Thursday, September 9, 2010

TA-80: Still Recording....

This is the actual beer (in the actual white-trash beer cozy) that I actually just cracked open, right now, and am actually drinking as I, in all actuality, type this post. Really? Yup!

I figured it was about time for another recording update. Last time I posted, I really just did a build up so that I could leave myself time and stories to fill up the space until the album is finished. I waaaaaaaaaaaayyyy underestimated our work ethic and stamina when it comes to recording. And at that, I have to immediately derail this into talk of work ethic.

I've been told by people that I look up to as working musicians that TA-80's work ethic is something to be admired. I have no other response, every time I hear this, other than to laugh it off. Let me break down this band for you. I, Amy 80, dropped out of college and either quit or get fired (or laid off) from every job I get; Jens 80 dropped out of college and either quits or gets fired (or laid off) from every job he gets; Jamin 80 dropped out of college and actually does really well as a worker bee (if it wasn't for his dead-beat, drifter of a wife, Amy...); Klae 80 dropped out of high school and gets fired or quits, etc. from every job; Russ 80 dropped out of college, was on his way to getting fired and/or quitting every job he got until he got his new, fancy-schmancy job that he has now. He's easily the most responsible of us all, and I'm sorry Russ, but that's not really saying much. Aside from Russ and his insane computer knowledge, the only thing that any of us are good at is being in a band. Not even a band, but this band. We've all been in other bands that did absolutely nothing. But when we get together and write songs and make music, something clicks and we all want to put in 200%. It's not because anyone is pressuring us or anything. This is what we're good at. We figured out what we're good at, and amazingly enough, we all happen to enjoy it just as much so it leads into us doing pretty good work, really fast. I guess that's work ethic. I call it having a good time.

So let me tell you a little bit about this album. Right now, we're planning on it being 13 songs. We don't have a track listing made yet because we haven't finished recording. I know that in this age of digital music, a lot of people wouldn't think of the song order as being relevant but TA-80 does. We don't think you have to listen to the songs in order to enjoy them, and by all means, if you can find free downloads, go to town...But, if you happen to listen to a full copy of our album and get to hear the way we lay it out, I sincerely hope it adds something to the overall experience, because that's definitely something we're going for. We're all fans of albums, not just single tracks. It's good stuff. I hope that doesn't totally get lost.

The track listing, as it appears right now (and in no particular order) is:

1. Trading Diamonds for Dominoes
2. Brandy and Boardgames
3. Bury You
4. Seasons in the Slum
5. I Don't Wanna Think
6. Losing Time
7. Desperation Moonlanding
8. I Don't Wanna Start
9. Gates of Steel
10. The Only Man Conway Twitty Every Loved
11. Suicide Doesn't Go With My Shoes
12. Too Long, Too Slow

Okay, I know there are more, but for the life of me, and can't remember them right now. Some of these are not the real titles, also. "I Don't Wanna Think", "I Don't Wanna Start", and "Too Long, Too Slow" will be changed. Those are the songs that don't have lyrics written yet. Or if they do, I haven't heard them. Jamin writes the majority of the lyrics so we don't really hear them until he records a demo. Then I listen to that demo (and no one else) and do a new demo with my voice. Jamin doesn't like his voice and usually doesn't want people to hear him try to sing. It's not as bad as he thinks but whatever...We all have our quirks.

We have 8 songs that are almost completely done right now, including punch-ups and vocals. We've all decided that our goal is to have all recording done by Halloween and start mixing after that. From there, we want to have everything ready for mastering by December so we can schedule a January release. Get ready Johnny Love!! We have shit coming your way! (Johnny is our AMAZING mastering guy.)

That's about all I have for you all for now. I'm going to work on some super rough mixes and get them up online for some very exclusive sneak previews. I am only going to give the link out to people that directly ask for it. In case you want it and are reading this now, just send me an email at amyta801 at aol.com and I'll send you the link when it's available. It might not be for another week or so, so don't hold yer breath or anything.

xoxo -

Amy 80

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

A Break From What You're Used To...


For any of you faithful readers out there, you may have noticed that all has been quiet on the TA-80 front for a while now. Hopefully you know, from our posts thus far, that that means we've been busy little working bees. Yes, it's true...TA-80 is back in the studio. It may seem surprising since it took a whopping 5 years for an album to come out after "Junk Car Grand Prix" but the truth is, we work and record constantly. Whether or not we get to actually enjoy the fruits of our labor is always up in the air but with this new and most recent endeavor, I'm feeling confident that we're building up to the most impressive TA-80 release this world has seen yet.

The big plan is that we will switch over this blog to become a recording blog. We want you to experience the recording of this album along with us. In order to do that I feel I need to start from the beginning.


I know. But this is the way it goes.

The demos for this album started several months ago. Actually, they pretty much began right after we got off of our U.S. tour with the amazing bands, The Queers and The Leftovers. The tour didn't go the way we expected and we left the whole ordeal knowing one thing for certain: We had to do what we felt (really felt) was right and keep working no matter what happened. It was the only way for us to continue as a band. That tour was a very hard test for us and at first glance, we failed miserably. However, if you take a closer, a longer look, you can see that we fell hard and came back even stronger. We were detrimentally naive and crushingly inexperienced but we have always learned fast and we took our short tour in as the biggest learning experience of our lives.

Our tour ended in Phoenix, AZ and we moved into an apartment complex across the street from our last show. We were flat broke, homeless, unemployed and the band was as close to being over as I've ever seen it. We were at our lowest point. I really wondered if we could actually pull ourselves back together. It was so bad that everyone was donating plasma twice a week just for enough money to buy some bread to eat and cigarettes to smoke. The cigarettes were unnecessary if you ask my mom, but with the stress that I and everyone else in the band was under, it wasn't even an option. If I could've been drinking a fifth of vodka a day at this point, I would've been drowning. I can't stress enough how not good the situation was. The only thing I had...the only thing any of us had, was our determination to not EVER make the same mistakes again. This is still our drive.



