A Musical History
Welcome. Here I'm presenting a little bit of everything I've done with my guitar over the years. It starts with a couple of the most recent things I’ve done, and the rest of it is in the order I grabbed the stuff to put it up. So, not chronological, not linear - just an improvised order (kinda like me).
It's been good fun finding and putting this stuff together. Turned out to be more of it than I thought. Hopefully, you'll find some stuff here that you like. Thanks for stopping by!
2022
I Believe In You
Jerry Falzone asked me to contribute some atmospheric Neil Young music to be played before the DeJa Vu CSNY tribute show, Nov 4th, 2022. Here’s what I came up with. I figured it needed a video to share on FB, so I made a quick one. Wish I was there for the show, but hopefully, this will do in my absence.
2021
Strawberry Fields Forever
One of my very favorite Beatle songs, Strawberry Fields Forever had a profound influence on just about every aspect of my life. For this version, I just turned on the camera and started improvising, not knowing I would be playing this song. It just came out. I'm glad it did.
2020
The Inner Light
Dhani Harrison posted a lovely video in late March 2020 of him singing The Inner Light. He instituted The Inner Light Challenge, asking people to make and upload their own version of the song. For each, a donation will be made from The Material World Foundation to fight COVID-19. Here's my version. #innerlight2020
2018
Chasing Ghosts
I played on Jerry Falzone's recorded version of his great song before Kate Lee put her violin tracks down. When I heard the final mix, I asked Sam Gruttadauria (engineer/producer) for only the violin, bass, and my fingerpicked guitar tracks just to see what it sounded like. That grew into this version. Thanks to Kate Lee, Mike Nelson (bassist), and Jerry for letting me do this.
2002
11:11
I recorded this album between 1999 and 2001. The idea was to create a record that lasted exactly one hour that would make good relaxing music for massage therapy, acupuncture, chiropractic, meditation, yoga, etc. The result was 11:11, named because I happened to see that time on my digital clock twice a day, every day - the only time where all four numbers are the same. Also included is the song that started the whole project, but in the end didn't fit what the project had become. It's called "Bill In the 90s" indicating the beginning of Bill Frisell's influence on me.
Here are all the songs for your listening pleasure...
A Real Find and a real 5 star album
Bob Martin was a total unknown to me. However, when looking at CdBaby this CD came up on a search when I looked up various more established artists who's music I liked. So I sampled the tracks and knew it was something for me right away.
I don't recall specifically which artists I was looking up when this gem popped up-I believe it was some of the artists who record for the ECM label, though I wouldn't compare Mr Martin to anyone specifically that records for that label, apart from perhaps some very early Pat Metheny (around the "Watercolors" and "New Chautauqua" era). If you like those 2 recordings, then I highly recommend this.
Martin uses primarily acoustic guitars along with occasionally very clean sounding electric guitar (a very warm and beautifully jazzy sound).
There's also at times an abundance of hand percussion-and since no other players are credited it appears that the percussion is possibly from a software computer program, though very acoustic and human sounding for sure. I'm not sure where the bass sound is from-either Martin playing an electric bass himself, using samples, or maybe even a bass setting on a guitar synthesizer.The notes don't make this real clear.
At times you have long pieces of jungle percussion and acoustic guitars which sound like an epic journey through a rainforest. Other selections are beautifully quiet-like something that you might hear on a really good Windham Hill recording from the early 1980's-but actually better (at least to me) and more evocative than the artists that label featured back when it was new and only featured "New Age" music. Once in awhile, a jazzy piece comes using scales and chords closer to some more mainstream jazz artists. This is ALL done quite amazingly. Martin never makes a misstep here-and this album covers a lot of ground without losing a unified vision. There some beautifully quiet, ethereal pieces, and i'm very glad to see that Martin is not afraid to lay down very long pieces that allow the listener to lose oneself in the music without it ending prematurely.
The date on this appears to be from 2002. Well it took me nearly a decade to discover it, but it really is timeless. There's nothing dated on this that would ever prevent me from enjoying it just as much 30 years from now.
If only Mr Martin would do some more recordings..."
