Aloha, gzeeplets! Welcome to the post for my latest offering, The
Madonna Within EP.
OK, Before we get to the story behind the project, here are the
mp3s.
Click HERE to download a zip file of the entire EP, encoded at 128kbps (~20Mb).
Or cl
ick here to download the zip file at CD quality.
OR click below for the individual songs---click the 320kbps link to
download the high-quality file; click the 128kbps to download the
average-quality file.
1.
B
eautiful Stranger
(320kbps)
(128kbps)
2.
Love Tried
to Welcome Me
(320kbps)
(128kbps)
3.
La Isla Bonita
(320kbps)
(128kbps)
4.
I'm Not Cool Enough to Listen to the White Stripes (the Madonna within mix)
(320kbps)
(128kbps)
And a couple alternate mixes:
5.
L
ove Tri
ed to Welcome Me (Softly)
(320kbps)
(128kbps)
6.
I'm Not Cool Enough to Listen to the White Stripes (the Madonna without mix)
(320kbps)
(128kbps)
There we go. Now let's talk about the EP. Overshare time!
What's an EP? According to
Wikipedia, "An
Extended play (
EP) is a vinyl record or CD which contains more music than a single,
but is too short to qualify as an album." I grew up in the 80s, so
I remember having vinyl records--12-inch dance singles (which
sparked my lerv for remixing & glitching), a Footloose picture
disc, and
that David Lee Roth EP with Just a Gigolo on it. When I bought it, I thought "extended
play" meant remixes; but no, for some reason it meant "4 songs or
so." Whahappah?! At the time I was a li'l peeved, but it must've
stuck in my mind, because "releasing an EP" became one of those
things I always wanted to do in my imagined popstar life, like
doing a "concept album" or a spread in Playgirl or coming out with
a line of vitamins or something.
Why Madonna covers? Well, why not? I love doing cover
versions--they're often pretty quick to put together, and you can
put your own spin on them; plus, (and this is just my theory here)
people can be more easily persuaded to actually listen to them. Not
to imply that I'm p
utting myself in the same league as these people, but I heart the
various versions of
Smells Like Teen Spirit,
Umbrella,
Baby One More Time, etc. I also love the different versions of Like A Prayer, like
Bigod 20's and
John Wesley Harding's versions. Which brings us to the other half of the question--why
Madonna? Well, again, I'm a child of the 80s. Behold me in my full
80s horror (this picture is from a Prince-inspired idea I had of
wearing only purple, white or black. Ugh. I still remember someone
making a joke about me wearing "disposable clothing.") So anyway,
yeah, I grew up listening to Madonna songs. And I had (and still
have, sigh) friends obsessed with Madonna. (I reiterate---sigh.)
Also, her music is so ubiquitous that pretty much everyone knows or
likes at least one song. Furthermore, they're not exactly the most
difficult ones to sing--I don't think Madonna has ever put
gwakloads of melisma into any performance.
Moreover, I already had ideas for Madonna covers. One idea was for
a version of
Nobody's Perfect. I thought that it, with its out-of-control
auto-tune, sounded something like an artificial intelligence experiment gone
awry. The song is sung from the point of view of a robot that's
just been given emotion which it cannot control and massacres all
the scientists developing it. Of course, then the robot feels sorry
and sings the song about nobody being perfect. I thought it would
be cool to remake the song like that, with audio clips to suggest
the backstory. It was actually on the list of songs to do, but I
decided eventually not to do it, because the song (let's face it)
is pretty dull, even if it has a backstory and all that. Another
song that I wanted to do but didn't make the final cut was Like A
Prayer--I wanted to combine the acoustic guitar sound of the John
Wesley Harding version with a hard beat like the one I used in
Swamp. I ended up not doing that one because I didn't feel as strongly
about it as the other songs. As for other songs I might have liked
to do, there's
Inside of Me and
Bedtime Story, the former because it reminds me of a few people who've died, the
latter because it's just such a cool song. But since I didn't have
much of a point of view for those songs, and not much to really
add, I decided not to do them. Oh, and I always thought it would be
fun to do
American Life (such a bad song--I wonder if
the song she stole it from
[allegedly--fascinating and bizarre link] was any better), but I sort of incorporated that into La Isla
Bonita, so yeah.
