frostyjr2
Well-Known Member
Of course!If you have time @frostyjr2 , I think we would all appreciate any details you could provide as far as instrumentation,
production notes, inspiration, etc. It's a fun part of RiffMasters to share a little "behind the music" action if you are inclined.
i played a homebuilt T-type (ash body with an old school 3 brass saddle bridge, a MIM Fender neck with vintage style tuners, a no-name 'staple' P90 neck pickup i got off of a Reverb vendor and a Seymour Duncan Broadcaster in the bridge position).
The bass was a Squier Vintage Modified fretless Jazz Bass.
Both guitar and bass went through a signal chain of HX Stomp > RC-3 Loop Station > Scarlett 2i2 > mac desktop running Logic Pro X.
i came up with a couple of chords that fit the vibe beforehand but the actual parts were improvised while watching the video with its sound turned off, layered guitars were done as live looping and the bass was then added as an improvised single pass on a separate track. The percussion stuff was a native loop in Logic that was added last.
Apart from tweaking relative levels a bit, i didn't do any post-production work.
As for inspiration, well, there's the great Ennio Morricone, who did the music for those Sergio Leone 'spaghetti westerns', and Elmer Bernstein of course, and Bruce Broughton who did the music for Silverado and Tombstone all kicking around in my head, but really i just tried to do my personal take on a 'western' style soundtrack.
It was definitely a challenge to work on something which is pretty far from where i usually live musically, so the 'mysterious stranger rides into town' metaphor seems pretty apt.
Howdy, and thanks for the welcome, folks!
And a special super-appreciative 'thank you' to TVvoodoo for their video sync and remix work!
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