V Arts & Entertainment . ,.ii‘ u ; • lif. j < lifaj (ft m,xj ‘ < < • *>'&«T i’ i :u liitf) hi/v " # > § i | By Mark Up Senior Ropwtar staff Red” are famous all throughout the stale, and even in other places across the country where college football is a big deal. There's only one problem - the crowd never has chanted4 ‘Go Big Red” in unison. The size of the stadium and the large number of people simply prohibits any kind of organi zation of that scale, so that the group cheers are rarely more than garbled, clumsy sounding roars. The hand also is usually a disappoint ment I'm sure the songs it pfays sound good in some context but the band also faces a severe logistical problem - playing to V6,0G0 people in lour general directions. . R hat this means is that when the band is Rpposed to be playing something like thsfi ftg^ndtheme, there’s probably about! tVBHHrann^one,sixsnare<^u^^l * In fairnuMo the band, though, it pro vides one £ the great aural joys of any football Jflurday - its late in the game, brassy^Maition of the Charlie Brown jMjJrainvorst sound on Saturday at Memo HpRadium is simply the general con versa Jon of the crowd. In a society that has made ■ few major steps in attitudes toward race Rid sex over the past few decades, a football Sodium on game day is genet ally the most "RThe best sounds are those that come in spontaneous, immediate reaction to wliat occurs on the field, and there arc a varie ty of these reactions. The eoicst are the ononises of boos that follow “bad” calls against the home team. Or the hissing noise that greets visiting evils like the Oklahoma Sooner? or now-retired Alabama coach Bear Bryant yelps, moans • *# k before dawn, s wake up and ight silence. If yorll hear the first have the morning air t two minutes. Then hear the next five birds, then the next fifty, one hundred and then more, e squirrels will get going in the the acorns will start, to rain The cars get up again, and by ’t believe how loud the world is time of day. time people all over Lincoln tering the most hated, obnox the world — an alarm clock of it’s shut of f they ’ 11 marvel at quiet, but you, of course, will know differently. Local bands consider cassettes most affordable option 9 la Hen m tkc ImiI cMKtttf m f J the sWvw at Pickles, 1(371 St. i tt/J mi Malcn, Mil 0 St jj B and the Hot Notes, “back in wack” V Roger Bene*, “Lie Awake” xgFl The Blue Band. “One More Won't Kill Ya” ft Bob‘n'J, “We Want Off the Planet” : Bobby Carious, “The Paul Phillips Show” & 'jk] The Cheatin’ Snakes “Snake Fascinated! ” fcjf‘ Christopher “The End of the Age” [El . Dave Dickerson, “No More Land to Give hvj. Elysium Crossing “Rhythm of the Rain” t vii?l EroJca, “Babelogue” U$< The Eoiksters, “what a poser” KpH ‘Jra Jared nod the Doo Rites, “How Do You Doo? j \dr| The Lemmings. “Skoomba Loomba” Ryc': ^4 Lonesome Dave and Hardly Every Holm,4 ‘The Ballad of Oral Roberts” ' Raj4 *3 Laurie McClain. “Gettin‘Out Alive” MS: uwf John Moran, “The Taming Power of the Great f/Mpfl w] The New Brass Guns, “White Dress” tr4 * Daniel Newton, ”... somebody actually plays this stuff yho Out of Habit. ‘'Flavors of Favors” „ pKJt r$j Private Kangaroo, “Another Bad Day for Bobby McKay The Return ^Olossingtown” |£kJ1 w fi John and Jmon Shaw, “Flowers From Hcaven yd “Staged! A Live Lincoln Sampler” featuring The New i( Breus Guar, 13 Nightmares, Etysium Crossing, The Return, hj Trottf Mystery, Mannequin Beach, Out of Habit, Charlie Burton and the Hiccups 3 Scott Stewart, “Quiet Life” t „ KjwU JJ Such Sweet Thunder, * ‘Jan Chamberlain PMg&m 3 Dave Sullivan, “Endless Road” J Tone Def Crew. “Grand Def Audio” K Wjkj H Tuna Fbh Jones, “Tuna Fish Jones” P+/hX ( I Who Doctor Who. "Sodden Do*" Co||||>fc<, ^ ^ ^ [j^ *£*•**** i— > —1 *" By Mark Lag* Senior Reporter For aspiring Lincoln recording artists the possible roads are vari ous, many corne sliortly to dead ends and the most common in volve the cassette. “Cassettes are by far the cheap est to get out,” said Randy Wa son. who besides leading the Lin coln band The Return, has re corded a number of local tapes over the last few years at his own Black Sea studio. But first, one must get music on to a master tape, and there are at least a couple of options in Lin coln. Mastcitrax, 1844 N Sl, is a 24 track full-time professional re cording studio, said Jim Rupert, co-owner. The studio's standard fee is $40 per hour, plus additional tape costs, Rupert said. “The tape costs depend on how much they use,” he said. “Some people want twenty