But enough of the songs I didn't do; let's talk about the ones I
did...
Beautiful Stranger.
[click for lyrics] I just think this is a great song. It's one of my favorite Madonna
songs--I love the arrangement, and if I'd not done it, I might have
thought that I had nothing to add to it, that it was absolutely
perfect the way it was. Now that I'm finished with it, of course,
I'm very pleased with how it turned out, and I think I brougth my
own aesthetic to it. Why did I choose this particular song? Well, I
know that it had become something of a 'signature song' for me, but
I can't really explain why. Partly because I sang it all the time
at the radio station while waiting for files to process or whatnot.
Partly because I like to change the lyrics to make them Ed-centric.
Example: "To know Ed, to know Ed is to love Ed... You're
Ed-vrywhere I go...." In the end, the song becomes something of a
song about myself, as if I'm the beautiful stranger. Or as if
there's a part of me that is a beautiful stranger to myself. I
suppose you could read a lot into that if you wanted to. One of
things that I'm reminded of when I think of that interpretation of
the song is when my friend Mark was learning the song Where or When
for an
audition. ("And so it seems that we have met before, and laughed
before, and loved before... but who knows where or when?") His
vocal coach told him to sing it as if he were singing to himself. I
kind of like singing Beautiful Stranger in that way--it's an
interesting interpretation. Oh, and one more reason why I chose
this song: I've already performed it, sort-of, live on
The Ed Shepp Radio Experiment as part of
one of the fundraising shows I did. Another reason why it's a signature song of mine. I thought that
since I've performed it already, I might as well do it right and
make a big production of it. So I did. And I even name-checked my
hometown at the end. ("You came here from Florida, and brought the
beep from
Mount Dora...") Booyah!!
The processing in the song: I fell in love with a lot of the
instruments that I used to create the song. I love the choir-type
voices, the celesta-type sound which I wanted to sound like a toy
piano, the brass-type sound that you sometimes hear in it, and of
course the tubular bell (one of my all-time favorite sounds; so is
the "boing" sound effect in "dancing all over the place"). I'm also
very pleased with all the beeping, and most especially with the
timpani that comes in around the "Ed-vrywhere I go" parts. Ever
since I heard a timpani used in both Bjork's
Human Behavior and the bottom heavy dub mix of Madonna's
Human Nature, I've always wanted to use the sound in something. I think in
Beautiful Stranger is makes the song even more fun. Oh, and the
drums: these were just drums I was using as a temporary file to
check out the vocals and stuff; I hadn't intended to use them in
the final mix. But the more I listened to it, the more I liked it.
The song is at 122bpm, so I think a driving beat works pretty well
for it. So I kept the drums mostly simple, and I'm really pleased
with how they came out.
Love Tried to Welcome Me.
[click for lyrics] OK, I must confess--I can relate to this song. Sure, maybe it's
not the best, most moving song in the world, but in that tumultuous
time when I was dating and all, I found that the song really spoke
to me. I guesss in a way it still does, as I realize that finding a
relationship and getting married just isn't important to me like it
seems to be to other people. To paraphrase Bjork,
I definitely enjoy solitude; perhaps I'm overly wedded to my own independence. Or perhaps I'm
just rambling. Anyway, I've always felt this song was under-rated,
so that's one reason I wanted to record it. Another reason would be
that I have very little somber pieces in my repertoire, so I
thought this would be a nice addition.
As for the processing in the song, I originally wanted it to sound
very natural, but, as I am wont to do, changed my mind as I worked
on it, going with a very electro sound. I'm very pleased with the
vocoded parts. I also like the instrumentation, which in my head
started out as a very simple recorder-type instrument playing the
parts. But when I heard some of the wind instruments that I could
use for the song, I chose to use a flute and piccolo for the main
parts of the song and went with an electronic sound for the
baseline, which alone sounds very haunting (you can hear this more
in
the softer mix). I flattened the echoes a little too to try to give the song a
more '
blue' feel.
