Machinists! Good afternoon/morning/evening — wherever you are. How’s this thing, this newsletter blog thing, going so far? What parts it do you like best? Anything you’d like to see more of? Let me know in the comments!
Thanks for the feedback, everyone! More Intentional Listening exercises to come -- and I will do a Q&A soon (maybe early next week?). Studio tour as well! I might experiment with a show check-in thread-- I've got a solo show this Saturday and could use some setlist help :)
A cool idea for a show day post could be something like an hourly run down of what a show day entails. Im thinking-- day of routines, superstitious rituals , sound check, that glamours backstage life, last thing you check before hitting the stage. Really could bring us into what a show day feels like.
Everything about this is super fun. I'm particularly loving the veil pulled back on familiar and unheard songs. Your process to songwriting and song-loving is fascinating.
I really appreciated the active listening exercise. You're right - you can glean so much more from the music when you really try to pick out the minutiae.
I'm really enjoying hearing previously unreleased songs, or songs that were played for specific sets that we as a collective group may not have heard before. I really loved Bring On the Dancing Horses/Crane Wife 3.
I joined to hear what you had to say about lyric writing and storytelling. I love the music you make, but I'm not a musician and can't really put your insights on that to work. On the other hand, your style, subject matters and themes as a lyricist/storyteller appeal to and resonate with me and your thoughts there might, who knows, inspire or otherwise help me in my creative writing efforts. So, to the extent you can talk about lyric writing and storytelling, then, I will be gratified. Thank you.
A favorite booklist, inspiration for your vocabulary/love of words, favorite historical events (for inspiration). I found.The Decemberists through my love of reading and history and can't get enough.
Everything's great so far! It's super cool to see you pull off the clock's face and point out all the gears and levers, all their scratches and divots, and the inscriptions of the names of those who crafted them. Particularly enjoy the annotated lyrics!
It's so much fun! I sometimes tire quickly of related emails that come every few days, but I remain so excited for these. I love learning more about familiar Decemberists stuff, and I really appreciated the walkthrough of Kanga Roo - a song I keep listening to and talking about!
Really appreciate the breadth and diversity of the content you're posting here...I've been working on Lake Song, and really enjoy the active listening and song annotations...this has been a wonderful surprise...
Very enjoyable. Would love to hear more inside stories- road stories, tell us about your crew, how the band managed through COVID, off the wall recording studio stories, that one time when the band went "Really??" at one of your proposed lyrics - stuff like that.
I'm a co-founder of a NFP art center in the Chicago 'burbs. Two galleries, 26 studios, classes and outreach. In addition to our formal mission, I always said we were about "demystifying the creative process". I am still on that quest. Thanks for helping me along on that journey.
Years ago, I read a little book you wrote about The Replacements’ Let It Be. I really enjoyed your writing about music, and the way you wove in memories from your adolescence.
Have enjoyed everything so far and the variety is what keeps things interesting. Favourite bit so far though was the Kanga Roo tribute/walkthrough. Most artists I love have been introduced to me by other artists I love so always keen to hear who has inspired you and who you're listening to now.
Sort of figured this would be a twice-monthly deal, so I've been shocked at the amount of content shared so far. I wonder how deep this rabbit hole will go. Will we be getting an esoteric deep dive into a Happy Cactus song and how it evolved into a Decemberists song years later? A version of that song from instagram live that I still sometimes have stuck in my head ("bear with me, I might need some symmetry sometime" I think the words were)? When the tour starts will we be getting weird missives involving boardgames?
I’d thought this was going to be some kind of pyramid scheme where you goaded us into selling meals that could be served after having been boiled in plastic bags or something…it’s not so, I’m disappointed on that front but what I did LOVE was other peoples’ music - Echo into Crane Wife 3 I listened to ~100 times. Love that stuff 👏
I am blown away by how much has been shared so far. I was really only expecting a few things a month. The tidbits you’ve shared have more than tickled my interest for backstory.
I love to hear about the process. What inspired the lyrics/chords. What did you bring to the band and what did they add? What parts came easily and which took a lot of work? If you have demos to share, that's always fun. Loving the series!
I'm in a similar group on fb and we make collaborative playlists - it's given me loads of new music to chew on. 'Current earworm' lists are great, esp when each person only adds one song.
I'm all about the "behind the scenes" as to your lyrics; the inspiration, where you were in time, etc.. I've always felt that your songs are each short stories...gaining insight into your headspace feels very intimate. Thank you so much for sharing.
Thanks for the reply Colin. That's too bad. Would be great to have them in the collection, but I understand. Also, wanted to tell you that my 4-year-old, Henry, has really taken a shine to 'The Mariner's Revenge Song'. We have watched a few of the live performances of this song on YouTube, which he absolutely adores. He loves seeing the changes in the whale for that song. He also keeps asking when The Decemberists are going to come back to Calgary so he can see the band play the song love.
