Fallout

Bass and electric guitar
Photo by Juan Montana on Unsplash

As I hit publish on the piece falling yesterday, I was visited with the memory of recording my very first song which, of course, had very little to do with the piece written yesterday.

Honestly? I’d forgotten the event entirely. But fragments of the song came back and I couldn’t figure out until this morning why the song sounded familiar.

I was probably thirteen when had gotten it into my head that I wanted to be a singer. But, a singer who couldn’t sing wasn’t on anyone’s list of potential future bandmates. I ended up picking up what was probably a hot bass guitar. The used instrument store, B-Sharp, had a bit of a reputation — whether or not it was justified — for buying and selling any used instrument without asking too many questions about ownership. You couldn’t expect premium prices if you were selling to them, but that was often not the goal — if you know what I mean.

Anyway, after discovering I didn’t know what the hell John Taylor (Duran Duran) was doing with his bass and having started falling into liking garage, punk and post-punk, I started mimicking the bass players from Joy Division, Peter Hook’s (bka “Hooky”) playing style. Which, my friends, did not endear me much to the folks who wanted to play rock and metal, the predominant genres of music to be in a band with at the time. And punk? Well, I was just a kid and there weren’t all that many kids into playing Joy Division styled songs.

I was clueless. I didn’t know (or much care) which note I played, as long as the bass was in tune and it sounded good to my ear. That didn’t mean it sounded good to anyone else’s ear, mind you — especially because I was being really experimental with what I discovered later were minor progressions (with jazz elements). And I grew fond of dissonance because it was more “edgy” sounding. Remember, I didn’t have a clue. I was just playing note patterns that “sounded right”.

One of the things I picked up from emulating Hooky was his tendency to play something other than the root note and turning the top two strings into an open chord. The D-string was open (occasionally with muting) and the G-string was what defined the chord structure.

“Michael,” I was told. “Bass players stay low on the neck, play the root chord and never, and I mean ever, should play chords. Please stop.”

Every the rebel, I ignored their entreaties and played on. High on the neck on on the strings… with chords.

One of the songs that came out of those days was a bass-dominated song called “Falling”. (“Michael, you absolutely cannot call a series of bass lines doing whatever horrid thing you are doing to them a ‘song’. Please stop.”) The other instruments? Drums by a friend who didn’t own a drum set, but played a snare in middle school with me. And… my vocals.

On a lark, I asked the theater teacher in my high school if I could use their recording equipment, a two-track recorder located in the school’s auditorium. He agreed, but only if I had one of the regular student stage crew set up the mics and manage the levels from the booth. And we mic’s everything, including the bass and a drum set that the school let my friend borrow. He even almost sounded like he knew what he was doing playing a full set after about the fifth take.

It was all live takes, drums and bass mixed on one track and vocals on the other. Not only did I have to play bass, but I had to “sing” (sic) at the same time.

And we recorded that bugger in less than an hour (the next class was going to use the auditorium to rehearse and so we had to be quick about it. I almost sounded like a real singer.

And that, my friends, is how I recorded my first song at the tender age of fifteen (give or take), absolutely clueless about what I was doing as a musician or a singer. And it actually, if memory serves me, sounded… okay.

I probably have that mixdown one one unlabeled cassette or another. Chances are that it is completely lost to time. But I’ll probably never find it.

The lyrics were very mid-teen in context — about [an imaginary] crush that never materialized. I had no one specific in mind when I wrote it, I just wanted to write something catchy. What I can recall:

I can feel myself falling
Falling to the ground
With every step towards you
I fall on further down...

If you should walk away
And leave me falling here...

[the rest is scrambled in the noggin]

Bet you can guess why “Walking Away” became one of the next songs I wrote (about another nonexistent woman in my life). That became part of the playlist from my goth band a couple of years later and there are actually recordings of the thing, live at the world’s famous (sic) Fernando’s Bar.

