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Showing posts with label Hues of Blue. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hues of Blue. Show all posts

Saturday, July 4, 2026

Hues of Blue Retrospective

It's terrible when my boring day job work life ever spills into my fun personal free time life, but in the IT consulting world, there is this concept of a "retrospective" at the end of a sprint to reflect on your recent work.  It's an agile methodology thing in software development.


I just thought of some of that being comparable to the phase after announcing your new record is out.  "Hues of Blue" has been out for two weeks now.  For artists like me, it's not unusual to think back on it, get past it, let it do what it's gonna do, and shift your thoughts to other things.


You're supposed to think back on what worked well, what didn't, and identify what you could possibly do differently next time to improve.  Capture the lessons learned, and all that.  Never a bad idea.


It's like a lot of things, releasing an album.  There's an arc to how you feel along the way.


You give a speech, a performance, take an exam, meet a work deadline, etc.  There's the preparation, the work, a little nervousness beforehand, then you deliver on the big day.  


After the initial positive feedback dies down, there's a feeling of emptiness somehow, a hangover of sorts.  It leaves you thinking to yourself, "well, that's over, now what?"


The obvious cure is to move on to the next project of course, but sometimes you have to let yourself live with this inevitable blues for a while first.


Some of it is blues because your blues album didn't immediately achieve more initial "success" than it did.  You never expected virality, but the excitement wears off.


Time to get real about it.  You always think your music is great right when you finish it, and history proves there's a "creative myopia" aspect wherin later on, you realize it wasn't as great as you thought.  It's a real thing that happens to everyone.


History also proves that your taste changes, your tolerance changes, your favorites change over time.  Other people's opinions have an influence.  I've been continually surprised by which songs of mine people seem to like most.  The opposite can happen too.


The scenario:  I liked it enough to record/release, then quickly didn't think it was among my best, then time went by and compliments, stream counts, etc. show I might've been wrong.  Revisiting with subsequent listens years later makes me change my mind and begin to think of it as being among my best after all.  


Gotta give it time.  Some faves stay on the mental list, some fall off and get replaced.


The inevitable letdown time is when "they" say you should keep hyping that new album, long after the release day.  You had the slow build up of anticipation, and that's just the beginning.  Hype, hype, hype.  Never stop hyping.


Thinking of this, it makes me want to remind people that my album called "Sunrise" was among my best.  That's what I think about it two years later.  Never too late, right?


My quality has dipped since, I can and do admit it.  But I think it's important to release your mediocre stuff, and not just wait around until you have nothing but absolute keepers.  You'd go a lot longer between releases, for sure, if you took that approach.  A real record label wouldn't agree, but here at Scott Cooley Records, I do what I want, dammit.


Ups and downs, peaks and valleys, strikes and gutters.  Such is the catalog of most.


In retrospect, if I were reviewing this album, in the context of my catalog, I wouldn't say it's among my best.  Honestly, I might rank it near the bottom of a list of my albums.  I would say it has:


  •     More of a limited number of genres than usual (less variety)

  •     More of a consistent theme than usual (subject matter wise)

  •     Less commonly-used instrumentation (harmonica, horns, mandolin)

  •     Fewer songs than usual (11)

  •     A strange track order (with every other song being sort of "blue", with a couple of the best at the end)

  •     One non-original standard (Nobody Knows You When You're Down And Out)

  •     Three arguably substandard songs on it (Because Of You, Fox Hunt, You Had To Let Me Go)

  •     One that could've been recorded better (Hot Plate Situation)

  •     One that could've been sung better (More Than Meets The Eye, arguably all the rest too)

  •     Three outstanding songs (Scoop, Treasure Trove, Rock Bottom Blues)


Overall, it's like a lot of albums by any artist:  you have three songs you love, three that could've been left off, one interesting cover, a couple that could've been performed and/or recorded better, and the rest being fairly enjoyable.


These days, assuming you don't purchase streams, the play count stats are right there in most of the streaming platforms, so however you define success, you can't hide from the reality of how the new release is doing, it's there for all to see.