La Isl
a Bonita.
[click for lyrics] With this song, I wanted to re-imagine it as a tragedy. The
backstory here is that we have a transgender "woman"
(male-to-female) sitting in a run-down apartment, despondent over
something we don't know. We hear the sound of her refrigerator
humming and various household noises, plus a television set in the
background. We hear her crying, and from the television set we hear
an announcer talking about a story to air at 11 about the "new
hallucinogenic drug ravaging the transgender community."
(I'm amused by the idea of snorting Calgon), and it's supposed to
make those who use it, at least the MTF transgender ones, feel
"like The drug is called Calgonreal girls." Then the announce says,
"And now back to Tyra" and we hear
The Trya Banks Show (a show which arguably epitomizes depressing, brain-dead daytime
TV, and one which presumably would appeal to the transgendered,
since Tyra Banks, with her
wigs and being 9 feet tall and all, is practically a drag queen
herself). Interestingly, I think in the clip she's talking about
one of her biggest beauty secrets, which is, go figure,
Vaseline. Anyway, the woman in the song mutters (of course), "Calgon, take
me away" (I couldn't resist that one) and snorts it. Quickly
thereafter the music from the song fades in and she starts singing.
I meant it to be evident that this girl isn't relating to this song
because she's actually been to any sort of tropical island, so I
mangled the Spanish wherever I could. Except, of course, for the
title, which pretty much everyone knows. I want to convey there
that she's clinging to a corny Madonna song to escape her reality,
but she's also conflating the song's content with her reality.
Under the influence of this new drug, she believes that she's been
to this island. At least, until, she gets to the bridge of the
song, where we hear the song start to collapse (the vocoded
background vocals flatten, etc.) as she gets to the line "...a boy
loves a girl." Here she crashes down from her high, from two
factors: 1) the high doesn't last very long, which I guess in a
sense would make it like hallucinogenic crack and 2) the
realization that she is not, in fact, a girl at all, which is a
buzzkill. At this point you hear her break down again (and you hear
Tyra talking aboug Spanx) and she snorts more of the drug. Then the
music fades back in and she resumes singing.
I tried to make her sound as if she were breaking further with
reality as the song continued, but that she was also connected to
her sadness. So she's not "high" in a traditional sense; she's more
in a "mixed state," some combination of despair, euphoria and
agitation. Anyway, at the very end, I thought that nothing (nothing
but nothing) could convey her despair more than a rendition of the
rap from American Life. Cuz really, is there any lower point than
that? And the last line about nothing being what it seems helps
illuminate her experience; but mostly I liked the idea of adding
that because in a pop music sense it's almost the very essence of
tragedy. Can we agree that the rap in American Life is the worst
thing Madonna has ever done (musically, at least), tongue-in-cheek
or not? (I would even include "
Wild Dancing" here.) Discuss.
A note about processing: You'll notice that the vocals in the song
are not pitch-corrected within an inch of their life. This is
intentional. The singer is not supposed to sound good. So I just
sung the song in in one take, with no practice. Not that I had to
worry about sounding bad enough--I'm far from a good singer. But I
definitely did NOT want the song to sound like a good singer trying
to sound bad. I've heard that so many times before, and it's
tiring. I like the way my version came out--I'm sure it's
cringeworthy to someone with good ears, but it's not supposed to
sound good. As for the instrumentation, I wanted it to sound lush,
and even disorganized toward the end. I also wanted it to build
every time it began, since the music isn't real per se, but only
part of the singer's hallucination. I did a lot of doubling of
instruments to try to get the right sound, and for the most part
I'm pleased with it, especially the part where the full drums come
in--the effect I was going for there was this: when the bass and
the drums first come in, they're supposed to sound puny, so I
gutted a lot of low frequencies from the bass guitar and kept the
drums low in the mix. So the listener is supposed to think it
sounds crappy, but then be surprised when the full drums and bass
come in. I hope I achieved that. Unfortunately, I don't feel like I
really achieved the full effect on some of the vocals--I wanted
there to be more echo in the end, to really give an impression of
'otherworldliness,' so to speak, but I just didn't have the time to
delve enough into that, and I feared it would muddy the mix beyond
recognition. Alas! Maybe with the next song of this sort....