Gary Hayden, via CD Baby
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" ...Martin's lush wash of six-stringed layers that suggest a big, big sky...And when Martin solos, extant melodies sometimes bubble to the surface. It's like faces in the sky; you stare at clouds long enough you're bound to see someone you know."
Frank DeBlase, City Newspaper, Rochester, NY, December 2006
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'"I've got your CD in my treatment room and it's great! It's just the right combination of good guitar with low key approach. My clients are aware, sort of, that there's music, but they're not distracted by it, and in fact, it adds to the overall feeling of relaxation, rest and healing."
Cassandra Adler, Massage Therapist, Seattle, WA
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" ...I have been using your CD for my Yoga classes. A few of my ladies have fallen in love with it... It really is a great CD. We especially like it for our meditation at the end. Thanks for the wonderful relaxation and peace you bring us every class!"
Sue Soule, Rochester, NY
Biography
Fans of the seminal 1980s band Personal Effects will recognize Bob Martin as the guitarist and one of its founding members. Based in Rochester, NY, Personal Effects had regional and national success in the club scene and on college radio. They released half a dozen records and earned rave reviews from the underground and mainstream press alike.
Although Personal Effects disbanded at the end of the 80s, in 2001 former members Paul Dodd, Peggi Fournier and Bob Martin formed, together with bassist Ken Frank and occasional member Pete LeBonne, Margaret Explosion. They play ambient, other-worldly jazz in the form of completely improvised compositions, and have released several albums as well as over 200 mp3s of their live compositions. Phil Marshall now plays in Margaret Explosion after Bob relocated to the Chicago area.
Bob continues to write and produce guitar-based music for performance and recordings, films and special projects. You can find his production work on Steve Greene's two trio CDs (Acoustic Living and Live In Your Living Room) as well as Steve's duo CD with Gene Bertoncini (Gene with Greene). He’s also been a key contributor to Jerry Falzone’s “Liar’s Moon” alth
11:11, his first solo release, has enjoyed success with those involved in the healing arts, including massage therapists, acupuncturists, chiropractors and yoga instructors.
11:11 CD Cover Notes
Those without whom there would be no music: my mother and father, my wife Liz, my son Nick and my “daughters” Emma & Nana; my teachers Steve Greene, Gene Bertoncini and David Hamburger; my musical siblings Paul Dodd & Peggi Fournier, Tom Lanze, Mark Peters, Roy Berns, Brian Soule, Bill Martin & Matt Dugan. My musical influences: The Beatles, Neil Young, Bill Frisell, John McLaughlin, Django Reinhardt, Joe Pass & Ravi Shankar. Special thanks to Lynn Johnson, Sue Gaile, Deeanne Bevin, Jeffery Young & Cassandra Adler for valuable input.
On this recording I played some incredible guitars by Steve Andersen, Steve Klein & Steve Kauffman, Ken Parker, and Bernie Lehmann. Percussion courtesy Big Fish Audio. Recorded entirely on Apple Macintosh Powerbook G3 and G4 computers utilizing Steinberg Cubase and Bias Peak software with Digigram audio cards (thanks Neil) as well as a Tascam US 428. Mixed using Sennheiser HD 580 and HD 497 headphones (thanks Joe, thanks Rob), as well as Tannoy monitors, powered by an Ashly SRA 120 amplifier (thanks Bill, thanks Dave, thanks Jim). Recorded with Neumann Mics (thanks Karl, thanks Jeff). Cover Design by RTM & Associates, Inc. Front and Back Cover Photography by Karl Winkler. Inside Cover Photo by Abby Berns
All Songs Written, Recorded and Produced by Bob Martin
©& P 2002 RTM&Associates, Inc.
Duane Sherwood's interpretation of Margaret Explosion's version of 4am.
2008
Occupy Abbey Road
In December 2008, Tim Schwieger and I went to Abbey Road to record a couple of songs. We wrote the songs, rehearsed via the internet, got together to rehearse in person once in Tacoma, and then got on a plane with our guitars and headed to London. Beneath the video are the songs we recorded at Abbey Road. The event was documented thoroughly and built a we built an entire web site about the experience. Click here to visit it.