So, with that unhappy scenario, let me bring you into the most amazing and wonderful world of the new album, TA-80: Will Bury You. This album will feature Russ 80 on drums and vocals; Jens 80 on rhythm guitar and vocals; Klae 80 on lead guitar and vocals; Jamin 80 on keyboards, programming and vocals; and Amy 80 on bass and vocals. The album will be recorded and mixed by TA-80 and recorded at the (for now) official studio of Phat Phorty Records. One song will feature a steel guitarist, though we haven't hired that person yet. I'm sure they will be amazing because, at this point, we won't settle for much less.

We've been busting our asses on this album so far. We already have all the drums and bass done. We started recording guitars a couple days ago and only have about 6 more songs to completely finish before we can leave guitars behind and move onto vocals, keyboard and overdubs. Overdubs usually involve another instrument (or vocals) that has already been recorded but needs some punching up. So far, nothing needs any punching up, which is incredibly exciting for me, as one of the main engineers for this album.

My main goal is to get a sound that's near perfect with the initial recording so that I don't have to do any punch ins or anything. It's hard to do and near impossible if you don't have great musicians to work with. Luckily, I have phenomenal musicians to work with. I can't wait to give all of you readers a sneak preview of the album. You're going to get it. Just keep reading and in one of these upcoming posts, there will be a link to a site that will be exclusively streaming some of the new songs.

We have hardcore, country, folk, punk, pop, rock and all the genres that come in between, on this new album. I've included a few random pictures from our sessions so far. Unfortunately, Russ 80 is missing from these. We captured a lot of his input for this album in a video recording we did during a practice at his house down in Tucson. Russ is a huge part of this album and his lack of pictures should not ever make anyone think he wasn't around. He is there from beginning to end, as always, and will be on this album too. And he'll also be having a beautiful baby with his beautiful wife during the recording of this album. It's a busy time for all of us.

I hope this whets your palates enough for the time being. We all have a 3 day weekend coming up and will be getting shit-tons of recording done. I'm hoping that I'll be able to share some music with you by Monday night. If not, I'll for sure have more stories and pictures.






xoxoxoxoxo ~

Amy 80


Wednesday, August 11, 2010

TA-80: Angry Young Computer e.p.

Angry Young Computer





"Angry Young Computer" is the 11th TA-80 release. It is a 4 song e.p recorded in Russ' laundry room studio and was released in an extermely limited 20 or so copies, that were only given to close friends and family members, in December of 2008.

This was shortly after Melissa 80 left the band and Russ returned as drummer, and aong with me, Amy and Jens, I referred to this at the time as the "All-Star Line-up." We were all finally on roughly the same page and we all fully understood TA-80.

The first track on the e.p was a song I had just recetly written on a break while I worked at Citibank, called "Late Night Breakdown." This song appeared later in a slighlty different version on the "Born Insecure" l.p. This is one of my favorite TA-80 songs. It has a late 50's - early 60's feel that's fairly common in pop-punk, but is something we actually don't do very often (except for maybe "Stop the Clock" on this same e.p.). But this version is very much still a work in process.

The remaining three tracks are from an abandoned(?) project called "Weekly World News of the World", which was basically going to be an album of new recordings of our old material. The thing about our old albums is that the songs aren't necessarily always bad but the recordings and performances often were, and we had played alot of these countless times live over the years, so we thought we'd revisit about 13 or so of them. All in all we only finished five.

"Never Forget" was a live favorite from "Junk Car Grand Prix" that was plagued by the shittiest drum sound ever put to tape. This new version is cracking though.

"Stop the Clock" was a re-recording of an old "Hepatitus Bees" song me and Russ wrote back in the day about a particularly boring trip to the mall to buy socks. It's great fun though, and I love Jens' "Heathcliff" vocal at the end.

"Warm Kites" is a frantic, high speed revision of the "Junk Car Grand Prix" song, which usually gives us a reason to freak out during our live shows. I originally wrote this for me and Jens' side project "Admiral Fantasticus & the Zodiac Shower Curtain", which was devoted to bizzarro music that would never fit on a TA-80 record, but Amy wanted to use this paticular one for TA-80, and we still play it live quite often.

We are actually planning on re-issuing this e.p along with a few more rare and unreleased tracks in the very near future. I love the cover for this record. It was basically a collage made out of an old Starlog magazine and a book of 60's magazine ads. Like I said, only about 20 were given out, but I still have a big pile of these lying around but they're not mastered and we've remixed this substantially since the original release, so the re-release should be pretty cool.

Track Listing:

1. Late Night Breakdown
2. Never Forget
3. Stop the Clock
4. Warm Kites

Note: we've actually played all of these live.

- Jamin 80

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This E.P. opens with a track from our (then) upcoming album, "Born Insecure". It's still one of my favorite tracks from that album. This is a slightly different recording than the one that appears on "Born Insecure." For one, this one is definitely not mastered. It also has a completely different lead vocal part (notice how bored I sound? I fixed that later...) This version is also severely lacking backing vocals. It wasn't finished but we knew it was good and decided to let everyone hear what our new rough mixes sounded like.

As for the older, re-recordings of songs on this E.P., well....We have much better recordings now and we're going to reissue this E.P. and get everything mastered, so when anyone reading this finally hears the E.P., it should sound pretty damn good. However, the original release of this was rough, to say the least. But it was the most amazing release we had put out. Even in its roughest stage (the original release) it was a million light years ahead of "Junk Car" or anything on "Atari." This was when Russ came back into the band and we re-entered the studio with full-fucking-force.

We got back together with Russ and it instantly felt better and sounded better than anything we had ever done. This was the first time the line-up included Jamin, Jens, Russ and myself. Maybe it all comes down to the right timing, but something about Russ coming back at that exact moment seems like something more than just a happy coincidence. Maybe not. It just worked really well and I'm still excited over it.

