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David "Skinny Devil" McLean



Last Updated: 11/24/2009

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Status: Married
City: LEXINGTON
State: Kentucky
Country: US
Signup Date: 11/15/2005

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Thursday, December 03, 2009 

Current mood:  jolly
Category: Goals, Plans, Hopes
original post: http://skinnydevilmusic.blogspot.com/2009/12/december-lifestyle-challenge.html

"He conquers who endures." (Persius)

Well, it's safe to say the ribs are back to near-100%, I'm happy to say. It sucked to cancel the gigs for October & most of November while I was recovering, but my workouts are back to "brutal" status and the ALIEN BLUE gig on November 28 firmly established that any remaining artifacts of the injury are small enough as to not effect anything measurably.

Now I'm back to goal-setting. For GUITAR my plan is to get my sweeped arpeggios up to speed with my scales and add some jazz standards to the repertoire; for LESSONS the plan is to get to work on Christmas & holiday songs for students of all levels; WEB: we're trying to re-build the web-site so that by the first of the year ALL the lessons & mp3s are back on-line; I have some commercial music projects that need to get finished within a couple of weeks; and DIET goes back to vegan with the exception of sashimi several times a week.

I also have some professional goals with regards to ALIEN BLUE and 2010 bookings, which is giving me a headache (hahaha!!!).

Sooooo.....what are YOUR personal goals for December?




Currently reading:
The Boomer Bible
By R. F. Laird
Thursday, November 12, 2009 

Current mood:  imaginative
Category: Music
Track #9 from "Virtual Light", the new CD from ALIEN BLUE, is "Lady's Got the Blues" (4:14).

The song is a classic minor key blues in Am (which we'll discuss below) using a "straight" rhythm, features a gorgeous vocal by Blue, smooth vocal harmonies, and a cool opening lick where I double the guitar with a unison "scat" vocal (shades of things to come...) as a nod to the incredible George Benson.

For those interested in the mechanics of composition, it should be noted that the minor blues is the bridge between the "blues model" and the "diatonic model", featuring elements of both. In "Lady's Got the Blues", we take the standard 12 bar structure and alter it (doubling bars 9 & 10), thus following the 14-bar structure:

i7  iv7   i7   i7
iv7  iv7  i7  i7
VImj7   v7  VI7  V7

i7   V7


Note that bar 10 is a minor 7 on the 5 chord, but then bar 12 and 14 use the dominant 7 (major triad with flat 7 on the 5 chord), which opens up myriad harmonic possibilities because it introduces the G# into the otherwise diatonic C (though I stick primarily to the harmonic minor and it's dim-7 arpeggio).

The guitar solo references immediately back to several other songs on "Virtual Light", most notably by referencing licks straight out of "Imagine We", but at times placing them in a new context (note the rapid descending line that runs a succession of 16th triplets to straight 16s to 8th note triplets to straight 8s, for example, and the sweeped arpeggios).

The end of the song metrically modulates to a slower tempo, using a shuffled groove right out of the classic burlesque tradition (can you see that twirling feather boa?). FUN STUFF!!!

Listen: http://www.skinnydevil.com/Lady%27s%20Got%20the%20Blues.mp3

original post: http://skinnydevilmusic.blogspot.com/2009/11/song-of-week-9-ladys-got-blues.html

Currently reading:
Frankenstein
By Mary shelly
Tuesday, November 03, 2009 

Current mood:  stoked
Category: Music
original post: http://skinnydevilmusic.blogspot.com/2009/11/song-of-week-8-skinny-devil-shuffle.html

"Skinny Devil Shuffle" clocks in at 2:37, but this isn't a true representation of the song length. It's actually much shorter - just a little jam over a 12-bar blues shuffle. But this one was so much fun (you hear us laughing and such) that we left the mistakes and re-starts and after 2 false starts you get the real thing.

The shuffle (think triplettes, but drop the "2") groove is in E (a blues E, not a diatonic E) and I just play around with some fun blues cliches, running up & down the neck a bit having fun.