MONDAY, DECEMBER 8, 2008
Bob's Diary from the Studio Two Recording Session
8:30 am Tim and I meet for breakfast at the hotel. Both quite nervous, so there is not a lot of conversation. We had talked this day to death for more than a year prior. I feel the clock counting down.
9:15 am We leave the hotel for the 15/20 minute walk to Abbey Road. For Tim it takes hours. I feel as if we get there in 30 seconds
9:30 am The reception desk at Abbey Road. They summon Alice Carlisle, the video liaison, and have a person show us to Studio Two control room, where we meet Chris Bolster, our engineer and Gordon, the tape op (now Pro Tools Op) whom we will later dub Magic Gordon, for his editing prowess. Alice and Aaron, the cameraman, meet up with us and, since the drum kit we've hired has not yet been delivered, we decide to do some photos of us arriving at Abbey Road as well as crossing the famous crosswalk.
10:15 am With the video shots of our arrival out of the way, we head back to the studio and go over what our plans are with Chris and Gordon, as well Aaron. Setup commences with the drum kit assembly, mics being placed, headphones being checked. They've hired me a 1972 Vox AC30 which sounds magnificent. Off center on the Vox is a vintage Neumann U47, placed about 14" away, along with another U47 about 8 feet away from the amp, raised about 2 feet higher, putting it in the center of the room (left to right) and about 2/3 of the way back. I'd taken along my Parker Fly Standard Classic and no outboard processing. The drums are all vintage mic'd – AKG D112 on the kick, AKG for the overheads, an AKG for the snare and a Neumann U47 about 4 feet in front of the kit. While things are being set up, we tour Studio One, the orchestral studio where A Day In The Life's symphony section was recorded (which was being set up for a full symphony scoring session) as well as Studio Three, which is where Pink Floyd recorded Dark Side of the Moon as well as other albums and is home to many bands. Later, we will mix in Studio Three.
11:00 am We start to work on sounds. Tim tries the kit and toys with the placement of the drums. I am getting some sounds out of my amp, choosing which pickup/volume combinations to use. The engineer is amazed by the guitar sound and comments that he's never heard the amp "like" any guitar as much as it likes my Fly Standard. Hooray, cuz I have to agree with him. Somehow, the combination creates a sound that is just perfect for what we are recording. A word about Studio Two - the sound in there is just, so, Beatley. It's the room ambience, even though it can be altered with baffles that swing in from the side, as well as setting up ad-hoc drum booth using baffles, the room still SOUNDS like the original room the Beatles recorded in! The drum mics, and later the bass and acoustic guitar, will be routed through vintage Fairchild and Altec limiters on the way into the Pro Tools environment. Tim also has authentic Abbey Road tea towels to put on the snare drum. The lore is "the older the towel, the better" and apparently this is determined not only by age, but by how much of the kitchen has been permanently absorbed by the towel...
12:00 noon We decide to do my song, The Verdict, first because it is simpler and will get us warmed up faster.Time to start tracking.Tim is up first. Prior to our trip, part of our rehearsal regimen was recording and re-recording the song ourselves, as well as practicing the parts like mad. So, to save time and to keep the feel we were after, I brought along some reference mixes that Tim could play to. So, listening to a mix of the demo without drums, Tim layed down the drum tracks.
12:30 pm Tim is up again to lay down the bass track. He nails it in just a couple of takes. Which is amazing for two reasons - he's not a bass player, primarily, and we had decided he'd play bass for this song about a week before we went.
12:45 pm Time to lay down the guitar tracks. We start with the chunking rhythm guitar. One pass to get levels, one pass to lay it down. Next is the syncopated rhythm part that plays foil to the vocals and the other rhythm guitar. One take and it's down.
1:00 pm Time for lead guitar. Chris offered up a couple of distortion boxes as I needed a bit more overdrive than I could get running the amp full bore. The first box he suggests, called a Hot Cake, would not work - we beat it, we kicked it, we offered it bribes, but it was not to be. So, a vintage Ibanez Tube Screamer came into service. I needed just a little bit more than the amp could give, so it was very lightly used. I layed down the lead and then doubled it.
