Last week, upon my return from an extended holiday in Thailand, I had an urge to sing a song that I had discovered while vacationing. Throughout my break, I had missed my guitar terribly, and the first thing I wanted to do was see if I could strum the chords and sing the lyrics in the same reckless and carefree manner as this amazing band called Old Crow Medicine Show.
Once home, I tuned my guitar and sang it to the best of my ability. It felt good. Natural. Raw, yes, but comfortable. At this point I know that Leslie (@onepercentyello) is always good for a little Ukulele and harmonies that can take my out-of-tune voice and make it sound presentable. I uploaded it to Soundcloud, sent a few tweets and linked it to Facebook, asking anyone to:
Download this file add some banjo, fiddle, harmonica, gazoo, whatever you want, then upload YOUR part to soundcloud and send me the link. The timing should be right, but DO NOT send me a file with your part on top of my part. It will get muddled. Send me your part only. I will layer and arrange what I get back into a song.
A few minutes later @bryanjack from Vancouver sent me a lead guitar track, a few hours after that @joebire from Australia sent me a Mandolin track, a day later @drgarcia from Monterey (Where are you now?) sent me some awesome Patti Smith style backing vocals, Leslie had a crazy weekend, but she did not disappoint, finally @joelbirch from Paris sent me some wicked electric guitar tracks. Every morning I would wake up to a new thread for my sonic tapestry.
Tonight, I played with the sound levels and am ready to present the final piece. Maybe not final, but where it stands now:
Wagon Wheel Collab by intrepidflame
I have only ever met Leslie and only briefly. We have made music together several times in the past. Bryan and I have played together on a few projects too, but I have never met or worked with the others. We are a loose network of learners interested in seeing what these tools can do to bring people together.
image By giulia.forsythe
What does it mean that a group of people spanning the globe find the time to create music just for the sake of it? How are our relationships and connections strengthen by the bound of music, however, splintered and artificial? I understand that this is not a collaborative project, seeing that everything came through me and the others were not able to hear what anyone but me had recorded, but that is not the point. The point is that this was a spontaneous idea that had little to no planning. What could we produce if we explored other tools, planned together, exchanged ideas, or played live. Practiced. Edited. Well you get the idea.
I am a big fan of spontaneous, loose, free flowing projects. They open our ideas to what is possible. Not only for our own enjoyment, but they can help us consider the implications these sessions or ones like it can have for our students. I would love to hear from the participants of this project in the comments. Why is this important? Is it? What did you get out of this? Why did you participate?
I am hoping that the real beauty of what we have done will come out in the ideas we share in the subsequent conversations. Furthermore, I would like to invite anyone reading to help take this project a step further. How about if someone or a group of people created a video for it! I would love to be involved and take direction, but don’t want to lead the video. I love to see how far we can push ideas. The song is public, creative commons, and waiting for anyone to do more with it. Find another group and create something else with it. Please share what you do. I will send this post to the band and see what they think as well.
Thanks everyone for playing along.
This musical journey I have been on over the last year has graced me with so many fine people, that it begins to make me self-conscious. There’s always a part of me that feels so plain, and when you play music, you tend to attract dazzling people. From crashing Learning 2.010 and meeting Jabiz and so many others, to traveling through China, India, Nepal and Tibet and encountering characters from around the world, to returning to Canada and jammin’ with the fine folk at summer music festivals, my little ukulele and I have met an abundance of down-to-earth, kind, generous people who are willing to share who they are honestly.
I find this with music. First, live, messy, amateur music tends to repel a large group of people that I have little in common with. Nicely done! Then it places a beacon for all my favourite type of people to find me. When they arrive, I hand them a kazoo, chicken shake, tambourine, morchunga or pretty much anything I have laying around to play with. Together we raise a louder ruckus and attract more fine folk. Pretty soon we need a campfire for the jam.
And here we have a digital campfire jam. People spanning the globe contributing their light to make a beacon for others to follow. And, in jam style touched with Jabiz’s signature, we have a place where all voices are welcome, everyone is valued for their contribution, and everyone who thinks its cool is invited.
You plain? Me dazzling? I think you have it backwards.
“a place where all voices are welcome, everyone is valued for their contribution, and everyone who thinks its cool is invited.”
That sounds nice when you put it like that!
Jabiz, I have to tell you that the campfire drawing was very inspired by your ‘bring on the dancing horses’ track you uploaded to DS106Radio. My original posthas always linked to your soundcloud for that track.
That guitarist was always you, so it’s so cool to see you using the drawing for a new track that has so many of my dear ds106radio players gathered together!
I love how you have brought collaboration to the next level.
It’s beautiful.
Thank you so much. I am flattered. Like I said in my post, I am not sure this is collaboration as much of the music has gone through my filter. Looking forward to more organic and still better planned project. These loose ideas are nice to see what is possible, but would like to take to another level soon.
Thanks again for your kind words.
hmmm…
original post: http://gforsythe.ca/2011/01/29/art-of-listening/
Thanks, all of you. this made me smile than anything else today. Totally totally unreal.
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