Pop Shield

Tales Of A Radio Sound Engineer. This blog is dedicated to Caroline who kicked my ass to do it. Follow @popshield on Twitter @Popshieldblog on Facebook.

Category: Out and About

Playlisting

How things have changed.  The heady days when ‘going downstairs to have a look at some aluminium foil’ was not an actual valid activity are but a distant memory.  And it’s all a joyous lesson in taking the time to stop and smell the roses, something one rarely has time to do in a busy studio session.

There are, however, some parallels to be drawn between radio life and baby life. Upon the arrival of Pip Shield my spouse and I reacted to the somewhat daunting situation by promptly dividing ourselves up into Head Of Inputs and Head Of Outputs. Two-way talkback systems between kitchen and bedroom were quickly set up and calibrated.  For some funny reason I find myself unconsciously ensuring that our little baby and the big bad parent monitor unit never meet, for fear of some kind of sinister feedback loop occurring. Nap-times are the childcare equivalent of putting on a long tape in a busy radio show, giving you the opportunity to T&P and look ahead to the next sequence in the schedule.

As much of our daily lives have changed, the criteria for organising my record collection has also taken a curious turn. Basically, everything has been reclassified into the four following playlists:

Nappy Songs – Rock, Disco, R&B, Pop.

Relaxing Space – Ambient, Classical, New Age.

Food Music – Folk, Blues, Soul, Reggae, Country.

Playtime – Electronica, Jazz, World, Easy Listening, Dance.

Naturally, here is nothing that Pip prefers to listen to during Bare Bottom Kickabout than Rabbit by Baz N Steve.  Oh, if only Bare Bottom Kickabout was a bone fide pastime for adults.  Hmm, hang on, I think there are specialist holiday places on offer where it might indeed be.

Some changes have occurred inside my head too.  I’m talking about the ear worms.  So it’s goodbye to the old hold favourites of ‘Everyday’ by Muddy Jolly, ‘Valerie’ by The Futons, ‘I Will’ by The Bugs etcetera and hello to wall-to-wall nursery rhymes and children’s songs.  Honestly, I could barely fit any dreams in my head last night thanks to The Little Green Frog having expanded to fill my entire brain.

Thanks to the proliferation of local Rhyme Time groups, and our overzealous attendance of all of them, I have refreshed my repertoire of ditties, with the help of Clarice’s excellent children’s songbook Refrain, Set & Match.  These tunes now accompany all the activities of the day.  Praise be that Junior’s musical development is not yet such that he is able to critique my performances.

The current Radio Pop live music set list on rotation goes something like this:

Burping Songs:

A – List: Horsey Horsey, My Bonnie

B – List: Daisy Daisy, Skye Boat Song

C – List: Row Row Row Your Boat, The Big Ship Sails (new entry)

Washing & Dressing Songs:

A – The Little Green Frog (new entry)

B – Peter Rabbit Has A Fly Upon His Nose, Hickory Dickory Dock

C – Heads Shoulders Knees And Toes, Incy Wincy Spider

Playing Songs:

A – Sleeping Bunnies, Five Little Ducks Went Swimming.

B – Bananas Of The World Unite, Five Little Men In A Flying Saucer (new entry)

C – Five Currant Buns In A Bakers Shop, Put Another Pancake Into The Pan.

Sleeping Songs:-

A – Hush Little Baby

B – Somewhere Over The Rainbow

C – Que Sera, Lavender’s Blue.

You’ll notice no mention of Twinkle Twinkle Little Star because I’m sorry to say that in my opinion that it is a very boring song.  No matter how much I try and spice it up with grandiose hand gestures.