No words, nothing fancy - just a blues jam with a giant grin on my face and Blue humming along!

http://www.skinnydevil.com/Skinny Devil Shuffle.mp3

Enjoy!
Currently watching:
Mary Shelley's Frankenstein
Release date: 1998-07-29
Monday, October 26, 2009 

Current mood:  artistic
Category: Music
original post: http://skinnydevilmusic.blogspot.com/2009/10/song-of-week-7-imagine-we.html

=====

"Imagine We" clocks in at 4:41 and is chock full of guitar mayhem hidden within it's mellow exterior.

Today, I mostly want to talk about compositional ideas....

Borrowing from a common melodic theme heard in dozens of songs sung over a simply Cmaj7 to Am7 change, followed by a 2nd section that replaces the C with an F add9 (the F doesn't properly replace the C until you add the maj 7 and the add9, then you get out of the box, which creates some interesting opportunities for the melody). The F add9 then expands to add the mj7 & #11 for extra spice.

Then comes the twist: a modulation to F#m (using the4 same 2 chord pattern, this time F#m add9 to E add9) that pivots off the A note in both Am7 & F#m. The F# expands using the same open E & B to an F#m11, with the E & B notes common to the Eadd9. This allows a pivot back to the original key using, again, the E & B that are also common to the Cmaj7.

Cute, huh?

Several more things then rear up: the same bridge that we saw in "That You're Gone" and "Ragamuffin Voodoo" re-appears (again, in a new context) and the stage is set using some mean guitar runs that occur later on the CD in other songs, for more self-referencing tie-ins on "Virtual Light".

I wonder how many more YOU can find? We haven't even mentioned the lyrics yet, or melodic themes.

Yes, "Virtual Light" is becoming quite the musical puzzle....

Listen here: http://www.skinnydevil.com/Imagine We.mp3

Enjoy!
Currently reading:
Clapton: The Autobiography
By Eric Clapton
Release date: 2008-05-27
Friday, October 23, 2009 

Current mood:  happy
Category: Music
"Ragamuffin Voodoo" (3:47) is song #6 from "Virtual Light", a quick, energetic, and a fun song to play!

The song kicks off with a vocal riff (me) followed immediately by a second vocal (Blue) singing a haunting opposing line. This second vocal, if it sounds familiar, is a direct reference to the title track, "Virtual Light". The guitar comes in and doubles vocal, then adds some cool percussive effects.

The verses feature some fun vocal harmonies and the chorus sneaks in some wicked & challenging guitar licks scattered about the main riff.

One really fun tid-bit is the guitar referencing the vocal:

"Draw your line in the sand
Strange design, stranger hand
Drop the 5 and raise the 4...
"

After which the guitar plays a standard blues lick that features the tri-tone - the lick slides up 1/2 step from the 4th scale degree to the sharp 4 (or flat 5). "Diabolus in Musica" is Latin for "the devil in music" or simply "devil music", which I thought was a witty tie-in to both our general blues style (blues used to be known as devil music) and to the song title "Ragamuffin Voodoo".

The bridge is a common theme in many of the songs on "Virtual Light", starting with last week's entry, "That You're Gone", only this time the context is completely different. The context in "Gone" is the relative minor to the songs key of E major, while in "Voodoo" it comes as a clear modulation away from the Em (G) context, but the final B chord is the dom5, leading back to Em (as the dom7 chord allows a return to either a major or minor tonality).

Here it is: http://www.skinnydevil.com/Ragamuffin Voodoo.mp3

original post: http://skinnydevilmusic.blogspot.com/2009/10/song-of-week-6-ragmuffin-voodoo.html
Currently reading:
Musicophilia: Tales of Music and the Brain, Revised and Expanded Edition
By Oliver Sacks
Release date: 2008-09-23
Monday, October 12, 2009 

Current mood:  rockin
Category: Music
Original post (w/ MP3) Here: http://skinnydevilmusic.blogspot.com/2009/10/song-of-week-5-that-youre-gone.html
=====

We're back this week with song #5 from "Virtual Light" (the new CD from my duo Alien Blue): "That You're Gone" (5:07).