1:15 pm Now it's time for me to sing... this was the part I was most nervous about, but getting behind a Neumann U47 with one of the vintage wrap-around pop-shields took away my apprehension. In the headphones, the sound was INCREDIBLE. I could not believe that this was me singing! It took two takes, but we got a usable lead vocal down.
1:30 pm Break for lunch. Off to the Abbey Road cafeteria. Yes, it's the same room that it was when the Beatles recorded there, but it's been completely redone over the years and is now a bar as well. I had some beef and rice dish that was, I am sure, delicious, but my hunger level was so low I barely ate one quarter of it.
2:15 pm Back to the studio to overdub harmony vocals for The Verdict. These take a few tries (let's face, I am not a professional singer). But down they go.
2:30 pm We review the tracks to make sure we have what we need. Thank goodness we have two takes on the lead vocals, as a bit of each is going to be needed.
3:00 pm Satisfied with the tracking on The Verdict, we start work on Don't Blink, Tim's song. Same basic method is used - Tim plays drums to the reference track we've brought.
3:30 pm Tim drops the bass in. BUT, we hit a snag. (The snag, for the technical minded of you: The C# at the 4th fret of the A string sounds terribly flat as the fifth of the landing chord in a descention from D to F#. It has worked in the hotel room with just guitar and bass. Not sure what is causing it, as the note reads fine on a chromatic tuner. No matter which tone changes we try, the aural illusion persists. So, we decide that the root of F# at the second fret of the E string must be used instead. I still have no idea what was causing this). Suffice to say it held us up for a bit as we tried to overcome it.
4:15 pm Time to add an acoustic guitar track. The studio has hired us a 1966 Gibson J160E that may be one of the best sounding and playing Gibson acoustics I've ever had the pleasure of playing. A Neumann SM2 is placed in front of it, and it gets routed through the Fairchild limiters before hitting disc. Again, the sound is just classic Beatles acoustic. Tim puts down a track, but his left hand is having a very hard time. So, I put down the track, but it's a bit sluggish to the beat, and I toss down another. Later, during the mix, simply muting this track makes the song move along a lot better. But, at this point, it was planned to be a part of the song.
5:00 pm Electric guitar time. There are three basic guitar parts this round. The basic rhythm track is a strum with some flourishes that syncopate things with the drums. The second track simply uses single strums very close to the bridge and lets the chords ring. On the demo, we used vibrato here, but the vibrato on the Vox is not right. Unlike a Fender amp, the Vox has only switches - hard or soft vibrato, or fast or less-fast vibrato. We decide to bag the vibrato here and see if we can add it later in the mix. The final basic guitar part I put down is single notes and runs that offer melodic parts to the arrangements.
5:30 pm Time to lay down the lead guitar. This went quickly as it is very short and I had it very well rehearsed. We did three takes, two of which are used as doubled parts in the final.
5:45 pm Starting to move along, I lay down a guide vocal for Tim. I do this in two takes, both of which are retained.
5:55 pm Tim comes down and sings Don't Blink. We do a number of takes as Tim plays with different ways to sing the song. He has a number of takes which can be cut together to form a good take.
6:30 pm We order dinner, which will be ready at about 7pm and I start to lay down background vocals. These are pretty complex. It takes me a good long time to get them down, but I am still not happy.
7:00 pm Dinner. We eat at the Abbey Road Cafeteria again, this time we both have Spaghetti Bolognese, which I wolf down as I am starved, in the midst of a bunch of really drunk classical musicians. Nothing, it seems, is a greater gift to the British than free drinks! After dinner, we tour the Mic Locker where we discover that as a part of their vintage mic collection, Abbey Road has 14 U47s and enough spare parts to make 14 more! They also have a huge number of M50's, M49's, TLM 170's - the list keeps going.
7:30 pm I go back down to the studio and finish my background vocals. This is easier now, as I ask to bring the volume down on the backing tracks and can sing quieter, being able to hit the pitch on ooohs and aaaahs better.