"Stop The Clock" was an old song of Russ' that he recorded with his old band, The Hepatitis Bee's. This side project included Russ, Jamin and a bassist named Mike Parker. There is an old split that Phat Phorty put out with the Hepatitis Bee's and Rainy Day Schedule. I'm sure there will be more on that later...

"Never Forget" was pretty old at this point but we had never gotten (what we considered) a good recording of the song. We decided to try it one last time with this new, seemingly unstoppable line-up. That did the trick. I had to completely redo the vocals. The original release of this had some pretty rough vocals that I did in the midst of being almost deathly ill for 2 months. I went back and resang them several months later and they came out great. We finally did this song some justice. I've always felt like this is my best pop-punk song. Apart from the vocals on the pre-chorus, I wrote everything on this song and I'm damn proud of it. It's only a tiny bit pretentious. Not bad!

"Warm Kites" was always one of my favorite songs off of "Junk Car" and especially one of my favorites to perform live. The version that appears on "Junk Car" had a long, ridiculous bass solo/outro that I've always been embarrassed of. As soon as we started to practice it in our live set, I insisted that we come up with a better, punchier ending. The result, I believe, was completely Jens' idea. It's always nice having a punk rock band that is comprised of people who have spent their lives listening to and picking apart some of the most awesome punk rock out there. As soon as I said, "Let's punch it up," Jens simply held the notes of the pre-chorus a couple extra beats and we came up with a nice vocal harmony outro that nailed in the hook. Everyone always either calls this song "Breaker, Breaker" or "911". Either is fine. But the actual name is "Warm Kites" and it does say the title in the song. Twice.

- Amy 80

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Recordings...yea, put that..pretty good...

- Klae 80

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I like this, the re-recordings were good...I liked the new stuff. The cover was really funny.

- Jens 80

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Monday, August 9, 2010

TA-80: Atari Du Cirque

Atari Du Cirque



"Atari Du Cirque" is the 10th TA-80 release. It is a compilation of mostly pre-released material, however there are 6 never-before-released songs. It was released on August 1st, 2007.

There are 2 songs from "Are Go!", 6 from "Junk Car Grand Prix", 3 from "4", "Peppermint Girl" comes from the "God Save the Queers" compilation, and the "Think Tomorrow" single.

About the previously unreleased tracks:

"Small Moments" was recorded in the same 2005 sessions that yielded the "Think Tomorrow" single, it was recorded in the Basement studios with Randy Curtis and at the time we were in=between drummers so for the first time since "80-83" Amy 80 plays drums on a song. Amy also plays bass, I did keyboards and Jens 80 played guitar. I like this version a lot better than the one on "Are Go!", although my old D.C band-mate, J.J., claims the original version is better (he would also be completely wrong). We actually re-recorded this song a 3rd time in 2008 for the abandoned (?) "Weekly World News of the World" L.P. However we'll probably re-release that in the near-future along with "Angry Young Computer" (more on those later). I think this is the first full-fledged TA-80 song Jens plays guitar on.

"It's Always One Step Away" was recorded in 2006 in a one-off session with a producer named Eric (I totally forgot his last name) who was yet another producer trying to turn TA-80 into a pop band. This one was more egregious than "4" even, in that Eric totally replaced ALL the music we recorded. God knows who is really playing this. Yet somehow the results are better than "4". I actually like this, due to the fact that the song was pretty well-written to start with and I think Eric actually liked the band. Amy's vocals are great here too.


There are also a couple of songs from Jens' old band The Rummage League, "Capsul Countdown" and "4-1 Against Maybe". We decided to include these since Jens had just joined us and the other musicians on the recordings were Amy and Russ anyway, so it seemed appropriate. It was a good way to introduce listeners to Jens and I think these were recorded at the exact same time we started "Junk Car Grand Prix".

"The City Sleeps With One Eye Open" and "Marginal" are demos from the unreleased "40 oz. Rose" sessions (MUCH more on that on a later post).

"The City Sleeps With One Eye Open" was recorded in 2006 in our spare bedroom using Powertracks. It was a real turning point for me. With the last couple of albums I had really tried to guess what other people wanted to hear. I made sure that the intros were the right length and that there weren't too many or too few chords, but at this point it honestly looked like the band might be doomed, so I threw my arms in the air and said "fuck it!"

I was literally recording exactly what I wanted to hear. The song only has 2 chords? Fuck it! The vocals are mumbly and go out of tune? Fuck it!

So in a way it was a callback to the dreaded old days but somehow we had improved a whole lot since "Psychic Headache." So even though we were doing exactly whatever we wanted to do and were recording it with zero regard for what other people thought, the result was actually fairly listenable. I still kinda think it's one of the best things I ever wrote. We had no drummer at the time so both this and "Marginal" have programmed drums. "City Sleeps" will always be special to me because it features the heavily reverbed meow of my black cat "Padme" who died shortly after the recording.

Oh yea, it also got us on the Queers tribute.

"Marginal" was also written at about the same time as "City Sleeps" but it took about, oh... a year, to write a chorus for it. So this is from around late 2006 or early 2007. I have fond memories of sitting around the Bambi Bar at night with Amy, pounding pitchers of Budweiser and coming up with lyrics for the third verse(I guess I have written drunken lyrics since 'Junk Car'...). We are currently re-recording this for the upcoming "TA-80 Will Bury You" LP.

Track Listing:

1 Peppermint Girl
2 Psychic Headache
3 Small Moments
4 It's Always One Step Away
5 The City Sleeps With One Eye Open
6 Marginal
7 Everything's Okay
8 Warm Kites
9 Capsul Countdown #2
10 Occupy Her Mind
11 (I'm Giving You) All Of Me
12 Super Slob
13 Think Tomorrow
14 4 - 1 Against Maybe
15 Spinny
16 Writing Songs For You
17 Soft Noise
18 Heaven?
19 Mambo #80

We only made about 50 of these and there are maybe 3 more left at http://interpunk.com/item.cfm?Item=68094&. After these last 3 sell I'm not so sure we'll reissue it. I'm not that proud of most of the older material, yet at the same time it's the only place to hear old TA-80 and all the post-"Junk Car" material on it is pretty good, and I still love the liner notes... so the fate of the cd is up in the air at the moment. Whatever you do, just make sure it's not your first TA-80 album. Buy "Born Insecure" first. It's much better.

