Thursday, May 12, 2011
Wednesday, May 11, 2011
Monday, November 15, 2010
Thursday, November 19, 2009
Billy Valentine

I began to find my authentic musical voice in 1991 thanks in large part to Billy Valentine. Billy is a really special soul. He’s a great friend. Someone who I’ve shared the road with for nearly twenty years. I love the guy. Deeply.
And he is one of the truly great singers around today. I’m continually amazed that more people do not know who he is. It never fails that when a newbie hears him for the first time, they are floored.
So, in the quest to increase Billy’s currency whenever possible, we at SoA found a great opportunity for mixing him into our musical fold.
On Tuesday night, November 24th, when our next-to-last episode of Season Two of Sons Of Anarchy airs, viewers will hear Billy singing the Creedence Clearwater Revival song “Someday Never Comes.” It's on iTunes, so if you’re digging it, drop the 99¢ and spread the word.
http://itunes.apple.com/us/album/someday-never-comes/id341458974?i=341459093
As a bonus, here is a a song from 1991 that I wrote with the incredible Phil Roy, my brother from 3 Guys From Italy. It’s called “Hope In A Hopeless World”. It’s been recorded many times. But no offense to the good people who have sung this song, none have brought it like Billy did....
Enjoy.
Hope In A Hopeless World by Billy Valentine">
Tuesday, September 15, 2009
Ruby Tuesday
Episode 2 of the new season of Sons Of Anarchy features Ruby Tuesday as sung by the beautiful and soulful Katey Sagal.... Wish you guys could hear it but those who control the rights (not FX, not the Stones) will not allow it to be posted on the website! Maybe the good people at FOX will hurry an iTunes release! So come on guys, let's make it happen!
Tuesday, September 08, 2009
Sons Of Anarchy - Season Two - Premiere Episode Music

The opening?
ANVIL!!!! Rawk in all its recklessness. “Slip Kid”, a song by The Who. Matt Hyde makes is sound rad and Franky Perez (people should know about him) sings his friggin’ ass off.
The closing?
LIONS doing an amazing take on “Girl From The North Country”. When you see the montage you’ll be blown away. I read the script which called for four different versions of the song to seamlessly play, one into the other. I asked LIONS to do a version for us. Gave them no direction at all. Just said I wanted to hear what they had to say When they sent it to me, the other three versions were no longer needed. LIONS have managed to capture all emotions necessary. It’s pretty incredible when you land on the same cosmic page like that.
Go buy these two tracks on iTunes. They’re waiting for you. at 99¢ a piece, sounds like a good deal!
Saturday, September 05, 2009
THE SCRANTONES

My friend Greg Daniels, the producer of the American version of THE OFFICE, played Jay Ferguson’s demo of what would become the show’s theme for me one afternoon before the series had sarted. I thought it was fantastic, far better than anything I’d given him from ‘my own pen’ that I had hopes for. We both agreed that while Jay’s demo had a really nice, whimsical quality, the recording could be more fully realized.
Greg asked if I had any ideas that might make more of Jay’s theme. I got my friends Dillon O’Brian (piano, organ, accordion, theremin), Brian Macleod (drums), and Hal Cragin (bass) together, and we met at the Record Plant in Hollywood to record the theme. That’s me on the guitar, by the way. Oh yeah, we were in the studio on a Thursday night, one week before the air-date of the premiere episode.
Not long after that, Hal, Dillon, Jimmy Paxson and I appeared in the BOOZE CRUISE episode. It was on that boat that we became THE SCRANTONES.
We’re all pretty busy doing what we need to do to make a living, but we love the idea of the Scrantones despite the fact that there is little evidence of the band anywhere outside of our imaginations. We did actually come to life in Scranton, during the cold month of October, 2007, making a heroic stand at the Catholic Youth Center!
Here is a little something that people have been asking us to give them for a very long time.
2:26 seconds of pure Dunder-Mifflin delight. Enjoy...
The Office Theme (long version
Sunday, August 16, 2009
Forever Young by Audra Mae (alternate version)
When Kurt asked me to find a lullaby to open episode 112 last year, I thought Bob Dylan’s “Forever Young” would be great.