I'm Not Cool Enough to Listen to the White Stripes (the Madonna
within mix).
[click for lyrics] I'm not sure that you can really call this a cover version. It's
inspired by the beast within mix of
Justify My Love, (hence my "Madonna within" mix and EP title), in which Madonna
basically read excerpts from the
Book of Revelation and interspersed them with some lyrics from JML. The music in the
mix is actually pretty boring--some sitars I think, the sample of
Madonna wailing from Erotica (although it sounds awfully good to be
Madonna; kind of like the wailing in Paula Abdul's
My Love is for Real, which is actually not Paula Abdul but
Ofra Haza. I'd always thought as much, but I figured that it was so drowned
in reverb that it could've been Abdul's crap voice. Anyway, as far
as I know this remix pre-dates auto-tune, so I have my doubts as to
whether Madonna herself sung that part). And the beat was from
another rather uninspired remix of JML. So I redid the music with
loops, rather than try to re-create any of it. Also, I didn't use
any of the JML parts, but instead used my song I'm Not Cool Enough
to Listen to the White Stripes (Vote for Angelyne) from my CD
Superpowerpusssy. It's a song which is absolutely self-explanatory,
as it simply states that I'm not cool enough to listen to the White
Stripes and exhorts the listener to vote for Angelyne to be the
governor of California. If you look at its success as an Angelyne
campaign anthem, it's a total failure, but that's fine. It was a
song I created while I was just learning how to use Cubase on a
friend's laptop, and it served as part of
the inspiration for a ditty that I made for
WFMU's
Pseu Braun called
The P is for PsuperpowerPseu Too (which also combines elements from
The P Is for Pussy and
Superpowerpusssy.) So anyway, since the music is very different and the "remixed"
song is as well, I wouldn't call this a cover version in the strict
sense. But I will say that I made most of the same choices in
interpreting the text as Madonna (or whoever coached Madonna) did,
with a few differences, some of which work well, some not so well.
One example of something we did differently is that I like to
pronounce the word "blasphemous" as [blass-FEE-muss]. I just think
it's funny; it might be hard to hear in the song, though.
One thing that I really like about the song is the way the ending
of JML and InCEtLttWS parallel each other. In JML, it ends with the
quote "What're you gonna do?" from the song. Mine ends with "Are
you cool enough?" which actually ended the original version as
well. I like how that turned out.
But since this isn't a cover version in the strict sense (since
Madonna certainly cannot be credited with writing the Book of
Revelation, although I'm SURE she tried to change a few words or
something to get a co-writing credit! :P ), why did I choose it?
Well, ever since I first heard it, I thought it was one of the
coolest ideas ever. And I always wanted to do something similar, or
maybe even copy it outright for an episode of
The Ed Shepp Radio Experiment
or something, but I never had time to do the latter, and I couldn't
think of any way to do the former which would come out as well as
JML. I also have a fun memory of the song from college, when my
friend
Tavares and I, who were the only people who knew the words by heart,
walked through campus speaking them in unison, looking like
lunatics. So anyway, since I couldn't think of a way to make the
idea myne own, I thought, "I'll just do a cover of it!" And so I
did. I have to admit: I had a concern about omitting the line that
says "the slander of those who say that they are Jews, but they are
not..."; but I chose to leave it in. After all, it's not my
words--I'm covering Madonna, who was covering the Book of
Revelation. And frankly, I don't know that the phrase is explicitly
anti-semitic. It seems to me that the author, John, was saying that
Jews who'd rejected Jesus constituted a "
synagogue of Satan," not Jews or Semites in general. I can see how some people might
find the wording offensive, but let's face it, people, the text is
thousands of years old and has been translated a zillion times by
people with almost as many agendas. Who knows what was said back
then? So today we end up with a potentially incendiary line in a
song that no one will really take seriously, but creates some juicy
controversy (at least
it did for Madonna--obviously an intentional move on her part, and more savvy than
Michael Jackson's pathetic
"kick me, kike me" lyric intended to stir up a ruckus).
