The story of Nick Vivid continues. You can catch up with how I met him and who he is here.
I
 was still in LA the last time I blogged about Nick. The NASA machine I 
talked about (his recording and mixing gear + his sound board and 
supercomputer) moved out from the apartment and into his own shop at 
Orchard and Stanton at the Lower East Side of New York City. 
Conveniently located next to LES live music venues Piano's, Tammany 
Hall, Arlene's Grocery, Cake Shop, etc. If you're on your way to St. 
Jerome's or Hotel Chantelle or Johnson's or wherever, it's very nearby 
if you wanna visit. He fixes instruments, pedals and records, mixes and 
masters both digital and analog.
 Every
 time I'm at the LES to shop for fabrics or to alter my clothes at the 
tailor I find all the bands setting up their gear and carrying around 
their drums and amplifiers around the area. Amidst all this bustle is 
Nick Vivid outside his shop for his cigarette break. It feels like he's 
the community's caretaker. Always there if anyone needs him. After I'm 
done with my pizza or burger I always ring his doorbell and pay him a 
visit. Nick was one of my favorite interview subjects for my documentary
 series. I could listen to his insights for hours and never get bored.
In
 one particular visit he engaged me in a very conspiratorial way. "Wanna
 see something cool?", he teased. He typed and clicked away in his NASA 
station and a recording file in mid-mix appeared before me on his giant 
computer monitor. He pressed play and I grinned. I thought it was a 
discovery of his, maybe one of his clients that he wanted to turn me on 
to. "That's one of my own songs", he announced, "I'm doing a whole 
album. I played all the instruments and I sing in it. I'm calling it 
Fräulein".
"You
 HAVE TO let me have the scoop on my blog!" I yelled. "Not now! Don't 
tell anybody I'm doing this yet!". It felt really cool being one of the 
only guys to listen to it before it's release. A cool thing about being a
 music impresario and journalist is that I get to hear all the goods 
before anyone else does. I hope that encourages all you aspiring ones 
out there to do the same.
![]()  | 
| The Nuclears | 
I
 felt so suppressed keeping in that excitement for two months. And now I
 finally get to spread the news. I got the email with an attachment of 
the rest of the album. And I couldn't process what my 
reaction was. I resonated with a bunch of songs. “Krav Maga,” “Animals” 
and “Time River” struck me very powerfully.
![]()  | 
| Drag Citizen | 
"I
 like the trumpets in Krav Maga" I praised. "What trumpets? I did that 
with a guitar". How the hell did he make a guitar sound like a trumpet?!
 The whole album was very hard to categorize. Is it 70's influenced? 
90's influenced? It doesn't sound like anything in the 00's. It sounded 
very unprecedented to me. Very uncategorizable. Nick Vivid was in a 
glitter band with Blitch 66 in Drag Citizen. He was in an energetic Who /
 Clash / Stooges influenced band with The Nuclears. So my initial 
response to the album was that it violated my expectations a little. I'm
 not saying that's a bad thing. Any step towards the unfamiliar or the 
unknown is very daring.
I
 read the "About" section in the Fräulein website and it states: "I 
don’t know where they came from but they’ve been haunting me for 
decades. I had dozens of these songs by the time I was 11.” When Nick 
was 11 it was still the 90's. I feel like Soundgarden is the closest 
resemblance of what Fräulein is but Fräulein is much less sinister and 
much more upbeat. It can't be lumped under the Coachella stuff either 
because every song has a skillful guitar solo in it and the riffs are 
very well crafted.
I
 didn't know how to go about it. My mission statement is clear. I 
champion elements like madness, glamor, sex, spectacle and party spirit 
in the bands I curate. It's tough for me to know whether Fräulein is 
ever gonna play out that way because it's purely a sonic body of work 
with no stage presentation. That's because Nick wrote everything by 
himself and he didn't assemble a band yet. But there's this one piece of
 band art which does present a fresh fantasy realm: Samurais.
I
 wonder. If this ever plays out, what are the band members gonna wear? 
What are the music videos gonna look like? Is Nick gonna come out with a
 Samurai sword on stage? Maybe with the branding decisions and the 
presentation the whole experience of Fräulein will all make sense. I 
initially wanted to campaign Nick because he fit my music activism goals
 with the nature of his previous glitter/rock n roll bands. So instead 
of all this speculation on what Fräulein is or what Fräulein will be. 
Let's ask Mr. Nick Vivid himself.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Trip: Hello Nick, what's your response to the aforementioned intro?