7:45 pm Back upstairs, two gentlemen pop into the control room. The tall, young fellow is greeted as Giles. I am introduced to Giles - telling him my name - and he says "great name!" I don't get why he thinks I have a great name. I am introduced to the other man as Jeff Jones- Giles says that Jeff is his boss. Tim tells me to go get the camera. I still don't get it. As soon as I leave the control room and head down the stairs, I realize that we've got Giles Martin, son of the Beatles producer George Martin, in the control room. His boss, Jeff Jones, is the CEO of Apple Records! I get back upstairs and Tim sends me down for the video camera, which I hurry to get. I get back up and capture a bit of video with Giles and Tim talking. Then we get photos of us with Giles and our recording team. Giles and Jeff leave, and we review our takes.
8:30 pm We've just completed listening to all the takes to make sure we are done tracking, which we are. Magic Gordon starts to edit the vocal tracks to get the agreed upon best of each take into a single track on Don't Blink, while Chris heads off to Studio Three to begin mixing The Verdict. We wander down to the studio and begin to break down the gear, putting the drums away in a very leisurely manner. I grab the J160E and do an impromptu rendition of Norwegian Wood as well as Strawberry Fields (Tim has told me that the Beatles were recording Strawberry Fields in that studio on December 8, 1966). Tim catches these on video. Then Tim goes over to the Steinway and noodles around on the Steinway grand that's in there. He's playing a song that McCartney wrote, but that sounds to me like the John Lennon song "Isolation". Then I sit down and play Let It Be and Imagine - and I use the term "play" loosely. Later, when we get back to the hotel, we agree that this little time alone in Studio Two was our favorite part of the day.
9:30 pm Off to Studio Three to meet Chris. He's got a good basic mix of The Verdict dialed in. I make a couple of suggestions (one to fix where I sang sharp) and that's it. The mix is done by tenish.
10:00 pm We begin mixing Don't Blink. Tim makes a number of suggestions about drum sounds, all valid and good. They've gotten incredible sounds down on disc for us. Chris works more on sounds and the song becomes a powerful mix. We try a mix with Tim singing as well as a mix with me singing the song. Tim's vocal track still needs work. From all of Tim's takes, we can put together a good vocal performance, but we are out of time to complete this. Fortunately, we have all of the session audio, ProTools control tracks, etc, so we can mess with it ourselves later.
11:00 pm Copying of the session files begins. We are exhausted and exhilarated, all at once. We pack up what we came with, heavier by the incredible experience, the ProTools tracks, and an Abbey Road Mug each (on the bottom of the mug it says "stolen from Abbey Road"). We leave Abbey Road. It's the same 20 minute walk back to the hotel, but it's pouring rain and we don't care! Well, Tim gets out his umbrella and I have a baseball hat, so it's not so bad.
Back at the hotel: We try to get the grins off our faces, but the scotch and bourbons we are drinking just help to make them wider. In between all of the stuff we did at the studio, we heard some great, great stories about people who've crossed Abbey Road's threshold. Some good, some bad. We think our sessions were light hearted, upbeat and fun, and that was confirmed several times throughout the day. So, hopefully if there's ever a story about us being told, it will be in a positive light, at least in respect to our attitudes.
Putting all of the feelings about this experience into words is just impossible. The Beatles have been engrained so deeply on both our psyches - have so formed the people we have become - that this was an almost familial union. I don't feel as if we've kissed the Blarney Stone - more like we got a chance to sit next to it and hang out. It was an experience of a lifetime, and one for which I will be forever in Tim's debt!
Posted by Bob Martin at 8:10 PM, December 9th, 2008
1981-1991
Personal Effects
At the end of 1981, I joined Peggi Fournier, Paul Dodd, and Martin Edic to form Personal Effects. About 6 months in, Martin left the band and Bernie Heveron came to play bass for a couple of years. When he left to join Colorblind James Experience, we had Chuck Carter for several months, and then finally we were blessed with Robin Mills who was with us the majority of the band's life. We released several albums, toured, and played a LOT of shows. Scorgies, a bar in Rochester where original music flourished, was our home base.
