THE STORY OF DAVE 3

    
    

Almost immediately after I finished DAVE I started work on DAVE 3 with a concept in mind for how the album would be structured; what if, instead of 10 songs that are a minute each, what if I made one song that was 10 minutes long.

What a journey.

BIG NARF!

The first part I completed for Big Narf was the part after the double bass part in the beginning, originally called Betty. Then, I made the double bass part to go before Betty. The rest is a blur to be honest, although I know I came up with the opening drum “solo” after the reverb bass tapping part. I’m not going to explain the story behind a lot of the parts, although the part directly before the tapping part, called Melly on music for white people to clap to, is based on the Black Cats song from Call of Duty World at War. Also, the beat on the second to last part in the song is the same beat to Joe McCarthy’s Ghost by the Minutemen, and the very last part is meant to coincide with the beginning of Tovik on DAVE. In terms of how long it took me to complete it all, I had been doing test runs for a few months before I finished the song, but the final version of Big Narf, and the test run I may release later, were recorded about a week and a half before I released the album. The intro and the ending were mainly to make the song hit the ten minute mark, but also since I like misdirection a lot, I thought it would be funny to make the beginning really nice sounding, and then kick into the real song. I had Sam record the piano, and for inspiration, I sent him the Taxi Driver sax theme. The crowd noises were stolen from YouTube. It took about an afternoon to record all the instruments on my end, as I finished the drums and bass in one day. The reverb bass part had been recorded a few months before I started recording DAVE 3. It took 3 days to mix, and I re-recorded a bass part a day before I released the album.

[UNTITLED]

I was originally going to call this one s l e but I decided against it for some reason. This was recorded a week or two before I recorded Big Narf, and was completely recorded in my bathroom. The first part was 3 guitar parts layered on top of one another, all playing the same thing, and a bass playing the same thing as the guitars. The second part was just two guitars, and took surprisingly long to record because I kept messing it up. It took only a few hours to mix

FUN FACTS

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