Nick: Thanks
 Trip. Very kind words. The idea that I am viewed as a "community 
caretaker" in anyone's eyes is a very high compliment. I get tremendous 
satisfaction out of helping bands achieve the next level and realize 
their vision in the studio. Some dude walks out of the shop with his amp
 after I've fixed it - he's gonna use it on stage that night. I see it 
as my job to make sure that his amp is the one thing he doesn't have to 
worry about. These are big responsibilities in my eyes. There's a lot of
 trust put in me by others with all of these things and I take it 
seriously. Paying my bills is good, but helping people out is the most 
fulfilling part of the gig for me. No question.
As
 for Fräulein, it all started when I was thinking what I was gonna do 
next. I didn’t have a band but I wanted to do something of my own since I
 had the studio. So I said to myself "OK, Nick, put yourself in this 
scenario. Picture this: You have 5 months to live. You have time to make
 one last album. What would it be?". And I said "Man, I feel like I've 
been cheating myself for years. I've been holding myself back. I haven't
 been doing what I'm supposed to do." A month later I was recording it. I
 wasn't expecting anyone to like it. I didn't even know if I was going 
to like it. I just felt compelled to do it. Now that it's done, I'm so 
grateful I did it. From an audience/fan standpoint, I love how the 
guitar tones came out. I'm most pleasantly surprised with the drumming. 
The drums came across much more musical than I thought they would. It's a
 big drum record. It's a big guitar record. It's a big vocal record. The
 production was meant to sound like you were hearing it on the radio, 
and that took a lot of work to get that sound, but when I found it I was
 like "Yeah this is it! This is the sound I've heard in my head for 
decades!"
You're
 right - what do you label it as? I hear every one of my rock influences
 in there, but it doesn't sound like any of them. I don't hear anything 
outside of melody, harmony, and basic pop music structure that signifies
 it as anything familiar. So I believe it's very accessible music, but 
that's where the similarities probably end. Again, these were songs that
 I've had that I would always hear in my head, but they never fit into 
any band I've been in. They're born out of a place that has no limits 
and no rules, which is what rock n roll is supposed to be about anyway. 
For a group of people who say "Fuck the rules", music fans live by a 
very strict set of them. Most bands just copy what came before without 
digging into their hearts to find their true selves and letting that 
shine. 
And that goes for rock, indie, punk, whatever. Which is why this 
is probably not for the masses. But that was never part of the deal.
That
 said, I can understand and empathize with people not liking or 
understanding it. Certainly when you start a band, there's a pressure to
 align your band to other things so you can find your potential 
audience. There's a pressure of some sense of conformity. For instance, 
when I was in Drag Citizen, it was "If you dig Kiss and Motley Crue 
you'll probably like us". I guess that's always a safe starting point, 
but it wasn't enough for me. Every band I'd been in, we would hit that 
critical 
juncture and I could see the writing on the wall. I used to 
think that the limitations of 4 or 5 people all using their common 
ground as a sandbox to work in was good for keeping me focused, but now I
 see that wasn't the case. Cause eventually I'd always say to myself 
"This band is not going to progress. This is not going to dig deeper and
 change and get more to the heart of the music we're trying to convey. 
We won’t become ourselves. We won’t realize our own identity. And that 
truth will ultimately leave me unsatisfied." This is the point where I'd
 typically become estranged from my band mates. I'd get bored. They'd 
get confused by me. They'd see me as a bit too weird at best, or at 
worst a tyrant.  I'd get frustrated with us not having the ability to 
reach what I saw as our potential. That intangible potential. With 
Fräulein I finally feel free, complete, and content. Fräulein is doing 
that thing that is bravely going into uncharted territory. And not for 
the sake of going to uncharted territory, but going there because I was 
intending to do the most honest thing I could do and it led me there. 
And regardless of the outcome or if people dig it or not, it's got a 
place in this world because it's got that clear sense of purpose.
![]()  | 
| Drag Citizen | 
As
 for what it looks like on stage, no idea. Again, this is a project born
 in inspiration. If and when Fräulein performs live, it'll be what it'll
 be. I take myself out of these decisions as much as possible. I gotta 
get out of my own way in order for this thing to work. My visions are 
the boss. I just work the tools. There's a music video being made, and 
my friend who is making it - I told him "You pick a song that inspires a
 vision in your mind, and make that video. I don't wanna see it until 
it's done." I'm letting other people I trust take this record and add 
their interpretation to it. And I'm excited to see what it means to 
them.
Trip: That
 was beautiful. It's like the Kerouac theory of not editing your own 
stream of consciousness. So this is the journey of manifesting your own 
uninhibited authenticity without judgement.