Very much enjoying this content! The annotated lyrics, demos, and unreleased tracks are especially intriguing!
I've got a question: As a fan of the Wildwood series, I was incredibly excited to hear of Laika's upcoming adaptation. Are you able to tell us if you will be involved, either in the written screen adaptation or contributing to the soundtrack?
The annotated Leslie Anne Levine was a great little read. It'd be awesome to see more of those.
It might also be cool to talk about storytelling through music. A lot of your music is narrative-driven, and it'd be interesting to hear about your process for songs like "Rusalka, Rusalka", "The Island", or The Hazards of Love.
Loving everything so far! My favourite post so far was the Annotated Songs for Leslie Anne Levine. (For some reason, there was no email announcement about that post. I assume that's why its numbers are so low, please don't let that dissuade you from doing more of those!)
Hi, just trying to catch up on your posts. I love the covers, your storytelling, but most of all your singing. Thank you btw for doing an outdoor concert this year. I canceled all of my concerts due to chemo except yours at Edgefield.
Love the annotated songs and will never tire of hearing the stories behind them. It’s fascinating. Your writing has had such a big impact on mine and I imagine so many others on this journey. Any way you can take us behind the scenes will be amazing. 🙌🏼
It's all been great. Cool in depth look into your work/life. The only thing I could ask for, would be more song tutorials. I would have never figured out Lake Song had you not made that instagram video, and it would be thrilling to learn anything/everything you have to offer.
Coming back after enjoying a weekend of cooking to Bring On the Dancing Horses inspired playlists - loving the music recommendations! Also that song is impossible to get out of your head.
You released only on EP a track called "E. Watson" -- and it has become one of my favorite pieces you've ever created. I went so far as to get a copy of "The Story of Chokoloskee Bay Country" which I believe may have inspired the song, but I'd love if you could share any other background about the piece. Thank you!
Really enjoying the content so far! It's nice to feel connected with other fans as well - none of my friends are interested in the Decemberists (despite my best efforts) so I often feel like I'm listening in a bit of a vacuum. I'm a 21 year old student in the UK, and came across the Decemberists when I randomly stumbled on a YouTube cover of Rox in the Box - a rather roundabout route! Very rapidly became one of my favourite bands (along with the equally wonderful Michigan-based Crane Wives, named after the Decemberists album). I hope to be able to see a live performance one day...
Oh - and I was so thrilled to say the Lake Song tutorial. I've been attempting to teach myself the guitar for a while now (without much success), and I think having an authoratative version of one of my favourite songs to work towards will provide some much-needed inspiration!
I really enjoyed reading about the story behind Don’t Carry it All. In general, when I listen to your work, especially the first time, I associate the storytelling with moments and feelings in my life. Being able to learn more about them later on is an added bonus because now the song’s meaning has expanded for me (or any listener). And I’m also a nerd and love geeking out over the details! Can’t wait to read more!
The mix has been great - photos, recordings, video - love it! My favorite was the footnotes on song lyrics because it was so richly packed with little tidbits of new information. The sound quality of the recordings is really good. Vibe is pretty energetic, it seems like this was the product of a bolt of inspiration and you're just going with it, and people seem to dig it.
I love everything about this. I have been eagerly checking for posts. My favorite so far is probably the mindful listening of Kanga Roo. I appreciate your insights and storytelling so much. But of course I love listening to the unreleased songs and such. I am looking forward to more tutorials, though I am hoping future tutorials can zoom in on your hands a bit more and maybe give some more basic pointers. I am very novice and self-taught/teaching in guitar playing. Anyway, now I expect i will also randomly randomly think about "that damn cowbell" every now and then...
Thanks for the feedback, everyone! More Intentional Listening exercises to come -- and I will do a Q&A soon (maybe early next week?). Studio tour as well! I might experiment with a show check-in thread-- I've got a solo show this Saturday and could use some setlist help :)
A cool idea for a show day post could be something like an hourly run down of what a show day entails. Im thinking-- day of routines, superstitious rituals , sound check, that glamours backstage life, last thing you check before hitting the stage. Really could bring us into what a show day feels like.
I was thinking a tour of your home studio would be cool. Showing us your guitar, amp, equipment collection
Seconded, anything that shows us more about where some of these tunes are made would be super cool.
Everything about this is super fun. I'm particularly loving the veil pulled back on familiar and unheard songs. Your process to songwriting and song-loving is fascinating.
Loooove the annotated lyrics!
I really appreciated the active listening exercise. You're right - you can glean so much more from the music when you really try to pick out the minutiae.