This was a very heavy episode culminating with the murder of Donna. Because the script called for the same song to end the episode, I’d have to come up with a different version that could underscore each characters reaction to the tragedy.
This process of discovery generally takes me through some changes, both musically and psychically. In TV, things move really fast, and It’s hard to figure out what is going to work without seeing the picture. Trying to gauge what the scene will ultimately need is highly intuitive to say the least....
One thing I knew for sure - Audra Mae had the voice to sing the song. Ultimately, the sheer emotion of her voice naked, without any instruments backing her up, was as powerful as anything that would carry the closing montage so we did not use this recorded version. We took the instrumentation out and let her solo voice carry the last 3+ minutes of the episode.
Here's Audra singing Forever Young with a pretty awesome band consisting of Val McCallum, Greg Leisz, Larry Goldings, Davey Faragher, Aaron Sterling and yours truly...
Forever Young by Audra Mae
This was a very heavy episode culminating with the murder of Donna. Because the script called for the same song to end the episode, I’d have to come up with a different version that could underscore each characters reaction to the tragedy.
This process of discovery generally takes me through some changes, both musically and psychically. In TV, things move really fast, and It’s hard to figure out what is going to work without seeing the picture. Trying to gauge what the scene will ultimately need is highly intuitive to say the least....
One thing I knew for sure - Audra Mae had the voice to sing the song. Ultimately, the sheer emotion of her voice naked, without any instruments backing her up, was as powerful as anything that would carry the closing montage so we did not use this recorded version. We took the instrumentation out and let her solo voice carry the last 3+ minutes of the episode.
Here's Audra singing Forever Young with a pretty awesome band consisting of Val McCallum, Greg Leisz, Larry Goldings, Davey Faragher, Aaron Sterling and yours truly...
Forever Young by Audra Mae
Tuesday, August 11, 2009
Food
I had dinner at Osteria Mozza with my friend Murray one night last March. It really tweaked my brain. Seriously. I think this would explain why....
1. Afetati Misti with gnocco fritti - mortadella, agrumi, speck, and prosciutto.
2. Tripe alla Parmagiana
3. Mussels with Passato and chiles
4. Burrata with Asparagus, brown butter, guanciale, and Sicilian Almonds
5. Sheep's Milk Ricotta with Trufflebert Farms hazelnuts, and Aillade toasts.
6. Calf's Brain Ravioli with sage and lemon.
7. Linguine with clams, pancetta, and Fresno chiles
8. Braised Rabbit and Rabbit sausage.
9. Sweetbreads Piccata with Artichokes.
10. Fried Fingerling Potatoes with rosemary
11. Wild Spinach
12. Rosemary olive oil cakes with olive oil gelato
13. Fritelle di Riso with Nocello soaked raisins and banana gelato
14. Apple Borselino with apple cider jelly gelato and caramel sauce
15. And one other dessert but I'm too food drunk to remember.
16. Purge and start again.
1. Afetati Misti with gnocco fritti - mortadella, agrumi, speck, and prosciutto.
2. Tripe alla Parmagiana
3. Mussels with Passato and chiles
4. Burrata with Asparagus, brown butter, guanciale, and Sicilian Almonds
5. Sheep's Milk Ricotta with Trufflebert Farms hazelnuts, and Aillade toasts.
6. Calf's Brain Ravioli with sage and lemon.
7. Linguine with clams, pancetta, and Fresno chiles
8. Braised Rabbit and Rabbit sausage.
9. Sweetbreads Piccata with Artichokes.
10. Fried Fingerling Potatoes with rosemary
11. Wild Spinach
12. Rosemary olive oil cakes with olive oil gelato
13. Fritelle di Riso with Nocello soaked raisins and banana gelato
14. Apple Borselino with apple cider jelly gelato and caramel sauce
15. And one other dessert but I'm too food drunk to remember.
16. Purge and start again.
Sunday, August 09, 2009
Paul Brady
Most mornings, you can find me sitting in PEET’s coffee listening to music. Love these Shure 201 noise canceling earbuds.
