Archive for the ‘Blog’ Category

The “White Horse” Cover

Thursday, February 9th, 2012

The White Horse isn’t literally a horse, it’s an illusion made by the ocean. It is wave that is blown by the wind so its crest is broken and appears white. But once I started calling it a White Horse wave, I couldn’t divorce the two interpretations. The artwork, a stunning picture by Toronto photographer Andrew Barrow, was eerily close to my vision.

“This ‘horse wave’ happened in 2009 during one of the strongest winds to hit the North shore of Lake Ontario for some years. The wave was against a pretty neutral sky so the Image quality of the shot has been sacrificed in order to bring out the subject but the actual wave formation, clearly in the shape of a horse, is not photoshopped at all. The head, nose, neck and mane are clear but if you look closely you can also see the hind quarters and what looks like front legs trying to break free from the surf.”

The “White Horse” EP is available for download at BandCamp, iTunes, and for streaming at Spotify.

The White Horse Story

Friday, January 13th, 2012

Where “Black Sheep, Run” was a broader commentary with a wide dynamic range, “White Horse” was for me, deeply introspective and meant to showcase the songwriting through sparse instrumentation.

At one point, the four songs chosen for the project lived in a metaphorical no man’s land . They were either too down-tempo to perform live, or too lyrical to fit on my indie-pop records. Eventually these four found their own place as songs that translated well on the acoustic guitar. This project exists out of my desire to share this other side of my songwriting and bridge the gap between “BS,R” and my next full length that I’ve only just begun conceptualizing.

“White Horse” is a batch of songs that I can play live as a solo musician that feel complete. Playing full band is something that I’d love to do more of to fully highlight what we were able to achieve on “Black Sheep, Run”, but logistically it’s not practical for me right now. Especially on the road.

This project was a great learning experience for me. For starters, with the studio dates coinciding with the birth of “Black Sheep, Run” producer Ed Valauskas’ daughter, I got to make production choices on my own. He will certainly reclaim that role on my next album. It was also an opportunity to work with some friends of mine for the first time. Paula Kelley provided a gorgeous string arrangement for “White Horse” and was able to accentuate the baroque and classical references I was trying to make. That arrangement came to life thanks to Aaron Tap at QuailTop Studios in LA. Let’s not forget new friends that lent their talents – Chris Barrett (Piano on “You Answered Me”) and Tim Gearan (harmonies on “November 15).

The support thus far for “White Horse” has been really encouraging and validating in a very new, unexpected and humbling way. My performances on this EP were recorded in one day at Q Division Studios. I feel this is a good representation of who I am as an artist and a performer at this time.

Golden Owl(s): The Story of My One Night Band Part II

Tuesday, September 27th, 2011


Photo By Joshua Pickering

At this point we had our band members, band name, band picture and were off to our practice space (Oranjuly’s space over at Sound Museum Brighton).

Being a solo act, rehearsal spaces aren’t typically a part of my process but ONB gave me a reason to break away from my tendencies. For example, I have this awesome Fender Mexican Fat Strat that I got for my twelfth birthday, it was my first guitar. At one point it helped me “shred” Metallica’s “Master Of Puppets” and Cream’s “Sunshine Of Your Love” but for as long as I’ve been the acoustic dude (2004ish), it has sat in its gig bag in a neglected corner under my bed among dust bunnies. Saturday was different, it forced me to use this guitar once again and fall back in love with it.

Another departure for me was the group writing. Despite our deadline, our songwriting process happened pretty organically. Evan had the idea of making our set an homage to William Shatner and Star Trek. That theme was the building blocks for “Name Your Own Price”, “Vulcan Girl”, “Beam Me Up Scotty” and Leonard Nimoy’s version of “If I Had A Hammer”. So we worked through it there in that sweaty rehearsal space with some ideas and a few beers. “I’ve never appreciated Bud Light more than I do right now,” Aaron said. I’m pretty sure we all shared those sentiments.

Speaking of Aaron, this dude is a total badass. Really creative parts and tones. During the share any ideas phase he busted out this cool keys part in 6/4. It had this great overdriven Rhodes tone and an undeniable groove. After some funky bass and drums from John and Lou, a little more structure and some vowel singing by me, we had the basis for “Vulcan Girl”.

From there we banged out our other songs, contemplated our stage outfits (gold sequin suits were mentioned but later dismissed), did interviews with Keith Pierce and Ryan Spaulding and called it a long and productive day in the studio. Thinking back on it, I’ve never had a more productive day musically.

We got back to the Middle East around 7:30PM and found out we’d be playing second at 9:30. This was an ideal spot, the less time from rehearsals to performance the more likely I was to remember what we worked on. The set felt great and while I was performing I couldn’t help but thinking we actually sounded like a band. No doubt the crowd, a packed room there to support ZUMIX, Boston Band Crush and the One Night Bands, helped make the performance.

After the rush of playing our first and last set together pulling it off sans any huge flubs I was feeling great. The real humbling moment of the night was back in the green room after the set when the manager for Annual Snowfall, the teenage ZUMIX band who totally kicked ass for a H.S. band, asked if the group could get their picture with me. It was a cute and flattering gesture. Aaron thought this was the greatest thing. “That was awesome!” he explained. “Kids can smell two things: talent and fear. They definitely saw your talent.”

As I was packing up my gear in the green room with the other guys the dynamic had changed. Where before I had seen four strangers I had just met earlier that morning, I now saw brothers in arms. We had made it through something unique, exciting and challenging together; and as I talked to all of them about their upcoming shows I knew these people, along with the other friends I made that night, were now a part of my life.

Golden Owl(s): The Story of My One Night Band Part I

Monday, September 26th, 2011


Photo by Johnny Anguish/DayKamp Music.

