Time Machine
Published January 25, 2003
Hey, my bud and Cleveland native Chris Butler, former leader-songwriter-guitarist-producer for the Waitresses, Tin Huey member, solo artist, has a hypercool, zeitgeist-humming new CD out called The Museum of Me, wherein he recorded new songs with the ur technology of wax cylinders, wire recorders, and vintage tape, all mixed up with the most modern digital recording in a post-postmodern phantasmagoria. Chris writes:
- The "Oh Brother, Where Art Thou?" movie soundtrack was old tunes recorded with new technology - "The Museum of Me" is new songs recorded with old technology. My CD flips the idea behind that very successful release.
The New York Times recently ran a half-satirical/half-think piece on something they called 'The New Old' = a trend to reissue cool products from the past and the revival of moribund brand names like the new Mini Cooper, Danelectro guitars, Eames furniture, Triumph motorcycles, etc... "The Museum of Me" is part of this trend. If Post-Modernism was a crunching together of the best bits from past designs, The New Old is reproducing a design in its original, 'pure' form... but with modern 'materials'. In "The Museum of Me", the pure 'design' is the signature sound of these antique audio formats... think "new wine in old bottles". If you want to get really theoretical about it, this CD is an exercise in Audio Industrial Design... something I'll define as soon as I can think up a definition!
....I've always been fascinated by the idea of time travel. When I tried my first antique audio recording - "The Bottom of a Workingman's Beer" on a wire recorder I'd found in a flea market - what went in was modern me... but what came out was a 50-year-old sound... it was as if I had transported myself back to the mid-20th Century!
Better still, Chris will be featured tomorrow morning on NPR's Weekend Edition discussing his new disc and the technology that went into it. Be sure to tune in!
- Time Machine
- Published: January 25, 2003
- Type:
- Section: Music
- Filed Under: Music: News, Music: Alternative Rock
- Writer: Eric Olsen
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- Eric Olsen's personal site
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Comments
hi Jim...
i have no doubt that Mr. Burnett used tons of vintage gear recording his tracks. i've never seen a gear list, but cool old mics & preamps - hell, anything w/ a tube in it - is cherished in even the most au courant digital studio. i think my point was more along the lines of doing newly written tunes vs. drawing on the catalog of Depression-era music.
cbutler
A friend of mine, The Evolution Control Commitee, lately of the parish of Columbus, Ohio, has used retro gear, especially stuff found in thrift shops to make make music and did a limited release (actually escape) of eight-track tapes.
Jim...
would be VERY interested in hearing this! please hook me up!
and great that he's using 8-track tapes! i've located a machine that can record in this format, and plan on using it for Volume 2 of the M. of M. project.
cbutler






From what I understand, T Bone Burnett used 30s tek like carbon-ribbon mikes and recording techniques for the soundtrack of "Oh Brother".
However, it is great to hear about people using talent to make records instead of studio magic (don't worry, we'll just fix it in the mix).