This morning, Sunday, the shuffle mode is taking me all over the place and nothing has stuck to my heart like the song that just came on.
Paul Brady. I admit I was a little late coming to the party. But thanks to Dillon O'Brian and Curtis Stigers, I did finally get here...
This should put some ease to your soul as it rips it to pieces at the same time. Quite a feat.
The Lakes Of Pontchartrain
This morning, Sunday, the shuffle mode is taking me all over the place and nothing has stuck to my heart like the song that just came on.
Paul Brady. I admit I was a little late coming to the party. But thanks to Dillon O'Brian and Curtis Stigers, I did finally get here...
This should put some ease to your soul as it rips it to pieces at the same time. Quite a feat.
The Lakes Of Pontchartrain
Thursday, August 06, 2009
Coltrane

My Dad produced a lot of John Coltrane recordings. Pretty much everything on IMPULSE! I don't know the actual number, but I'd say that in the six plus years they worked together, they must have recorded at least four albums a year. A lot of the records were never released during Coltrane's lifetime. Fact is, Dad used to hide the sessions from ABC, Impulse's parent company. They thought it was ridiculous that Coltrane was making all these records in the first place... But they let my Dad run the label and he saw fit to let John go in the studio whenever he wanted to go. Pretty amazing collaboration. Don't see that anymore!
Here is a track from the album Meditations. I offer this for no specific reason. It just came up on my iTunes and I'm trying to blog as much as I can to make this a habit...
Compassion
Wednesday, August 05, 2009
Fortunate Son

Back in the production days of season 1 (seems like a long, long time ago) Kurt had the idea to close episode 108 with an instrumental version of “Fortunate Son.” The dramatic flow that was occurring on screen had a lot to do with sons, some fortunate and some not so. I got together with the awesomely talented Lyle Workman and we recorded this one morning at his Burbank studio. Brian Scheuble, another one of the great LA recording engineer/mixers that I can call friend, made this piece of music sound that much more rich and compelling.
A bunch of fans have been talking this piece up on the various message boards. Well, for those fortunate sons (and daughters) who have stumbled on to this site, here is your reward...
Fortunate Son
John The Revelator
Kurt from the beginning wanted to use the song John The Revelator. Funny, when we were prepping the pilot, long before FX had ordered a season’s worth of episode, I was immersing myself in music that I might think relevant to the show. I was formulating my musical palette (without having scene a single frame of footage... we had yet to begun filming.) Among the artists I’d been listening to was Son House. His version of “Death Letter” has always been a harrowing recording that moves the dead. And I had reacquainted myself with his version of John The Revelator as well. I pulled them both into my Sons Of Anarchy iTunes playlist that I was compiling. (Today, the list is 500 recordings strong.)
Cut to last October.
The finale (“Revelator”) was shot and it was time to put music to picture. Kurt wanted score to underly the entirety of ACT IV. Six plus minutes of music with some specific emotional touch points that I would need to respect. (As watchers of SoA can gather, we don’t ‘score’ the show in a traditional way, looking to incorporate stabs and stings at those moments where the gun goes of or the bikes rev up.) So this was going to be something new for me. How to score a long passage without it sounding like score...
I brought out my Collings D-3 acoustic guitar and tuned it to an open chord. (I believe it was D but it might be G.) And then I watched the picture and started to play. Luckily, the microphone was in the right place as I watched the picture. My intention was to create a tonal sense of what could/would work with picture. It was a sketch at best. Certainly nothing that I anticipated would be usable. Anyway, I did one solid pass of guitar playing up to the point where Kurt said he wanted the song John The Revelator to come in. I sent my musical musings off to Kurt and he dug it. He dug it so much that it was THE version that stuck in the actual episode. (I often find myself trying to improve on my ‘sketches/demos’ and the results are never as good. Lessons #1 right there!)