I could review the data with you herein, but I don't need to.  It's public information.  Popularity is what it is.  I'm not chasing anything.  I'm also not hyping anything.  I'm done now.


My lesson learned is simply that I like writing & recording.  The releasing part isn't too much trouble.  I don't mind a couple blog posts and social media posts to build anticipation and make the world aware of it.  Beyond that, I don't have it in me to seek publicity, or do anything else marketing-related at all.  It's just the way I am.  Can't help it.


When you do everything yourself, it can be a little exhausting.  Time to take a long break now, then possibly repeat the same process again someday.  I don't think I'll change much of anything.  


If I win the lottery or something, I could enlist professionals to help me with a lot of it, which would be very appealing, but my current budget remains unchanged, and only allows for my own labor.  I've proudly never spent any money on getting the assistance of others in making my music.  I never thought I was good enough to get that serious and sink any money into it.


I like doing it all myself, but I've always been an individual sports type of guy.  Take tennis for example.  I love singles and despise doubles.  I love the thrill of being the only one to take credit for my wins, and don't like relying on others.  If I were on the ATP tour, I'd prefer to be one of the rare players without a coach even.


I have to be a team player in my day job, but in my free time, love to go it alone.  Sure it would help if I wrote better songs, learned to sing better, took instrument lessons, practiced more, etc., but I'm not willing to do any of that.  


You can't just set out to write better songs.  They just happen.  You have to write some, then take the bad with the good.  This project feels like continued mediocrity, but I may change my mind about it someday.


I gravitate toward being a songwriter, first and foremost.  If I was a young man, I'd go to Nashville and try to do that I guess for other artists.  In this day and age of 20+ songwriters writing a single song, I suppose I'd have to be willing to change my DIY loner approach.  


As you know, I also recently announced a fun cowriting experience that resulted in a great outcome.  It helps I'm not opposed to collaboration or cowriting.  Maybe that's something I'll open myself up to more.  Stop being so selfish and be more willing to share, that kind of thing.


Maybe that's the takeaway from my retrospective: gotta start getting others involved more often in my future music endeavors.  It may cost some money, but the older I get, the more it would be worth it.


On the other hand, since I already have a few unreleased songs in the vault earmarked for consideration of future release, I can't quite release another album where half the songs are my obviously home recorded quality, and the other half that enlisted pros, which would be odd.  I'll think about it some more, see what happens.  Starving artist stereotypes aside, I'm not completely poor.


Despite Hues of Blue not setting the world on fire, I feel like I've still got some music in me, so that's the good part.  I won't say room for improvement, but I will say room for more.  I probably do need to be a little more selective with my standards.


Oh, yeah, almost forgot - Happy Independence Day!  Here's to the self-funded indie artists out there owning their creative freedom.  I virtually toast you all and wish you the best!


Sunday, June 21, 2026

Music Videos, New

My official artist channel on YouTube now has 6 new music videos that feature songs from my new studio album.


Promotional or artistic.  Those are the reasons for music videos.  Traditionally, they would boost sales of the music.  


In the streaming age, I'm not sure the promotion aspect matters much.  Since I make mine myself with free video footage I find, using free tools to put them together with studio recordings of my songs, they're not so much works of art I create from scratch either.  


I'm unaware of how hitting play on one of them would make people later want to hit play on the song without the video part in the music streaming service they use, but I suppose that does happen.


I guess some would, and will, because watching/listening to the video peaked their interest enough to want to listen to the entire album.  So, I guess posting several music videos featuring songs from my album is a form of album marketing.


I enjoyed MTV back when it launched in the early 80s because it was cool and new and seemed aimed at people like me.  I was a popular music fan, and I was around 14 years old.  I probably didn't check it out until I was about 15 though.  It made me a fan.  


I grew up watching reruns of The Monkees TV show in the 70s, so I was already aware of how the marriage of music and video could be fun.


When I became aware of YouTube in the late 2000s, I initially thought it was great because I could watch live footage of bands I liked.  Later, I noticed a lot of self-releasing musical acts like me were setting up their own channels.  Eventually, I created one for myself.  It took me a while to think of how I could use it though.


