Weekend Update

Another busy weekend here! Not much to report, two things:

The Downtown Band

I played a really fun private show with the Downtown Band at, of all things, the Birmingham Zoo. As usual, we had so much fun making music together and just being around good friends. The 10 piece band pulls from a talent pool of over 200 musicians in the Nashville area, but we have a core group that usually plays.

The band is structured so it’s easy to sub out if you pick up a tour or session, which has meant the talent level is incredible since you don’t feel locked down if the artist you play for calls last minute.

Loading in at the Birmingham Zoo with The Downtown Band for a prom this weekend. Yep, a prom- haven’t worried this much about what high schoolers think since I was 17.

Loading in at the Birmingham Zoo with The Downtown Band for a prom this weekend. Yep, a prom- haven’t worried this much about what high schoolers think since I was 17.

There are 3 groups that go by the same name and sub through various events, but the one I’m the most involved in has the following people:

Jordan Phillips- Lead singer. Also lead singer of Centricity (Sony) signed pop group and producer with Apollo LTD.

Erin Berry- BGV’s. Pop singer under the name Berry.

Michelle Brooke- BGV’s. Americana singer under the name Michelle Brooke.

Adam Stark- Guitars/BGV’s. The other half of Apollo LTD. See above credits.

Gabriel Anderson- Bass/BGV’s. Insightful music industry blogger here.

Jordan Perlson-Drums. LONG list of credits including Snarky Puppy (which is my favorite 😆) Website here.

Max Fulwilder- Sax. Reggae background, and current band director at Christ Presbyterian Academy.

Layne Ihde- Trumpet, rapping. Multi-talented guy who also writes the most adorable children’s books.

Eric Tucker- Trombone. My favorite credit he has is his gig with Aretha Franklin for a bit.

Kim Wheeler- Mix engineer. Canadian, but we don’t hold it against her. Website here.

Over the years, these people have become like a little second family to me, and while the gigs aren’t prestigious, the hang combined with the insane musicianship onstage makes this one of my favorite groups to play with.

New patches on the way

I spent the weekend working on finalizing a big project related to cover bands, and it should be dropping on Wednesday or Thursday of this week. If you want to get updates about my patches that I design for The Nord Stage 3, you can sign up for my email here or go to www.patchfoundry.com/nordstage3 for more details.

That’s it for now. Have a great start to your new week.

Relaxing Piano Music

My friend Grant Pittman released this delightful collection of original piano songs, and anytime I want to relax I listen to them. Grant’s day job is working as music director for Lauren Daigle, and during the slow down during the pandemic he managed to have time to record this.

Sometimes it’s not how fancy something is, but how perfectly executed it is.

Song Exploder

There is an awesome podcast where artists break down their songs, explaining how they did each part and why it’s significant.

One of my favorite artists Lianne La Havas is featured in the latest episode, and explains how the legendary bassist Victor Wooten was partially responsible for her latest hit, “Can’t Fight Away This Love”.

If video is your thing, there’s a limited series on Netflix by the same guys that is well worth the watch. The above micro episode just whetted my appetite to binge the whole series.

Cool Line Mixer

So a problem for keyboardists who play multiple keyboards live is having enough input channels in a small enough form factor mixer. I complicate that because I also like to be able to have some control over my monitor mix, and use stomp boxes live. That’s a tall order to find in a small form factor.

Today I think I found the ultimate line mixer that checks all of those boxes- the Samson SM10. It has some really cool features in a 2U rack format I’ve never seen before in a line mixer:

  1. 8 stereo line inputs (with two XLR inputs)

  2. The ability to route channels to a separate headphone mix only, allowing for them to be used for monitoring purposes only

  3. Dedicated FX loop

  4. Panning for all inputs

  5. XLR output so you don’t need a DI for FOH

To create a separate monitor mix for myself, I’ll be doing something rather unusual. I’ll plug my wireless or wired pack live into the back of the SM10 on channel 1 using the stereo input, then route it to a separate “Mix B” section only this line mixer has.

Then I’ll route the output of the whole mixer (minus the mix B inputs) through the 1/4 outputs on the back into channel 2, and send it to mix B, as well. Then I’ll select the headphones to only monitor mix b, which is a combination of the monitor sends from the venue and my keyboards. This will allow me to have independent level and panning for both of the inputs without having to flag down a monitor engineer.

Confused? I maybe, too. 😆When the unit comes in I’ll post a more detailed walkthrough of how to set everything up.

Luck, Investments, and Hard Work

The older I get, the more I realize how little I have to do with whether I’m “successful” or not.

Sure, working as hard as possible is important.

But here are some things that matter a lot more than that.

• Having a stable enough home environment to be able to show up consistently

• Having parents who supported you at critical times in your career and relationships

• Being born at the right moment when what you want to do is actually a profession, and not a hobby

• Not having to constantly fight debilitating emotional or physical barriers that you have not control over

• Being the color skin/gender that most people associate with what you want to do

• Having been taught an an early age that the world is predictable enough that if you work for something, you might get it.

• Having spouses that choose to grow emotionally and support you even when times are tough

• Being born into an area where you were exposed at an early enough age to cool stuff that sparked your interest

• Growing up in a house that values learning

• Having great teachers who inspired and gave unselfishly to make your life better

• Being born at the right moment in history where we’re politically stable enough that you actually have the time to do your profession and not try to survive

• Being born in a country that’s stable enough to allow you to do something other than survive

• Living in a time period where the tools you need to succeed are inexpensive and readily available

• Being born into a family with a long history of behavior that leads to the accumulation of wealth or skills

• Not being exposed to drugs or debilitating addictions at an early age where you don’t have the developmental skills\ to resist

• Being born so that you were exactly the right age at the right time in the market that what you are specifically trying to do for a living is considered valuable.


If you’re keeping track, not one of the above involves being born into a wealthy family, which could be an entirely separate list.

Combine this with luck, or the odds that if you keep showing up with something that’s valuable in the marketplace you will get picked sometimes, and I feel like hard work has less and less and less to do with it.

Sure, it's easy to blow it by being lazy, but pretending like the reason we're where we're at today because we "earned it" is ridiculous.

It’s crazy not because we didn’t work hard (I’m sure we did) but because it marginalizes how much people have invested in us and how blessed we really are.