Holiday for Two Announce Debut Album, This Will All Make Perfect Sense Someday![UserPostedImage](http://productnews.link.net/general/Entertainment/03-04-2011/ZooeyDeschanel300x400.jpg)
![UserPostedImage](http://image.take40.com/300x400/john_mayer_bw_scarf_leg_up_may08_300x400.jpg)
This Will All Make Perfect Sense Someday is the debut album by
Holiday for Two, the duo consisting of singer-songwriter/guitarist Ryan Ross Hernandez, and actress Ophelia "Bettie" Cavallo. Hernandez has been quoted as saying that the album will be "
a much less guitar-centric album than I've ever made before". The first single was believed to be "
The Centerpiece of Life", after it was released on iTunes in early May 2011, but it does not appear on the album's final track listing, only seemingly serving as a promo single. The first single, "
If You Work for a Living, Then Why Do You Kill Yourself Working?", will be made available for online stream on June 27, 2011 on the band's official site and released to all digital outlets on June 28, 2011. The album is believed to be self-released, since the act isn't signed to a label. Hernandez has hinted that the group might seek a distribution-only deal with a record label to get the album available to a wider audience with a physical release.
Released: July 12, 2011
Recorded: Capitol Studios; Hollywood, California
(August 2010 - November 2010; May 2011)
The Village; West Los Angeles, California
(January 2011)
Hyde Street Studios; San Fransisco, California
(March 2011)
London Bridge Studio; Seattle, Washington
(April 2011 - May 2011)
Genre: Folk, indie rock, indie pop
Length: N/A
Label: Self-released
Producer: Ryan Ross Hernandez
Recording and production
Influenced by the album, Another Green World, by Brian Eno,
This Will All Make Perfect Sense Someday was recorded in four different studios, using Logic Pro software. The duo would record in each studio for no longer than two weeks, with Ryan Ross Hernandez noting, "
Working with Bettie meant that we couldn't go into the woods for four months to make a record. She's married, she has a very closed-knit family. On this record we both wrote these songs in our downtime between studios separately and when we came together in studio we shared what we had and made edits to make them work for both of us. We would later start recording that brand new song on the first day of the next session, which is something I've never really had the opportunity to do in the past."
During its recording, Hernandez stated: "
It's not a guitar-based record. We've been into vintage keyboards and playing with that palette. We're not adding guitars because people will be expecting them since the project has my name associated with it. I'm so proud of this album that at this point I don't care if people don't like it compared to my solo work." Vocalist, songwriter, and pianist Bettie Cavallo elaborated further, "
We had a lot of points over the course of making this record where we literally had to stop what we were doing and take a break to figure out what we both wanted out of this record, out of this project. At times it sounded too out there from what we originally envisioned, and at others it sounded as though these could all be Ryan Ross Hernandez songs, just with a female vocalist added to them." Hernandez later stated: "
I love playing guitar; but it's a really immediate, impulsive sort of instrument. I can play any style of music on guitar, but this isn't a project where I want to show-off that part of me as a musician. It's okay to think of me as the guy who is a singer/songwriter, and also a crushing guitar playing, that's fine. I'm not saying I'm not that guy anymore, I'm just not that guy in this project. It took us a little while to figure out how to do it differently; how to find something that would work."
Hernandez's production was influenced by
The Queen Is Dead by The Smiths,
Pet Sounds by The Beach Boys, New Order and the David Bowie album,
Low,
Closer by Joy Division, with Hernandez noting, "
They really lean on a particularly technological bent. I wanted to do that. I wanted less photograph, more impressionism." Hernandez elaborated, "
[This Will All Make Perfect Sense Someday] was an exercise in using an entirely different tool set. The whole record ended up being this big experiment, which was really exciting. I still think there’s a lot more to explore in the way we made this record. And I think we'll probably continue on a similar trajectory and see where we end up on the next album." It also confirmed that there will be another Holiday for Two record.
This Will All Make Perfect Sense Someday also marked the first time Hernandez mixed an entire album, in addition to producing it.
