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		Feb 2019 - Welcome To Jay's 
		Museum Video -  a bio kind of- sort of  
						
        
						
						Johnny Skilsaw Alumni: 
						Ron Auber 
						Mike Paterson 
						Peter Robinson Sunshine-Fuhry 
						Nick Dicorato 
						Mark Hutchins 
						Dave Lyles 
						Joey Crifo 
						Paul Andrew 
						
						
						The scrolling  
						museum graphic and art / the backdrop of my 
						website. I created it in the early 2000s using Photoshop 
						when a hand injury (Saturday night palsy) kept me from 
						playing for several months. Please note flash cameos 
						from  Charles Butkowski sitting at the bar in different 
						places throughout the video  
						
						
						Music 
						Excerpt Bibliography   
						
						
						
						0:00 
						I've had the privilege of 
						working on more than a few projects with
						
						JG Thirlwell  AKA Feotus , 
						Manorexia. Steroid Maximus In the early 
						2000s  I did several remixes for him that he encouraged 
						me to "mangle"  thus re-imagine the instrumentation and 
						structure. In doing so,  I would invent entirely new 
						passages not using little if any "remix"  source  
						material  though entire sections) . Of all these 
						projects "Miracle" is my favorite. The  music top of 
						this video (with the rapid images)  is cut from the 
						crazy extraneous intro I worked up for my outlandish 
						take on the tune. It's interspersed with other sounds 
						I've created and compiled over the years. 
						
						 
						
						 0:42 
						A series of  
						Fractal Harp 
						 clips recently shot.  
						I've concocted a way of being able to sing feedback (as 
						well as other instrument sounds I've created) with an 
						ordinary microphone.   
						
						1:16 
						
						Concert For Two Pianos 
						 excerpt (Wasco) - 
						excerpt from piece conceived several  years ago and 
						finally recently recorded with full accompaniment. 
						
						 
						1:21 
						"Noisy House" excerpt. 
						Zippy chunk of an exhausting 
						
						
						Swiss Army Bass 
						/Johnny 
						Skilsaw piece shot at Giant Studio in the 
						mid/late 80s 
						
						1:34
						
						"Heart Of Gold" 
						-(Neil Young) Stylized 
						excerpt from an old web video (2004ish) that's gotten a 
						lot of play.  
  
						
						1:46 
						"Treadmill For Two" (Wasco) The quintessential Johnny 
						Skilsaw  tune that continues to allude being 
						recorded to my satisfaction. During Live performances 
						Mark Hutchins would "express himself" by sawing his 
						stage gear up showering  sparks on the band and 
						audience. The Skilsaw sounds used here on this track are 
						actual footage of original Skilsaw Drummer, Ron Auber 
						sawing chunks off the actual 
						
						
						Swiss Army Bass 
						 in order to make it 
						lighter.              
  
						
						
						2:05
						"Death 
						Of A Cynic" 
						(Wasco, Patterson)  is a
						
						Johnny Skilsaw
						  "hit" song featuring s ear-catching 
						feedback sound created with crazy techniques came up 
						with while living in a studio microphone feedback. 
						Different versions of the tune straddle two JS 
						incarnations, The first featuring Mike Patterson's 
						vocal.    
						 
						2:28 
						
						
						"I Am The Walrus" 
						(Beatles Cover) Epic
						
						Johnny Skilsaw
						  version of the tune is EPIC.  
  
						
						2:43 
						More 
						
						Concert For Two Pianos 
						 
  
						
						2:50 
						"Rocket Man"
						Egotar 
						(Elton John cover)   
  
						
						3:07 
						"Levon" excerpt  
						Egotar   (Elton 
						John cover)     
						
						I play and take a lot of 
						liberties with familiar tunes I love and grew up on. It 
						also disciplines me to play parts and in ways I might 
						not otherwise - crucial to expanding as a musician on my 
						rig where I can just make up any shit I want and get 
						away with it sounding "together". I love Elton John 
						tunes in particular because of the beautiful chord 
						inversion built into  his music.     
						
