I banged this one out pretty fast. I start with a figure, a motif and build on it. This time, I built on a bit of history. Back in the late ‘70’s I landed an entry level job at Counterpoint Recording NYC. As I developed some elementary engineering chops, the studio owner and songwriter, Jerry Ragovoy, (he wrote, Time Is On My Side, Cry Baby, Piece of My Heart) took a liking to me and gave me opportunities to engineer his song demos. This predated midi and computers. We recorded to tape and in pieces—first with a drummer keeping time and Jerry banging away on a Prophet 5 synth. Bass and various other parts were added later. The process was laborious and tortured. I don’t recall ever finishing one. Jerry was in his late 40’s and my numb skulled judgmental twenty something self thought his time had come and gone. See, Jerry’s music wasn’t exactly current. He sure did try though. At the time, the trend in R&B dance music was a 120 BPM, four on the floor, slap octave bass thing. I can still conjure up images of Jerry dancing around the control room with his granny reading glasses perched on his nose. He loved what he was doing. I was clueless to how important those days would become.
In a fit of nostalgia, I based my latest tune on the very drum and bass feel that I cut my teeth on with Jerry. Why not? What’s old is new again. I made the track. The lyrics came easily. I sang it and buffed up the mix. It was another one of those “message” songs. I can’t help it. I put it aside for a couple days to let it ferment.
When I returned to it, I dug it. I started to tweak it here and there. I’m pretty good at that part of the process. Simplify. Accentuate. Rinse and repeat. Then, as I worked, my “this-is-crap-o-meter” started to move into the red. “Change the drum feel. Your voice sucks. The chorus sounds weak. It should be faster. That bass line is cheesy. Lower the key. You have no business making pop music, Jesus! You’re 68!” my internal critic screamed.
I felt a tad nauseous. I entered command/Q on my keyboard. “Do you want to save?” my computer asked. Even my computer was questioning my work. I’d gone from love to loathing. Bliss to bummed. Confident to confounded. Sure, critical thinking is part of the creation game, but games are supposed to be fun, right? I shut down my gear in disgust. I was mortified by my own work. There’s no way I will share this one, I thought.
This morning, I listened to the song again with fresh ears. Is it the best song I ever wrote? Nope. Is it the worst? I’ve written some stinkers, this wasn't one of them. Will this be the last song I ever write? I hope not. So why all the drama?
Several years ago, Ogilvy's HR Department instituted a bizarre and overthought peer evaluation system as part of our annual performance review. One of the peer comments was that I take "work criticism too personally". Guilty as charged. I won't bore you with the origins of this curse, but I know I'm not alone. I identify with what I create.
The irony, through all this, is I stopped listening to the message of the lyrics I wrote.
Dream your dream
Be all that's true
Give all you can
The best of you is waiting to be found
It's wanting to believe
Feel the beat
The pulse of time
Hear the voice that spins a rhyme
Open up your heart
And you will receive
A New Year’s resolution. Be kind to myself. Find joy in my work and let it go. Care less about what others think and care more about what makes me, me. I have nothing to prove. I've been to the mountaintop. Has my time come and gone? In a way, yes, in fact, I welcome it. But, in the way that really matters – making stuff for making's sake – I'm just getting started. Who knows, I just might start dancing to my own music. Thank you, Jerry.
Listen and enjoy. So be it. Happy New Year.
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