Did that journey end or did it just start? Is there more to explore?
Nick: Right.
 I knew that if i was going to go where I needed to go with it, it had 
to be done that way. The nice thing about music in the stream of 
consciousness, at least how I am approaching it, is that once something 
comes to me a certain way, it doesn't seem to change. Like the song will
 come to me and I'll always hear it like that - even years later. So in 
that sense, it was very easy to manifest. I look at it now and realize 
this is the first time I could really do this. I didn't have the ability
 in the studio before to interpret these things correctly. But now that 
I've been recording for the past year and a half non-stop with all these
 bands with different needs and styles and amassed so much better gear 
than I ever had and tuned my ear to tones and whatnot, I could finally 
get the sound I was hearing. Now I can hear a sound in my head and say 
"Oh I need to play that riff through a guitar with P-90 pickups and a 
Marshall JCM 800 to make that sound" or whatever it is. Before, it was 
like "I hear this sound, it's an awesome sound, and I have no idea how 
to get it."
I'm
 definitely in the midst of the journey. For one, there's many many many
 songs left to record. But I've already been involved in performing on 
16 albums. Some solo, some with bands, some EPs, some finished demos. 
Those all lead me here. As long as I keep my mind free to interpret what
 my soul's telling me, there will always be more to explore for sure. 
That's what makes it exciting. But I do feel like this path has many 
miles ahead of it. Again, no limits, so I'm curious to see what happens 
next.
Trip: Do you feel that the outcome of your work is gonna get more and more defined as you go deeper into that journey?
Nick: Well,
 if it's a reflection of me, then as I go deeper into knowing myself or 
understanding myself on a spiritual level, the music will follow suit in
 theory. That's kinda heady, but yeah the horse goes before the cart in 
that sense. But also, I have no control over what songs come to me. I 
can't tell what’s going to happen. I already have a few things I'm 
pretty sure will be on the next album. Maybe if I have some kind of 
spirit guide or something on the other side - who knows how that stuff 
works - but maybe they're planning some really badass tunes for me to 
play and are waiting for me to build this particular compressor unit for
 the studio before they give 'em to me or something. Heh. Who knows for 
sure.
Trip: Can
 I challenge you about that theory? The way my creative process works is
 like this: I'm pretty sure I have a lot of dimensions to me. I have a 
deep side, I have a wacky side, I have an obnoxious side, an angry side,
 a party spirited side, a soulful side. All of those "sides" are either 
part of my life experiences or part of my personality. They're all 
authentic.
I
 know if I ONLY tap into the party side the whole album will be shallow.
 If I ONLY tap into the angry and sad side the album will be too self 
indulgent and overbearing.
Are
 you conscious about how many "sides" or dimensions your authenticity 
has? Are you addicted to only exploring one of them? Did you unearth the
 other dimensions to who you are? Are you aware of how many dimensions 
your authenticity has?
Nick: That's
 just keeping things in balance. To be honest, I try not to think about 
it too much. I think at this point in my life I trust myself to be in 
balance with things.I do that by just taking care of the next thing on 
the list in my day-to-day life. What's next? "Stay calm Nick and do the 
next thing on the list." Just put one foot in front of the other and see
 what happens. That's how we get through life without going crazy, 
right? I'm approaching the music from Fräulein the same way. "What's the
 next song I have to record? What's the next batch of tunes?" I trust 
that somewhere in there all of those "sides" will be addressed naturally
 if I'm keeping things in balance.
Trip: What inspired you to call it Fräulein?
Nick: I
 came up with it in 2008 when I was thinking what my ultimate music 
project would be. I liked the feminine word that was harsh sounding. 
There was this really cool band from Montreal called Lady. And they were
 heavy. And I was like "Such a heavy band with such an ironically 
feminine name." Something about that duality really stuck with me. Like 
Queen or Kiss or whatever. The one-two syllable harsh sounding word with
 a nice pretty definition. The name came back to me as I was working on 
this. And it fit. "Yeah, this is that idea I had in 2008 - but it’s real
 now."
Trip: I
 read the lyrics. My reading is that it's about taking action and not 
fucking around. It's about liberation from things holding you back and 
it's about sobriety. Was that your intention?
Nick: Yeah
 I've always been more into lyrics that can be a little open to 
interpretation. They're about my experiences in life but I've always 
been into lyrics about “triumph in the face of adversity” and all that. I
 like lyrics that are cryptic, yet powerful. So that tends to be what 
gets written. Most times, a lyric will come with a vision or a thought, 
and I try to fill in the holes to have it make sense. I try to figure 
out what the song is trying to say and translate it.
