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- Path: sparky!uunet!uvaarpa!darwin.sura.net!paladin.american.edu!auvm!MAGNUS.ACS.OHIO-STATE.EDU!SKOVITZ
- Approved-By: Discussions on all forms of Music <ALLMUSIC@AUVM.BITNET>
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- Newsgroups: bit.listserv.allmusic
- Date: Wed, 27 Jan 1993 23:05:46 EST
- Sender: Discussions on all forms of Music <ALLMUSIC@AUVM.BITNET>
- Comments: Warning -- original Sender: tag was ALLMUSIC@AUVM
- From: Sonia Kovitz <skovitz@MAGNUS.ACS.OHIO-STATE.EDU>
- Subject: Tripping Out in Masuda-Land
- Lines: 176
-
- The ALL-too-kind Sonia speaks of my pieces:
-
- >Listening to Mike Masuda's compilation of his own music is like opening up a
- >magic trunk in a fairy tale. In the blink of an eye an enthralling kingdom
- >stretches out in all four directions. Voices (in various electronic
- >alterations but I like Mike's unadorned voice best), guitar, bass, infinite
- >varieties of percussion, all mixed with equal parts feeling, mastery, and a
- >panoply of x-the-unknown synth effects. Here is a MAJOR talent, a beautiful
- >soul blossoming like a flower, or actually like a whole wild and glorious
- >garden. Mike's tape reminds me of a quote (that I only half-remember and will
- >have to track down) by Rabindranath Tagore: "The world spoke to me in...? and
- >my soul responded in music." Mike, to say that you are AMAZING is the
- >understatement of the year.
- *
- Garsh... :)
- *
-
- Wow, thanks Sonia for the uplifting commentary!
- Like I said on the tape, these are demos, so they are not quite polished yet.
- (When are they ever "done"?)
- Like my big inspiration (John Lennon circa 1965-66), I have a
- problem accepting my voice the way it is--which is why I like to
- DO things to it to make it sound like *other* people.
- I feel strange, because I rarely let others listen to my music; I'm
- musically speaking a very shy person. I thought that maybe if I let
- Sonia and a handful of others hear a sampling of it, it would boost
- my spirits. Just hearing the positive feedback from Sonia has made me
- very happy and made me want to carry on with other ideas with more
- drive.
-
- >Some stuff is hilarious: "The Gigolo's Tale" ("no one gets laid in San Jose"),
-
- Actually this tune was thumbed down by my previous band, because
- of its utter vulgarity. Of course, people do get laid in San Jose, but
- it never seems to happen for me lately. Bummer...
-
- >the funkorific groove-throb of "Wimp Rap" ("I'm a scrawny little man with a
- >little mind...
-
- This tune grew out of a silly little jam that my friends and I did for fun.
- At that time, there were rappers rapping about how much better they were
- than other rappers, and I thought I could make a diametrically opposite
- angled rap focusing on the "meek", getting off on being so wimpy.
-
- >pop: "Silhouette," "Heartbreak and the Nosy Boy," "Innocent Dreams," and also
- >some bouncy pop with a hot raunchy riff: "Janell."
-
- Well, there are stories behind each of these.
- I won't go into details now, because I'll eventually rewrite them on a
- separate post. My influences show, though: Kate Bush, Beatles,
- Zeppelin, and Motown, respectively. There's a lot of other pieces
- I've done, but they are still too cheeseball to be considered for
- peer review--perhaps later, when I have learned how to play the
- instruments a little better will I attempt to re-do these sketches.
-
- >Among my favorites are the extraordinarily beautiful extended meditative/
- >contemplative/eastern jams: "Tibetan Highlands" (bone-soul-shaking drone),
- >"Gabriel's Nightmare" (an extremely engaging picaresque/psychic/musical/
- >mystery/travel narrative), "A Raga for Sarina" (lush and gorgeous), "Twilight
- >Zephyr Moon" (many-layered mind-blowing solar-plexus-opening suspension of
- >time), "Kilimanjaro" (spacious, quiet, expansive, hypnotic; sounds like tuned
- >drums; I loved the lyrical and restrained yet insistent bass throb; I think
- >you posted that this one was for me; if so you sure hit the mark), "Andean
- >Diversion" (resonant and bewitching Peruvian pipes), and "excerpt from
- >composition with Electric Mbira" (authentic and moving).
-
- A lot of these "parallel world" music compositions that I've done were
- done in a trance-like state of mind, where I let the music come through
- on its own without preconception. It takes me about 15 minutes to
- half an hour of "foreplay" (setting the sounds and the rhythm) per track
- before letting it go. Musical channeling... what a concept.
- A lot of the stuff was done on the Casio CZ101, which is excellent in
- making simple bass tones and neato sitar-like washes ("TZM" is all Casio).
- The Peruvian pipes is an aurallusion--the melody was played on a standard
- recorder. Marco has seen it. It's got a cork on the end to alter the
- lowest note from a C to a B to fit a pentatonic modal scale.
- "Raga for Sarma" uses Casio for drones, and an acoustic guitar/sitar
- played with an E-bow, to get a secondary colortone addition.
