New Track Today, New Album on July 1st!

Right, first up, here’s a new thing I recorded this morning, as a tribute to the great Gerry Goffin who died yesterday. He was one half of one of the all-time great songwriting teams, along with Carole King. They wrote SO many amazing songs, but I picked ‘I’m Into Something Good’ to reinterpret for my tribute:

Now, the new album is out on July 1st, is called Diversion,  and comprises two long duo pieces with double bass genius Jon Thorne, recorded live at the London Bass Guitar Show this year, the first time we’d ever played together.

Jon, as bassist with Lamb, has been a bass hero of mine for many many years, and his own album, Watching The Well, written for Danny Thompson, is outstanding. I’m SO happy with this music, and am looking forward to playing shows with Jon. Here’s the artwork for the album. It’ll be at http://music.stevelawson.net on July 1st!

New Music with Julie Slick and Andy Edwards

Not one, but two new tunes! How exciting.

During the time the Julie was here at the start of April, she and Andy and I managed a gig, that was recorded, and a recording session at Kidderminster College, where we also gave a bass/improv/Julie-stuff masterclass.

We’ve got HOURS of stuff recorded, which I’m sorting though. My guess is that the first ‘official’ release will be some bass duets, but here’s one duet from the Kiddy sessions, and the first thing we played as a trio at our gig at Tour Of Song – both are rough mixes, but are just about there. Enjoy!

Photos from Sunday’s gig with Julie Slick and Andy Edwards

It’s been a wonderful week of music-making with Julie Slick and Andy Edwards. First our show at Tower Of Song in Birmingham on Sunday night, then a day at Kidderminster College, giving an improvisation masterclass, and then recording some more music and a photo shoot.

All of that will be forthcoming ASAP, but for now, here are some pictures from Sunday’s gig, taken by Rob Groucutt:

Also, if you haven’t heard/bought Julie’s most recent solo album yet, it’s here. You need it:

New Video – An Introduction to My Pedal Collection, Pt 1

This is the first in a new pile of videos I’m going to be doing, introducing a few of the effects pedals that I use. I’ve taken the 5 that are in my current live set up, and gone through them. Not just ‘reviewing’ them, but looking at how they interact. That seems a bit more useful 🙂

Oh, and there’s a lil’ improv thingie at the end putting them all to good use.

Enjoy, and if you dig it, feel free to share it around!

Gig with Julie Slick in Birmingham, April 6th + New Video!

OK, two v exciting bits of news!

First, my next Birmingham gig is with one of the most remarkable trios I’ve ever been a part of – Julie Slick, me and Andy Edwards.

[  BUY TICKETS HERE  ]

Julie, for those who’ve been hiding for the last 8 years, has been blowing people’s minds all over the world as part of the Adrian Belew Power Trio SINCE SHE WAS A TEENAGER. Seriously. Now still in Adrian’s band, and also in the 6-headed-behemoth that is the Crimson ProjeKct, she gets to swap bass duties with Tony Levin every night. Also a remarkable solo artist, her two solo albums feature her brilliant compositions, bass work and production alongside guests such as Robert Fripp, Adrian Belew, David Torn, Marco Minneman, Pat Mastelotto… A cast of geniuses, with her at the top of the bill. She’s that good. Listen:

Andy Edwards is something of a drum legend – from Robert Plant’s band, he went on to play with many of the UK’s top prog bands: Frost*, IQ, Magenta, and is greatly in demand as a clinician.

I’ve played in duos with both of them, and am excited to see what alchemy takes place with this new band. It’ll be amazing. I promise. here’s the ticket link if you missed it above.

Exciting news part 2!

it’s not often that I get to announce a new video that’s already reached 10,000 views. In fact, it’s never. Until now. this was filmed at the Frankfurt Musikmesse, by Gregor Fris of BassTheWorld.com, who asked me to ‘just play’. No looping, no processing, just bass. However I wanted for as long as I wanted. This is what came out. It sounds and looks lovely, I think. The internet seems to agree. Please do share it around if you dig it:

I’ll write more about the making of the video later… but for now, go buy gig tickets! 🙂

For International Women’s Day…

It’s International Womens Day! A day to celebrate brilliant women, to acknowledge the massive debt our culture owes to the many millions of women who battled uphill to get past massive sexism and inequality to shape the world we live in. To give thanks for the mothers and sisters and wives and girlfriends, friends and colleagues who teach us and with whom we partner in building lives, culture, society, friendships, homes, communities…

But it’s also a day of reflection, a day of lament, a day to acknowledge that pretty much none of us dudes do enough to correct the imbalance, that we are want to fall back on tropes about slow progress or even to use clever blogposts and Facebook statuses to hide our inactivity behind. It’s WAY, WAY easier to write this than it is to call out some dickhead at work telling sexist jokes, to make a fuss about those situations where women are constantly overlooked, to check our language for times when we put appearance first in the list of things we compliment a woman for, as though they need to earn the right to be complimented on their work by looking the part first.

It’s always easier to sound like a feminist than to act like one. To write inspirational bullshit on the Internet than to get off my arse and do my fair share of the housework, to daily resensitise myself to the systems that enable my male privilege… So don’t take this as a statement of success, but an admission that I’m not where I should be. And neither are you, dudes. No sackcloth and ashes, just take some time to fix some things, OK?

And here, to celebrate the day, is some incredible music by women I’m inspired by and aspire to be like. Geniuses all:

What The Mind Thinks, The Heart Transmits – Out Now!