Jens did the album art, we basically just stole the art off the cartridge of "Circus Atari" (which is 'Atari Du Cirque' in french (at least according to babel fish)). I don't know if anyone else ever caught this or not but the front cover says "15 Super Songs!" When in all reality, there are 19 songs on the CD. Oh well.

- Jamin 80




............................................................................

"Atari Du Cirque" came to be because it was already taking too long to get "40 oz Rose" recorded. As Jamin said, MUCH more on that later. It also came out of people (horribly confused and misguided people) who kept asking for us to reissue our old albums. Even in 2005 or 2006 (whenever we credited this as coming out) we knew the old stuff was mostly unlistenable. We had a handful of new or unreleased songs, some demos, some of Jens' demos from The Rummage League Cowbell Sessions, and a decent sized group of oldies that we could actually stand. We threw them together with a couple of the singles we had done and called it good.

This was the first album we made available for sale online. Jamin posted the link above so I don't think I really need to post it again. Just scroll up if you missed it the first time. Anyway, this was a big step for us. I had started really doing online networking for the band and found a few places (and people) that liked our music and this made us all confident in bothering a place like Interpunk to sell a measly few of our retarded albums. We sold a good amount and still have a few left. Grab 'em while they're luke. Luke-warm? No, Luke Skywalker, you fucking inbred.

This was release right at the end of when things had completely fallen apart for the band. After living with us for a couple years and randomly helping us on shit here and there, Jens officially joined the band with the recording of "Small Moments." Jens did an amazing job both mimicking the original and also coming up with his own new twist on the song that made it even better.

Now, Jens is my brother. The thought of working with Jens instantly brings back memories of our parents making us do house and yard work together as kids, which usually ended with a huge fight (sometimes physical) and someone crying (not ALWAYS me). Jens and I have always gotten along great but we've never been able to work together. A few times in school we had classes together...our poor teachers. They could do nothing but sit back and let us yell obscenities at each other until we calmed down and got to work on class stuff. Getting away with this type of shit (I think) was only possible because we were either too funny or too smart to interrupt. So, I had some serious doubts of how us working in a band together would go.

In fact, Jens wanted to join us years earlier. When Jamin and I moved out to Arizona he wanted to join us. Instead I joined a band he had put together with this drummer he knew. He acted like a total ass at the first practice, I yelled at him and told him I could never work with someone who was such a bully to new people and also said he would never be in These Acoustic 80's and left. I stuck by that until he joined us in 2006. He was on a very tight leash for a while and was basically told to keep him mouth shut and do what Jamin and I wanted until we knew we could trust him to be civil. He surprised us. He was and continues to be a great asset to this band and I was a fool to keep him out of it for so long. So we even included a couple of his solo songs just to show our love and appreciation for his work. He brings a helluva lot to the table. Good stuff.

I do need to take a moment and talk about "City Sleeps" and "Marginal." These two songs are still (maybe, on certain days) my favorite two TA-80 songs. Hearing these now, I'm still excited about what we're going to do with them. The versions on this album are only the demos. And this is pretty much what our demos sound like now, if not slightly more fleshed out and with more complex vocals. Canned drums, muddy bass, muddy guitars, a butt-load of keyboards and some rough ass vocals recorded on our Shure Beta 58a's (a pretty damn decent mic for instruments, in my opinion) because we don't even keep our vocal recording microphone around here all the time. These were the first demos we ever did that came out so amazing. At this point, these sounded better than anything we had recorded before. The songs were a million times better than anything we had written thus far, for sure.

"The City Sleeps With One Eye Open" started as one of Jamin's crazy ideas. He explained it to me before I ever heard it (something he does with almost every song he writes nowadays) and I have to be honest, I was more than a little worried. The things he was describing reminded me of "Expansive" and I told him that I wasn't convinced that heading back down this road was such a good idea. He assured me that I would like the song and went ahead and put together the drum loop and a rough demo of him singing and playing acoustic guitar.

When I heard the song, I was floored. I thought it was amazing. I still think it's amazing. I immediately threw on my vocal parts and we decided to keep Jamin's vocal on the 2nd chorus. A lot of people love Jamin's vocals, me being one of them. I've never been a fan of cutting Jamin out of a singing role. However, we've heard from many more people that they prefer hearing someone singing who is a bit more accessible and on top of that, Jamin's never been that fond of singing. He likes doing the hardcore stuff and back-ups and throwing in "Hey's!" wherever they're needed, but that's about it. But his vocals on this song are spot on. You can hear a couple parts where he goes slightly flat but he never loses the note and that imperfection creates such a warm, indie-rock vibe that I adore, there's no way I wanted to cut it out completely. My vocals can be too cookie-cutter perfect sometimes and music isn't perfect. Sometimes you need a bit of the dirt to give it some depth.

This song also opened with Padme's purry meow. I miss her so much. She was a good kitty, even though she shit everywhere except for the litter box. This song is Padme's song. She was inspiring. I wish we had more of her work, but like so many amazing artists, her life was, sadly, cut short, and we all miss her dearly. I love you, Padme!!!

"Marginal" was a bit of a chore. We had the opening verse and bridge for about a year before we finally got around to writing the rest of the song. I'm pretty sure we actually wrote the rest of the parts several times but Jamin and I always wrote at the bar, on napkins, and we would either lose the napkins with the new part or look at the napkins the next day and wonder how the hell we had been singing it the night before. I will say that I came up with the music for the chorus at the bar, maybe a month after we wrote the song and we never worked on it again. For a year I kept telling Jamin that I remembered it and that we didn't need to even worry about it. Once the rest of the song was written and we were ready to do the full demo (the version you hear on "Atari Du Cirque"), I had to remember, or at least figure out something as good as, the part I had come up with so long ago. It must've been great because the first time I picked up the guitar to prove to Jamin that I remembered it, I played it perfectly. I could've shit. My memory sucks so this rarely happens to me. But, it's a great chorus and one that definitely sticks with you.

