Black Sheep, Run more info and song previews: http://www.nimbitmusic.com/ryanschmidt/
The album has been out for 4 months now and response from fans and musical peers has been really strong. Even with that, we still don’t have a single album review. I often hear “I like the music, but there’s no story”. This frustrates me. Everyone has a story. Here is mine.
The Backstory
My twin sister and I were raised in a small New Hampshire town just north of the Massachusetts border. We grew up in place where there were no traffic lights, or street lights for that matter, and only one convenience store known as The Village Store. In elementary school I started playing the saxophone. At this time I had already written a handful of songs in the boy band vein. (see picture below). You could say I got the music bug at a young age. Before I even had anything to say, I had my sister Lauren doing my photo shoots.

In 6th grade I auditioned for the Jazz Band on the Alto Sax. Me and a Trumpet player were the only 6th graders chosen that year. Over the next three years, we played for Clark Terry and Branford Marsalis at the UNH Jazz Festival.
While thinking of future college goals, I decided to attend a private High School. The music program there was young and wasn’t as structured as I had hoped for. Because of the fact that there are few opportunities out there for Solo Sax players, Kenny G. purposely excluded, I started getting back into the guitar and songwriting.
I heard about Q Division Studios around the same time I was volunteering for the NEMO Music Festival and the Boston Music Awards. I had a handful of songs that I wanted to record over my Christmas break and had remembered their name. I remember meeting Ed Valauskas and getting the tour around the studio. He was a lot nicer and patient with a 17 year old with little-to-no recording experience and stupid questions than he needed to be. During the mixing process, I was going through my teenage runaway phase. I was having one of those “I am going to follow my dreams no matter what anyone says” moments. That summer I released the “Burning Bitter Years” EP. It was a far cry from what I wanted to say with my songwriting, but it was a start. The CD is since out of print but I recently found a used copy of it on Amazon for $69.98. http://amzn.to/iiHSl0. This is crazy! I’m pretty sure you can still get it for free at Last.fm.
The Recording Story
After “Burning Bitter Years”, I kept in touch with Ed V while I worked on new music and finished High School. I knew our dynamic was good in the studio and I asked him to produce my album when the songs were ready. Those in between years I gigged as much as possible including a semi-regular Lizard Lounge show. One of the more memorable Lizard shows was when I opened for a Eli “Paperboy” Reed solo piano show.
Fast forward to the Fall of 2008 where we had whittled the 30+ songs down to 12 or so album contenders. I remember those first two weeks of recording. That was the first time I felt like a professional musician, working hard with a focused and talented team. One highlight of those early sessions was having the talented and nicest guy in rock, Aaron Tap drop in while on tour with Matt Nathanson to record electric guitars on three songs. A few hours later, I was driving him back to the Berklee Performance Center for his sold-out show. When I got back to Q, Ed, Rafi Sofer and Matt Tahaney had thrown four part harmonies on the Bridge of “Her Story”. I remember thinking it was out there but musically valid at the same time.
This theme of using left of center production and playing techniques stuck throughout the recording process. On the intro to the 8th track “Where You Are”, the opening riff is played by Phil Aiken hand plucking/muting the upright piano strings. It was one of those special studio moments that happens by chance and can’t be imitated. It was that ethereal playing that got people’s attention. “Where You Are” was placed on a digital compilation for a top secret members only P2P site (so secret I can’t share which one) and received over 40,000 downloads in under a month. Soon after that I started classes at Northeastern University studying Music Industry. We had three songs mixed and mastered and two other unmixed songs complete. The album took a 4 month hiatus as I settled into college life and wrote new songs. Some of the newer songs started to outpace the older album contenders. In the Spring of 09 we were back at it.
In hindsight, I notice two different performers on the record. The fall 2008 Ryan Schmidt vocal approach was straight, smooth and mindful of the way the songs were originally written (“Her Story”, “Not What I Used To Be”, “Invisible”, “Where You Are”, and “Wake Up With You”). The Spring 2009 Ryan Schmidt was loud, raspy and confidently experimenting with new phrasing and melodies (“Alright”, “Lost Somewhere”, “Notice Me Tonight”, “Night The Bells Rang”, “Under Attack”, “Pisces”).
the story continues… Part 2 coming soon