Tuesday, December 18, 2012

A Little Something For Christmas

I'm going to keep this short and sweet. We recorded a few tunes during a rehearsal back in September. One was "Beyond", which we've posted before, and since that turned out pretty decent, I figured I'd put this one out there as a little Christmas gift for those who've supported us through the past year.

The song is called "Awake". It was the first song that we worked up together, at the tail end of the "7th Seal" era. At the time, it was called "Blood" and had a totally different set of lyrics that I just couldn't finish. We played it at the final two 7th Seal shows, and have done it at every Rule 17 show. When we recorded the 3-song demo back in 2009 (the one with Act of Defiance, In the Wake of Fear, and Waste Away), we inexplicably didn't record this one. None of us can really remember why we didn't.

So here it is: Awake


Lyrics:

It's another grey-skied monday morning
It's another day and a deeper rut
Fake fluorescent daylight is burning in my eyes. 
This boring life could drive you nuts. 

Time keeps moving faster, you're here and then you're gone
Life is getting shorter but death lasts just as long

We awake, running headlong into life, we learn the world is ours to take. 
We arise, throwing caution to the wind just to live before we die. 

 A second life is waiting for me
Beyond a painted western sky
Burning through my senses, it stimulates my soul
The body ages but the spirit's never old

I (Travis) take the first solo, Troy takes the second solo. 
Obviously, we decided to throw a couple extra guitar tracks at this one. Why not? 
So there you go - have a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year.
 

Sunday, November 18, 2012

Gig Recap: The Garage

Last night, we did a tripleheader at the Garage Bar in Moorhead. This was our first time at the Garage as a headliner - and actually, our first time as "Rule 17". For those who haven't been there, it's been completely remodeled since back when it was Pistol Pete's. New stage, new PA, new lights, etc. It's nice in there. They cater to a combination of original bands and cover bands, which I would imagine makes for a pretty interesting dynamic night to night, but the flexibility of venues that host original bands is part of what makes multiple band shows like this doable.

First up was Sex Knuckle, who should be familiar to rock fans in the F/M area by now. We've done a few shows with them by this point and will undoubtedly be doing more in the future.  This was probably the best I've heard them collectively play - they were great.

Next up was Phoenix Rising. I've heard the album tracks and the demos, and was pretty impressed, but I had never heard them play live. If you get the chance to see these guys, take it. Hopefully, they can get a few more things set up here on the south side of the state.

We got started some time before midnight, and played around an hour and a half. I obviously can't give an audience level view of it, but everything seemed to go as usual with one difference...
...we had dancers.

I've been in bands where people would come up and dance, and none of them did a Testament cover. In this instance, it was during "Waste Away" - which has to be the hardest thing we do to dance to. It's a gauntlet of tempo changes. It reminds me of a time back when we were known as 7th Seal that a couple danced for about 5 of the 10 minutes that the song "7th Seal" lasted. I guess people love a challenge - and I have to admit the strong urge to chuckle every time I say "thank you dancers".

So, that's the end of Rule 17's headlining gigs through the end of 2012. I'd especially like to thank all of our friends/fans who come out and support us, tell their friends about us and really help us bring people out. In a world where people are increasingly inundated with information, the value of word-of-mouth keeps getting higher, and so for those of you who help us out we'd like to give a big "thank you".  

Monday, November 12, 2012

About the Song: Beyond

Last night, I uploaded a new tune for the first time since 2009. Those of you who have seen us playing over the past year are well aware that we have quite a bit more than 3 songs, but we just hadn’t gotten around to recording them...until September...and that was accidental (kind of).

I’ve mentioned in previous posts about how we used to do the equivalent of “boombox” recordings to get arrangements right. We have a little more accurate system now, which we tested back in Sept. Throw mics on the drums, take lines out of the amps, and there you have it - recording with decent enough quality so you can get a decent grasp of how a tune is. This is something that we intend to work into more of our rehearsals, so we should be able to get a little more sample music out there before we settle in and go for a full-length.

So, without further ado, here’s “Beyond”.

I originally wrote this song back in 1999 or so - it was part of the “lost album” that I’ve mentioned before. I had been thinking back on that period, and figure that of all the tunes, this one fit in best with what we’re playing now. The opening riff was reworked. The chorus and middle section were entirely rewritten. The lyrics are completely different, as are the vocal melody lines. The solo section goes back and forth between Troy and me. As always, it will be interesting to see how these sections develop as we keep working with it live.

