Dubstar: Counting Out
Counting Out was one of the very first songs we recorded when Dubstar reformed in 2006. And yet, somehow, it was never finished. Even now, there’s no vocal from Sarah on it. What went wrong?
I’d written it earlier that year — one of the first things I’d composed on Gary Numan’s Yamaha CP-70B electric grand piano. Musically, it came from the same place as Talking In My Sleep a few years before. That restless feeling of needing to stay relevant in the mid-2000s. Trying to move away from the synth textures we’d leaned on in the '90s and seeing if electric pianos could give us something with a bit more movement, a bit more life.
How Dubstar Made Demos
Since the early days — back when we were still called The Joans — the process was almost always the same. I’d write a song, usually on piano, though not every time. The words would be finished too, although they rarely survived unchanged after Sarah sang them for the first demo. Then I’d knock together a basic accompaniment on the computer to set the mood, structure, key, and tempo. Then Chris would add guitar, we’d get overexcited, and before long the track would be weighed down by too many ideas. Great fun of course, but the I’d have to strip it all back, quietly deleting the last six or seven decisions so the thing could breathe. There are plenty of examples in the Dubstar cannon where a more minimal approach worked well, and where some tunes were way too busy.
That was often the problem when there wasn’t a vocal to build around. And it wasn’t easy getting one, because as well as living hundreds of miles apart, Sarah and I were totally incompatible key-wise. I write in B to D major, she lives in E and up. So if I wanted to record a demo vocal myself, I’d have to slow the track down, sing my part, then speed it up digitally to match Sarah’s range. It sounded deranged.
So in many ways, we were flying blind. Especially Chris who often was working with extreme bare bones of a song. Counting Out is a perfect example of this issue. The demo vocal — mine — was recorded after we’d finished the arrangement. When it finally came to light that the key didn’t suit Sarah, I realised we’d have to redo all the guitars. By then, other better songs were in play. Counting Out was quietly moved to the back of the queue, and when the recordings were shelved in 2008, it got left behind.
Thinking Back Now
When I hear Counting Out now, it sounds exactly like what it was: a band trying to find its footing after a long time away. It’s the mid-2000s to a fault. I can pick out every influence we’d dragged in at the time. It’s a bit Keane, obviously, but there’s also a very clear nod to Ulrich Schnauss that should never have made it past the demo — far too close for comfort. There are those half-time drums I was inexplicably obsessed with back then. And then there’s this repeated idea in the lyrics about outstaying your welcome, which isn’t my usual song topic.
If I remember rightly, the song came out of me creeping towards forty years of age. Turning thirty didn’t bother me. Thirty-one did. Because that’s when I realised the birthdays wouldn’t stop. I remember being fourteen, thinking thirty was impossible. How could I ever get that old? And surely — surely — I’d be dead before then.
Ha — my inner Frenchman speaking.
But when I hear Counting Out today, it feels like a message to the three of us too. A quiet suggestion we probably shouldn’t carry on. Maybe we should leave Dubstar in the past. And yet we didn’t.
This article includes excerpts from DUBSTAR.COM. Want more? You can find the story behind every Dubstar song ever recorded including dozens of unreleased songs right here at Dubstar.com
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