I played piano, acoustic and bass on this song. I'm not great at piano, though I have been playing that longer than guitar. Just not as consistently. I modeled the playing after the piano part on "Imagine". I've never known how to play that song but I knew that style would fill this song out nicely, keeping it nice and slow while still moving at a steady pace because of the quarter notes. It's music geek shit but it works. I do think about this stuff sometimes.

Well, that's about all I have to say on this little compilation. "Mambo #80" is still awesome. I just realized I never really told the story of how that came about. It's quick and simple. Jamin was going through Fruity Loops trying to find a loops he liked and every time he played a new one, I'd play the bass line you hear on that song. When he hit the mambo style drum loop and heard my bass part, we both busted up laughing and recorded it. After that, I left the studio and Jamin and Russ took over and finished it. Many beers later that night I heard it and loved it. It still cracks me up. See, being obnoxious CAN be good!

............................................................................

"Atari Du Cirque" is cool Daddy-O. Nawwww...don't say that...

- Klae 80

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Wednesday, August 4, 2010

TA-80: Peppermint Girl (from the "God Save the Queers" tribute cd)

Peppermint Girl (from the "God Save the Queers" tribute cd)



"Peppermint Girl" is the 9th TA-80 release. It's contained on a compilation album called "God Save the Queers", released overseas by CR Japan in 2007 and in 2008 by Asian Man Records in the U.S. It was partially recorded in the basement studios by Randy Curtis and partially recorded in our bedroom by our own damn selves. The line-up was Amy, Jamin, Jens & Pat.

In 2006, when Joe Queer asked us to contribute a song to the upcoming Queers tribute album, the first song to pop in my head was "Pepermint Girl." I loved the song and it was the only one I could imagine us pulling off. Although, shortly after reording "Peppermint Girl" I finally heard the Queers "Today" e.p. and I remember thinking if I had heard "I Don't Want to Go to the Moon" earlier I would have covered that one instead.

We were really excited to do this. I had been a longtime fan of The Queers and it was a hoot to see our name on a cd along with other band's I had admired growing up like Screeching Weasel and the Dwarves.

As for the final results, I have to say I'm a little mixed. I love the second half of "Peppermint Girl" but not so much the first half. I wish we would've used something other than the "Rugrats" style keyboard sound...but I think the harmonies at the end really pointed the way to where TA-80 were headed. Also the Mellotron at the end? Hell yes! Strawberry Fields forever and ever!!!

This was a good thing to have done. It really got us out there. Every night on tour somebody would come up to us who was a big fan of our cover and we still get album orders from all over the world (Japan, Spain, etc.) Not to mention a later tour we did with the Queers.

Track Listing:

1. Love Me (Dwarves)
2. Danny is a Wimp (Screeching Weasel)
3. Kicked Out of the Webelos (Teengenerate)
4. This Place Sucks (New Bomb Turks)
5. I Don't Wanna Work (Black Tie Bombers)
6. I Like Young Girls (The Nobody's)
7. Goodbye California (Toys That Kill)
8. Boobarella (Beer Bellies)
9. Burger King Queen (Groucho Marxists)
10. Rambo Rat (The Jolts)
11. You're Tripping (The Hard Ons)
12. Monster Zero (Disgusteens)
13. Granola Head (Cletus)
14. Daydreaming (Parasites)
15. Hi Mom It's Me the Front-I Hate Everything (Toothless George)
16. Fuck the World (I'm Hanging Out With You Tonight) (The Unlovables)
17. Teenage Gluesniffer (Le Volume Etait Au Maximum)
18. Too Many Twinkies (Teenage Rehab)
19. I Didn't Get Invited to the Prom/Debra Jean (The Steinways)
20. Peppermint Girl (TA-80)
21. I Only Drink Bud (City Mouse)
22. Stupid Fucking Vegan (The Secretions)
23. Homo (Snot Rockets)
24. I Wanna Be Happy (The Femurs)


By the way, Le Volume Etait Au Maximum's cover of "Teenage Gluesniffer" totally steals the show here. Buy it and find out for yourself! It's available at http://www.amazon.com/God-Save-Queers-Various-Artists/dp/B0010V9086 or
http://interpunk.com/item.cfm?Item=154713& .

I have no idea how many of these were printed, thousands and thousands I'm sure. We've never played "Peppermint Girl" live I don't think but we have played in practice once or twice. A slightly different version of the song is also available on "Atari Du Cirque" avaialbale at http://interpunk.com/item.cfm?Item=68094&.

Hell yes.

- Jamin 80


...........................................................................


We've all had our shaky moments in life. The few months preceding the recording of this song is mine. I had been working at AOL for a few years and I was really happy and comfortable. The band had broken up and gotten back together for what seemed like the hundredth time. I was 22 years old and wondering if I should keep striving for a pretty much impossible dream. I had a total breakdown one night and told Jamin that I was done with the band. The only people up until now that had ever heard us were family and friends and it was starting to look like we weren't ever going to do anything seriously. This disappointed and defeated me and I broke down. Jamin said enough to keep me going for at least another week. In that week, I decided to send a message to Joe Queer and ask him to listen to our music.

I didn't expect anything from it. I figured he wouldn't even respond to me. Much to my surprise, he responded to my retardedly long winded email and said that he'd love to hear some of our music. I sent him a copy of "The City Sleeps With One Eye Open", hoping that his love of Jesus and Mary Chain might win us some sympathy. I also sent him a link to our myspace. A few days later, he responded back saying he had listened to the song and the songs on our myspace and that he loved it. He then mentioned his tribute album and said he'd love for us to do a song on it and that he'd call me once he got off tour. Sure enough, my phone rang early one Sunday morning and when I answered, I heard the thick North-Eastern accent of Joe Queer asking if I was Amy. That conversation led into Joe formally asking TA-80 to record a song for a Queers tribute album he was planning on releasing later that year. I said, "Absolutely" and emailed him within an hour, telling him that we had decided to record "Peppermint Girl." He thought it was perfect and the 15 month journey of recording "Peppermint Girl" began.