Lyrically, the song is about...something. I’m actually not totally clear on what this tune is about. I’ve always dug the lyrics to “Hang ‘em High” by Van Halen, and kind of tried to cop a bit of that vibe on this one.

Some are born in fortune's hand, 
but that was not his fate. 
Everything he has, he had to take

All he owns is on his back.
His hands are leather-hard
This man with nothing has everything in his power. 

Night falls quickly. The dark clouds push the light away. 
Face the cold wind, push on through to day. 

Beyond the dark horizon
Beyond these barren plains
Beyond these fields of lies and empty nights
The world waits a lifetime away

He gazes 'cross the blackened sky
beyond the windswept plain, 
steps outside his shelter into the rain.

A little step to infinity
Another step towards death
He won't avert his eyes or hold his breath


If you figure out what it’s about please let me know. 

Monday, October 29, 2012

November 17th - Maddock People at the Garage Bar

The time has come to start working on promoting our November 17th show at the Garage Bar. This is a pretty easy/fun task this time around, because we actually get to present a little something that we've talked about for a long time.

As I've mentioned in a previous post, bassist Dave Stensland and I (Travis Woyen) grew up in the same area and graduated from Maddock Public School. As one might imagine, we're not the only musicians to come out of there.

Phoenix Rising has really gotten rolling over the past couple years, playing mostly north of here. They've released a debut album, "Revelations", and if I do say so myself there are some pretty great tunes on there. Former Valhalla singer Warren Weston is handling the vocals. Tony Brandvold and Zach Eyl, both of Maddock, handle lead guitar and drums.

You may have heard Sex Knuckle with us at Rick's, or at a lot of other places around town. As I've mentioned before, Chris Ellingson is from Maddock, and singer Samantha Bennefeld is from just down the road (New Rockford). It's also a little-known fact that drummer TR is an honorary member of Rule 17.

So, come on out to the Garage Bar on Saturday, November 17th. You won't be disappointed.

Sunday, September 23, 2012

Weekend Recap

Whew!
This past Friday and Saturday at Rick's were a blast. Between my coughing and Chris' bleeding, we were like a lost episode of ER. Either way, a good time was had by all.


First off, we'd like to thank Sex Knuckle for opening for us. They got a chance to debut some of their original material, which I thought was really cool.

It was pretty fun playing with these guys. It's somewhat known that Dave and I are from the same home town. Sex Knuckle guitarist Chris Ellingson is also from there, and singer Samantha Bennefeld is from a ways down the road. So both nights wound up being a bit of a central North Dakota old home week.


We had the opportunity to debut a couple of new tracks, Beyond and Inversion. They both went over well. Beyond will stay as-is. Inversion suffers the fate of many tunes that I've written, where a lyric idea gets about half done and then runs completely out of steam. So, "Inversion" gets a new name to match the new chorus.

The playing itself went well. I was nursing my way through the tail end of a cold, but all in all it was a good time.

So, from here we get ready for our next show, which is October 20th at the Nestor Tavern in Fargo with Chaos in Question. That'll be a fun one as well, and we haven't played the Nestor in a long time. Keep your ears open for new tunes - looking at a couple that we haven't done before for that show. We're also looking at getting a few basement demos done during our rehearsals, so if stuff comes out decent, we might just throw it out there for public consumption.
Later - Travis








Monday, September 10, 2012

Rick's - two full nights and new songs!

It's been a while since I did a blog update, but I wanted to address our upcoming show at Rick's Bar in Fargo.

The show at Rick's on Sept 21 and 22 are a bit of a milestone for us...not even a bit of a milestone, but a big milestone. This will be our first time since 2006 playing two one-hour sets (which is what we call a "full night"). This will be the first times since 2006 that our band name will be listed by whatever happens to be on the menu for the day.

So, for the occasion, we're introducing 2 new tunes; "Beyond" and "Inversion". Okay, "Beyond" was played at the Shoreham Block Party, but I'd imagine that most who were there won't be at Rick's. Either way, they're new to you and new to us.

It's nice not having the limitation of time, even though we have the 2 hours and JUST the 2 hours. Every show since we started playing again has involved deciding which songs not to play, so it'll be fun to have some of this stuff hit the light of day again.

