That's a seriously fine pair of basses! Kind of a "sometimes you feel like a nut, sometimes you don't" approach.
Tony,
"IMHO, You REALLY should do some more recording"
...at least until I get one right! Recording one track at a time is interesting in that you can build a song from the ground up, all by yourself - but at the same time, it's difficult for the same reason. There isn't any kind of "group" feel until you get well into it and I tend to get either bored or lost when putting down the first track or two. You also don't have input from other points of view and the addition of parts that perhaps you wouldn't have thought of (funny story to follow in a minute).
I always wanted to have a nice, melodic singing voice with some range and control but it didn't happen so it really limits my song selection to the few that I don't sound truly awful on. The last thing I heard, Bob Gibson (an old folk music pioneer that we did some commercials and a demo for a movie theme song with) had a scratch copy of "Hard Years" and he was going to play it for John Denver to see if John wanted to record it? It's been about 30 years, but I expect to hear back from Bob and John any day now....... Personally, I've always wanted to hear Willie Nelson sing it. Maybe I could pay him to lay down a quick track?
OK, the funny story about adding other points of view when recording: The final song on The Ship album is the big finale and is made up of about four different sections, some old, some new. It starts with a fast section where I was playing some jazz-style runs. Then it blends into a big four-part harmony chorus of a previous theme where the part I was playing was actually inspired by Macca's bass line on "Rain" with some tenth and twelfth fret stuff on the D and G strings and then drops into a revamped version of the opening number with kind of a mellow, "rolling ocean" tempo. This goes on for a verse or two and then it goes from the key of D to A major (they went down to A, I went up to it) and a new section starts.
The lyrics are "The bond that held me captive...was a hold I had to sever...etc." This section is very four-to-six-part, Beach-Boys-ish in terms of harmony with the extra parts that Gary Usher had us add. Tempo-wise though, it was powerful, but slow. In my mind, it seemed to plod along. When we were doing the basic tracks, without vocals or other points of interest, it R E A L L Y seemed to plod along. At some point during a run-through, I had had enough and started playing a new, up-tempo bass line. Normally when you're recording and somebody starts playing something weird, it means "Cut! I screwed up." So everybody stopped and somebody looked at me and said:
"What are you doing???"
"Well, err, uhhh I'm playing the bass line to "Sugar-pie Honey-Bun". This thing needs something to liven it up. Just keep playing and let's see if this works."
They kept playing, I kept playing this counter-tempo Motown bass line against what they were playing, it worked and we kept it.
Here is a copy of that last cut in case you don't want to download the entire monstrosity.
http://webpages.charter.net/tbradshaw/Music%20stuff/ending.MP3
U-haul trailer rental to Los Angeles - $167.00
One month's supply of fresh strings and picks - $253.00
Dinner for five at the Teriyaki Tiki across the street from Elektra Studios - $34.00
Ending your folk opera with "Sugar-Pie Honey-Bun" - priceless!