And so, Pip Shield’s musical development is already coming along leaps and bounds.  With a bit of assistance, he can play the piano with his feet, and he has already stroked a clarinet and grabbed the strings of a real cello.  Band practice is a staple favourite activity in our household, during which Pip holds down the rhythm section on the Mexican maraca. His approach is very similar to the one I have for strawberry picking – nail one, eat one. Sophie the Giraffe, Squeezy Penguin and Kazoo Mummy generally take the melody.  All our various other rattles and bells take turns to augment a backing track from the Baby Einstein Popular Classic Tunes Generator.  Way to go round here.

Anyroad, I must get back to the aluminium foil.  It does look interesting.  It sounds pretty good too.

We’re Getting There

Entertaining train driver announcements this evening on my commute home this evening: –

“Good afternoon, although for some of you it will be good evening. This train is for Davidston.

If you have been bored and looking at the twinkly lights by the doors, you may have noticed that you do not see Hubbridge listed.

This is because:

A. Hubbridge is not important enough to have its name written up in lights.

B. We haven’t got round to it.

Or C. We don’t know how to do it.

The next stop will be Hubbridge. If you live in Hubbridge don’t worry, you’re going home.”

At last, Mate gets his own cola.

Flam Of God

Top Cat’s show on Nations Favourite is coming live from Mudstock this morning.  Just had the peaceful Stop And Have A Think About It religion feature live from the Parallelogram Stage during the drum soundcheck for Colonnade Pyre. Genius.

Da Da How The Life Goes On

Been at home in the garden this morning, it’s a beautiful day.  There’s only one thing bothering me though.  The Oy-La-Li-Oy-La-La Bird is driving me potty.  All day long it sings the first part of the chorus and then STOPS, like a game of musical chairs.  Leaving my poor daydreaming head searching for the other notes to resolve the tune.

It wouldn’t be so bad if it was something off the Captain Salt album but everyone knows Oy-La-Li is regularly voted in the top five worst Bugs songs of all time. A chart usually topped by Number Eight, the eight-minute avant-garde art gibberish soundscape in B minor with no tune.  And if there’s a bird out there that knows how to sing that I’ll be very impressed.

I would be very appreciative if anyone out there can tell me what this annoying bird is, so that I can put a supply of its favourite food in the field around the corner and lure it well away from my garden.

Alternatively, please let me know if there is a British songbird in existence whose call is the second half of the tune of the chorus of annoying Bugs knees-up Oy-La-Li. And if there is, what does it eat? Perhaps I can entice a couple into my garden.  Then everyone will be ha ha ha ha happy ever in the market place….. ARRGGGH!!!!

The Long And Winding Road

The musical lifestyle is by nature essentially nomadic, within which the artist wanders from stage to studio, town to town.  I suppose us Corporation engineers are engaged in a microcosmic version of this, moving from one situation to another within an ever-changing technical landscape.

On my recent travels I encountered my good colleague, Herbert Floppenwanger. Herbert says to me “I’ve been reading your blog, Pop.  I keep wondering if you’ve written anything about me in it, and if so, what I might be called.  “Oh, I probably would just call you ’Jules’” I say to Herbert Floppenwanger.  “That’s what I do with most people”.

The next day, I have a booking with the outlandish 70s rock bassist Luci Quango.  We are set to record links for a fascinating documentary about women who were working at a US guitar factory during the second world war.  I am a little overexcited about working with the equally excitable Luci.  This is because she once taught me how to dance the Mashed Potato, and I am in need of a refresher.  I meet her and her producer at reception, and as we ride up in the small lift we are already in full fling.  For anyone who would like to know how to dance the mashed potato, I wouldn’t bother.  It involves pivoting both feet in and out and simultaneously shuffling from one leg to another whilst flicking alternative legs in the air and bouncing up and down all at the same time.  Highly confusing and I cannot claim to have mastered it.  “Next time round we’ll do the Hully Gully” says Luci.  “OK. You’re on.”