- "Kilimanjaro" was done with a Korg Poly 800II (also simple to program/great
- tones) to produce the soft Gamelan-like belltones in 23/16 over which
- the stream-of-consciousness notes are played (I cheated, using only
- the black notes...oops). I recorded that one many years ago, but I
- dedicate that one to Sonia, seeing that she enjoys BASStones.
-
- >"Fly Away" had wonderful lyrics and dramatic situation, but I didn't like the
- >electronically distorted voice on this one.
-
- I agree. It's a tad cheeseball to hear the Mickeymousean voice on that one.
- It still makes me cringe, but I included it because it has that
- backwards ping-pong ball introduction...
- At that time, my voice was still quite awful, so I "covered up the
- evidence" with a pitch adjust on the tape recorder (record the voice slow,
- then playback at normal speed--the "Camille" thing that Prince did on
- _Sign of the Times_ and the Lennon-voice on "Lucy In the Sky.."
-
- >"The Old Man and the Poppy Fields"--your singing is perfect on this one!
-
- Funny you should say that, cuz
- I sang that one when I had the worst flu I ever had. My voice was
- quite rancid and raw, but I thought the song was appropriate for it.
- I wish I could sing like that always, without the flu. The Cat Stevens/
- Peter Gabriel hybrid there...
-
- >Loved that rockabilly guitar on "Shake a Leg"---ooweee.
-
- My Beatle-in-cheek impersonation, complete with Harrisonesque solo.
- It took me about 30 takes to get that solo. I had just bought my
- Strat at that time, and I was all thumbs on it. It sounds easy, but
- I sweated like crazy playing that damn solo over and over....(:0
-
-
- >One of the most utterly distinctive and FASCINATING songs is "A Personal
- >Psalm." I can't even fully grasp the rich play of musical references here,
- >but I swear that's an Elizabethan drumming pulse holding down the bottom while
- >a gradual gathering, a glorious assemblage of harmony, speaks a parable in
- >many voices. Mike, this is truly INSPIRED.
-
- Thank you Sonia. Originally it was supposed to be a simple madrigal piece,
- but I decided to make it more deep and prolific. It's almost preachy
- in its +/- comparisons, but in a way, it's a ballad
- with allusions to predestination, individual choice, karma,
- living in the shadows of others or seeing the light, and
- Old and New perspectives on the importance of the exo- and endo-saviour
- concept--all in one song. All this and the "I will assist you,
- I will protect you, I will comfort you" chorus makes it a neat
- package deal. The end sounds like a funeral march, with the snares, but
- what IS death? It IS rebirth from one perspective, or an outgrowth, or
- moksha (a la Marco). The guitar has a simple riff that repeats itself
- and keeps the song in time, and the handmade bass drum (basically a
- plastic bucket with a drum head fastened to it) provides the procession
- with the appropriate motion.
-
- I'm glad you liked it Sonia. Marco's next to hear his compilation.
- Right now, I'm working on Marsha's, Michelle's, and Mick's compilation,
- each individually put together. Lots of M's there.....
-
- I want to eventually put together an album to release on CD, but I'm
- afraid I am too poor right now, so I can't EVEN think of doing that. But if I
- do, I will certainly count on their input to see what should and should not
- be released...
-
- For the ALLMUSIC compilation, I chose "Gabriel's Nightmare" and a new
- version of "The Old Man and the Poppy Field" (complete with electric
- tabla sounds from the Casio). It's a little longer than the five minutes
- alotted, but I figure that since "Gabriel's Nightmare" is only 3:30ish
- minutes long, I can possibly get away with a new six minute version of
- the "Old Man..", complete with extra words. I hope.... :)
-
- BTW DO people put out CDs recorded on cassette four tracks? That would
- be a challenge, wouldn't it? You can't possibly get a "pro audio" sound,
- but to get it as close as possible would be rewarding in itself--instead
- of relying on top-notch equipment. Hmmm... ;)
-
- Heck, the Beatles did it with less. Modern music is spoiled rotten.
- We have it too easy.
-
- Also, does anyone know what's going on lately with Yusuf Islam (aka
- Cat Stevens)? Did you know that Peter Gabriel played flute on
- "Katmandu"? _Mona Bone Jakon_ is a great album. Stevens has such a
- great storytelling/singing voice. Put out in 1970! Paul Samwell-Smith
- did an excellent job at producing this album. "Troubled" leaves
- chills up and down my spine. Iff (IF and only IF) Yusuf Islam ever
- came back out to play some of his old tunes, who would go to see him?
- I would certainly be there. That whole "scandal" with the Rushdie
- thing doesn't bother me at all. In the end, it's his music I want to hear.
- It touched me.
-
- >****************************STANDING OVATION*******************************
-
- I bow to your majestic grace as the limelight burns a hole in the back
- of my mind. With a tear of rejoice in my winking eye, a smile begins
- to poke around the corner of my nose.
- I thank you my grace, for taking audience with me.
-
- Mike.
- Tripping Out in Masuda-Land
-