Now - the main course. Recording John The Revelator. I knew that Curtis Stigers was the voice! No doubt about that. He sings the main title theme so brilliantly, I think of him as a cast member sometimes. I enlisted some of my favorite musicians to meet up at The Pass in LA, Dave Way’s awesome studio. Dave would also engineer. He confided that he was a bit anxious as he’d not recorded drums in his studio in a while. (Most of his work is mixing and producing with a deep passion for garage-type recordings at his awesome home studio. 3 mics on the drums. MAX.)
Brian Macleod, my fave drummer and another perennial in my SoA arsenal, played with my guitar accompaniment. He watched me through the glass as I signaled dynamic changes. I love it when the process is this organic and unrehearsed. (On a musical note, what I love about this show is that it requires a certain spontaneity that you just don’t want to rehearse much. It’s about feeling.)
So Brian is rocking it and Greg Leisz (string master most extrraordinaire) is playing lap steel, punctuating lines with his unique tonal shifts and transitions. Greg is ridiculously good; no mistake why he is as valued as he is by so many artists and producers. (Check him out on www.allmusic.com for a peak at an amazing career.) Greg finished his lap steel part and then proceeded to mandolin. Fantastic....
Davey Faragher, my favorite bass player in the world, was ready to play but as the song unfolded I just motioned to him to lay out. I was looking for the right entrance. It just felt like he should enter for the final tag. This came when Piney tells Jax that it is “time for a change...” The deep ringing sentiment of that line, what could underscore the profound foreboding of those words? I didn’t want to make a BIG deal out of it musically, but by the same token, it needed some power. It felt like those deep bass notes from Davey were all that was needed.
My friends Gia Ciambotti and Kim Yarborough added this haunting and powerful background vocal line that explodes. I love their sound. Been looking for a section like that for a very long time....
So all that was needed - Curtis’ vocal. As I said, I knew his was the voice to sing this song. Curtis gets Son House. He gets B.B. King too. Frank Sinatra. Shaw Colvin. Van Morrison. He has great taste and he’s got his own sound. (Have I stressed how IMPORTANT that is?) Needless to say, he pretty much killed it (in the best possible way.)
Ed Cherney mixed it. Ed FUCKING Cherney!!! This guy is Hall Of Fame brilliant! By the way, Ed asked, “Who recorded these drums? They sound fantastic.”) Dave Way! 5 microphones. Nice Dave. A Grammy winning engineer paying you the supreme compliment.
I guess the subtext of all this is that I am really good at getting a bunch of incredibly talented people together to make me look like a genius....
Cut to last October.
The finale (“Revelator”) was shot and it was time to put music to picture. Kurt wanted score to underly the entirety of ACT IV. Six plus minutes of music with some specific emotional touch points that I would need to respect. (As watchers of SoA can gather, we don’t ‘score’ the show in a traditional way, looking to incorporate stabs and stings at those moments where the gun goes of or the bikes rev up.) So this was going to be something new for me. How to score a long passage without it sounding like score...
I brought out my Collings D-3 acoustic guitar and tuned it to an open chord. (I believe it was D but it might be G.) And then I watched the picture and started to play. Luckily, the microphone was in the right place as I watched the picture. My intention was to create a tonal sense of what could/would work with picture. It was a sketch at best. Certainly nothing that I anticipated would be usable. Anyway, I did one solid pass of guitar playing up to the point where Kurt said he wanted the song John The Revelator to come in. I sent my musical musings off to Kurt and he dug it. He dug it so much that it was THE version that stuck in the actual episode. (I often find myself trying to improve on my ‘sketches/demos’ and the results are never as good. Lessons #1 right there!)
Now - the main course. Recording John The Revelator. I knew that Curtis Stigers was the voice! No doubt about that. He sings the main title theme so brilliantly, I think of him as a cast member sometimes. I enlisted some of my favorite musicians to meet up at The Pass in LA, Dave Way’s awesome studio. Dave would also engineer. He confided that he was a bit anxious as he’d not recorded drums in his studio in a while. (Most of his work is mixing and producing with a deep passion for garage-type recordings at his awesome home studio. 3 mics on the drums. MAX.)