After the recording, Mark comes into the studio.  “I was thinking of you the other day”, he says, “as I had a complete nightmare with that awful guy at the Patronising Equipment Centre”.  I asked him for some equipment and his attitude was appalling.   I actually had to shout at him ‘YOU ARE A VERY RUDE AND UNHELPFUL MAN!”  “Oh dear, Mark.  I’m not surprised. I’ve had the same a few times recently.  You know, you go to the service counter and ask the assistant for some equipment, and he looks at you like you’ve just asked him to fill in an unemployment benefit application form in Chinese whilst holding a pen between his teeth.  Poor you.  I’ll give you the email address of who to complain to.  I’m keeping it on record for a special occasion.”  I’ll be sure to tell you all about it.

On the subject of travelling, I recently bumped into Henry whilst derigging from recording a band called The Wild Wandering Hobos. “We enjoyed a repeat airing of one of your sessions last night.” he says.  “Oh, really?” I reply, wondering if that could be possible.  “Who was it?”. “Trailer Trash” he replies, to which we both smile. “Crazy band,  but there’s definitely something there. Although I had to stop Gabriel from telling the whole saga on air.” says Henry, who had witnessed some of what had happened during this notorious session. I agreed that it was probably a diplomatic idea not to broadcast what had occurred over the airwaves.  But I guess that there’s nothing to stop me from doing it here…so let us begin.

So, I’d been asked to mix a session with the band Trailer Trash for Carl Suet’s Manchester-based show on Little Sister Radio.  My phone rings about an hour before the load-in.  It’s Reception.  “Hi, we have somebody from Trailer Trash here, can you come down and meet him please?”. “Oh, well he’s very early and I’m a bit busy at the moment.  Can you ask him to come back at 5.30pm please?” I reply. “I tried that,” says the receptionist, “but he says he has to talk to you.”  “Oh, I see.  Okay, give me five minutes, I’ll be on my way…”  I drop what I’m doing and pop down to reception.  Sitting on the sofa is a grubby young man with bug-like eyes and his front teeth missing.  He looks like he could benefit from a nice hot dinner, a deep bath and a good night’s sleep. “You’re an hour early”, I say, “so, can you amuse yourself and come back at 5.30pm?”.  “Can’t I come upstairs?” he asks. “I’ve got nowhere to go, and I haven’t got any money.  I don’t know where the others are, they didn’t tell me the right time.  I’ve run out of credit on my phone.  Can I use your phone to call them?”. “Oh, OK, I say.” And pass him my mobile. He calls his bandmates and has a moan at them.  You don’t get this kind of behaviour from the internationally famous musical guests at The Nations Favourite. Guests like, say, Laurie Atmos, whose entourage present you with other demands.  Like: For this small acoustic radio session consisting of solo voice and acoustic piano, we insist that you connect all of this hired outboard to your very inflexible and limited general purpose broadcast desk and send these esoteric effects back to these in-ear monitors, post fade, in stereo, to the detriment of the broadcast.

Speaking of which, the other day I was working with a singer who reinforced the old adage “Never work with animals, children or Belgian jazz musicians”.  Unfortunately, in spite of being an exceptionally talented musician and producer, the chanteuse in question was not able to hang up the producer hat and concentrate on performing and give me a chance to do my job.  To my consternation, she became utterly obsessed in the pursuit of the complete and utter obliteration of compression and 180Hz in her headphones whilst relaying all her demands in French to her ‘inginieur’ who is standing beside me bending my ear. Having removed the offending frequency from no less than four points in the complex signal path, including the reverb returns, I invite her to come and have a listen to the thinned vocal.  My aim is for her to hear that it might be all a tad OTT; especially considering the lack of Q controls in this set up.  She listens. Ah yes, so you were right, she says, via her sonic interpreter.  Put it back as it was.  Small victories.