I'm really enjoying hearing previously unreleased songs, or songs that were played for specific sets that we as a collective group may not have heard before. I really loved Bring On the Dancing Horses/Crane Wife 3.
I joined to hear what you had to say about lyric writing and storytelling. I love the music you make, but I'm not a musician and can't really put your insights on that to work. On the other hand, your style, subject matters and themes as a lyricist/storyteller appeal to and resonate with me and your thoughts there might, who knows, inspire or otherwise help me in my creative writing efforts. So, to the extent you can talk about lyric writing and storytelling, then, I will be gratified. Thank you.
A favorite booklist, inspiration for your vocabulary/love of words, favorite historical events (for inspiration). I found.The Decemberists through my love of reading and history and can't get enough.
Everything's great so far! It's super cool to see you pull off the clock's face and point out all the gears and levers, all their scratches and divots, and the inscriptions of the names of those who crafted them. Particularly enjoy the annotated lyrics!
It's so much fun! I sometimes tire quickly of related emails that come every few days, but I remain so excited for these. I love learning more about familiar Decemberists stuff, and I really appreciated the walkthrough of Kanga Roo - a song I keep listening to and talking about!
Really appreciate the breadth and diversity of the content you're posting here...I've been working on Lake Song, and really enjoy the active listening and song annotations...this has been a wonderful surprise...
Very enjoyable. Would love to hear more inside stories- road stories, tell us about your crew, how the band managed through COVID, off the wall recording studio stories, that one time when the band went "Really??" at one of your proposed lyrics - stuff like that.
I'm a co-founder of a NFP art center in the Chicago 'burbs. Two galleries, 26 studios, classes and outreach. In addition to our formal mission, I always said we were about "demystifying the creative process". I am still on that quest. Thanks for helping me along on that journey.
I think a video lesson on the subtle nuances of playing bazooki would be great!
Demonstration Tapes and Lost Songs are really fascinating. I really love this new community and whatever you decide to share with us.
I loved the focused listening post.
Years ago, I read a little book you wrote about The Replacements’ Let It Be. I really enjoyed your writing about music, and the way you wove in memories from your adolescence.
Have enjoyed everything so far and the variety is what keeps things interesting. Favourite bit so far though was the Kanga Roo tribute/walkthrough. Most artists I love have been introduced to me by other artists I love so always keen to hear who has inspired you and who you're listening to now.
Sort of figured this would be a twice-monthly deal, so I've been shocked at the amount of content shared so far. I wonder how deep this rabbit hole will go. Will we be getting an esoteric deep dive into a Happy Cactus song and how it evolved into a Decemberists song years later? A version of that song from instagram live that I still sometimes have stuck in my head ("bear with me, I might need some symmetry sometime" I think the words were)? When the tour starts will we be getting weird missives involving boardgames?
I assume it'll be fun regardless.
I’d thought this was going to be some kind of pyramid scheme where you goaded us into selling meals that could be served after having been boiled in plastic bags or something…it’s not so, I’m disappointed on that front but what I did LOVE was other peoples’ music - Echo into Crane Wife 3 I listened to ~100 times. Love that stuff 👏
Loving the exclusive music content!
I am blown away by how much has been shared so far. I was really only expecting a few things a month. The tidbits you’ve shared have more than tickled my interest for backstory.
I love to hear about the process. What inspired the lyrics/chords. What did you bring to the band and what did they add? What parts came easily and which took a lot of work? If you have demos to share, that's always fun. Loving the series!
Really loved the Lake Song walkthrough! Thats a song that the tabs online can never get right and it was nice to hear it direct from the source
Ditto.
I’d love a “mixtape” like a list we can put together ourselves on whatever music app/media we listen on.
I'm in a similar group on fb and we make collaborative playlists - it's given me loads of new music to chew on. 'Current earworm' lists are great, esp when each person only adds one song.
Best thing hitting my inbox.
Agreed!
I'm all about the "behind the scenes" as to your lyrics; the inspiration, where you were in time, etc.. I've always felt that your songs are each short stories...gaining insight into your headspace feels very intimate. Thank you so much for sharing.
That fucking crazy ass cowbell
Haha, I’ve listened so many times!
Truly bizarre and enlightening.
really loving this relatively new way to work out a bond between the artist and the fans...pretty much a bard-ish way! hugs from Italy
The ability to download the songs would be lovely.
I don't think that's a feature available on substack; and besides, I kinda like that they'll just live in the Machine Shop
Thanks for the reply Colin. That's too bad. Would be great to have them in the collection, but I understand. Also, wanted to tell you that my 4-year-old, Henry, has really taken a shine to 'The Mariner's Revenge Song'. We have watched a few of the live performances of this song on YouTube, which he absolutely adores. He loves seeing the changes in the whale for that song. He also keeps asking when The Decemberists are going to come back to Calgary so he can see the band play the song love.
