Monday, November 17, 2014

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Here is a new video by Banana Street titled “Take This Hammer”:



This song was recorded with the full band (Jeff Kytta - Drums, Yacek Zawadski - Guitar, Kev Moeller – vocal/harmonica and my brother James - guitar). I love the way the song builds to a crescendo and almost goes out of control and then comes back down to a tempered finish. And I hope you do too.

This video is dedicated to Leadbelly.

Those of you that know me well will know that I’m a big fan of Leadbelly’s music. Leadbelly, for those who don’t know already, was a singer/songwriter that lived from 1885-1949. As a man Leadbelly was one badass dude. In 1910, he was in a terrible fight getting his throat cut from ear to ear and mortally wounding the other man in the battle. He walked several blocks with his hand across his throat, so he would not bleed to death, to a nearby hospital. He was convicted of manslaughter and served 15 years on a chain gang, being released in 1925 when he wrote a song for the governor of Texas. Governor Pat Neff pardoned Leadbelly on his last day in office – the only pardon he ever granted. Leadbelly didn’t stay free for long though. He ended up serving another 5 years after killing another man three years later. Alan Lomax secured his release in 1933; Lomax recorded Leadbelly for the Library of Congress and he setup performances for Leadbelly all over the country. Leadbelly soon became famous and he hosted a radio program in the 1940’s with numerous musical guests including Woody Guthrie and Sonny Terry and others who would perform songs with him on his show.

Like I said, Leadbelly was a badass as a person, but his music and influence were immense and in a very good way. He like no other performer created the folk protest song. First with subtle works like “Grey Goose” and “Take This Hammer” which were adopted as resistance songs and celebrated the perseverance of the human spirit; and then more directly with songs like “Scottsboro boys”, “Bourgeois blues”, “Same Boat Brother” and many other songs. The folk tradition is unique in American music in that it has a social conscience. And it started with Leadbelly, no other songwriters of leadbelly’s era were writing songs like this. He of course, influenced many artists like Woody Guthrie, Bob Dylan, Joan Baez, Pete Seeger and many others to continue this tradition – which set the stage for the political reforms of the 1960’s.

Leadbelly was a collector and writer of music and when he was in jail he led work prison groups in southeastern Texas, working “lead”, he would sing rhythmic work songs so the workers could keep time as they swung their hammers, there would be a loud “clang” as all the hammers hit the iron rail ties simultaneously bending them into place. Prisoners “lined track” for the railroad all throughout Texas and the Deep South. “Take this Hammer” is a song that came from these work songs. It is about a prisoner who rebels against the oppression of the chain gang and flees in an attempt to escape, leaving his hammer to another prisoner to take back to the prison captain at the station headquarters. “Take this hammer and carry it to the captain, you tell ‘em I’m gone, you tell ‘em I’m gone”. This song has been recorded by many different artists over the years, but the first recording was Leadbelly’s in 1940 recorded by Folkways Music, which is now owned by the Smithsonian Institute.

In my video there are clips of Leadbelly from a 1940’s movie from the archives of the Smithsonian Institute. I would like to thank Lisa Bradford at the Smithsonian for helping me secure the rights for me to use these clips in my video. It took 6 months of emails back and forth but in the end they were very helpful and they granted me permission.

All other video not filmed by me is public domain footage from www.Archive.org . Using mostly black and white video it was a challenge to bring color to this video that does not look gaudy; you will be the judge to whether I was successful. I hope that you enjoy the video as much as I enjoyed making it.

You can listen to Leadbelly’s original recording (1940) in a video here:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dXnVd2q_bIg

KSM

Monday, November 1, 2010

White Wolf and the Sonic Princess "Radio Man"

Here is my Lastest video in cooperationwith White wolf and the Sonic Princess


Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Monday, May 17, 2010

I'm very please how this video truned out:

Banana Street at it's best.

Saturday, January 23, 2010

Battery Operated Guitar Amplifier 8-9 Watts



This audio amplifier schematic and guitar/harp amplifier project is a class AB audio power amplifier using a TDA2003 module power amplifier.

Output is 8-9 watts

It includes two JFET preamplifier stages and a bass boost tone control.

This Guitar/Harp amplifier uses a Cabela's Rechargeable 12-Volt Battery.

And the amp is totally portable requiring no extrenal plug and 8 hours of continous play time on a single charge.

Silvertone 1481 Harp modifications

The Silvertone amp is very easily modified because it uses point-to point wiring. Please be VERY careful when working with tube amps the voltages can KILL you. First thing to do is identify ALL capacitors and short them to ground for a few seconds making sure they are fully discharged.

Here is a list of the modifications that I use on my Silvertone 1481:

1) Add a 22 uf by-pass capacitor electrolyte on the first 2.2K cathode resistor ( this adds more bass. Be sure that the negative side of the cap is to ground)
2) Replace the second 2.2K resistor with an 1.5K resistor (This adds more gain - don’t do this to the first tube stage or you will get too much feedback)
3) Move the volume control from the first preamp tube stage to be last thing just before the output stage, just after the tone control (this allows creamy preamp tube distortion at any volume level)
4) Replace all .01 uf coupling capacitors with .02 uf capacitors (this allows more bass and midrange to pass from stage to stage)
5) Replace the 270 ohm resistor with a 240 ohm resistor rated at 10 watts. (this runs the output stage a little hotter, but is still in spec for a 6V6 output tube
6) Replace the original 7 inch alnico speaker with a 10 inch alnico speaker

With these changes the amp will be as good as any harp amp out there. It works great for guitar too unless you’re looking for a guitar amp that does not add distortion.

Good luck