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Greg McGrath: The Session

Greg McGrath and I had a bit of history prior to his first SnowGhost Session. I met him through his father Peter McGrath, a well-known classical recording engineer. We immediately found that we both had a passion for indie rock and hi-fi, and it broke our hearts that they weren't sleeping in the same bed. We couldn't understand why there were so many shitty recordings out there of our favorite artists. I invited him up to help out with the building of the studio and he accepted, moving to Whitefish for all of two months, lifting, wiring, lifting again, and wiring some more. During that time, we took breaks to record his first record with Kris King (of Lansing Dreiden fame) on drums. It was both of our first tries, with the studio bei... read more >

Posted by Brett in sessions on February 22, 2007 at 06:33 PM - (1 comments)
The Studio

Ah, the old days. Sun Studios, Motown, golden takes, session players, and all-night jams. Groupies, cocaine-fueled time signatures, breaking equipment, tantrums, tracking, and overdubs. The recording studio used to be a hallowed and magical place to me. The mysterious sonically separated rooms, the endless supply of instruments and gadgets where songs were hatched. I would read stories about how Keith Richards would spend days trying to get one little riff, or how much booze and coke Derek and the Dominoes went through while creating their masterpiece. If I dreamed of being a rockstar, the part where I got to swig whiskey and smoke various substances with a pair of headphones on while a guy in the booth told me we were rolling ... read more >

Posted by Greg in recording on February 19, 2007 at 05:37 PM - (0 comments)
When a Pin Drops...

Velvet ropes, wrapping paper, 10-digit price tags, burglar alarms, media coverage, and flashing signs. Sometimes we have to be told that something is special. A child will stare blankly at the work of an impressionist and ask his mother why a painting that looks like something his pre-school buddies collaborated on during recess is special. The child's mother, also staring blankly at the masterpiece, might reply, 'Because it is.'

Sometimes the experience is very personal. Maybe you've just seen a movie that will forever change the way you think about life. You leave the theater and immediately find out that everyone else thought the movie sucked and they can't wait to get the taste out of their mouths. Your companions' ... read more >

Posted by Greg in concerts on February 14, 2007 at 05:38 PM - (0 comments)

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