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Roger
McGuinn:
High Flying Byrd
Icon,
instrumentalist and innovator, the Grammy-winning James
"Roger" McGuinn has experienced just about everything the
music industry has to offer. From fronting "America's first
super group," the seminal Folk/Rock band The Byrds, to forging
a successful major label solo career, touring with Dylan's
Rolling Thunder Revue, and being inducted into the Rock n Roll Hall
of Fame, McGuinn has successfully sustained his career for over four
decades by experimenting, adapting, and challenging the status quo.
In addition to putting the 12-string
Rickenbacker guitar on the musical map, McGuinn is also credited
with taking acoustic Pop/Rock electric and fathering spin-off
genres such as Acid Rock, Country Rock, and Space Rock as he
experimented with a variety of sounds and sound-processing
technologies such as the Moog synthesizer.
And McGuinn continues to be at the
forefront of the music industry, illustrating where it is heading
and what artists can accomplish on their own. By harnessing the
Internet and personal recording technology, McGuinn created and is
now monetizing his latest self-released album, Limited
Edition.
Eschewing the expense of several
weeks in the studio, his new release ultimately cost him
practically nothing to produce. Only the first track, "If I
Needed Someone" was "professionally" recorded in a
Nashville studio - that track cost $6000 to produce. He recorded
and mixed the remaining 13 tracks at home using a Dell laptop (the
computer was free, offered to him by Dell for his evaluation); Adobe
Audition software, retailing at about $299 and a couple of USB 2.0
hard drives. McGuinn estimates that by using self-recording
technology he saved about $75,000.
Using Adobe Photoshop, McGuinn
designed the package and sent it to Oasis CD Manufacturing
for replication and Digipak packaging.
"It's really democratizing the
way this technology has given musicians the power to record their
own stuff," says McGuinn of tools like Adobe's Audition, which
he began using when it was still called Cool Edit Pro. He's worked
with other recording and mixing software, but says he keeps coming
back to Audition because it's intuitive. "You just clip and
paste, drag and drop, whereas [I find] if you want to do something
with Pro Tools, you have to go through hoops."
McGuinn shrugs off the notion that
music recorded and mixed digitally somehow sounds worse than records
made the "old-fashioned way." "It's really just a
psychological barrier some people think they have," he says.
"They say that if it's recorded on a computer, they can hear
the difference. But they really can't."
Even with the right
equipment at their disposal, not all artists are prepared to work
entirely on their own without the support of experienced studios,
producers and engineers (see the October issue of AtlasPlugged). But for someone with
Roger McGuinn's skills, the entire project was liberating. Not only
did he enjoy playing with the technology, the low production costs
enabled McGuinn to bypass being beholden to a major label record
deal. In fact, he never even shopped Limited Edition
around.
So how does complete control over a
project vs. partnering with a label feel? Comparing this most recent
release with his last major label solo album, 1990's Back from
Rio featuring the talents of Dave Crosby, Chris Hillman, Tom
Petty, Elvis Costello & Dave "Eurythmics" Stewart,
"It's like red vs. black," McGuinn said from a cell phone
as he drove between tour dates with his manager, songwriting partner,
and wife, Camilla. "As in, I was in the red, and now I'm in the
black."
Rio, released on Arista,
is still in the red - nearly 15 years after its release he has yet
to see a profit, Limited Edition, however, took only a
few months to yield results for McGuinn and his own April First
Productions label. He won't say how many copies he's sold, only that
by doing as much as he could on his own, he's making money on the
project by selling it on www.mcguinn.com and
through Amazon, and feels that's enough of a distribution network for
his established fan base.
Instead of paying back a record label
advance for studio time, McGuinn now makes money on every CD he
sells. "It's all gravy now," he says. "Labels can
provide only one thing, and that's hype. They've got the connections
to get you on Leno and Letterman, but you can make as much money,
probably more, doing it yourself."
Promotional support for this release
consists mainly of touring and giving interviews to publications
ranging from Acoustic Guitar, where he talked about his songwriting
process, to USA Today, where he addressed music technology, sounding
more like someone from Silicon Valley than an old Folkie. Disc
replicator Oasis included several of the tracks on OasisSampler CD
compilations that went out to more than 500 radio stations lending
an added promotional boost.
In addition to his love for
technology, McGuinn remains a fervent supporter of traditional Folk
tunes and is on a mission to preserve the music and bring it to a
wider audience. On his Folk Den
web site,
he's posted the lyrics and sheet
music of more than 100 traditional Folk songs that are in the public
domain, as well as MP3 versions of him playing those tunes. McGuinn
says he was inspired to create the Folk Den when he saw that today's
Singer/Songwriters were learning from artists such as himself and
Bob Dylan rather than from the traditional songs that influenced his
early '60s Folk contemporaries. So he began posting the songs,
concerned that they were getting lost in the shuffle. "People
aren't going back to the original material," he says.
"It's like they think Folk music started with Joni
Mitchell."
"I love that music and think
it's great to share it," he continues. "This used to be
how news was transmitted, with troubadours going from town to town.
It's a way to preserve our heritage."
The songs are also a tremendous
resource of wonderful melodies that are in the public domain, he
says, giving songwriters a tool with which to build their
own music. As an example, he points to John Lennon's "Happy Xmas (War
is Over)", which was based on the broadside ballad "The Noble
Skewball" and "Blowin' In The Wind", on which Dylan
wrote his own lyrics to the old spiritual "No More Auction
Block".
McGuinn has licensed the recordings
through Music Sharing Licenses from Creative Commons,
meaning that he owns the copyright to the recordings. Listeners can
download the songs and burn them to CD, as long as they don't sell
copies. If a user wants to use the recording, they can contact
McGuinn via Creative Commons, an organization that helps music and
video artists create a "some rights reserved" alternative
to the "all rights reserved" traditional copyright.
"I just wanted to share the music, and as long as I don't walk
into a Wal-Mart and see it for sale, I don't want access to be
limited," McGuinn says.
Also available at the site is his
2001 Grammy-nominated recording, "Treasures from the Folk
Den", a collection of 18 traditional Folk songs performed by
preeminent musicians of the genre such as Joan Baez, Judy Collins,
Pete Seeger, Odetta and Josh White Jr. Like his recent Limited
Edition release, McGuinn recorded, edited, and mixed the record
himself on his PC, using 64 multi-track software then known as Cool
Edit Pro.
Packing PC, instruments, and
microphones in the car, McGuinn and his wife traveled around the
country recording the artists in their homes.
McGuinn says the Folk Den project has
garnered the interest of musicians as well as educators who use it
as a Folk music resource. Along with the small success of Limited Edition, he says that this recognition of his
work is as gratifying in its own way as the chart success he knew 30
years ago. So does he miss being a pop star?
"Sure, I'd like more
recognition, and I would appreciate a Pop hit, if that were somehow
ever to happen again," he says. "But I'm not willing to
play ball with big corporations to try to get that. There is a
compromise there that I don't want to make."
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