Since I was not a live performer, I thought I could at least create a video for one of my recorded songs.  I think I joined in 2013, and eventually posted my first video in about 2016.  That was a slide show video of my state folk song Smitten With The Mitten that showed the official symbols of the state of Michigan.


A couple years later, I thought I should attempt a lyric video.  Whoa, that was a challenge, but I pulled it off for my song "Coney".  Very time consuming.  Later on, I used public domain video footage I found on the Internet Archive for several more.  Then I tried some that leveraged free stock footage.


Fast forward to last year, and I was realizing artificial intelligence could be used to quickly put together video content that would be appropriate for the song subject matter.  


Now I'm close to having 100 videos on there, and hardly any of them show footage of me, nor do they feature much content I actually filmed myself.  So, not a lot of creativity for the visual portion of it.  I was just proud to teach myself how to put the song title text in there, you know?


I'm not good at any of it.  It's also really annoying that despite my efforts to tweak the settings in YouTube, the automatic subtitles keep showing up.  If any of you uploaders can tell me how to permanently disable those, I would appreciate knowing.  It's particularly annoying when they get the lyrics wrong, and even more so when it's a lyric video.  So confusing.


All free software tools.  Tried a bunch of different combinations.  It was interesting, tedious, and now with AI, it's a lot faster to whip these up in a jiffy.  I would never use AI for my actual music, but for videos, it comes in handy.  


They're not too much trouble now, but in the beginning, there was a learning curve for sure.  Mine are obviously very much the work of a novice, amateur for sure.  The art is in the music.


It just seems like something you should have if you're a solo artist.  I figured out how to set up my own website, figured I should also have a blog, some social media profiles, and it was a final missing piece - to have a YouTube channel with music videos.  Another box to check for my online presence.


Has it helped?  Probably a little.  Was it worth the effort?  Yeah, I guess so.  It's just a normal part of my process now.  I write songs, record them, create an album cover graphic, and then make a few music videos for each album release.  Part of my process, along with blogging announcements of the release, and creating a web page for each album.


For each album, I also set up a video playlist now too.  Playlist:  https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLv8nm8Sw4SS9plF0EoVVczunzgAc5vZt5&si=typte5erBdbFiUcW.  


My videos range from 1.5 thousand views to 12 views.  I guess I've been an active music video artist for over 10 years now.  I myself think it's fun to watch some of my own music videos when I'm done making them.  I figure if I like some of them, others might too.


Some are interesting enough to enhance the listening experience.  They can make you like a song more than you would have from just hearing the audio alone, in my opinion.  It's another way to experience music.  Some purists think they are distracting and not how music should be consumed.  


My focus is on the joy of the challenge of figuring out how to do it myself, and keeping the cost extremely low by using only my own labor.  Some are funny, some are lame and low-quality, and some are actually (arguably) impressive.


For the album I just released, "Hues of Blue," I've created 6 new music videos featuring the audio from the studio album recordings.  They are not necessarily the best songs on the album, but they are ones for which I was able to easily and quickly find appropriate video material to go with the song subject matter.


Here those are:


Scoophttps://youtu.be/GqPeqOFEAcw?si=o4ISKucnSW_suUh5



Rock Bottom Blueshttps://youtu.be/KLBCDdG8wP8?si=-pkQHgxNcrrB2CBW



Treasure Trovehttps://youtu.be/THGkrqbj82s?si=juVK3Scgq2TbwqjY



Waiting At The Windowhttps://youtu.be/_TcZuo7MuYc?si=GOesaM7EABjH60jm



More Than Meets The Eyehttps://youtu.be/T9b7kS6xX74?si=OoCBRnbFtaj4TOYR



One Fly In The Househttps://youtu.be/7fjWdrA8320?si=1G9zRFc4JkVsb18p



If you want to go through the huge hassle of signing in to YouTube with a Google account, then clicking your mouse a couple times, you could like them, share them, save them, comment on them, or even better, become a Subscriber to my channel, which gets you in to the "community" you can post to.  If already signed in, click the following, and you're good to go:


Direct Streaming Links for "Hues of Blue"

 Today you can stream my new studio album everywhere, including:













For more information, see: https://www.scottcooley.com/albums/hues-of-blue

Thursday, June 11, 2026

10 Days Until My Next Album, Woo Hoo!

I already announced it: https://blog.scottcooley.com/2026/06/the-big-reveal-hues-of-blue-will-drop.html I told you the title, showed you the cover art, listed the songs.  My last post revealed almost everything about my new studio album.  That was over a week ago.  The countdown continues.