Personal Effects played all over the northeastern USA and managed to have a couple regional hit records including being in the top 5 in the dance charts in NYC.
A lot of different bands played shows with us - some of the more famous were REM, Pylon, 10,000 Maniacs, Psychedelic Furs, Modern English, and Grandmaster Flash, as well as many, many great local bands.
It was a great time to be playing original music and I am grateful for a decade with such a great band!
For more info...Personal Effects.
2001-2017
Margaret Explosion
Peggi Fournier, Paul Dodd, and I got together after a decade when they invited me to join Margaret Explosion, initially with Greg Slack on bass, followed by Ken Frank for the last 13 years. We had a standing weekly gig for seven months of the year at Rochester, NY's Little Theater Cafe, improvising everything we played, for 16 years. The band still plays there with my good friend Phil Marshall now in the guitar chair. To download over 200 mp3s and see other videos, go to Margaret Explosion.
2014-2017
Jerry Falzone & Liar's Moon
I played on two CDs with Jerry Falzone and Liar's Moon - "Liar's Moon" and "Chasing Ghosts". Also did several shows. This one, with Marty Dorren on bass, Ken Colombo on piano, Greg Andrews on drums, and Debbie Randyn Saltrelli on backup vocals. I always had a lot of fun on these gigs.
Jerry was kind enough to let me post MP3s of the two albums I played on. For Liar's Moon, I played on Sunset On The Bay, Liar's Moon, I Could Be Your Dance, and Ocean's Reprise. For Chasing Ghosts, I played on everything but Built To Last where I felt I had nothing to add because Steve Piper did such an amazing job.
For both records, I got to work with the great Sam Gruttadauria again - first time we'd done that since our involvement in Cold Steel way back in the 70s.
Jerry was also kind enough to let me design the covers for both records.
1975-1980
Unit
Unit was Mark Peters' project throughout the 70s. I ran sound and helped with recordings of the first incarnations of this band that featured Mark Peters, Mark Rossiter, Steve Letkauskas, Vinnie Ercalamento, and Vinnie Randazzo. This version was Mark and Mark along with Brian Soule, Don Strenczewilk, and me. These videos are from our only show - 1980 at the Record Archive. There's also a bonus video from the Penny Arcade in 1976.
There is also audio that was recorded at two shows: The first was at Rochester, NY's Wine Press in 1976. The second, at Rochester's Nazareth College. AND, there's audio of three cuts Unit did in Rory's studio in Penfield circa 1978.
1996
The Sennheiser Scores
In my other capacity in life, I am a marketing/advertising/designer kind of person and have had the good fortune of being able to put those talents to use in the music, pro sound, and broadcast worlds. Sennheiser was my number one client from 1991 to 2006 - a run of 15 years. I was responsible for creating all ads, printed materials, booth graphics, etc during that time. For the 1996 NAMM music trade show, they were going to have several in-booth audio demos, so I came up with the idea of creating instrumental music that could all be played at the same time and work together, despite being very different styles. Here are the four songs, recorded in my home studio at the time using Digidesign Session.
Mid 70s
Cold Steel/Rocko Steele
This was, effectively, my first official band that played out in clubs. We were intially called Rocko Steel, a paraphrase of a school chum to us all named Rocco Stio (not sure he ever knew!). Chuck Leone, our booking agent, made us change our name to Cold Steele for some reason. Mike and Steve Barnes were our singers (Steve also played trombone). Tom Lanze played guitar and trumpet. Sam Gruttadauria sang and played keyboards. Alan Paprocki played bass. Roy Stein was our drummer, but before him were Rick Heberger and Mike Morgan. And I played guitar. We played quite a bit, covering a pretty wide variety of stuff. Some Top 40, some oldies, some obscure stuff. It was a mighty fun time!
I put this video together from the only stuff I have - some poor tapes of us at the Orange Monkey in 1976 and some 8mm footage a young student shot when we played a high school in Canadaigua, NY. When you think about the times, it's amazing that I have even this to work with!