Calgary: no plans yet, but in time...
As a well travelled musician, would love to hear your thoughts on great touring locations/audiences/national differences.
Very much enjoying this content! The annotated lyrics, demos, and unreleased tracks are especially intriguing!
I've got a question: As a fan of the Wildwood series, I was incredibly excited to hear of Laika's upcoming adaptation. Are you able to tell us if you will be involved, either in the written screen adaptation or contributing to the soundtrack?
I think a Common Room: Q&A may be in order -- maybe later this week...
The annotated Leslie Anne Levine was a great little read. It'd be awesome to see more of those.
It might also be cool to talk about storytelling through music. A lot of your music is narrative-driven, and it'd be interesting to hear about your process for songs like "Rusalka, Rusalka", "The Island", or The Hazards of Love.
Loving everything so far! My favourite post so far was the Annotated Songs for Leslie Anne Levine. (For some reason, there was no email announcement about that post. I assume that's why its numbers are so low, please don't let that dissuade you from doing more of those!)
weird! I wonder why that happened -- maybe I'll re-send
Hi, just trying to catch up on your posts. I love the covers, your storytelling, but most of all your singing. Thank you btw for doing an outdoor concert this year. I canceled all of my concerts due to chemo except yours at Edgefield.
Love the annotated songs and will never tire of hearing the stories behind them. It’s fascinating. Your writing has had such a big impact on mine and I imagine so many others on this journey. Any way you can take us behind the scenes will be amazing. 🙌🏼
It's all been great. Cool in depth look into your work/life. The only thing I could ask for, would be more song tutorials. I would have never figured out Lake Song had you not made that instagram video, and it would be thrilling to learn anything/everything you have to offer.
Coming back after enjoying a weekend of cooking to Bring On the Dancing Horses inspired playlists - loving the music recommendations! Also that song is impossible to get out of your head.
My most favorite pieces: Annotated song and the Intentional Listening!
I love everything I’m seeing here thus far -- peeks into books, music, and inspiration-- keep it going!
more handwritten lyrics? more Carson-art inspired by or that inspired your art?
But really, no, you're grand. We're enthralled with any sharing. Food for thoughts and souls.
This is so fantastic! Finally a place where I can ask: what the hell is a Superman trumpet?
You released only on EP a track called "E. Watson" -- and it has become one of my favorite pieces you've ever created. I went so far as to get a copy of "The Story of Chokoloskee Bay Country" which I believe may have inspired the song, but I'd love if you could share any other background about the piece. Thank you!
Really enjoying the content so far! It's nice to feel connected with other fans as well - none of my friends are interested in the Decemberists (despite my best efforts) so I often feel like I'm listening in a bit of a vacuum. I'm a 21 year old student in the UK, and came across the Decemberists when I randomly stumbled on a YouTube cover of Rox in the Box - a rather roundabout route! Very rapidly became one of my favourite bands (along with the equally wonderful Michigan-based Crane Wives, named after the Decemberists album). I hope to be able to see a live performance one day...
Oh - and I was so thrilled to say the Lake Song tutorial. I've been attempting to teach myself the guitar for a while now (without much success), and I think having an authoratative version of one of my favourite songs to work towards will provide some much-needed inspiration!
I just started so I am still getting a feel of the site and your postings. Like the heading a lot.
I really enjoyed reading about the story behind Don’t Carry it All. In general, when I listen to your work, especially the first time, I associate the storytelling with moments and feelings in my life. Being able to learn more about them later on is an added bonus because now the song’s meaning has expanded for me (or any listener). And I’m also a nerd and love geeking out over the details! Can’t wait to read more!
I'm loving this, always like the guitar tutorials. It's all good! Thank you so much for doing this Colin!
The mix has been great - photos, recordings, video - love it! My favorite was the footnotes on song lyrics because it was so richly packed with little tidbits of new information. The sound quality of the recordings is really good. Vibe is pretty energetic, it seems like this was the product of a bolt of inspiration and you're just going with it, and people seem to dig it.
Definitely song origins and links to other tracks.
I'm enjoying it quite a bit though I am brimming with questions about your songwriting processes.
I love everything about this. I have been eagerly checking for posts. My favorite so far is probably the mindful listening of Kanga Roo. I appreciate your insights and storytelling so much. But of course I love listening to the unreleased songs and such. I am looking forward to more tutorials, though I am hoping future tutorials can zoom in on your hands a bit more and maybe give some more basic pointers. I am very novice and self-taught/teaching in guitar playing. Anyway, now I expect i will also randomly randomly think about "that damn cowbell" every now and then...