We had worked with Randy before on "Think Tomorrow" and "Small Moments". I thought he did an okay job on those songs and felt confident in bringing him on to record "Peppermint Girl". We had Pat 80 playing drums for us at the time. He was a good drummer. I wanted him to work because he was the brother of our old drummer, Matt, but he didn't work at all. We stalled out majorly while Pat was in the band. He didn't want to be in a band. He did a good job with us but it wasn't what he really wanted to do and I think you can hear it in the recording.

The recording of this song was a real eye-opener for us. We demoed the hell out of this song and figured out an extremely complex vocal arrangement for the end. We listened to Joe's version and we were all left feeling that it should've been more. I can hear where Joe wanted to go with it, but based on conversations we've had since then, no one else in the band (at that time) was into doing a big Brian Wilson outtro. We weren't afraid to do it, though. Joe coached us along the way and I constantly sent him demos to make sure that he liked what we were doing. He gave us clear and un-opinionated feedback. Joe is great at telling us exactly what we should hear and not at all what we wanted to hear. I appreciate all the guidance he gave us and could never bring myself to talk shit about him. Despite anything that eventually happened, he helped us so much and I will forever appreciate that.

We recorded this song in some all night sessions with Randy. I remember coming out of the Basement studio at 7 a.m. and watching the zombies wander around downtown Tucson (at the bus station). Creepy shit. It was good fun, though. The recording of this song ended (promptly) with Pat leaving the band and Melissa joining. I wish we could've had Russ on drums for this. I don't mean to slight any former members of TA-80, but the line-up we have right now fully understands and loves this song (the original). It would be amazing if we did it now. Even recording with Randy wasn't great. I still had to take the masters home and add all the vocals onto the ending that you can all hear now. Randy didn't get it. I think he wanted to but he just didn't. Sometimes, we're the only ones who know what's best for us. That's just the way it goes.

- Amy 80

*************************************************************************

Wow... "Peppermint Girl" This was cool. Uhhh.. Man, I'm really distracted by the Johnny Carson best-of we're watching right now... Okay, um, let's see, here. We did it at Randy"s Basement Studios which was the first time I got to record in a "real" studio and... Waitasec, Charles Grodin's book and stuff... Yep, and the great Flydini. Uh-huh. It's a good bit, the eggs are funny. Oh, yeah, and the phone, too. Man, I'm really glad we watched this. Yeah, and so we recorded this thing at Joe Queer's request and, damned if'n it didn't do wonders for us. When we went on tour, there were people at the shows that actually knew our shit and that was, no shit, amazing.

I guess, now that they've gotten to the Robin Williams/Bette Midler horseradish, I could prolly mention how the whole studio experience really did teach us a thing or two. Namely, that most studios aren't set up to handle anything like what TA-80 needs when we record, even back then. Fer Christs sake, we went into this with the implicit goal of achieving what Joe hadn't on the original, i.e.: a big crescendo of music and vocals a la Brian Wilson. It had to be big. Huge! And we did it, but we had to do it at home to finish it. Apparently, the "studio" couldn't handle the multi-vocal arrangements that we were recording and we had to beef 'em up with our own, new, set up. And the drums got a treatment, too (this is technically the 'or two' part of what we learned, but it would be inaccurate to say we completely quit compromising on drummers). "P-Ting!!!" The ring. Amy did the punch-ups and they sound great. Pat coulda finished this, but he didn't. His decision, not ours. It ended up sounding pretty good in the final mix anyway, but when we got it back from mastering, it had an inexplicable click in it and the ending had a fat fuckin' fade in the outro (originally, my favorite part of the song). Whatever, it was a cover. I hate doing covers. I'll come around eventually, but when I have to learn a non-TA-80 song, I buck like a spring colt. All in all, though, I do like this track.

Discounting "Small Moments", I think this is the first TA-80 song I was on that was recorded and it sold all over the damn world. Wherever the Queers are a-shuckin' merch, there's a CD with me on it. That's worth whatever shit went down while we were makin it. Plus, we requested (and finally got) the Japanese release of the album for our library, and man, that is pimp.

- Jens 80

Saturday, July 31, 2010

TA-80: Think Tomorrow

Think Tomorrow



"Think Tomorrow" is the 8th TA-80 record. It is a single containing one track, "Think Tomorrow" which is a re-recording of a song from "80-83." The track was recorded in the Basement Studios by Randy Curtis. I wasn't around for this recording. It was an overnight session and I had to work at 6 a.m. Amy played the mini-moog on it.

I actually like this recording a lot. One of the few "TA-80 in a real studio" recordings that someone didn't ridiculously interfere with. And it turned out warm and intimate.

It was given out with fliers to promote an upcoming TA-80 show at a venue that, now that I think of it, was also called the Basement. There were only about 25 or so copies made. For as few as there are, this is one thing we have plenty of copies of. If anyone would like to hear it, hit us up on . We'll send you an mp3.

This never had a cover, it was given out in a white envelope.

Jens 80 had officially joined the band at this point but I don't think he played on the recording either. I think Amy played everything. I loved the sound of the Moog so much on this that about 75% of the keyboards on every TA-80 recording since has used a Moog emulator. "Think Tomorrow" was played live a couple of times during the Cullen years, but not since.

This track is now available on "Atari Du Cirque" which can be bought at .

- Jamin 80

.....................................................................................