We're also really excited to have Sex Knuckle doing a special opening set for us. They've been doing really well in the area, and certainly have no need to be doing openers, but they're doing it for us and I think that's pretty cool. They hit the stage at 9:30.

So, come on out to Rick's! It'll be a good time, I promise.

Saturday, August 11, 2012

Shoreham Block Party

Hey everybody,
If you get a chance next Saturday, head on out to the Shoreham block party right by Lake Melissa. There'll be food and entertainment starting at 2pm. Rule 17 starts at 7pm, followed by Relevant (Chris Fritz's other band) and Back For More (my second to last show with them) to close out the night.

The location is right here:


View Larger Map


Basically, take Highway 10 out to Audobon. On the east side of Audobon, turn south on Co. Hwy 15, and take that as far as Randy's Bar on Lake Eunice. Hang left, and follow Co Rd 22 straight to Shoreham.

If you get a chance, head on out. It's obviously a BYOB event, and a donation to help cover the bands and PA always helps too (sound by Hat, so you know it's quality production). There should be space to pitch a tent if you need to stay over.

Monday, July 16, 2012

Jon Lord


Okay, I'll admit that this blog entry is more reflective of my influences than necessarily the other guys in Rule 17. I'm the biggest Deep Purple nut in the bunch, so the passing of Jon Lord bothers me the same way losing any big musical influence bothers you. While I'm trying to avoid putting too much non-band-related stuff in this blog, I have to admit that without Jon Lord, Rule 17 would either not exist or would be musically somewhat different than it is.

Musicians are the products of their influences along with whatever percentage of themselves they bring to the table. Most of us could probably list 20 other musicians who influenced us in some degree within a few minutes. In that sense, the musicians from a previous generation almost have some level of parentage to those of us in the generations that follow.

When one of your influences passes on, it takes a bit out of you. In some ways, it’s more understandable when you look at the shocking and tragic deaths of young musicians, particularly when they seem random like the crashes that killed Ronnie Van Zant, Cliff Burton, and Randy Rhoads; or the senseless shooting of Darrel Abbott. But time rolls on and, I hate to say it, but as we get older so do our heroes.

This was the case with Jon Lord who died of pancreatic cancer at the age of 71. Granted, I’d be hard-pressed to call 71 years a particularly long life, especially in this day and age. But after his retirement from Deep Purple in 2002, and even after his diagnosis, Jon Lord was still making music...and it was good music.

Jon Lord is responsible for giving me a case of “Hammond envy” that has not subsided since I first started actively listening to Deep Purple in the early 1990s. To be honest, I started listening because of Ritchie Blackmore, but it didn’t take long for my attention to turn to the real weight of the band, which was Jon Lord hammering away on a Hammond B or C3 through a distorted Marshall stack. The power of the combination dwarfed most of the distorted guitar sounds of the day. The harmonic content generated by the tonewheels of the Hammond created all sorts of interesting growls and textures, which he would further accentuate with ring modulation, shutting off the drive motor and leaving the amplifier on, which allowed him to “divebomb”, and shaking the Hammond itself to make horrendous “Crashes” of the spring reverb that would place a jarring exclamation point at the end of a jazz or R&B influenced run. In this sense, he was something of a Hendrix of the Hammond.

At the same time, he was a very schooled musician, well versed in the orthodoxy of the classical world. The second Deep Purple lineup is probably the most well-known, although it’s not particularly well known for its earliest output, which was built around Lord’s “Concerto for Group and Orchestra”, which was followed up by “the Gemini Suite”. In fact, prior to the release of “In Rock”, Deep Purple risked being pigeonholed as a quasi-classical sort of prog-rock experiment. Ritchie Blackmore is most often cited as the one who brought classical music into heavy rock, but Jon Lord deserves at least equal credit. Due to the nature of the instrument and his musical background, it wasn’t at all unusual for little bits of Bach to show up in a blistering, 120 decibel keyboard solo.

