Back to the Sac’

A quick and dirty concert flyer, but everyone seemed to like it.

Back to the Sac’ …. well, that’s what I wanted to call The Rubber Band’s return to Alacran Court.

It’s a cul-de-sac. We’re returning. Can I be any more clear?

The guys, however, thought that there were some childish innuendos in the name. Needless to say I got vetoed and we decided to go with the more mundane “Block Party”, instead. March 30th will always be remembered as the “Back to the Sac’” show to me, though.

Here is the highlight reel.

Were we perfect? Far from it.

Did we have fun? Oh, yes.

Did the crowd have fun? Yes, all three of them did.

I’m just kidding.

There were at least four people listening.

Please follow us on Instagram at @the.westwood.rubber.band ( we need all the help we can get )

Take care. 
Stay healthy. 
Live life.

– Scott


#therubberband #dadband #blockparty #ninetiesrock

A little music, a little art …

Stickered
My friend, Ben Good, gave me this idea for a comic – or, rather – his van did!

Teaching

I’ve been assisting in art class at Rancho Bernardo High School as an “Artist in Residence” and loving it. I really enjoy working with the students and am blown away by their talent. Thirty years ago I was in their shoes, taking art at a different high school in a different time. It might surprise you, but I didn’t have a great experience in my art class. It would be twenty years later before I’d take another. Part of me wants to make sure that these students have a better experience than I did. And, if that means attempting awkward poses for their figure drawing course, so be it. Art is a serious thing, but it should never be taken too seriously.

While RBHS was out on “Ski Week” ( a one week holiday bookended by President’s Day ) I got the opportunity to substitute for middle school English at Classical Academies in Escondido for a few days. Middle schoolers are squirrel-ly counterparts to their older high school peers, for sure – but I enjoyed my time there, too.

The path to teaching takes time and money, however. For starters, I’m looking at one year of coursework and another year of unpaid student teaching. Furthermore, Computer Science isn’t an “approved” subject matter in California – not yet anyway. I would need to pass a CSET, an exam proving my expertise in an “approved” field, to teach Middle School and above. Yes, Art is an approved field, and I am considering it amongst other things.

So, yeah. I guess I want to teach…

Still in Remission

For those of you who have been following my cancer story, I am still in remission. I just had my quarterly bloodwork, and there is still no evidence of disease. That’s not to say I don’t think about it a lot. The boogeyman is always there, and the boogeyman is me. When I was undergoing treatment, I drew a lot as an escape. Five years since my surgery, it’s still an escape…

"Duck" Cancer

Like it? You can wear it, too. I have it available as a t-shirt on TeePublic.

Music

Now that I’ve been playing in a band, music has become yet another outlet for me. I’ve been posting some questionable poetry on Drawn And Coded for a while, but what I haven’t shared is that I have also been writing songs. Up until recently the lyrics always came easier than the melodies. Suno, an AI music generation service which I wrote about in my last post, helped me bridge that gap. Suno is not perfect, but if I feed it my lyrics along with details on how I want them to sound, it’ll create a complete song. If I refine my criteria ( for example, if I change the timing, the key, the vocal style ), Suno will eventually produce something reasonably close to what I want.

After playing with Suno enough I realized that I wanted to accompany myself playing my own songs, or basically “cover” them. Before artificial intelligence this statement would have sounded gibberish, but now? Not so much, Unfortunately, whereas Suno can create a remarkably realistic and good sounding song, it’s horrible at transcription. I’ve yet to find a tool that does an adequate job of automating the process of converting audible music to sheet music, so I did it manually. It was a painstaking laborious process that resulted in many changes to what Suno had originally created : the chord progression, timing, structure, lyrics, and intonations all had to be changed to make it playable and singable by ( gasp! ) me.

My first song, “Survive”

This is my first song. I call it, “Survive”. It’s rough. It’s not perfect. But it’s mine, and I am proud of it…

Thank you Ben Good and John Hatcher for your help. Also, thank you to my stepfather, Don, who used to sing and play guitar every night before bed when I was growing up. Don, I don’t think you ever realized how much of an impression you made on me.

Here are the lyrics, if you’re interested…

Survive

[Intro]
Why do you have to be there?
And come back into my life.
Why can’t you just stay sealed up?
Where you cannot traum-a-tize.

[Verse]
You hurt me, burned me, you scarred me deep.
You left me all for dead.
A horrible void you left for me.
I need you outta’ my head.

[Pre-Chorus]
From the outside all is normal.
No evidence of disease.
But my mind still wanders back to you.
Distracted and un-eased.

[Chorus]
I will NOT give into you.
I will NOT sat-is-fy,
I will take you to the grave with me.
At best it will be a tie.

[Verse]
There are nights where I’m not sleepin’…
‘Cause of what you did to me.
Thinkin’ of what mighta’ been…
…and of what still could be.

I’ve found myself in re-tro-spect.
In this vacuum you left behind.
Why can’t you let me live my life?
Free from you. Dig-ni-fied.

[Chorus]
I will NOT give into you.
I will not sat-is-fy.
I will find myself! You will see.
I just need to try.

[Bridge]
I’m not the same I was before
I don’t think I’ll ever be.
I’ve picked up the pieces you left behind.
And made myself a better me.

[Outro]
I will NOT give into you.
I will not sat-is-fy.
I’ve found myself no thanks to you.
It’s time to say good-bye.
Good-bye.
Good-bye.

The Rubber Band

Meanwhile, the “Dad Band” that Shawn Burgwald and I started over two years ago is still going strong. Some Dads have left, and others have joined. The current roster is Shawn Burgwald ( Lead Guitar ), John Hatcher ( Bass ), Kenn Matthews ( Vocals ), Colin Young ( Drums ), Aaron Pipkin ( Keyboard / Guitar ), and Me ( Rhythm Guitar / Backup Vocals ). We’ve been playing together regularly and have even “broken out of the garage” and played live a handful of times now. Kenn Matthews is our lead singer, but occasionally I get a chance to stretch my vocal chords. Here we are at a practice a couple of weeks ago…

That’s all for now …

Wow, that was a lot of stuff to cover. Thank you for your continued support. And as always …

Take care.
Stay healthy.
Live life.

– Scott


#Suno #RanchoBernardoHighSchool #ArtTeacher #HighSchoolTeacher #GenerativeAIMusic #GarageBand #MakeSomethingCool #MakingMusic #TheRubberBand