Friday night felt like the night before the first day of school. More specifically 1st grade, 9th or freshman year of college. The transition years– the start of something new. I wasn’t going to know too many people, something I was both excited and nervous about. But like my days in school, I knew there were many friends and memories to be made if I fully immersed myself. And in my involvement I found that to be truer than I could have ever imagined.

Early Saturday morning as I raced over to the Middle East, I thought of my fellow Boston rockers tired/hungover and bleary eyed, making the same trip. Of the people involved that I already knew, I had never seen any of them before nightfall let alone 10 in the morning. The early wake up socializing was met with the anticipation of what was inside the envelopes which myself and 39 other musicians clutched tightly.

Around 10:15 a.m., just as the last of the participants rolled in, Ashley instructed us to open our envelopes and match the sticker on our name tags with others in our bands. “I hate team building!” someone shouted out as we struggled to figure out what our stickers were supposed to be. I was convinced, and still am, that mine was a pot of gold. “Pot of gold? Pot of gold?” I repeated as I made my way through crowd. I was on a mission and if you weren’t a match, you were dead to me for the next 5 minutes. I heard someone else say pot of gold in the back of the room, it was John Sheeran (bassist for Township). Our strategy was to hang tight and let the other three find us. Kerri-Ann finally encouraged us to seek out our remaining members.

Sure enough, three dudes were looking to round out their band. “Owls?” the group said to John and I. We looked closer at the stickers, they were the same as ours. The remaining band was Evan Shore (singer and guitarist: Muck & The Mires), Lou Paniccia (drummer: Oranjuly), and Aaron Rosenthal (keys: This Blue Heaven). Once we had all met up we were asked to conjure up a band name, a really difficult task it turns out for five people who just met eachother. Lou whipped out his iPhone and was reading off possibilities from a random band name generator.

That’s when Ryan Spaulding (Ryan’s Smashing Life) and film crew came over to introduce the new band. We were completely stuck in the naming process. His cameraman Jonathan Case suggested a combination of sticker theories, “How about Golden Owl?”. It was 300x better than anything we thought of (flaccid dolphin being one of the rejects). After 5 minutes of being a “band” we had our name, our first tv interview and a photo shoot. We decided to go for the “tough guys” face. I think it was the right call.

more to come…

http://www.onenightbandboston.com/

http://www.bostonbandcrush.org/

Cover Series

Tuesday, August 16th, 2011

I’m taking on a long list of covers picked by you (and me) to add to my YouTube page. Some will be candidly shot on my webcam, others might be live footage from a show or maybe even car singing. Hopefully by the end of the series you guys have turned me on to some cool new stuff, I have some new videos for the page and everyone wins.

If you have any ideas, add them to the comments. This list will keep growing. Once I have done a song I’ll put the title in italics and add the url next to it. Thanks for your support!

Check out the list on facebook.

Schmidt Happens Shirts are in!

Thursday, August 4th, 2011

The new Schmidt Happens Tee brought to by Audio Cotton.
…do we need to say more? I think the audience will agree that this heathered shirt says it all!

Buy it here: http://bit.ly/j53eqO

What’s in a title? What “Black Sheep, Run” Means to Me: Part 2

Tuesday, April 12th, 2011

The Recording Story (continued)

We continued recording through the Summer of 09 and well into the Fall. In September, we were putting finishing touches and recording some of my favorite performances on the album. When I wrote “Night The Bells Rang”, a song about a family torn apart during WWII, I knew I wanted a female vocalist to portray the significant other that left back at home. The character is burdened with raising a family and her only real motivation is the hope that someday when the war is over, her family will be nuclear once more. I was thrilled that the brilliant Juliana Hatfield agreed to be part of this duet. Having not met her until that day in Studio A, I was nervous that my songs would seem sophomoric to such a seasoned pro.

My nerves were eased when I got there and saw her and Ed hanging in the control room playing with her brown lab puppy, Charlie. Ed introduced us and soon we were talking about the latest episode of America’s Next Top Model. Her and I sat down with the lyrics and within minutes she was in the live room singing. She paid the ultimate compliment at the end of the session when she said, “Great voice, great songs and you’ve got the look. I can really see you going places.” This was the confidence boost I needed to finish the record off with the same energy I had when we first started.

By December 2009, the album was mixed and mastered. I took almost a year from completing the record to coordinate photo shoots, bio, album titles, artwork, manufacturing and distribution plans. DIY releases always seem to take longer than anticipated and Black Sheep, Run was no exception. I had spent nearly three years writing and recording and for me, the final touches deserved the same attention to detail. On November 2, 2010 my debut album was released with a CD Release Show at the Middle East Upstairs.

Why “Black Sheep, Run”. What does it mean?

When thinking of titles I immediately ruled out having a title track. This was my debut and I didn’t want to put any focus on one particular track. I also wanted to make a conscious effort to choose a title that wasn’t used by any other artist (I ran each contender into iTunes, Amazon and Google). Throughout the album process, I tried setting myself apart from the somewhat cliched singer/songwriter pop genre. From song structure, to lyric focus, from instrumentation to production, we tried making something our own. When people ask me what kind of musician I am, I tell them singer/songwriter or solo artist. Very often they say respond with “like John Mayer?” To be honest, I have nothing wrong with his music, it has its merit. What I don’t like is the countless uninspired copycats his music has spawned. For this reason I saw myself as a Black Sheep within my often limiting singer/songwriter label. I had every intention while making this record to stay as far away from “that” sound as possible, hence Black Sheep, Run.

What’s in a title? What “Black Sheep, Run” Means to Me: Part 1

Tuesday, April 12th, 2011

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

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