Trip: I
 understand the songs were in your head for decades but were the lyrics 
there for decades too or were they inspired from recent experiences?
Nick: A
 lot of the lyrics were there already. In the Garden for example was 
written 10 years ago "In the Garden I walked all alone". That line was 
already there.. The chorus break: "And then she comes round something 
something. She gives me hugs and kisses. Welcome home." That was all 
there from the beginning. Finishing them in many ways was more like a 
concentrated effort to do some archaeological digging to uncover the 
rest. Like doing a research project. I actually sat down in October and 
November and tried to concentrate on seeing the things that weren't 
already obvious to me. So I was a little more methodical at that point 
when it came to finishing them.
Trip: Yeah but are you the same person you were 10 years ago? Do the lyrics and statements still hold true to who you are now?
Nick: I am definitely not the same person I was 10 years ago. But yeah these lyrics definitely vibe with who I am today.
Trip: Do you feel that Fräulein II can be accomplished very soon since you have more of it archived already?
Nick: That
 depends on time. I would like a little rest from it as it was a very 
intense process, but yeah I see Fräulein II happening before the end of 
the year. I need to be pragmatic and put paying gigs at the studio 
first, but when it's the right time it'll happen.
Trip: What's your stance on finding band members for this and playing live?
Nick: I
 would do it if I think I could pull it off. The fact that there's 12 
layers of guitars and 3 part harmony vocals on some songs really makes 
me wonder if it's possible in a club environment to do it. I'd be able 
to strip some parts and keep the intent. Sampling vocals perhaps? I 
don't know if I am comfortable with sampling the backup vocals and 
piping in the harmonies through a trigger and making a drummer play to a
 click. It might be what has to happen to do it. Maybe 2 other guitar 
players besides myself. There's a bunch of considerations. I'm not sure.
 That answer hasn't presented itself to me yet.
Trip: Maybe if you write more songs and assembled a bunch of playable live numbers?
Nick: Maybe, we'll see I guess. I have no idea. I might just end up putting even more layered hard-to-play-live songs out. 
Trip: Well if you do eventually end up being able to play live, what kind of band members are you looking for?
Nick: I
 think I'd prefer rounding up some of my favorite players and friends I 
trust - ex-bandmates, etc. People I already know would be preferred.
Trip: Are there any other creative things you’re working on besides Fräulein these days?
Nick: I
 put a lot of creativity into engineering the albums I record for other 
bands in my studio. That's a lot of fun. No two bands are the same, so I
 always try to keep things fresh by trying something new at every 
session. There's the non-profit Kiss archive project I work on with a 
few friends. We're attempting to catalog every known photo, audio 
recording, and video recording of the band in the 70's. It's an ongoing 
thing that provides many hours of insanity and pays zero dollars. That's
 just a labor of love. The repair part of the business not only takes 
skill but a lot of creativity and problem solving skills, and that's a 
whole other outlet for me. I'm pretty fulfilled. I do envision a day 
when I will miss playing on stage. It hasn't happened yet, but I know 
that urge will strike me again. I love performing, but I'm not lacking 
it in my creative diet right now.
Trip: I'd love to do a separate detailed interview about your shop, but can you give us a brief about it now?
Nick: Yes,
 it's my mad scientist lab basically. I get to come in every day and 
work on projects. I guess it's no different than what you would 
visualize an artists' studio to look like, mine just has electronics 
instead of paint.
Trip: What's your ambitions on where to take it?
Nick: Well,
 to break even, and then to make money. Right now I'm eating peanut 
butter and jelly sandwiches and toast for most meals. I've got some debt
 I'd like to pay off. Until I can breathe easy on the financial front, 
the plan is to keep recording bands, repairing gear, making Fräulein 
records, and building my reputation on all fronts. The next place I'm 
supposed to go will present itself after that. As long as things are 
growing steadily, then I'm happy.
Trip: I have a feeling your real ambition is to be a Jedi sound/engineer producer.
Like do you ever see yourself as becoming a Bob Ezrin or a an Eddie Kramer someday?
Nick: Well,
 again, I think things have been working out for me so far because I've 
followed my heart and didn't try to compare myself to these kinds of 
legends. They certainly have had an influence, but you need to remember,
 they paved the way. They had no inspirations other than their own 
imaginations and the talent they worked with to go on. I like to look at
 things that way instead of saying "Oh I wanna be the next Bob Ezrin, or
 the next Eddie Kramer." Thinking like that could only diminish my 
efforts. I'm already a person who has his own ideas about things. It’s 
too limiting for me to compare myself to anyone else. 40 years from now,
 we'll see if I made any kind of impact. But whether I make a difference
 in the world doesn’t really matter to me. I know it mattered to me when
 I was younger, but now I just want to be involved in things I can be 
proud of. I’m still just as ambitious, but I think I’m focused in the 
right way now.
