One Unique Creature released today
One Unique Creature
is the 3rd
single from
Lawrence
Arabia's Singles
Club
released today
One of New Zealand’s most acclaimed
songwriters returns to releasing music, but in a new way.
Feeling strangled by music industry release norms of
premieres, deadlines and embargoes on his music,
Lawrence Arabia decided to take a step
closer to his fans sending them his new music as he makes
it.
Abstract:
A dysfunctional
relationship is temporarily improved by
hallucinogens.
Listen/stream 'One Unique Creature' below.
Listen to Lawrence Arabia's 'One Unique
Creature'
'One Unique Creature'
iTunes
Spotify
Apple Music
YouTube
Lyrics:
End
of the night you were ready
You looked a dull shade of
deadly
It's always strangely alluring
When you're
consumed by such fury
With a knife you could gouge out my
eyes
With no eyes I could not look surprised
But I
would not be surprised
Tip of your tongue there is
paper
Soon all our rage will be vapour
We will
dissolve into nature
Living as one unique creature
Oh
the sun it could burn out tonight
And the tourists might
turn all to ice
Smiles frozen goodbyes
(Fall
in...)
Production Notes:
On October
6 last year, my old mate Edward Castelow (Dictaphone Blues)
invited me to come and play a show in the Lewis Eady piano
showroom. The dressing room for the show was the music
school, a small warren of cell-like rooms where, presumably,
eight year old virtuosi are brought to tears after failing
to successfully execute an F#m scale. While relaxing in one
of these sometime torture chambers, I started tinkering
around with a looping waltz pattern on one of the Kawai
uprights in there and soon had the elements of the piano
chords and repetitive "ding dong" melody that make up the
basics of this song you now have in your inbox.
I took my
phone demo home and wrote a new vocal melody which turned
the existing piano melody into a counterpoint and we were
off. My first proper demo approach on October 16 last year
nailed the general feel and arrangement pretty much as it is
now. The next part of the process was to spend about four
and a half months not thinking about the song at
all.
After playing a bunch of varied shows around the
turn of March, I was ready to start panicking about what to
do for this month's song. The Lewis Eady piano song seemed
like the prime contender, but I spent a couple of weeks
walking around Auckland Domain trying to generate the right
brain wavelength to let the lyrics start flowing. Eventually
I decided that I was trying way too hard and that the lyrics
could work in an impressionistic way rather than as a story
with strong specific elements – the overall trippiness
could hopefully fill in whatever gaps existed in the
meaning.
Somewhere in that two weeks of musical
existential angst, I also went through three string
arrangement ideas and an agonising self-directed crash
course in Sibelius (the computer programme, not the
composer) just in the nick of time before recording a string
duo of Rachel Wells (cello) and Alex Taylor (viola).
Even
after recording the string arrangement, I still had no idea
how to bring the song to some kind of state of completion.
It was around then that Will "Wild Bill" Ricketts came into
my mind. I sent a text message to him about the hypothetical
possibility of adding some percussion to the song which he
responded to seconds later with an extremely enthusiastic
phone call – "send it right now and I'll put something on
it." About two hours later, Will sent a percussion feel with
about 20 different parts contained within it, and I had the
final element that opened up the key to the atmosphere of
the song and a sense of where it should end up.
Finally,
Mike Hall paid a visit to the salubrious surroundings of
Wall Of Shit on Tuesday evening and added double bass. At
that point, I finalised as much of the mix as my pro-am
skills would allow, then, on Thursday, my Wall Of Shit
roommate James Dansey came in and went over the mix with a
fine tooth comb.
This one has definitely been the hardest
work of the three songs so far, as evidenced by the
ponderous length of these production notes, but I'm really
pleased with the final result and excited to share it with
all you fine people.
Credits:
Vocals, electric bass,
piano, Yamaha SS30 string synthesizer, 6 and 12 string
acoustic guitar – Lawrence Arabia
Cello – Rachel
Wells
Viola – Alex Taylor
Double bass – Mike
Hall
Vibraphone and assorted percussion – Will Ricketts
Produced and engineered by Lawrence Arabia
Percussion
engineered by Will Ricketts
Mixed by Lawrence Arabia and
James Dansey
Mastered by James
Dansey