This is an old song. Not even old in the way that this single was released in 2005. I wrote this song when I was 16 years old. I came home from school with it stuck in my head. I was living with Jamin, his brother, Jason, and his brother's girlfriend at the time. I was also working with Jamin at a pizza place called MaBell's. Work always started at 4 p.m. but I didn't have to work that day. I got out of school at 3 p.m. and once Jamin left for work, I locked myself up in our bedroom and wrote this song.

I had the music for it first. Usually, at that time, I wrote my lyrics as I was writing the music. This was the first song that I had all the music running through my head but no lyrics. The lyrics aren't really anything meaningful. I think that's why I can still listen to this song and enjoy it. I have absolutely no personal connection to the words at all. I'm not even embarrassed to make the lyrics available, right here and now.

People all around, you see them everywhere
But they don't see you
Everybody's here, you stop and start to scream
But no one hears you

And I don't wanna see you
And I don't wanna hear you
But I can't help but feel you
today

That's it. For about a minute while I was writing this song, I thought that maybe I should come up with more lyrics. I'm not a big fan of repeating lyrics or verses because I kind of consider it a cop out. I mean, come on...Finish the fucking song already, right? However, on this song, I wrote what I wrote and felt like I had said everything that needed to be said to capture the feel of the song. In other words, I had no other ideas and was satisfied with saying just what I wrote because it would maybe work as some sort of meaningful statement. Again, I stress that these lyrics mean nothing to me. But I can see how they might be meaningful for other people. Or something.

The re-recording of this song was done at the Basement Studio with Randy Curtis as engineer. Randy recorded a few things for us. I'd have to say, and, unfortunately, this isn't praise, that Randy was the best outside person that TA-80 ever worked with. At the time that we recorded "Think Tomorrow" he was pretty great. He was open for new ideas and he was a great one for sitting around for hours on end, trying out (possibly) thousands of different sounds and effects until we'd finally find something that was perfectly weird enough for us. On this recording it was easy. Moog.

We used a real Moog for this song. This is not a digital effect. Randy still had a decent set up for analog recordings to run into his digital set up and that's exactly how we got this recording of the Moog. I played the Moog on this song. Actually, in both recordings, I did everything on this song/recording. It makes it hard for me to consider it a TA-80 song but since TA-80 is really all I've ever done musically, the fact that I did this song completely on my own, it's still TA-80. All my best stuff belongs to this band and I say this is the band's so it is. The Moog is fucking badass.

- Amy 80

.....................................................................................


I like the Moog. It was the first thing we recorded with Randy. It was also pretty understated. 'Nuff said!

-Jens 80

.....................................................................................

Soul Power! Moog-a-riffic. I like the reverb on the vocals. Sharks teeth.

-Klae 80

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

TA-80: Junk Car Grand Prix






"Junk Car Grand Prix" is the 7th TA-80 release and our 5th full-length album. It was recorded in 2004 and released early 2005. It was recorded on Powertracks Pro-audio in Amy's dad's garage. The line-up is Amy, Jamin & Russ with Jens joining us on the song "Soft Noise." The title is taken from an episode of "Speed Racer."

I basically consider this the first of a string of cursed albums and nearly resulted in the breakup of the band.

"Are Go!" was pretty well received locally and everything about the band was going up,up,up...this album was kinda the let down. Promises made by Right Time had fallen through and we parted ways with them.

A partial list 0f bad things that happened during the making of the album:

1.Cullen quit the band to pursue his college studies.
2. Russ quit the band 3/4 into making it to pursue work.
3. Places that would let us play kinda dried up. Either going out of business or banning us.
4. The 4-track tape I used to record the albums demos was lost halfway through the recording, resulting in us not recording most of the best songs written for this album.
5. The computer crashed right when we finished recording and we could only rescue rough mixes (so yes, the album is composed of mostly rough mixes... hello, shitty drum sound in "Never Forget").
6. After recording a good chunk of the album, which was originally a concept album about Michigan (our home state) called "The Great Lakes Statement", someone else put out an album with the EXACT SAME CONCEPT, resulting in me having to hurriedly rewrite most of the albums lyrics (in a drunken state, which has resulted in me vowing to write every TA-80 lyric, after this album, strictly sober). A few of the lyrics I never changed, "Great Lakes Statement" is still a quick Mid-Michigan history lesson and "Never Forget" is about leaving Michigan.


As of the time Russ left we were still about 3 songs short of an album, and the band was back down to only me and Amy. To fill out the album we used a Russ outtake from "Are Go!" entitled "Ya", an outtake of mine from "Are Go!" called "Heaven?" that me and Amy re-recorded and a new song we wrote called "Soft Noise" which featured Amy's brother and future TA-80 member Jens 80 on feedback and hollerin'. Oddly enough "Heaven?" and "Soft Noise" are kinda the highlight of the album for me, along with the Herb Alpert parody "Mambo #80", which was a damn blast to record.

The album holds up fairly well considering that by the end of the recording there was basically no band. Easily the best album we had made up to this point. We consciously decided to toughen up our sound to better reflect our live shows and it makes all the difference. For the first time we sound like a real punk rock band with a distinct sound. So most of it is in the TA-80 punk style, with a few detours into ska ("Crash Course"), dancey stuff ("Heaven?"), Noise-Rock ("Soft Noise"), power ballads ("Occupy her Mind") and hardcore ("See it Thru"). I think "Out(Count Me(Don't))" is maybe our funniest title.


Most of my problems with the album are due to the fact that all we were able to save from the crashed computer were rough mixes that we couldn't change... and we didn't have enough songs to have the luxury of outtakes. So we were stuck with the drums that sound like they were buried under a blanket in "Never Forget"... and the weird chords in the chorus "Tell Me".

Oh, and I CAN'T STAND "Exhumed Cadillac"... I don't know what happened. THe demo was good, but the final product? Ecchhh. Except Russ' slide guitar is the shee-yit on it!

This was also the time that an enthusiastic kid with a real talent for self-promotion named "Matt 80" joined the band. His exhuberance was a real life saver for the band at the time and we love the guy... he later left to move to California but we did re-unite with him years later and did a U.S tour with him in 2009.