Writing and composition
Co-lyricist Ryan Ross Hernandez notes that the album's lyrical content and themes differ from his solo recors of the past. He said that a point of commencing between the two was that Cavallo and Hernandez both lived in Los Angeles, Cavallo having been born and raised around the area. The lyrical themes mostly deal with location, love, and marriage. Hernandez states: "
There's a level of self-loathing in Let a Man Be Lost [his latest solo album] that I'm a bit embarrassed about now. It's a really dark record. I didn't want to make that record again. I didn't want to write those songs again. Everything I write is reflective of my own life and the lives of those people around me. They reflect the conversations you have and the rumblings of life around you. It was really good to write songs with someone else who is around my age and can relate with experiences we've had in life, but is also settled down and married. We have enough in common to relate, but enough differences that give a two-sided perspective on the meaning of home, and love, and marriage." Hernandez later stated, however: "
I would be remiss if I tried to continue writing in a solely melancholic voice. I'm not trying to figure out what I want out of life anymore. I have a clear vision as to what I want. The only thing left to do is actually do it and make it happen."
With
This Will All Make Perfect Sense Someday, the experimental side of the duo was drawn out more through production than a set songwriting process. Bettie Cavallo stated: "
The making of this album was a little more open-ended as far as submitting different ideas if there were openings or holes for ideas to be submitted, but I think a lot of the experimentation came from the production side more than it did from the writing side."
According to Hernandez, Bettie Cavallo's writing contributions were key during the album's writing and recording: "
There are a few songs that Bettie wrote all the music for. We would alter sit down and cut and paste and write lyrics and arrangements for them. This is the first time that I've had multiple compositions that started with someone else's demos and not mine." Hernandez continued to praise Cavallo's contributions, stating: "
I'm down with Bettie screwing around with what she wants to do. She's yet to lead us down the wrong path. I don't feel like we went all Kid A on everyone. But there are moments on this record where I thought to myself and said, 'Oh, man, fans of my solo career are going to wonder what's going on here.'"
Cavallo commented on writing contributions, stating: "
If I'm starting something from the ground up, either I've got a melody or a particular chorus or verse in my head or I've got a feeling that I'm chasing. It'll be something impressionistic; it'll be like trying to take a feeling or something that's happening environmentally and trying to bottle that and turn it into a piece of music. Both the things that I started as instrumentals for this record were written largely out of a place of procrastination."
Track listing
All lyrics written by Bettie Cavallo and Ryan Ross Hernandez, except where noted; all music composed by Cavallo and Hernandez.
1. If You Work for a Living, Then Why Do You Kill Yourself Working?
2. Theoretical Love is Not Dead (But I Will Murder It)
3. From Trauma Cometh Something Else
4. Smoke Gets in Your Eyes When You Smoke
5. Meditations in an Emergency Waiting Room
6. Baseball Was Better with Steroids / Love Is Better with Scotch
7. Go West on Hollywood Boulevard Until You Reach the Gates of Hell
8. Happiness Is Something You Need
9. Don't Think Twice, It's All Right (Bob Dylan cover) [written by Bob Dylan]
10. I Can't Make You Love Me (Bonnie Raitt cover) [written by Mike Reid, Allen Shamblin]
11. Can We Talk About the Gigantic Elephant in the Living Room?
Personnel
Holiday for TwoBettie Cavallo - vocals, piano, keyboards, guitalele, finger cymbals
Ryan Ross Hernandez - vocals, guitars, piano, mandolin, vibraphone, cymbals, horn arrangements, Roland 909, synthesizer, Korg M1, production
Additional musiciansAaron Carlock - drums, percussion
Sean Peterson - bass guitar
Vincent Gill - pedal steel guitar
Los Angeles Philharmonic - strings
Lydia Taylor - string arrangements, conducting
Bob Reynolds - saxophone, flute
Christopher Baldwin - alto saxophone, soprano saxophone, tenor saxophone, saxophone
Bryan Hurley - trumpet
Silas Stewart – french horn, piccolo trumpet, trumpet, trumpet (muted)
Brad Wilson - flugelhorn
Charlie Wilson - organ
Ruth Ramsey - oboe, theremin
Recording personnelRyan Ross Hernandez - producer, recording, mixing
Chad Wright - engineering, mastering
Marshall Ferrante - recording assistant
Stephanie Perry - recording assistant
Mark Brooks - recording assistant
Katherine Richards - mixing assistant
Adam Terry - mixing assistant
Edited by user 01 July 2011 06:45:49(UTC)
| Reason: Not specified