Of course, Lord’s musical output greatly exceeded his pioneering work in Deep Purple, but that’s definitely the element that drew me in. I can’t honestly say that there’s another modern keyboard player who has had a similar influence on my guitar playing in the sense of composition, phrasing, even tone. Realistically, speaking as a guitarist, the guitar players in classic bands tend to get too much credit for the band’s sound. John Bonham had as much or more to do with Zeppelin being heavy as Jimmy Page. Geezer Butler should get as much credit for the sonic weight of Black Sabbath as Tony Iommi. And Jon Lord added much more weight to the Purple sound than Ritchie Blackmore ever did - even if “going heavy” was Blackmore’s idea in the first place.

So farewell, Jon Lord. He did good work, and even though he wasn’t young, when the good die we very quickly realize how much they still had to offer.

Thursday, July 12, 2012

Upcoming shows

Well, things are moving along quite nicely here in Rule 17 Land. We’re taking a little “summer vacation” for the rest of July and the first part of August, then our schedule of a gig a month starts in August.

On August 18th, we play the Shoreham Block Party, which should be a great time. It’s out by Detroit Lakes, right off the lake - we'll have directions available. It’ll be a nice “end of summer” type of gig. It’s open to the public, so if you want to go just B.Y.O.B. and a few bucks to chip in for paying the bands. Chris’ other band “Relevant” will be playing after Rule 17, and that show will be my final performance with “Back For More”.

Moving into September, we’ll be headlining two nights at Rick’s Bar in Fargo - September 21 and 22. We’re really looking forward to being able to play a whole lot more of our songs, since every show up to this point has been in the one hour range, and we have nearly two hours worth of songs. The extra time, plus the extra night gives us the opportunity to play with song selections and setlists a little bit more so we can offer a different show on Saturday night than on Friday night.

On October 20, we will be playing at the Nestor, which was the site of the final 7th Seal show in 2008.
More details about other bands and whatnot are forthcoming. This will be another full night for us, and once again we look forward to being able to play more new and new-to-us material for everybody.

If you have any ideas for places that you'd like to see us play, just leave a comment below!

Sunday, July 8, 2012

Gig recap: June 30, 2012


So, it's been a week since Rule 17 officially played the last note of our "first" gig. Special thanks go out to everybody who came out to support us, and also to Vindictus for inviting us to play.

So, the last note was played, and it was hot - really hot. The four of us sweatballs hustled to get our stuff off the stage so Vindictus could get rolling, and the thought immediately crossed my mind: this is totally worth it.












Economics being what they are, we probably broke even money-wise that night. We intend to ultimately turn that around somewhat, but the important thing is what the real payoff was. We had a blast, and played pretty well too. Ultimately, that's what keeps you wanting to play music. There's a lot of work involved, and it's easy to get done with a set and wind up thinking, "well, that went okay". Nobody does all that work to wind up with "okay". Nobody writes a song hoping that it'll be "fine". Nobody spends years of their lives practicing an instrument in hopes that their playing is "competent", and nobody spends hours sweating in a humid basement with the desire to play a show that is "good enough". The Rick's show wasn't "good enough", it was just plain fun.


That all being said, we are planning on adding some more dates through the fall. We are finally moving into the position where we will have more material than we need for a given night, and intend to keep adding to that list. As I mentioned in the previous blog posting, there are a lot of new original songs to work up. Further, there are a lot more ideas for fun covers to do than we will ever have time to work up. That means that we will soon be able to offer considerably different sets for different nights. On June 30, we did a 7th Seal-heavy set, with a couple of newer originals and a couple of covers. Other nights, we might play more covers, or we might focus on new originals. Changing it up makes it more fun for the audience and for the band.

After all, if it's not fun, why bother?

Thursday, June 21, 2012

Summertime's here babe, need something to keep you cool...

Well, Summertime will be here by the time we play. That's right, we're actually booking some shows. Thus far, it's June 30 with Vindictus at Rick's Bar and then possibly something in August out at the lakes. Our goal is to be playing once per month in various venues around the area, then pick up a few out-of-town dates once we have our sets solidified.

I know I've mentioned this before, but this lineup hasn't played live since the summer of 2008 - almost 4 years exactly. To the casual observer, it may seem that we pretty much played our last show, wrote and recorded 3 songs, and did little else other than repeatedly change the band name and lineup. A little bit about the writing process was addressed in the previous entry, but the other week local music maven Scot Heinze asked me a question that I'd never been asked before.

"How many songs have you guys written, including the stuff from 7th Seal?" I had to think about it for a few moments. In 7th Seal, we did 9 originals live at various points, 7 of which made the album.