So yea...to sum up the album...don't write lyrics drunk.

Track Listing:

1. Tell Me
2. The Great Lakes Statement
3. Crash Course
4. Occupy Her Mind
5. Out(Count Me(Don't))
6. See It Thru
7. Exhumed Cadillac
8. Never Forget
9. Warm Kites
10. YA
11. Writing Songs 4 U
12. Soft Noise
13. Heaven?
14. Mambo #80

Note: "Junk Car Grand Prix will likely never be re-released, but the tracks "Occupy Her Mind", "Warm Kites", "Writing Songs 4 U", "Soft Noise", "Heaven?" and "Mambo #80" are all on the TA-80 compilation "Atari Du Cirque" which is available at http://interpunk.com/item.cfm?Item=68094& . "Never Forget" and "Warm kites" were later re-recorded for the 2008 "Angry Young Computer" e.p (which is getting a re-release very soon...you read it here first, folks...)


We played some of these live over the years, most notably "Never Forget," "Warm Kites," and "Heaven?". We also played "The Great Lakes Statement" a few times.

The cover was originally a hand drawn picture based on an Austrian beer bottle our good friend Gerhard gave us, that Jens 80 later re-created digitally. There were very very few copies of this made. Maybe 35 or 40. We really didn't do very many shows during this time period.

-Jamin 80

....................................................................

Tonight, I'm the last person to write my thoughts on this album. In a weird way, this was kind of my first album, meaning this is the first album that I really started writing the music. I was still trying hard with lyrics on this album too (something I tend to stay away from apart from the stray chorus or bridge here and there...) I really came into my own on my music writing on "Junk Car".

I think "Occupy Her Mind" was one of the first songs I wrote for the album. I was doing a QA job for a big Internet provider when we started this album. That pretty much translates into me doing countless hours of repetative, monkey work that didn't require me to actually speak to a single other human being. I loved it. I used to bring in about 20 CD's a day with me and listen to them as I, basically, pretended to do a job that actually meant something.

I listened to a lot of Elvis Costello during this time. When I came up with the lyrics for "Occupy Her Mind" I was listening to Elvis. I had already written the music because I was coming up with bass parts like crazy. I had found a style that was comfortable for me and the bass kind of got easier to play. Hey, it's gotta sink in at some point, right? Anyway, I was sitting at my desk, listening to Elvis, and I came up with the first verse. When I say that a girl is listening to someone singing but he's not singing to her...That's me singing to Elvis Costello.

I wrote the lyrics to "Tell Me" at Lane's house. Lane was a DJ for the Tucson local station. He did a show called Avante Garage and played all punk and related music up to 1980. The show came on at 2 a.m. on Tuesday nights. We rarely missed a show. We called in all the time and requested our favorite songs and Lane was mighty impressed with our music knowledge. This was mostly coming from Jamin. Now we all love the stuff but at the time, I'm pretty sure it was mostly Jamin doing the actual requesting.

So we ended up becoming friends with Lane and he had us on his show and played one of our songs, going completely outside his show's boundries. I ended up hanging out at his house one night while Russ was practicing for a different band. They were this weird, metal/emo/punk type of thing. Russ really got into that for a few years. I don't get it and I decided that I would rather hang out (very quietly) at Lane's place while he typed his dissertation or something. I told Lane later that I wrote the lyrics for "Tell Me" that night and he seemed really excited about it. He liked our band. It was nice.

I still really like this album. It's hard to say that because I wrote a lot of the lyrics and it's ultra personal and super girly and lame but the songs as a whole are pretty damn decent. This album is the specific reason why I really don't try to write lyrics anymore. I'm awesome at writing music and come up with a lot of the music you hear on any of the new TA-80 stuff. Lyrics, on the other hand...I leave that to Jamin. I gave up lyric writing to Jamin on "Crash Course." I originally wrote lyrics and sang vocals for it but it was awful. Even me, with my amazing ego, couldn't deny that it was terrible. I handed it over to Jamin and felt that, for as much as I loved the music, if he couldn't come up with good lyrics, we'd scrap it as an outtake. He came up with great lyrics and this was when I realized that I could write music, let Jamin write lyrics, and then I could sing it and it would still be an awesome TA-80 song that I wrote.

I grew up listening to the Beatles and whoever wrote the song, sang the song so that's how I thought it was supposed to be. Hey, it worked for them but not for us. We're not the Beatles. If we were...well, that'd be awesome.

This album is always a little sad for me too. This was the album we lost Russ. I thought we were done for. In a way, we kind of were. I mean, we didn't have another full length release until Russ came back to us almost 5 years after this album came out. I actually sent an e-mail to Dr. Frank (of all people) and told him how I was afraid we were going to be done. He (extremely kindly) sent some encouraging words back and we did continue to plug away. There's more to this story to come.

"Junk Car Grand Prix" was a really fun album. My dad, Gary Heronemus (who appeared on "Expansive, Yet Inexpensive") helped me with recording vocals. He taught me some stuff that I've incorporated into the way I record vocals now. He comes from a different time of recording but, damn, he makes some valid points. I'm not embarrassed of this album. I wish we could've had the recordings we wanted but it wasn't possible. As it is, I like it.

- Amy 80


....................................................................

This is the best one I ever heard

-Klae 80 (whom I'm not sure has ever even heard this...)

.....................................................................

Ooh-ee-oooh... I did this cover... God, I wish that I had re-did this cover... Actually, I did re-do it, a couple of times, I just wasn't very good at doing art on the ol' computer. Nowadays, I'm perdy sharp when it comes to graphics. Hell, I'll brag all damn day about how tight my shit is when it comes to MS Paint, but this cover kinda makes me cringe. I do love that rooster, though (hmmm... I should get that tattoo, mebbe.) I think this might be the first TA-80 album I was on, albeit breifly (when we did soft noise) and I started to play live with the band around this time. That was cool. And I knew Randy... Who we'll get to soon enough.


-Jens 80