A note about lyrics: Basically, I just said what Madonna said. Or,
rather, what I thought she said, because I already knew the song by
heart and didn't feel like checking them. Yeah, I can be lazy. So I
probably got some of it wrong. I guess that would put me in the
grand tradition of people passing down holy books, then.
And now the processing: This was a fun song to do, because I like
working with loops. The biggest challenge was to give them
variation. While I think everything's in the same key, there is a
bit of variation there. I think the song is listenable without
being too boring. Another challenge was making the spoken parts
loud enough to discern. I put a LOT of compression, probably too
much, on them, and maybe forgot to apply a de-esser. But I really
shouldn't talk about processing so specifically, because I'm sure
the whole EP, and maybe everything I've done myself, is littered
with technical errors. So to any engineers reading this and
thinking about how to express your criticisms, suck it. Another
vocal note: Everyone will notice that the chorus is not
pitch-corrected. In fact, it was a "scratch vocal," something I
just put in as a placeholder and meant to redo later. But when I
heard it with the spoken parts, I really liked how it sounded. I
think there was a bit of distortion in some parts of it, but that's
minor. Also, the way I did it, off pitch and all, reflects almost
identically the way I did the original song--basically, I sung it
before I had any music done and hoped for the best. Interestingly,
though, if you compare this song and the original back-to-back, you
do hear a slight improvement in my vocal control, because in the
original the last time I say "I'm not cool enough to listen to the
White Stripes" I flatten to some strange place, which sounds pretty
cool to me but almost certainly dastardly out of tune. My voice
also cracks a little. I'm a bit more consistent here, although I
would have liked to replicate the cracking and flattening more.
Alas.
WHEW!!!!!!!!!!!!! That's a helluva lotta yakkin! I hope I covered
everything; if not, maybe I'll come back and add more. Or ask me
questions if you want, or leave a comment. I'd expect that if any
hardcore Madonna fans actually listen to the songs, I'll probably
get some mean, evil comments! :P Hell, that comes with the
territory. In the end, though, I hope someone out there likes what
I did. It was a fun project--more time-consuming than I thought,
but also more fulfilling than I thought it would be, considering
the songs are Madonna covers. I guess I should also note that I
finished the project (actually was forced to finish it before I'd
have liked to) because of sad events, so to some this may seem like
an odd time to be dropping a CD (of sorts). But it really has to be
done before I get down to apartment-hunting and all that. Thanks to
everyone for your kind words, incidentally.
And since I'm thanking peops, I just want to give a shout-out to
everyone who gave me feedback or acknowledged the project. Thanks!
That means a lot. I'd also like to thank all the peops who did NOT
acknowledge the project--that says a lot. Thanks to Andy for asking
me how it was going, even though he couldn't care less about
Madonna covers. :P And thanks to Craig at
Little Pioneer Cider House studio for those great sounds.
In closing, I hope you like the songs. No, I hope you LOVE the
songs. Or HATE them, and send them to everyone you know raging
about how you hate them. :P And that's that. And that's the beep
for now.
Beep!
Ed Shepp
radio show +
mp3s +
CDs +
myspace +
article +
all the other links
Aloha, gzeeplets! Welcome to the post for my latest offering, The
Madonna Within EP.
Click HERE to download a zip file of the entire EP , encoded at
128kbps (~20Mb).
OR click below for the individual songs---click the 320kbps link to
download the high-quality file; click the 128kbps to download the
average-quality file. 1. B
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