Finally, my new album, What The Mind Thinks, The Heart Transmits, is out.

You can download it here, paying whatever you think it’s worth, from Bandcamp:

music.stevelawson.net/album/what-the-mind-thinks-the-heart-transmits

How It Came To Be:

The album was recorded live as part of a guided meditation on a retreat led by Jo Sumner – Lobelia and I had played a house concert for Jo a while back, and she mooted the idea of me providing live music for a meditation on one of her retreats last year. I loved the idea, especially given how many people already seem to use my music as an accompaniment to yoga/meditation/massage/therapy/etc.

There seems to be a certain kind of person who goes for my music in that setting – people who are REALLY annoyed by shitty 80s keyboard sounds and panpipes, who want music that the like, first and foremost, and THEN music that fits the setting.

But for years I’ve had emails from those people expressing some frustration that my music so often has weird spikey, dissonant, freaky bits that properly break the moment… Those bits of music aren’t about to stop happening within my usual ‘story telling’ approach to music creation, as they’re a vital part of the bigger story, but having the chance to make music in context meant that this piece ended up fitting that role perfectly, without any of the freakiness.

It’s a SLOW journey. 45 minutes of it. A single live track, with the only editing being post-processing (adding some spatial effects to the ambient layers, to make it sound amazing on headphones!)

The Title?

The title is the English translation of the Japanese idiom, Ishin Denshin. From the wikipedia entry ( en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ishin-denshin ) ::

Ishin-denshin (以心伝心?) originally comes from a Chinese proverb and is a Japanese idiom which denotes the traditional concept of interpersonal communication through unspoken mutual understanding. This four-character compound, known as a yojijukugo, literally translates as “what the mind thinks, the heart transmits.” Sometimes explained in English in terms of “telepathy” or “sympathy”, ishin-denshin is also commonly rendered as “heart-to-heart communication” or “tacit understanding.”

the view from the room where the album was recordedThe reaction so far has suggested that for many, it’s just what they were looking for. It’s very obviously my music, but in a format that fits a new context. I hope you enjoy it too!

(photos taken by Neil Sumner, at the retreat where the album was recorded.)

10 albums for £10 – Fill In The Gaps, Give The Rest To Friends

Right, so an interesting thing started happening as soon as I put the ‘Entire Solo Works for £10‘ offer online – people who already had *most* of the albums started buying the set, and then offering the rest of the download codes as gifts to friends who didn’t have those albums or had never heard my music.

I really like this idea – £10 is still way cheaper than buying even two of the albums on iTunes would be, and you can get them as 24Bit FLAC files if you’re a lossless HD audio buff…

So, please, feel free to buy the whole set, keep the ones you need, and either send the rest to people you want to introduce to my music, or offer them up on Twitter/Facebook etc. to people who might want them.

The download codes are single-use – so prob best to  get people to email you and then send them, rather than posting the codes publicly and just annoying anyone who fails to get the album from a code they think is going to work 😉

Download My Entire Solo Works 2000-2014 for £10!

Next week, my brand new solo album comes out. It’s called ‘What The Mind Thinks, The Heart Transmits’, and is a single 45 minute piece, recorded live as accompaniment to a guided meditation on a retreat.

I’ll write more about the album itself next week when it comes out, but for now, as a pre-release option, I’m doing my second ’10 albums for £10′ offer, and making my entire solo back catalogue available via Bandcamp for £10. That’s 14 years of solo bass playing, for  a crisp tenner (or paypal’s impersonation of one).

[CLICK HERE TO BUY ALL 10 ALBUMS FOR £10]

The album list is: 

What The Mind Thinks, The Heart Transmits (2014)
Believe In Peace (2012)
11 Reasons Why 3 Is Greater Than Everything (2011 – Remastered 2012)
Ten Years On: Live In London (2010)
Behind Every Word (2006)
Grace And Gratitude (2004)
Not Dancing For Chicken (2002 – Remastered 2012)
And Nothing But The Bass (2000)
Lessons Learnt From An Aged Feline (Pt 1) (2002)
Lessons Learned From An Aged Feline (Pt 2) (2004)

Those of you who’ve been around for a while will note the absence of Lessons Learned Pt III – the reason for that is that I’ve no idea where the master recordings are, and as such only have a fairly low res MP3 copy. I’ve rummaged through old hard drives and haven’t yet found anything labeled as that, though there’s a fair chance it’s in amongst some other sessions… When it crops up, I’ll stick it on bandcamp 🙂

If you want to listen before you buy, 9 of the 10 albums are available at music.stevelawson.net

When you buy it, you’ll get Believe In Peace as an immediate download, and the rest will arrive ASAP in the form of download codes – I’ll email you all 10 download codes, and the link to redeem them.

I’ll also be writing extensive PDF sleeve notes over the next week or so, and you’ll get those sent to you as soon as they’re finished 🙂

BARGAIN!

Gig at The London Bass Guitar Show, On The Cover Of Bass Guitar Magazine!

Exciting News! I’m playing at the London Bass Guitar Show on March 2nd.

Want proof? OK, all the mainstage artists are pictured on the cover of this month’s Bass Guitar Magazine, with me right in the middle. Oh yes. Good times, eh?

I’ll be on at 11:15am on Sunday 2nd March, though I may actually be on a little earlier than that in the masterclass room, talking to one of my heroes and friends, Leland Sklar… the two sessions overlap, so we’ll have to see how the planning works out!  Continue reading “Gig at The London Bass Guitar Show, On The Cover Of Bass Guitar Magazine!”

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