Stripped Down Music: Unplugged Performances in Unique Settings

I started making music when I was quite young. I auditioned for my first professional chorus in the 4th grade. It was a children’s chorus that rehearsed in Coconut Grove, Fl and there were two of us from Homestead that were selected. It didn’t work out as it was quite far from where we actually lived but I was hooked and just knew that there was something magical about making music and that I loved it and would be committed to for a lifetime.

Over the years I’ve worked to shape and improve my craft and have been so lucky to work with fantastic musicians along the way who shared their skills and knowledge. Florida was fabulous for building my songbook and getting experience as a full time performer. I left Florida earlier this year and am now back in California and working on building up a new performance schedule.

In the meantime, I’m uploading videos of the songs that I perform. These are stripped down in the sense that there’s no amplification and no additional production or tricks to sweeten the sound. I’m using an Apogee HypeMic to capture my voice and guitar and using my own kitchen and other people’s kitchens as a setting. I currently have 350 songs in my songbook, so I expect this to take a little while to accomplish although they’re stacking up pretty quick. I’m primarily using Tik Tok, but also YouTube, Instagram and Facebook. My hope is that folks will connect with some of their favorite tunes and have a moment that transports them to a time in their life when that music spoke to them, or perhaps connect them to some songs (old and new) they’ve never heard before.

Do you have a request for a song you’d like to hear me perform? Follow me on one of those platforms to hear my latest. And let me know if you’ve got a need for entertainment for your venue, restaurant or private party. Thanks for your support! Have a wonderful holiday season.

@kalyco77

Leader Of The Band – Dan Fogelberg One of my favorite songs to play, but then I could say that about so many of them… #oldschoolmusic #singersongwritersoftiktok #coversongs #fogelberg

♬ original sound – Kally O’Mally – Kally O’Mally
@kalyco77

I love rock and roll – Joan Jett This is such a fun song, always great in a live set for getting people to sing along. I live in an apartment and try to record these quietly and yet still try to capture the feel.

♬ original sound – Kally O’Mally – Kally O’Mally

Blurred Lines in the Music Business (Mimicry and Risk Aversion)

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Marvin Gaye’s family won the lawsuit to the tune of 7.5 million dollars.  So now Thicke and Williams have to pony up the loot. I’m a songwriter, a multi-instrumentalist and producer who strives for originality.  Now nothing in songwriting is purely original.  Most of us stick to the Western scale system and use I, IV, V as the root of our music.   Different formula’s for different styles but the fundamental platform in which we write a song has been an established paradigm for years.  So then what’s the problem? The business wants Mimicry! Repetition and for you to make it sound familiar!  One need only look to Glam Metal to see the obvious….lol.

IuAmz 

Making music is a huge business where ridiculous profits are possible (not probable for most).  Promoting the new and unique is akin to risk taking and like any big business, they’re risk averse.  They want to continue to reap profits from a proven method.  It’s understandable.  Fear of losing one’s paycheck is enough to incentivize them to want to err on the side of caution, so everything soon starts to sound the same.  Follow the rules, sound like someone popular, get to the hook fast, have production that sounds like the pro-sounds that the major houses put out.  One of the best examples of this is the Nashville sound, which has pretty much ruined country music.  The commercially produced music coming out of Nashville is sounding like pre-packaged meals, looks great on the outside, but inside it’s bland.  As long as the standard operating paradigm for the music business continues to be “do what has been done before,” we’ll continue to see judgements such as this.

We love songwriting for the framework, it’s like you’re given free range to roam within a certain set of rules and boundaries.  But there’s nothing new in the universe, so being creative is a challenge.  As a voice student, I was taught to never try to sound like anyone else, but to discover and cultivate my own sound.  The same approach applies to my songwriting craft.  I sonically isolate myself from popular music or even any music at all when I’m creating and let the words drive the melody.  Even with all safeguards, it’s still possible to end up with something that may sound a bit like something else.

To intentionally create music that sounds like something else flies in the face of true artistry, but we can’t help but wonder if the jury had really been peers of Thicke and Williams (meaning a jury of fellow songwriters) would the outcome have been the same?  I can easily distinguish the cowbell rhythm differences, and other major differences, but could the jury?

I use a submission service to place my music and I’d like to give you a little taste of my last rejection from Warner as it demonstrates this paradigm: “Hi Kally, First I want to say you are a true artist/writer.  I admire when an artist is not afraid to do something new.  The problem is, we work with straight middle America pop and RnB.  I wouldn’t know where to begin to place your project so for that reason, I have to pass.  If in the future I receive an opportunity that fits your style of music I’ll reach out to you.”  I’ll take the rejection over watering down my artistic integrity any day.

I’d be willing to bet that many artists get worn down over time and eventually bend to what the business wants, which is guaranteed profits.  It would be all to easy to sacrifice that integrity for the idea of “success” which is something every composer/producer must face.

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