takes for three songs, so it'll cost them a little bh more.” In addition to i* traces, me Mastertrax recording studio fea tures digital mixdown capabilities and DBX noise reduction. Watson's eight-track private studio is unfortunately no longer an option for Lincoln bands. After five years of recording releases by bands like For Against, 13 Night mares, Trout Mystery, The New Brass Guns and Chit of Habit, Watson has decided that Black Sea from now on will be the private studio of The Return. “I started it about five years ago, and was just doing it for fun,” Watson said. “But after a while the economics just took the fun out of it** ., “People thought I was making • tons of money cwrof it, but I was just paying off new equipment/’ he said. Recordces’ abuses of his fee policies and'unreliability in payment (hove Watson out of the Eiblic recording business once he id all of his equipment pgid off, he said. He might occasionally break (hat policy, though. “I might record with Out of 0 Habit again,” he said. *TH only work with good friends, good bands, or people I know that I can work with/ne said. Home recording is another re cording option. Roger Benes took this route to put out his “Lie Awake” tape. Benes said he spent about a year at home working on his own 8 track recorder to produce the nine song cassette. He also had a quar ter-inch two-track machine so he ' could make his own master. Which brings us to the n$xt step in dm process - master tape in hand, where does one go to get it mass-produced and ready for the market? . Rupert, Watson, and Benes all mention BQC - Best Quality Cas sette - in Council Bluffs as a good option for local musicians. “We recommend BQC,” Rupert said. “They do a real good job.” Watson said that 13 Nightmares took its “Black Sea” recording to Chicago to get records made, and For Against went to California for CDs, but his own band, The Re turn, had 300 copies of ‘ ‘Glossing town” produced at BQC • Three hundred is the minimum number they will make, and the cost for that number was some where between $400 and $500, Watson said. According to Watson and Rupert, cassette is by far the easi est format for Lincoln musicianptD market their music, for reaaon^of | economy and geography. Rupert said that Masteruax turns master tapes over the its clients, and can recomend certain places to take them. The closest place Rupert has gone through to get record copies ' made Is somewhere in Texas, and he also knows of places in Nash ville, Tenn., and on the coasts. CDs arc even tougher to get made, as there are very few places that do that now, Rupert said. Both cost ‘rtnuch more than cassettes. The final step, of course, is sales. Many local record stores put a variety of local releases on their shelves on a consignment basis. Pickles usually places five cop ies of local cassettes for sale in each of its three Lincoln stores at a price set by the band, plus a general service charge never greater than $1, manager Mike Bullerman said. ‘ * After that it’s up to the artist to check in and see how sales are,’ ’ he said. If all the copies sell out. Pick les will write the artist a check, and then put more copies on sale. The cycle continues until the artist pulls out, Bullerman said. Trish Duhas, manager of Twist ers, said that the store also takes local tapes on consignment, and puts them on sale at the artist’s designated cost, plus minor stick ering and service charges. Occasionally, with more estab lished bands like The New Brass Guns, Twisters will pay the band outright, actually buying the cas settes and then putting them on sale, Dubas said. Both The Return and Benes' have had cassettes on sale at Twist ers, Pickles and Project Imports. The Return’s “Glossingtown” ‘came out at the end of last school year, and has sold about 100 cop ies, Watson said. The band, cur rently without a drummer, has found a permanent drum program mer for recording work, and will release a cassette single in a month or so, “so that people will know that,we are still alive,” Watson 'Seines* liLie Awake,” was re leased about a month ago, and he has managed to get it placed in Lincoln, Omaha and Kansas City. ^ This is a result of Lie Awake, the band, having played fairly of ten in these cities, he said. “We’re known there,” Benes said. “But at the stores where we weren’t, wt didn't get much re sponse. It’s pretty tough to get your tapes on sale if they don t know who you are.” “The sales are going great,” Benes said. “1 think about 400 ,have sold.’* ’ _