Veracity
Genocide
Dusk
Original Sin
Spitting Lies
Out the Door
7th Seal
Dystopia
Blood on Your Head
(You can hear what studio versions were recorded here: (7th Seal)

I think we did Dystopia a couple of times live before we decided that it either wasn't gelling, or just wasn't a good live tune. It wound up becoming a "parts tune" instead of making the Conspiracies of Thieves album. I might have to revisit that one, because a couple of the riffs were pretty cool.

"Blood On Your Head" became "Awake". It was the first song that we worked up after Chris Fritz joined us, and we played it at the last two 7th Seal shows.

Since then, we added:

Act of Defiance
In the Wake of Fear
Waste Away
Perfect World
Another Life
(You can hear a couple studio versions here: (Rule 17)

These have all been played live in one form or another by all the lineups of "Act of Defiance". It was after this point that we've had to play some catch-up, so the following two have been added; Beyond and Inversion.

We still have to run these two through the final QC processes, so they won't be ready for the 30th. All told, that's 16 songs, with another 9 on the "to be learned" pile.

SO! We're doing an hour on the 30th at Rick's Bar with Vindictus. We're going to play a selection of these tunes (both from the 7th Seal era and after) in a way that we haven't before. Most of the set hasn't been heard since 2008, so it'll be fun to knock the cobwebs off the old tunes.

Hope to see you there!

Monday, May 28, 2012

A Song is Born

I thought it might be interesting to post how a song gets created. Naturally, anybody who writes music has a different method. Heck, I don't do the same thing every time. Some songs almost write themselves. Some just become "parts songs", where you have some neat ideas but they never jell. With us, a song typically starts with a couple of guitar riffs.

Back when I first started writing, I relied on playing a part until it was burned into my memory, or recording it on a 1970s vintage GE tape recorder. Later, I moved on to 4-track tape recording and eventually to using the computer.

The computer has completely revolutionized writing music. In the past, recording consisted of micing up my amp, setting the levels on the track, making a rough plan of which part would be on which track, hooking up a click source, setting the tempo, then actually going through and hitting "Record" and hoping I didn't screw up to the point where what I had initially set out to record was unrecognizable. Roughing out a song arrangement was worse, because you pretty much needed one instrument running through the whole thing so that you could get your cues. The relative ease of computer recording has led to me creating hours of guitar riffs. This is the root from which a lot of songs start, or at least get their parts.

So, here's a guided tour through the creation of the song "Act of Defiance".

This first clip is from the "first" actual rendering of the tune. Parts show up in other demos, but this would get to be a terribly long post if I posted every little bit and piece. The big differences are the lack of "punchy" parts at the beginning and end, the length of the solo sections, an extra harmony section at 2:50 that wound up in the middle section of "Perfect World", and another harmony bit at 4:05. I play both solos, somewhat poorly, just as "placeholders". With the verses, choruses, and extra sections, the original wound up being about 8 minutes long (I trimmed it significantly for this so it'd be easier to listen through).

Act of Defiance Mk 1


The second clip is from the first rehearsal where we worked out the arrangement. Arrangement-wise, this is the first rendering that's pretty much like the eventual demo. The process was fairly extensive, but pretty simple: record, listen, change, lather, rinse, and repeat. You can hear where we dumped the two harmony sections and final verse. One guitar goes off-track at the end, largely due to the number of changes we had made to the last part of the song right before recording this. There are no lyrics. I'm babbling "labba jai, gabba flibberty-doo" and that sort of thing for the duration of it, just to test out vocal rhythms and so we know where the lyrics are supposed to go (that can be tricky when starting with a pile of guitar riffs). Recording was done "Boombox-style" on a Korg Pandora. It's no Dark Side of the Moon, but good enough for arranging.

Act of Defiance - first rehearsal recording


And here's the final "demo" version. When the time comes to do an actual album recording, I can't imagine that there will be many changes - possibly a word or two in the lyrics or a couple notes in the solos.

Act of Defiance - Final Demo


So, take that times however many songs we're doing, and that's more or less how they come together. The most time-consuming part is the second phase, where there's a whole lot of listening and discussion of what works and what doesn't. It's also the most important for ensuring that the final product is as good as we, as a group, can make it.

