SPECIAL
ENDEAVOR TAKES BAND
TO HIGHER HEIGHTS

Allan Banfield (left) and Tom Johnson work through a recent rehearsal for
their CD at Banfield's studio.
By NANCY PIETERS MAYFIELD
Perched on a wicker stool, eyes
closed and head bent toward the microphone in front of him, Kevin Snider strums
a 12-string acoustic guitar and sings a hopeless tale about man in love with an
alcoholic: ". . . and she looks at me, wonders why I’ve not left yet.
She’s got somewhere she wants to be. Don’t do it. Don’t go that way. Done
so well until now. . ."
Tom Johnson
steps ups to the microphone to add some harmony as Snider’s rich chords,
accompanied by Fred Weber’s lead electric guitar, pick up intensity leading
into the refrain: "Don’t you want to settle yourself down? Get a house or
have some kids around. Don’t you want a life with me? And the thing is I say,
I’ll always love you Angeline."
The song,
"Broken Bottle" is on Special Endeavor, a 10-track CD that soon will
be released by Snider and his band, Degrees of Freedom.
This night, the
band’s stage is in Snider’s living room. The dining room table is pushed
back against the far wall; a rocking horse and a painting resting on an easel
are moved aside to make room for equipment and the musicians.
The song ends.
Johnson, an associate professor of psychology at ISU and the group’s piano
player, asks to go back to the final verse.
"I want to
work on that last part," he says. They run through it a few times,
experimenting with tempo and harmony, before moving to "C’mon," an
emotional song Snider wrote after watching a news report about a six-year-old
child who shot a playmate with a handgun. During
a break in the rehearsal, Snider, assistant vice president for institutional
research and assessment in the office of Planning and Budgets, talks about the
experience of recording a CD.
"This is a
dream for me. Making music is such a basic, important part of my life,"
says Snider, who wrote nine of the songs on Special Endeavor. Johnson penned the
sixth track, "Long Promise."
Snider, who
often composes songs on a small, travel-size guitar when he’s on the road for
work, finds his motivation from a number of places. "Anonymity" is a
fun look at how small town living can be restrictive.
"Quiet
Time" addresses the need everyone has to be alone and collect his or her
thoughts. Snider set this song in the morning because of a day when he got up
early to finish some work. At the end of the recorded song the singer’s
solitude is interrupted by the harried voices of Snider’s wife Sarah and his
two young sons scrambling to get ready for the day after having overslept. Such
shouts as "Mom, where are my socks," or "I can’t find my
toothbrush" accurately reflect the morning chaos many busy families go
through daily.
There’s also
a few songs dealing with love, as in the title track "Special
Endeavor," loosely based on Snider’s relationship with his wife, or love
lost as in Johnson’s "Long Promise."
Johnson wrote
"Long Promise" in 1978. He was inspired by the imagery of the
landscape during a Michigan ski trip he took in high school. He met a girl, and
the two of them skied together for a couple of days. The last day, they were
supposed to meet up, and the girl never showed.
That meeting
that never happened is reflected in the lyrics: "Our last goodbye wasn’t
supposed to be our last. One last look. If I’d known I would have cried."
"I took
some poetic license," Johnson says of using the teen-age experience as a
starting point to develop the song later.
The road to the
recording studio for Degrees of Freedom began more than five years ago when
Snider started playing in a weekly jam session with several ISU faculty members
including Doug Hermann, professor of psychology; John Allen, associate professor
of chemistry; and Peter Wright, then professor of technology.
The group met in a renovated garage and played a mesh of old, "and
poorly imitated," rock-and-roll tunes on two old crate amplifiers.
"At first,
the point was less about making music and more about socializing," says
Snider, who contributed original tunes and ad libbed lyrics.
When Jack
Renshaw, a fellow ISU administrator at the time, joined the group about a year
after it formed, he suggested Snider start writing the words down to his songs.
Musicians came
and went, but over time Johnson and Weber consistently joined the core group of
Snider and Wright. Twenty written
songs later, Snider felt the sound of the current trio should be captured on
recording. The group’s music is built around the full, rich sound of
Snider’s 12-string guitar. Johnson and Weber, both experienced musicians
who’ve performed professionally, add some great piano bridges and guitar
licks, respectively, to the group’s repertoire. Their ideas on arrangements
and various sounds help create the unique sound.
Johnson and
Weber agreed to help Snider by focusing on his compositions for the CD, and they
spent a few weeks practicing in a basement, "complete with exposed wiring
and cold cement floors." Since fall, they have been spending several nights
a month in the recording studio laying down tracks from Johnson and Weber, as
well as from ISU Information Technology employees Al Banfield and John Ford on
percussion and bass guitar respectively.
Ford, a
microcomputer/network consultant for user services, and Banfield, supervisor of
classroom/campus services, are both accomplished musicians who agreed to lend
their talents to the CD. The mixing is being done in Banfield’s recording
studio.
Snider is
producing the CD, working on the mixing with Banfield and Johnson and making
decisions on the final cuts.
Degrees of
Freedom has come a long way from practicing in garages and basements, Snider
acknowledges. It’s required a big commitment, including some sacrifice by
their families.
"We all
have day jobs. We all work on music when and where we can. We do it because
making music is a part of us, part of all our souls. We made this CD because we
felt the songs were at a point that we wanted to share them with people other
than ourselves," Snider says. "Besides, the basement was getting cold
and damp."
The Special
Endeavor CD will be $12 and will be available at Bella Rosa around the end of
March. Copies also can be ordered from Snider at ext. 2305 or plbkevin@amber.indstate.edu
March
21, 2001
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