Now, in only 10 more days, it will be released worldwide to a music streaming service near you.  Whichever one you use, it will be on there.  Apple Music, YouTube Music, Amazon Music, Spotify, etc.  June 21st is the big day, which is Sunday this year.

Some more background would seem to be in order.  I probably started getting into blues after watching the Blues Brothers movie when I was a teenager.  A while after that, Stevie Ray Vaughn was on the radio.  Around the same time I got into Jimi Hendrix.  In college, I hung out with guitar players who were into playing blues and listening to Sunday night blues radio shows.


By the time I was Senior, I took Intro To Guitar for fun, and all I wanted to learn was blues.  Turns out you only need to know three chords.  When jamming with a rhythm player, the pentatonic soloing is a blast, and I've done it ever since.  I've written and released several blues songs on past albums, but this is the closest I've come to an album that sticks close to that genre throughout.

Now I have to keep building excitement with another post leading up to the release.  I felt compelled, even though there's not much else to cover.  One thing I could tell is when they were recorded.

Looking back at the files on my computer here in the home studio, I see that I wrapped everything up on 05/29 of this year.  Nine of the songs were recorded since my last album, so from mid-2025 'till recently, but a couple I had lying around in a folder from earlier, waiting for the right album to be included on.  One of them, "Treasure Trove" was done way back in 2021, and another, "Hot Plate Situation" was recorded in 2023.  At least that's when I finished them.

Looking at the Date Modified dates for the lyric files (which are Word docs that also include the chords in them), those two songs were finished in 2019 and 2023, respectively, and all the rest were completed in 2025.  So, I guess I had all the songs written by the end of last year.  

You should know I usually finish recording a song in about an hour, so I've done this sporadically of course, as my free time has allowed this year, usually on a Saturday.  Sometimes I write a song, record it, then repeat;  while other times I'll wait until I have a bunch written, then go into recording mode for a while.  This album used both approaches.

This year I've mostly decided which songs to include, what order to put them in, what the album title should be, created the cover art, and sent them to the distributor.

Another thing I could let you know about is the duration.  The total playing time should come in at around 44 minutes.  Definitely my shortest.  Only 11 song tracks. There's one over 6-minute song, and one over 5-minute song;  but those are offset by 3 that come in within the over 2-minute/under 3-minute range;  and the rest are either 3-somethings or 4-somethings.  

I guess you could call that short enough to listen to in its entirety in one listening session, so that can be a positive, as well as the fact that there's length variety to mix it up and hold your attention.

A weird thing about the sequence I can make you aware of is that I had some songs that were more bluesy than others, so I decided to make the order alternate so that every other song was one of the bluesy ones, separated by those that were less bluesy.  

It must have made sense to me for some reason at the time.  Maybe I thought if the title is advertising it as potentially being a blues album, I didn't want people to bail on it after hearing two in a row that were not very bluesy.

I wrote all the songs, decided how to arrange them, sang all the vocals, played all the instruments, did the engineering, mixing & mastering, I was the producer, etc.  Did it all myself, as usual.  Here are the "official" liner notes:

The 14th, shortest, and most blue studio album by solo artist Scott Cooley.  Copyright © 2026 by Scott Cooley.  Used by permission.  Sound recording copyright ℗ 2026 by Scott Cooley, released on the Scott Cooley Records label (catalog # SCR14).  All songs (music and lyrics) composed (written) by Scott Cooley, except “Nobody Knows You When You’re Down And Out” which is a traditional, arranged by Scott Cooley;  published by Scott Cooley and Scott Richard Cooley Music Publishing, ASCAP;  recorded by Scott Cooley in 2025-2026 at Scott Cooley Music Productions studio in Grand Blanc, Michigan;  produced, arranged, engineered, mixed & mastered by Scott Cooley;  and performed by Scott Cooley, which included:  lead & backing vocals;  rhythm, lead & slide acoustic guitar;  bass;  piano, organ, trombone & trumpet;  ukulele;  mandolin;  blues harp;  drums & percussion.  For even more information, see https://www.scottcooley.com/albums/hues-of-blue.  As always, thanks for your support, in whatever form that may take.

So, there you have even more information about my new studio record.  Lyrically, it covers many relatable human-condition scenarios that can cause blues to happen:  waiting, cheating, lying, ghosting, firing, poverty, breakups, addiction, frustration, worry, boredom, loss, luck, love, and lust.  Musically, if not some type of actual blues, the subject matter and/or instrumentation are bluesy, even with those that would fall into a non-blues category like folk or rock.  

Mostly folk.  And the blues ones are acoustic style blues, not really "country" blues, and maybe closer to Delta than Piedmont, if at all.  It's my own style of blues I guess, so call it what you want.  If you need an umbrella term for categorization, maybe Folk Blues would be most appropriate, but I'm no expert.

I am somewhat of an expert in having the blues, however.  I recently looked up why listening to blues music can actually make you feel better, happy even:

  • Triggers dopamine in your brain
  • Helps you process difficult emotions safely
  • Activates the reward center with pleasure, joy & satisfaction
  • Validates your own feelings of heartbreak, poverty & loss
  • Gives you a powerful sense of community
  • Makes you realize you're not alone in your struggles
  • View your sadness from a safe distance
  • Hearing about someone else's pain provides catharsis
  • Lets you purge heavy feelings to clear mental space for joy
  • Hearing the transformation of pain into art inspires resilience
  • Sends you a message that you can overcome hardships
  • Blue notes in the music create a yearning tension that resolves to satisfaction

So, you have all these benefits to look forward to!  My new album will do all of this for you...and so much more.  I guarantee it.  😉


Tuesday, June 2, 2026

The Big Reveal: "Hues of Blue" will drop soon!

There you have it:  the title of this post reveals the title of my next album.  "Hues of Blue" will be released to music streaming services on June 21st this year.  A digital-only record, you will be able to download it and/or stream it on Apple Music, YouTube Music, Amazon Music, Spotify, Bandcamp, and nearly all of the major audio streaming providers.  

Like all of my albums, this one is being released on the Scott Cooley Records label.  It will be the 14th "full-length" or "long playing" studio album I've self-released as a solo artist, although it won't be as long as usual.  Unlike my last album, "When You Need To Fly," which could be considered a double album with 19 songs on it, this one is a lot shorter.  It will have 10 new previously-unreleased original songs, and one traditional song, for a total track count of 11.  

As you may have guessed from the album title, several of the songs could be categorized as falling within the genre of blues, with some elements of folk and rock in there as well.  On it you can hear me singing sad lyrics and playing in a bluesy style using instruments such as acoustic guitar, bass, drums, harmonica, mandolin, ukulele, piano, organ, and even some horn sounds played on a keyboard.

It seems that within the last year or so, I was maybe feeling a little more blue than usual.  I won't get into politics, but I know I'm not alone feeling this way lately.  There have been a lot of changes in the world and in our country that haven't been positive, and they've been hard to ignore.  This is probably what motivated me to write and record new music with bluish hues.

I wrote and recorded them in a spare bedroom in my house, as usual.  I could take photos or record videos to show you my behind-the-scenes journey and document the making of this album, but then I'd have to clean up my little recording studio/office area, also known as Scott Cooley Music Productions, and I don't feel like dusting it all off to make it camera-ready.  If you saw it in its current state, I'd be a little ashamed/embarrassed, and you would be unimpressed and potentially grossed out, so I'll spare us all that.