I’ve come across this kind of quirk a couple of times before.  At NOMAD Festival, the Zimbabwean Mbira queen Ella Mvesi spent her entire soundcheck asking for all treble to be removed from the monitors and complaining in her incredibly deep voice there was still “TOO MUCH TREBLE!!!!  I DON’T LIKE TREBLE”.  She sure hates treble.  Meanwhile ailing country singer Dwight Darling has the opposite problem.  When he came and performed in our theatre he spent the entire sound-check focussing on the obliteration of all bass from the monitors and eventually the entire house PA.  He just hates bass.

Of course, not all musicians are quite so difficult and some of the best, aren’t.  Just the other day, the wonderfully gentle and eccentric Welsh troubadour Rhys Jones comes in for a session.  He opens a carrier bag, takes out a wind-up metronome, asks me in his sing song voice to mic it up and swim it in big church reverb to sound like a grandfather clock.  He strums along to it, and he is happy.  The metronome keeps breaking down during sound-check, but it manages to hold it together for the live transmission.  After we come off air, Rhys shows me the contents of a large, checked laundry bag.  It’s a four-foot high felt puppet folded in half.  The puppet is based on a relative of his who was an 18th century explorer, about which he has just written a concept album.  I guess Rhys considers this chap as a kindred spirit.  Enough so that he has recreated him in stuffed felt and taken to carrying him around wherever he goes. “You sure the old boy is ok in there?” I ask “He looks a bit cramped.  Does he need a stretch?“  To which Rhys gets him out and rests him for a while on the Little Sister sofa, fondly extending his hand out onto the armrest.

Meanwhile, back to Trailer Trash.  I have taken pity on our band member and invited him to come and sit on the self-same sofa while I set up for the session. The rest of the band arrive in dribs and drabs along with their drunk girlfriends, with glazed eyes, asking for food.  I invite them to help themselves to tea and coffee.  It is not long before they are examining the shared fridge contents.  “Can I have this?” one of them says, pulling out a can of cola. “No, I think that probably belongs to somebody who might want it.” I say.  One of them starts eating some honey left behind by some vocalist or another.  Later, I find the drummer up to his scrawny elbow in a box of some poor unsuspecting newsreader’s breakfast cereal. I am working alone, thankfully in another room. “Sounds like you’ve got your work cut out down there!” jokes John, my fellow engineer up the line in Manchester. The band argue their way through the rehearsal.  They fail to get their heads around the clinical environment of the studio headphones, being more habituated to deafening pub and club monitors.  Somehow, I manage to hold everything together and eventually we fall on air. Afterwards, they head out into the young night leaving a pretty spectacular smell in their wake. But Henry’s right, those guys definitely had something.

Bugle’s Wonderland

It’s another charming day at Boogie Bugle’s studio.  On arrival at Helium, the first thing that strikes me is the inexplicable arrival of a bistro table and chair in the bathroom.  It’s fair to say that it’s probably been a few years since anyone took a bath in there. But that doesn’t get in the way of me imagining the cosy scenes that might ensue following this acquisition.  Rosy Turnbull exercising her pipes in a bubble bath whilst Gilbert smokes his pipe and does the crossword, that sort of thing.

It’s the usual star-studded day which passes very pleasantly.  During the proceedings, shy cinematic chanteuse Annabelle Oldflap knocks over a pint glass of water.  I find myself in the unusual position of the two of us being on our hands and knees in the middle of the studio floor trying to mop it up with towels.

In comes 80’s sensation and lead singer of The Bracelets, the one and only Linda Argyle.  Linda is forever destined to turn up in my life on a regular basis in a variety of unusual situations.  The first time it happened I had arranged to meet up with American Susan who was over from San Francisco. “Come and see my friend Linda perform in West End Musical Hairstyle!” she said. “OK” I replied, assuming her friend was perhaps a member of the chorus. It was only when we were stood outside the theatre entrance that I saw something. In the corner of my eye was a hundred times scale billboard of Linda Argyle running up the side of the building.  Clang. Could it be? Knowing American Susan, yes. It was.