Brian Macleod, my fave drummer and another perennial in my SoA arsenal, played with my guitar accompaniment. He watched me through the glass as I signaled dynamic changes. I love it when the process is this organic and unrehearsed. (On a musical note, what I love about this show is that it requires a certain spontaneity that you just don’t want to rehearse much. It’s about feeling.)
So Brian is rocking it and Greg Leisz (string master most extrraordinaire) is playing lap steel, punctuating lines with his unique tonal shifts and transitions. Greg is ridiculously good; no mistake why he is as valued as he is by so many artists and producers. (Check him out on www.allmusic.com for a peak at an amazing career.) Greg finished his lap steel part and then proceeded to mandolin. Fantastic....
Davey Faragher, my favorite bass player in the world, was ready to play but as the song unfolded I just motioned to him to lay out. I was looking for the right entrance. It just felt like he should enter for the final tag. This came when Piney tells Jax that it is “time for a change...” The deep ringing sentiment of that line, what could underscore the profound foreboding of those words? I didn’t want to make a BIG deal out of it musically, but by the same token, it needed some power. It felt like those deep bass notes from Davey were all that was needed.
My friends Gia Ciambotti and Kim Yarborough added this haunting and powerful background vocal line that explodes. I love their sound. Been looking for a section like that for a very long time....
So all that was needed - Curtis’ vocal. As I said, I knew his was the voice to sing this song. Curtis gets Son House. He gets B.B. King too. Frank Sinatra. Shaw Colvin. Van Morrison. He has great taste and he’s got his own sound. (Have I stressed how IMPORTANT that is?) Needless to say, he pretty much killed it (in the best possible way.)
Ed Cherney mixed it. Ed FUCKING Cherney!!! This guy is Hall Of Fame brilliant! By the way, Ed asked, “Who recorded these drums? They sound fantastic.”) Dave Way! 5 microphones. Nice Dave. A Grammy winning engineer paying you the supreme compliment.
I guess the subtext of all this is that I am really good at getting a bunch of incredibly talented people together to make me look like a genius....
The SoA Process
I’ve been very fortunate in this life to do many things that have given me great creative and professional satisfaction. I’m one of the lucky ones!
So, here I am at Chapter 47 in my life’s story. Funny how when I think it can’t get better than this, it somehow manages to do so. Working with a bunch of wild-eyed, passionate individuals who are creating this awesome television series called SONS OF ANARCHY, that's my day job!
So, for the next I don’t know how long, I’ll probably do some writing on this show and the process. How great it is to have people out there, fans, who feel as passionately as do those of us behind the scenes and in front of the camera. To our music fans, I’ll try and give some background on what you all are hearing each week.
This could turn into ramblings about the musical process that some might find boring, pompous and self-important. If I do come off as that to any of you readers, I apologize in advance. I’m not a writer and I don’t want to spend too much time editing my musings. I also believe there are some people out there who want to know about my process and some of the technical aspects of how we get to where we get...
So, here I am at Chapter 47 in my life’s story. Funny how when I think it can’t get better than this, it somehow manages to do so. Working with a bunch of wild-eyed, passionate individuals who are creating this awesome television series called SONS OF ANARCHY, that's my day job!
So, for the next I don’t know how long, I’ll probably do some writing on this show and the process. How great it is to have people out there, fans, who feel as passionately as do those of us behind the scenes and in front of the camera. To our music fans, I’ll try and give some background on what you all are hearing each week.
This could turn into ramblings about the musical process that some might find boring, pompous and self-important. If I do come off as that to any of you readers, I apologize in advance. I’m not a writer and I don’t want to spend too much time editing my musings. I also believe there are some people out there who want to know about my process and some of the technical aspects of how we get to where we get...
Saturday, August 01, 2009
Sunday, March 08, 2009
Rumi Sez...
We have a huge barrel of wine, but no cups.
That's fine with us.
Every morning we glow and in the evening we glow again.
They say there's no future for us.
They're right.
Which is fine with us.
That's fine with us.
Every morning we glow and in the evening we glow again.
They say there's no future for us.
They're right.
Which is fine with us.
Saturday, February 07, 2009
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