1988
Horizons (for Mom)
Seems I've always done handmade greeting cards, etc. When my Mom was living in Palm Springs, I'd make stuff and send it to her for Christmas. Then I'd visit her when I attended the NAMM show in January in Anaheim. For Christmas 1988, I shot video of the whole family in Rochester, edited it all together with some vintage transfers of old 8mm movies and stuff. To close the video, I performed a solo version of the Genesis song "Horizons". Glad the video survived so I could share it here.
1999-2008
Wesla Lee Collaboration
In the early days of higher speed internet, quite a few collboartive sites sprang up where people shared stuff. Often it was bootleg software.
I met Wesla Lee on one of these sites, called Carracho, that catered to musicians. She showed me her music, I showed her mine. And we started chatting, became friends, and collaborated long distance via the internet.
These three songs were written by Wes, sent to me with just her playing guitar and singing. I arranged and added instruments, etc to flesh out what I hoped she'd like as a good treatment. I'll add that she's got another nearly two dozen songs that are strong, beautiful songs and performances.
In 2008, Douglas Chang produced and directed a film in Boston called Absent Father. Through a mutual friend, I offered Wesla's "Shine" to be considered for use in the film. When the film premiered, I flew to Boston and met Wes there. We had no idea that he'd chosen the song to play for the intro to the film as well as over the credits. It was a fun day.
Anyway, so it goes, we drifted apart. Wes got away from music but recently dropped me a note saying she's getting back into it. Possibility for further collaboration.
2009
Test Score for a Short Film
Never having been asked, I'd never tried scoring a film. So I jumped at the chance when I was put in touch with Anne Loyer who was editing her short film Hannah's Ride. While it didn't work out that she used me, I thought the test music I did worked very well with the snippets of film she sent. So, I am putting it up here to show what I came up with. I'll say this - it's a LOT of work. I think I have a total of 20 or so hours to get music that worked for this 2 1/2 minutes of film.
A little background - the basic melody for this came from a demo I'd made in 2006, using a Boss Micro multitrack recorder. Subsequently named Hannah's Ride, you can hear that in the player under the video.
1980s
Demo Recordings
In the 80s, I was trying to write songs - some came out better than others. I used a four-track cassette recorder - initally a Fostex X-15 and later had a Tascam Portastudio. These tunes were initially recorded with an eye (ear?) to playing them in Personal Effects. Indeed, several were: Think Big, Yours Was Mine, The Verdict, The Words, and The Pane. Gotta Decide, Phobias, and Spaghetti Western never saw the light of day. Around this time, Brian Soule, Don Strenczewilk, and I recorded Don't Pay No Bills just for fun.
2015
Maggot Brain
I've become associated with my take on the Parliament Funkadelic hit song "Maggot Brain". It was a staple of the old Personal Effects shows most often in the encore where I'd shred it like crazy over a repeated chord pattern. While I don't have any video of the old days, I got some of it down while testing effects in 2015. Here's a shred version and a bluesier version...
1997
St Alphonzopalooza - Tea House Art Gallery
In 1997 we hosted a boy from Ireland named Matthew for a summer. We knew Matthew was going to be tall, but at 13 and 6'7" he was a site to behold. Brian Soule and Tom Lanze annually host St Alphonzo's Pancake Breakfast - an event where anyone and everyone from the olden times gathers to have food, drink, fun, and memory reinforcement. For this show, Brian went the distance creating backing tracks for EVERYONE to play along with (a monumental feat!). Anyway, these are the three songs I performed. Matthew was in the audience that night looming head and shoulders above everyone.
PS: If anyone has photos, please send them to me and I'll post them.
1999+
The Official Bob Martin Audio Christmas Card
In 1999, I recorded Mel Torme's "The Christmas Song" and sent it out on a CD as my audio Christmas card. Each year, for the next nine, I'd add another song with the idea that at the end of 10 years I'd have a completed Christmas album. The 10 year point was 2008. I've kept going, adding a new song once every couple or few years. And these days, instead of sending out CDs, I send a link to the site.
Link: The Official Bob Martin Audio Christmas Card.
Get In Touch
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