Another thing I can reveal is the album cover.  It is a photo of a cone of blue moon ice cream that has been dropped, with my name and the album title overlaid near the top.  I made it myself using some simple software.  Note that the text colors coordinate.  If this were a physical album with real liner notes, I suppose I would take credit for the cover art direction and design.  

It made sense to have the ice cream be blue due to the blues music, and the dropped cone represents having the blues, and there's also a song about ice cream on the album called "Scoop," so these things made my choices all make sense, tying several aspects together, as it were.

The first song, "Because of You," is a really old, previously unreleased one.  Its lyric includes the word "hues," which made sense as the opener to me and helped to tie things together into a cohesive whole in the decision making process of the album title, album cover, and what songs to include.  

It was probably the first blues song I ever attempted back in about 1990 in my earliest days of trying to write my own songs.  I slightly edited it and re-recorded it recently.  It is basically an exercise in rhyming with the word "blues," and although obviously the work of a novice, I've always liked something about it, hence the inclusion.

Speaking of song titles, here's the rest of them in the album position order (sequential track listing) with song durations (lengths):

1   Because Of You  3:28

2   Scoop (v)  5:06

3   Waiting At The Window (v)  2:55

4   More Than Meets The Eye (v)  6:08

5   One Fly In The House (v)  2:41

6   Fox Hunt  4:21

7   Hot Plate Situation  2:53

8   You Had To Let Me Go  3:54

9   Nobody Knows You When You’re Down And Out  4:37

10  Treasure Trove (v)  3:39

11  Rock Bottom Blues (v)  4:34

Note that the ones with a "v" after the title indicate that for these songs, I've made associated music videos that will also be available on release day via my official artist channel on YouTube - https://www.youtube.com/scottcooley.  

Speaking of "dropping" an ice cream cone and getting the blues, instead of dropping (releasing) a video or single well in advance of the album release, I'm going to drop the videos on the same day as the full album.  The video for the song "Scoop" indeed depicts a dropped ice cream cone.

I'm not planning any playlist pitching, pre-save campaigns, release events, listening parties, or any of that kind of thing.  On release day, I will just officially announce it again on this blog, set up pages for it on my website, and maybe do a few social media announcement posts about it.

The song files and cover image have been uploaded to the distributor, and the release date is set, so there's no turning back now.  It's set in stone.  If all goes well and according to plan, it's going to happen, like it or not.  I got it as good as I could.  It's close enough to what I envisioned.  I had fun writing and recording these, despite them being a little depressing, although "Treasure Trove" is a positive uplifting outlier song, which oddly enough has a bluegrass vibe, so it's not all doom and gloom.

The cool thing about blues though is that it can cheer you up.  I made the album alone, but I wasn't lonely, because sharing stories of struggle brings about resilience.  Also, I had my dogs by my side, and in fact, the song "More Than Meets The Eye" is written from the perspective of a dog.  Negative emotions signal the need for restoration, and can ironically, lower depression.  Listening to (or making) blues music is medicine for the soul.

I'm not planning to tour or sell t-shirts or anything like that either.  No live performances, no merchandise.  Just a new studio album release.  The countdown can now officially begin.  I've teased this project with some not-so-cryptic posts already, but now the cat is officially out of the bag.  I'm not planning to necessarily do anything else to build anticipation, but if you want to engage by dropping me a line by emailing me at scottcooley@scottcooley.com, I will happily answer any questions you may have.

Now you know practically everything there is to know about my new album.  All that's left is to wait a few weeks, then find it and listen to it.  I will create a page on my website for it with more detailed descriptions and the full lyrics.  Maybe a social media announcement or two, maybe not.  Otherwise, there's not much left to do but announce it and get through the hardest part - the waiting.  I'm excited for people to be able to hear it.

I just wanted you to tell you about it, so that you will know about it.  Hopefully, you'll look forward to it.  I think it's good, and I hope you will make time to listen to it and see if you agree.  Some of you are loyal core fans who always check it out when I release new music.  Thanks in advance for sticking with me.  I'm hoping that if you like it, you will decide to recommend it to other people who you think might also like it.  I will sincerely appreciate that.