Saturday, April 14, 2012

Subgenrefication

This blog was originally going to be all about Rule 17. Then I deleted it all and started it over, just so I could rant.

Once upon a time, people got together and started bands. Most bands were assembled to play hit songs for people to dance to. Some people assembled groups of musicians to see what would happen when they wrote original music. Some people had a vision of the type of music that they wanted to do, and hand-picked the right people for the job.

The legendary rock bands of the past and present seem to have been built around a combination of the second and third types. Deep Purple, Led Zeppelin, the Who, Queen, Van Halen, Black Sabbath, Rush, Blue Oyster Cult...the list goes on and on. These bands are all very influential, share a level of internal stylistic similarity, and yet are diverse in their influences and in their output. At the same time, they always sounded like themselves. If you hear a song from any of the aforementioned groups, it takes a matter of moments before you figure out who it is.

Today, particularly in the realm of hard rock and into heavier, more extreme styles, the goal seems to have been to decide very finitely on the direction of the band, then point everybody in that direction. This has been particularly true in the realm of heavy metal, which has fractured into a hodge-podge of subgenres with only a trifling difference between them. You have the "-cores", the various death metal subgenres, the various "regular metal" subgenres, and probably tons more that I'm not aware of.

It started in the 80s as ambitious rock journalists tried to fit handy labels to describe various bands. New adjectives started cropping up. To a degree they were useful, but there wound up being so much overlap that more adjectives started getting added to the mix. I have yet to discover a "Thrash" band that didn't stylistically play something that could be called "Speed Metal", and vice versa. Bands like Possessed and Kreator blurred the lines between extreme "Thrash" and "Death" metal, before the notion of death grunts were totally incorporated. So, "Death Metal" became a style distinct from Thrash, mostly due to the vocal difference (at this point, most Thrash vocalists still sang to varying degrees).

Eventually, you wound up with "Progressive" Thrash Metal, "Technical" Death Metal, and "Power Metal" became a term to describe bands that more or less are like a 20bpm faster version of Iron Maiden with newer amps. "Black Metal" originally meant bands like Mercyful Fate or Venom that sang about the devil a lot. Eventually, it became an aesthetic that was associated with a handful of Norwegian bands from the early 1990s.

From here, we wound up with an incestuous cross-pollination of subgenres, where black metal wound up influencing death metal, and you wound up with "Blackened Death Metal." So, is that Death Metal about the devil, Death Metal played while wearing makeup, or Death Metal played while the singer screeches a bit higher rather than in the more traditional guttural Death Metal delivery? I honestly don't know. If it's the first, then Possessed could just as easily have been a "Blackened Death Metal" band 25 years ago. If it's the second, it's just silly. If it's the third, then I guess we could have called the later period of Death "Technical Progressive Blackened Death Metal." I'd like to add a "-core" to the end, just to make it even more absurd.

It hasn't just hit extreme metal, either. "Doom", "Stoner", "Groove", and other terms have been used to the point of complete meaninglessness. I've mentioned how silly I think the term "Power Metal" is, and adding the word "Progressive" only makes it worse. We can pretty much drop the term "Progressive" from any band that we already say plays "Metal", because all of the originators of the "Metal" style came from the same scene that gave birth to Progressive Rock (Purple, Zeppelin, Sabbath), or were influenced by Progressive Rock (Priest, Maiden). I think it would be more appropriate to refer to ultra-simple metal as "Regressive Metal", since that would be the exception to the norm anyway.

So, what does this have to do with Rule 17? Those of you who have been listening to the 3-song demo that the 4 of us made have been hearing the result of 4 different people interpreting the same basic tune. I wrote the basis of all of the songs that we do (same as with the 7th Seal album for the most part). But, I don't decide how the drums go. I don't hammer out exactly how the bass lines should go. I don't dictate how the arrangement should go. Troy and I work out the guitar parts in the way that they seem to work best. I write guitar parts and lyrics and then as a band we work out how it should flow, how it should sound, where it should be punchy, and where it should lay back.

Going back to the beginning of this blog, my ideal is that Rule 17 is four guys heading in roughly the same musical direction - a combination of type 2 and type 3. I have no desire to play "Bla-bla-bla-metal". In a lot of ways, I identify more with Lemmy when he says "We're Motorhead, and we play Rock n' Roll".