Busking on Patreon

Soooo close to having the physical CD of Canyonlands done!  A few last minute mix issues, but them are the breaks.  (Who knew mastering was actually really a thing???) 

In the meantime, perhaps you've been sitting around listening to the free digital streams and downloads of Canyonlands, wondering, "Gosh, how on earth can I make sure Winter keeps creating this crazy cool music when he gives it all away for FREE?"

Finally, an answer!  I have added a little Patreon page. Think of it as my little busker's guitar case you can throw a dollar into now and then, if you're feeling the urge.  Contributing even an amount that seems barely worth trifling over to you would be HUGELY meaningful to me. 

If you *do* support us with any amount, I promise to keep making tunes, and by way of thanks will share with you a weird little haiku I wrote for my wife once.

Thanks in advance, beautiful human!

~ wz

Making Positive Waves: Ali in Ghana

Today's Kiva contribution was to this fellow with a 10000w smile -- Ali Mohammed, maker of groovy awesome things.  

There are some beautiful sculpted masks here, but what I really love are the jolly black Santas and the evocative slice-of-life-carvings of the different occupations.  He imbues them with such life and character, you can almost picture them ambling down the streets of Accra.  In his Novica profile, he explains his love of making sculpture.

Since I am a curious by nature, I always want to find out how things are done. I was good at learning through watching my brother when he was carving, and then I would try my hand and I would ask for assistance when needed. This helped me develop and master my carving skills. 

After 12 years of working with my brother I started to work on my own. I have taught other carvers, and currently I have four carvers working with me. I love the art of mixing colors and fixing aluminum plates to design an item. 

How can you resist supporting a guy who loves to support others in their artistic journeys?  That's a pretty special kind of wonderful.

Check out his amazing Novica portfolio at the link below.

https://www.novica.com/artistdetail/?faid=8473

And please consider supporting similarly cool humans worldwide with a small loan through Kiva!

And down the home stretch comes Zero

And down the home stretch comes Zero

A swirl of emotions percolating today, as I sit here laying the last few licks on Winter Zero's first album, Canyonlands.  The cherry is popped, the bloom is off the rose, the middle aged dude has found his groove and thrown it out there in the cruel world for all to hear.  I'm feeling excitement, fear, relief, reflection and, most notably, gratitude.

I'm grateful for my mom, who handed me her guitar when I was 8 and taught me the simple 12-bar blues lick that became the basis for everything I've done since on bass and gitfiddle.  My first song, written on that beat up old acoustic of her own youth, was about a bulldog who chased cars.  A couple years later, she took us to a chimerical, mystical land that has infected our imaginations ever since: the dusty eastern corner of Utah, where lays the transcendental pilgrim's trinity of Moab, Arches, and Canyonlands.

Also I'm grateful for my dad, the rogue artist, who over his 75 years has put nearly every cent he made from his art into his gas tank, to explore the highways of America, north and south of the 49th parallel, and in turn fed those adventures into his art.  He's laid a deep groove and circular way of life that has become my own.  

I'm grateful for best friends. Duke, the ranch kid who befriended me at 7, pulled me outside away from Atari, and gave me the hunger for sagebrush, horse sweat, and snow.  Ken, the burnout poet who became my closest confident and creative partner lo these past 27 years.  Curtis, my musical soul mate and token right-wing raconteur, who saddles up with me a few times each month for some serious windmill tilting.

I'm grateful for good fortune in finding generous and patient musical band mates and compadres - Jon, Reed, Mike, Shawn.  For the metal rush that was Boss Falcon.  For the endless corps of discovery that is The Whimsics.  For the incredible wealth of mentors in Bozeman, in folks like Joe, Doc, Noah, Eric, Gil, and the late great Kelly Roberti. 

Top of the list though (even though it's way down here) is my beautiful wife, Cyndi, who found me that night in that blues club in Billings, and we never once looked back.  She gives me not only the encouragement to follow my passions but the inspiration for so many of the songs that I write.  I'm a better man, a better human, for having her in my life.  (Remember this, husbands -- house chores are love notes made kinetic.)