Trip: Do
 you feel that the impact of those legends was because they were lucky 
to work with talented clients? A client that will make it huge will make
 the producer's name huge as well.
So as a sound engineer / producer, do you feel you're a talent scout as well?
Nick: To
 answer the first question, yeah I'm sure the right place at the right 
time, and the right opportunity and the right kind of open mind has 
everything to do with everything. Secondly, I like what I like, that's 
all I know. If I think something's good and marketable, maybe that makes
 me a talent scout. That said, there's certainly times that I just see 
things and see where they could go, and if I have the opportunity I try 
to take them there. If I am working with a band in the studio and 
they're rough around the edges, but I know given a little work they 
could reach a certain type of potential, I work towards making that a 
reality.
Trip: Marketable to who? And what do you like?
Nick: That's
 the thing, I have no idea if what I think is commercial is commercial 
to the rest of the world. Certainly pop culture has it's standards it's 
been molded with. That is in constant evolution. If I think something is
 commercial, it might not be commercial enough for today because pop 
culture is so strict. But maybe it comes into it's own some day. Maybe 
it'll get discovered. So then, yeah maybe I think a band I'm recording 
is good. Their song is good, the performance is good, it has a certain 
tangible energy that I can identify with and relate to - it makes me 
feel something - i wanna listen to it again. Makes me motivated to air 
guitar, makes me motivated to get in a car and hit the pedal, makes me 
feel free and alive and connected. But I don't know if the rest of the 
world has the same reaction to it. Maybe it doesn't touch someone else 
the same way. 
Luckily today, we're not completely limited by pop 
culture's standards. It's easier for like minded people to find each 
other. There may be one person in this town, and one in that town, and 
they can find each other now in a matter of minutes, and that would have
 been difficult 20 years ago. And maybe there's a market out there 
somewhere for some band I'm recording because I believe there should be.
 I think that answers your question.
Trip: I
 think it's perfect that your attitude is like that. And I think it's 
very rare to have someone with a strict principle of authenticity like 
you do. I know many bands that worked with certain producers and said 
producers want to make them sound like the closest resembling band to 
them that's topping the charts. Completely changing the band's identity 
in the process.
What
 you did with yourself in Fräulein is what I think you can bring out in 
other bands when they're trying to find their own authenticity. The 
mantra of not caring about making a hit, which consequently, might end 
up making a hit. Or better yet, set new trends.
I also think you're a work horse. And a straight and honest business man.
I
 think your constant experimentation to open new grounds with more 
Fräulein records is going to open new grounds in both the articulating 
of the creative process and in engineering techniques. That coupled with
 the principle that you respect your own authenticity and that of others
 are things that a client is dying to find in a working relationship 
with a producer.
Any closing words for this interview?
Nick: Yes
 thank you for everything and looking at the bigger picture with me. To 
bands: I agree with Trip, if you follow your heart and forget what 
everyone else is doing that is "successful", you might just make 
something great and timeless. If you make music that comes from that 
place, you'll at least have a fan in me.
Trip: Thank you, Nick.
=================================================================
Till the end of March, you can get the album at 100% off the cost by typing in the code FRAULEIN during checkout at the frauleintheband.com store. The download is of the entire album, in either mp3 or high quality FLAC formats.
I think we all know what the money quote is: 
“Doing
 that thing that is bravely going into uncharted territory. And not for 
the sake of going to uncharted territory, but going there because I was 
intending to do the most honest thing I could do and it led me there”
Go to this link with the playlist of Fräulein. Put your headphones on. I recommend you start with Krav Maga, Time River and Animals.
I'm planning to interview Nick on his insights and experiences on Analog studio recording. What stocks and gear are discontinued? Are the specs of the current gear in the market the same? Can we trust the sales copy of companies? What kind of basic knowledge should a client have when collaborating with a sound engineer? That and more soon, only on The Dead Notes.
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COMING SOON ON THE DEAD NOTES!!
**A REPORT & REVIEW ON PHILADELPHIA BAND: THE HIGH FIVE
**Full Interview with New York City Booker & Promoter Ashley Moree
**A REPORT ON THE ROCK N ROLL SCENE IN BALTIMORE  **A COMPREHENSIVE REPORT ON THE LA SCENE
**A COMPREHENSIVE REPORT ON THE NEW YORK SCENE
STAY TUNED!
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