						3:20
						
						"Shining On You" 
						(Wasco) (web video) Most of the crap I write is super 
						complicated and cryptic. This tune isn't. I did a 
						Fractal Harp version I posted on Facebook and it got 
						well over a million plays and well over 24,000 shares 
						before Facebook changed it's algorithm. Now I can hardly 
						get arrested but I can get over it since you're actually 
						reading this shit. 
						
						3:34 
						- more 
						
						Concert For Two Pianos 
						 
  
						
						3:50
						
						
						"Fractal Harp Sonata"  
						(Wasco) This piece came out great. I hope Steve Howe 
						sees it.  (web video) 
						
						4:13  
						-Segue  " "Be All End All" rig  keys velocity 
						simultaneous  triggered  drums  and bass  archive - I 
						did years of experimentation an the painful learning 
						process of bringing computer software on board into my 
						music. My concept: Use the computer as an instrument and 
						recorder without letting it dictate time or feel. 
						Because of endless options and my obvious attention 
						deficit perk - It's a continual challenge. I've come up 
						with some great KONTAKT  instrument libraries as a 
						result but I fight computers all day to do it. Here, I'm 
						playing hammer on bass but what is not as obvious is 
						that the drum (guitar and all other sounds) are being 
						played simultaneously in real time on keys using a bunch 
						of MIDI voodoo shit I figured out .  
  
						
						4:20 
						"improv"  Midi 
						percussion  Be all End all Rig with (archive)  
						 
						
						4:27 
						" improv"  
						
						Fractal Dulcimer (web 
						video) 
						
						
						For years now I've 
						perused methods, sounds and concepts of a percussion 
						based instrumentation for a full spectrum tonic 
						interface for the creation of real time, fully realized 
						music.--bla bla bla -= The use of conventional trigger 
						pads  to do this offers a practical midi and sound but  
						has endless limitations and feels like crap to play. I 
						came up with the Fractal Dulcimer series using actual 
						bass guitar stings tuned in 5ths, hit with dowels 
						simultaneously triggering samples I had created. The 
						result was great but conventional bass guitar strings 
						break when getting fwacked with 4 foot long dowels. I've 
						got a better idea & prototype in the works.  
  
						
						
						4:34 
						"Fractal Harp segue   - archive   
  
						
						
						4:47 
						"Rocket Man" (Elton John) 
						Fractal Harp version  (web video)  
  
						
						4:58 
						
						
						"Dueling Blackbirds" 
						(Beatle cover) Crucifixion of a perfectly innocent tune. 
						Web video showing two angles of the same performance.  I 
						end this and most other tunes with the outro of "Jet" 
						Paul McCartney & Wings 1973 - just to be a dick 
						
						5:11 
						"Ascension of the Dwarf Rabbit King" Wasco -Fractal Harp 
						orchestral bit -  "work in progress" from the Broadway 
						production of "Ascension of the Dwarf Rabbit King" 
						(kidding here)  segment recorded this winter.  
  
						
						5:34 
						"Divingboardus 
						Maximus" (Wasco)   From Flying Shelson's 
						
						"The Diving Board and Other 
						Chronicles Of The End"  
  
						
						5:46 
						"Fly Off The Diving Board"  (Wasco) -  That's me singing 
						like Ethel Merman   "The Diving Board and Other 
						Chronicles Of The End" 
						
						"The Diving Board And 
						Other Chronicles Of The End" (Row- Wasco)  would be a 
						dark comedy piece on media/ government driven mechanized 
						mass suicide. If only it wasn't entirely real.  
  
						
						6:00 
						The wind down of this 
						video flashes projects I've worked on -including many 
						albums & demos I recorded in my studio for and with 
						other artists in different capacities. 
						
						 
						
						6:32
						"Mozart 
						K563" - I 
						reverse engineered this piece and playing short segments 
						of violin and cello to bring it to life learning it by 
						ear as I went. It was a great musical exercise.  I used 
						an archaic E-MU sampler to do it (no computer)  The 
						recording came out great. 
						  
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