliest tastes, favorite shows and albums, and recent concert-goer activity. I thought it appropriate to turn the tables on Hugh. See below for Hugh's First/Last.

The first album you ever bought? 
My mom took us kids to National Record Mart and said we could each buy two albums for the new record player we just got. I chose 'Steve Miller Band's Greatest Hits' and Fleetwood Mac's 'Rumours'.

Your last album bought?
The Kinks’ “Face to Face’ and “The Kinks Are the Village Green Preservation Society” Deluxe Reissues. I am on a ‘Kinks Kick’ right now and am gobbling up as much as I can afford…damn you, Paul’s CDs!

Favorite album of all time?
Grant Lee Buffalo “Mighty Joe Moon”. If anyone ever says that an album can change their life, I believe that because this one changed mine. Too long of a story to tell here.

Least favorite/most disappointing album?
World Party-“Bang!” The previous album “Goodbye Jumbo” was such a favorite that the expectations for the next one was way too high. A couple of great songs on there (‘Is it Like Today?’, ‘Sooner or Later’) but there are a few that I can’t even listen to (Rescue Me, ‘What is Love All About?’).

First concert attended?
Not counting John Sebastian opening for Steve Martin at Heinz Hall in 1977, my dad took me to see The Eagles at the Civic Arena in 1979.

Last concert?
As of this writing…the awesome Donora CD 2 release show at The Rex last night. That will change with WYEP’s Rock The Block tonight, Lindsey Buckingham on Tuesday, The Felice Brother/Dodos/The Luyas Wednesday, Foo Fighters/Weyes Blood Friday…I think I see TOO many shows.

Favorite concert ever?
Camper Van Beethoven at Metropol in 1989. Just exactly perfect!

Least favorite concert?
Tim Easton at Andyman’s Treehouse in Columbus in 2002. What a nightmare. The Band at Metropol in 1994 was maybe just as bad.

Favorite thoughts, experiences about Pittsburgh?
This ‘music scene’ that I would like to think I am somewhat a part of is full of the most talented, friendly and supportive group of people anywhere. When you go see a local band and there are ALWAYS half a dozen other musicians from different bands in the audience…that to me is the coolest thing ever.

Favorite concert that you photographed?
The Elephant 6 Holiday Surprise Tour at Brillobox in 2008 or the WYEP Holiday Hootenanny 2 rehearsals in 2009.

Favorite Pittsburgh band records?
Lohio-‘Fainting Goats’, Meeting of Important People-‘List Show’, Good Night, States-‘Neighborhood Roofs’, Local Honey-‘Glore’, Host Skull-‘Totally Fatalist’, Donora-‘Weekend Tongue’, Big Hurry-‘Pushing Daisies’, Triggers-‘Contagious’, The Chad Sipes Stereo-‘Scrap’, The Harlan Twins-‘Stones in my Passway’, Boca Chica-‘Blackberries’. Small Cities-‘Washed in the Blood’, Satin Gum-‘Dance Me Home’, Brewer’s Row-‘Benny’, Chet Vincent & The Big Bend-‘Shut My Mouth’, Emily Rodgers-‘Going Away’, The Wreckids-‘What I Mean to Say’, Colonizing The Cosmos-‘C the C’, Rusted Root-‘Beautiful People’, Ben Hardt-‘Avalanche’, New Shouts-‘Answers on a Postcard’, Nik Westman-‘You’re the Blues’, Horse Or Cycle-‘Billy’, Mariage Blanc-‘Famous Last Words’.

Thanks to Hugh for the answers! Now check out thousands of Hugh's photographs, run very quickly together in the video below: