After the immensely successful proof of concept of A Roadkill Operaas a stand-and-sing concert performance at Artomatic 2012 in Crystal City (Arlington), Virginia, the next step was to record a demo. So said Maestro Jeffrey Dokken. So, on a cold day in January 2013, the entire cast and orchestra for the recording gathered at Blue House Studios in Kensington, Maryland.
We had the studio booked for 4 hours for our 59-minute show. The plan was to run through it a couple of times, and to re-record anything that wasn’t decent enough in the remaining time. That was the plan.
Jeff Gruber, the recording engineer, suggested we lay down the overture first and get a good mix on the sound for the orchestra before adding in the vocalists. He got the orchestra sounding so good, though, that I asked Jeffrey Dokken “Is it me or does that sound good enough to release commercially?” Dokken agreed it was good enough for release. It turns out that Gruber is a classically trained musician in addition to having a very fine ear.
So I asked Gruber “Can we still get the whole thing recorded today?”
Gruber said “No. We can lay down the backing tracks from the orchestra today. Bring the singers into the control room and I’ll record them on a scratch track. We can bring them back later to lay down the vocals on clean backing tracks.”
It took six months.
The singers were all very busy, and we also had to lay in some of the instruments separately; Dokken on timpani, Parker on cymbal, and on hammer and 2×4; and Natalie Spehar on the killer cello solos. Scheduling available studio time for them with their limited availability, plus mixing sessions, took until late June. We were lucky to make our targeted release date: July 4, 2013, the 25th anniversary of the opening night of Roadkill!!! Live!, the subject of A Roadkill Opera.
Since the goal of the January 2013 demo was to have something that could be pitched to artistic directors, and it wasn’t done and (as of March) it was not certain that it would be completed anytime soon (if at all), I started editing and publishing the sheet music. If the recording was not completed, we could still pitch the show. Whether or not the recording was completed, anyone wanting to mount a show would need the sheet music.
As an old Chicago punk-rock light and sound man, the ethos of DIY (do it yourself) was strong; publishing the sheet music for A Roadkill Operaallowed others to do it themselves. Having the backing tracks cleanly separated from the vocal tracks allowed for both the separate release of a CD with the backing tracks and for the release of karaoke videos for A Roadkill Opera.
The studio work of Dokken and Gruber so elevated the recording that they were given producer credits along with Parker. Dokken later joined Parker when, though not nominated or performing at the show, A Roadkill Opera was invited to the GRAMMYs in February 2018.
Looking for further creative re-use of the songs from A Roadkill Opera, and recalling how Irving Berlin recycled the songs from the black-and-white film Holiday Inn in the color film White Christmas, I took up the invitation to participate in the ASCAP Musical Theatre Workshop 2018in Los Angeles. Stephen Schwartz’s invaluable advice was to look at the structure of the play to get the main character on stage with and “I want” song early, and to look as well at giving the main character an “I have a problem” song.
Thus the book for the musical theatre version of A Roadkill Opera has been re-shaped and the order in which the musical numbers are performed has been revised. The new musical is called Hungry Men Don’t Swerve. More to come as it gets further along.