What made you decide to do another solo
album?
I was playing with all these different bands and people,
collaborating, and wanting to have my own material. If they're
gonna hire me, then I might as well just write my own stuff and
hire myself as bass player. I'm so sought after that I want me
too.
So you recorded most of The Green Sparrow in
your own home studio?
The first thing I did was spend two years building the studio in
Vermont. It's the same guy that had built my old studio, and Trey's
barn. Trey and I used to talk about Stevie Wonder's work triangle,
where you can spin around in your chair and have everything you
need within reach. I worked alone for nine months, completely
alone. I had read [choreographer] Twyla Tharp's creativity book.
She was saying you should face your solitude, and I had never
really worked alone much, at all. And then I read Julia Cameron's
The Artists Way, which Trey recommended 10 years ago.
What does that book recommend?
It's 10 hours a week and there's exercises. There's two weekly
rituals which I still do. People talk about the Morning Pages,
that's one of them, where you write three pages every morning.
There's all these unexpected reasons why it frees up your brain.
You could be writing, "God damn it! The dog pissed on the floor
again!" But you're venting that stuff and you're teaching your hand
to keep writing despite the fact that your inner censor that you've
developed since childhood is gonna say what you're writing is shit.
It's been kind of life-changing.
Were you suffering from writer's block?
Sometimes I was. I mean I've been writing songs for 20 years, but
never all day, every day, all week, for a year. And what it was
unearthing, in terms of my fears and what I didn't know how to get
in the flow of, was astounding. But the result was I came up with
50 songs, and by the end of September, I had recorded just six of
them. In October, I changed it up, and [engineer] Jared Slomoff and
I were writing the rules. I live my life by all these rules. You
can't have the fun of breaking rules until you make rules.
What are some of the rules?
The rule for the year was no gigs allowed. But for October, the two
main rules were one song a day, it had to be finished from
beginning to end, demoed. And the other rule was, I had archived 20
years of jam sessions and little scratch pad ideas, so everything
had to stem from something that had been archived.
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