This song came about while I was jamming. Just goofing off by myself using that classic Hendrix R&B chord-melody style that Jimi developed by expanding on the ideas put forth by Ike Turner, Curtis Mayfield, Steve Cropper, and others. After Hendrix used this in songs like "Castles Made of Sand" and "Little Wing" the idea was picked up by others (you've heard it in songs by RHCP, Pearl Jam, Steve Vai, & more).

So anyway, I'm toying with a 6/8 groove in E (E F# G# A B C# D#) using a I IV V and then started spicing it up (I get bored easily!), so I added the chromaticism by dropping in the D for the mixo-feel, then took the 4 chord from major to minor. The underlying progression then became:

E B E A
E B D_A Am
Am E E

Yes, yielding an 11 bar cycle with a descending line from bar 5 of E-D#-D-C#-C-B.

The bridge also features some chromaticism, due solely because I love to listen to Blue harmonize with more complex harmonic options. I can never guess what she'll do, but I'm very selfish in that I want to enjoy the unique lines she draws in the sand. So I took a theme that is in many of the song bridges on "Virtual Light" (more on this later): C#m to B to A, which became C#m B Bm A cycled several times (w/ sus2 embellishments) and ended with the return to the A to Am that resolves back to E. Note the chromatic line is identical to the first section.

Then we get to the 3rd and final section of the song where I employ open string chords and both Blue and I really open up vocally with a choir-esque sing-along sort of thing. From live performances we started extending several notes until it became sort of a contest to see who could hold the longest note (she usually wins), but she opted to take a more support role during this section, so I opened up with a long-held note that turned out to be 37 seconds on the recording. Probably the longest single note I've ever held, though not as long as notes I've heard Blue hold!

Too bad this isn't a hit song or we'd hold a world record for longest note - a mark currently held by Morten Hacket of a-ha in their song "Summer Moved On" at 20.2 seconds.

The lyrics deal with the grieving cycle and how we step not just from loss to acceptance, but from grief to celebration, exemplified by the last 3 lines of each section:

"I see your face, and all I can say..."
"I see your face, and hold back the tears..."
"I see your face, and now I can smile."

The final section is meant for you to sing along. No words, just a simple melody, so put it on, turn it up, listen....and sing!

Monday, October 05, 2009 

Current mood:  awake
Category: Music
original post: http://skinnydevilmusic.blogspot.com/2009/10/song-of-week-4-harmonica-interlude.html

=====




We've talked about (& listened to!) the first 3 songs from the new Alien Blue CD "Virtual Light": "Welcome to the Show", "Virtual Light", and "Cool Cat". Now it's time for song #4 - "harmonica interlude" (1:04).

Less a song and more just me jamming on harmonica using a classic blues theme (G mixolydian blues using the draw 2 position of a garden variety C harp) for about a minute - hence the term "interlude".

This one is simple & pure improv: I start playing, add a bit of Blue's impromptu vocals in the background, and an egg shaker playing along. Pure unadulterated fun!

Listen here: http://www.skinnydevil.com/harmonica%20interlude.mp3

Enjoy!
Friday, October 02, 2009 
We just got done lowering the price for Alien Blue's cd An Alien Blue. You can buy the cd, download the cd, or download individual songs at:
http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/alienblue
Monday, September 21, 2009 
Keep track here...every Monday, "behind the scenes" and MP3!

http://skinnydevilmusic.blogspot.com/
Tuesday, August 25, 2009 

Current mood:  ecstatic
As in the past, I've made certain "challenges" as of late with different people (fitness, diet, musical, etc. - some are to read a book[s] or write one, abstain or explore areas of personal life, finish that project...) and thought it might be time to issue a public challenge. This one is basically a lifestyle challenge.

As I noted in my note last week (at Facebook), this month I am going vegan as well as re-doubling my rehab efforts. I also have issued myself several musical challenges to be described later, and I have given up ALL alcohol for the entire month of August.

Who wants to join in for a September challenge?

Who wants to challenge themselves in areas of fitness or diet, music or art, asceticism or indulgence?

Post below what YOUR personal challenge (the challenge is with yourself, not with others) or challenges will be for the month of September...and feel free to follow up with progress or for support!

--
David