[Side note: I just strummed “Falling” out on my bass after a couple of false starts. Surprising how muscle memory works after forty or so years since I last played it. Also interesting is that it is based on the same key as “Walking Away”. As I said, clueless at the time.]

I honestly hadn’t thought of this song in at least thirty years. Not until I hit “publish” on that poem yesterday. The brain can be strange at times, can’t it?


19 responses to “Fallout”

  1. Jennifer Patino Avatar

    Haha, I love it 😄

    1. michael raven Avatar

      It’s weird. I seriously wonder where that tape ended up now. I’ll have to keep a lookout for it as I catalog old stuff for storage.

  2. lyndhurstlaura Avatar

    The brain is a constant surprise. I have so much filed up there that I never think of – but if someone or something feeds me a prompt it’s still (so far) very efficient about sending me information related to that prompt within a short space of time. I recently joined a social media group which is focussed on the area where I grew up and lived for the first 19 years of my life. The members post a lot of photos of ‘then’ and ‘now’, which stir a few memories. One day there was a picture which included the actual building where a friend used to live back in the day, and I was immediately transported back to the good times we used to have there. I hadn’t been in the area or thought about it in many years, but just one image and I was there. The brain is a great thing. Here’s hoping yours continues to bring out those musical memories. 🙂

    1. michael raven Avatar

      That sounds like a great time. It’d be fun to rehash old memories with the neighborhood kids, but most of them are apparently bigger shut ins than I am (and those who aren’t largely have omitted from theory memories how they terrorized me with their teasing and bullying 😂).

      I forgot how one of my early punk bands did “C is for Cookie” about triple time the original Sesame Street version, and with more yelling (me). That was part of my memory unlock too. lmao

      1. lyndhurstlaura Avatar

        Kids can be horribly cruel. Fortunately for me I got that stuff out of the way by the time I was 22, or thereabouts. That said, there are the psychopath/sociopath types who stay like it for life. This was around 16/17 for me, and hippy was the vibe of my chosen tribe. Listening to prog rock and other interesting sounds whilst watching colour wheels and globular oil lamps and smoking whilst being peaceful and loving was the main activity. I’ve seen a few of them on social media, but not reconnected because I’ve learned to leave the past where it is unless it comes knocking on my door – and if it does, I welcome it. 😎

  3. Bob Avatar

    I haven’t touched a bass in years. I wonder if I picked it up, would I remember some old songs?

    1. michael raven Avatar

      I’m betting you might after a couple of false starts. Time to hit the second hand store or pawn shop?

      1. Bob Avatar

        i actually still have my bass. I just haven’t taken it out of the closet in years.

        1. michael raven Avatar

          Well, what are you waiting for?

          1. Bob Avatar

            Haha, cause I’ll probably be terrible.

          2. michael raven Avatar

            There is at least one solution to that 😉

          3. Bob Avatar

            Haha. I’m picking up on the hint.

  4. chrisnelson61 Avatar

    Ah, the possibilities of youth!
    First bass I ever played was a Grant, short- necked baas styled like an SG. It was crap.
    Next was a Shergold which was gorgeous and played beautifully. Always my second instrument though, so I get where you are coming from regarding style.

    1. michael raven Avatar

      LOL. My learning instrument was a step below that. I don’t even think it was branded. Or, if it was, someone removed the branding from it to make it harder to identify.

      Playing my new bass is like a dream compared to that old beast.

      1. chrisnelson61 Avatar

        To be fair the Grant was third hand, and the Shergold belonged to my sister so I didn’t get to play it too much – generally when we were writing and decided to swap instruments. Good though.

        1. michael raven Avatar

          But… it still had serial numbers instead of a sanded area where those might have been, right? LOL.

          1. chrisnelson61 Avatar

            Ah, yes…wonder where it is now? 🤣

          2. michael raven Avatar

            At the B-Sharp Music equivalent in your neighborhood? Sans serial numbers?

          3. chrisnelson61 Avatar

            Probably at the tip, but let’s hope not!