I'm grateful to day jobs for giving me the means to satisfy a modest gear lust, just enough to create and capture the songs that show up in my head.  To paraphrase the great Willie Nelson, melodies are always floating around you like little bluebirds or dragonflies - you only have to reach up and pluck 'em out of the air.

And I'm grateful to you, for being here, now, for checking this shit out, and reverberating with me.  

The streams and downloads are free here, because these tunes were made from 100% heartfelt gratitude.  If you enjoy them, please share them and that's reward enough for me.  Thanks!  

~ wz

Trippy Detroit Tunnel

Trippy Detroit Tunnel

After a lonnng day traveling in southern Ohio yesterday, I missed a connection back to Montana last night in Detroit and ended up getting a two bit hotel voucher.  The walk between Concourse C, where I deplaned, and Concourse A, where the shuttles swarm, takes you down an escalator and through a tunnel that -- again, after a lonnng day -- was akin to a strange mushroom trip.  Low lights, warps of color, and lots of loud Motown music.  

Halfway through, I completely forgot where I was going, and felt myself slipping through the looking glass, disappeared, and was never seen again ...

IMG_5114.JPG

(Youtube/John Grabowski) This is just a few minutes of the Light Tunnel, a memorable music & light installation connecting Concourse A with Concourse B/C at the McNamara Terminal at the Detroit Metro Airport. It's become my favorite part of connecting through that airport. There's a great (somewhat technical) article about the installation at http://www.jimonlight.com/2008/11/18/the-mcnamara-tunnel-detroit-airport/ .

Listening to: Fresh Snow

Listening to: Fresh Snow

 

I love almost everything I hear these days from Canadian bands.

So many great sounds emanating like auroras from north of the border -- atypical vibes are flowing from every tap, pervading the Canuckian consciousness.  This is the country that in recent decades brought us Of Montreal, The New Pornographers, Barenaked Ladies, and the Arcade Fire, to say nothing of legends like Rush, Neil Young, BTO, and freakin' Men Without Hats.  

(How does one reconcile a culture that brings you all of this, plus Crash Test Dummies and *gasp* Nickelback?)

But what excites me the most is the verdant Canadiana indie scene.  And while some of it is awash with the same UK-sourced shoegazing that saturated the U.S. over the last 10 years, maple leaf rock has a playful, artful aesthetic honesty all of its own.

(I won't lie -- I needed some good shit this week, being among those who have wistfully considered swapping Trump for Trudeau.)

And thanks to Weird Canada, tonight I found this lush band Fresh Snow and their album WON. These dudes catch some serious waves, and each track is a journey through beautifully sculpted landscapes of soft noise and evocative melody, with a spirit both carefully articulated and delightfully improvised.  

This track Proper Burial has a sweet goddamn bass part, and an industrial nerve that contrasts with Carmen Elle's sweetly contributed vox.  I'm hooked, but hear it for yourself

And how do you ignore a title like Don't Fuck a Gift Horse in the Mouth?  Long form pulsing reminiscent of the best Secret Machines, with relentless headbutts of Waitsian wailing courtesy of Fucked Up's Damian Abraham, who seems like a fun guy

It's extraterrestial, groovy, and raw.

So what do you call an album that's a follow up to an album called WON?  How about ONE?  

As luck would have it, these talented amis have just released some fresh new snow that rips.  Here's one from ONE just to get you started -- listen to it in its entirety and tell me you wouldn't love to catch these dudes live show sometime.

Nice work, Snow.  And I love you, Canada.

 

A photo posted by FRESH SNOW (@freshsnowmusic) on

Hello world

Hello world

In which I attempt to justify becoming a blogmeister.

 

I am very shy.  

I am too self-conscious and embarrassed to read a blog, much less author one.

However, I now find myself in the predicament of having written and recorded a few tunes that feel like maybe they don't suck so much, with the even more disconcerting inclination to share them with you. And the presumptuousness with which I am executing on this bizarre obsession makes me feel like I should explain myself -- to justify myself to myself.  

So, in assessing this blog (which has barely begun and yet has already revealed itself to be regrettably self-aware), I yield unto you, dear reader, the inalienable human rights of snap judgement, loathing, and vengeful deprecation. I emphatically sanction any sudden preference to ditch this sucktastic shit and go browse for cat videos.  I'll join you.