After the show, I followed Susan up the stairs that spiralled up through the backstage area of this Victorian theatre.  We arrived at a quaint dressing room with light bulbs all around the mirror. We knocked on the door and entered. Inside, Linda was sat at the dressing table taking off her wig. It didn’t feel like the best of times to be introduced, but Linda seemed unfazed. I guess when you’ve been in showbiz for a while you get used to this kind of thing. Linda was ready in a snap, and we left the building via the Stage Door. Outside, there were met by a host of fans waving programmes to be signed by Linda. Then we jumped in a taxi which took us fifty meters around the corner to Pizza Impress. There, Linda regaled us about her latest adventures in Buddhist chanting over some salad.

Some years later, I was working on Top Cat’s show where Linda was a guest. Linda was the subject of the Top Drops feature where listeners text or email in their claims to fame of the guest star.  The celebrity rings a bell if the story is true and sound a horn if it is baloney.  At the start of the show, I mentioned to the production team about my previous pizza-based meeting with Linda Argyle.  The next thing I knew, I was number one in the Top Drops charts.  I had to abandon my faders to go through to the studio and tell my story on mic. Linda appeared to recognise me. Well, she graciously smiled and rang her bell anyway.  In retrospect, it could have been a tad embarrassing if she’d gone for the klaxon.

Anyway. Back to Bugles. Ric Greaves appears.  He looks a bit aimless and shy. This is not what I expect at all. “Hi, I’m Pop Shield” I say, to break the ice. “Hi, I’m Roy”, he replies, using his non-stage name. As soon as he is in the studio with Bugle, Roy reverts back to his charismatic loud on-screen Ric-like self. The band rehearse a song Ric has written for children about the unlikely topic of… bogies.  In a boogie-woogie style reminiscent of jazz singer Roger Kelly. The call and response section of the song goes “Rolling!”…“Flicking!”.  We love it.

And with that, for the remainder of the afternoon, each time the machines go into record, someone shouts “Rolling!”, as we tend to, and somebody else calls back “Flicking!”.

Noiseless Pollution

Stage Two have been complaining that ‘The Noiseless Discotheque’ is too loud. Brilliant.

Leaf It Out!

Woo Two

At the end of a tense day in the studio, there’s nowt worse than back-timing your required sleep only to discover that you should already be in bed. Except you’re on the steamed-up top deck of a drizzly London bus in the dark in the middle of a tube strike and forty miles from home. Your hair needs washing and you are down to your last quarter tank of petrol.

So, I’m on the bus fiddling with my phone like every other member of the species. I look up ‘Cheeky Delinquent’ on Wonkypedia. We had Cheeky Delinquent in session for Shane Zealand today. And very good he was too. Something I did not appreciate during the session about Cheeky D is that his stage name was derived from the world famous online Woo Name Generator. Way to go.

Followers of this blog may recall the events of Mudstock 2011 when I somehow instigated what turned out to be the exclusive use of Woo Name Generator monikers by the Parallelogram Stage truck and stage crew. This ran throughout the line check for the Woo Woo Gang and indeed for the majority of the Mudstock weekend. It was the dream gang… Scratchin Leader and Smilin’ Dreamer on the knobs, Arrogant Conqueror and me on stage coms, with X-Pert Professional on the F ‘n’ Geoff. Those were the days when Shiny was a Ruff Begga and Eusabio a mere Undiscovered Bum.

If only I had known this fact a few hours ago, I could have happily called Simon ‘Thunderous Menace’ all day long. And, in turn, answered strictly to the name of Wacko Pupil. Oh well.

Quote of the day today is awarded, typically, to Mr Menace…

“Unfortunately the famous Corporation red light is broken. Just like the rest of The Corporation. So this is my mouth telling you that we’re recording. Which we are.”

And as I sit in a stationary train carriage in the middle of a failed signal in the Olly Polly area, it feels like the famous Corporation red light is not the only thing broken today. Next stop – daybreak!