GLONO Interview: Larry Crane, Archivist of Elliott Smith’s Estate

Elliott Smith - New MoonOn May 8, 2007, Kill Rock Stars will release New Moon, a new collection of mostly unreleased songs that Elliott Smith recorded between 1994 and 1997. Larry Crane, editor of Tape Op Magazine, and Smith’s friend and studio partner from back in Portland, has become the official archivist for the Estate of Steven Paul Smith. Crane mixed New Moon, supervised the mastering, helped with the sequencing, and wrote part of the liner notes.

He took some time away from his busy schedule at Tape Op and Jackpot! Recording Studio (the studio he and Elliott started together) to talk to Glorious Noise about New Moon.


Before we get to the interview, though, let’s take a look at the makeup of this new collection. There are 24 songs spanning two discs. 12 on each, just like Elliott Smith and Either/Or. Coincidence? No way. Every effort has gone into putting this out in a way that would be consistent with Elliott Smith’s vision.

Songs from the Elliott Smith sessions: “Angel In The Snow,” “Talking to Mary,” “High Times,” “Riot Coming,” “Georgia, Georgia,” “Whatever (Folk Song in C),” and “Big Decision.”

From a 1996 radio session: “Thirteen,” “See You Later,” and “Half Right.”

From the Either/Or sessions: “New Monkey,” “Looking Over My Shoulder,” “Going Nowhere,” “Go By,” “Placeholder,” “New Disaster,” “Sleigh Bells,” “Fear City,” “Either/Or,” “Pretty Mary K” (other version), and “Almost Over.”

From Jackpot! in 1997: “All Cleaned Out,” “First Timer,” and “Miss Misery” (early version).

Three have been officially released before on compilations: “See You Later,” “Angel in the Snow,” and “Big Decision.” And studio versions of both “See You Later” and “Half Right” appear on Heatmiser’s Mic City Sons.


GLONO: There are 24 songs on New Moon. How many additional unreleased masters are left in the vault?

LC: There’s no way to really answer that question. Some unreleased masters are different takes of released songs, therefore not necessarily “new” songs. Some are “rough” sounding, so releasing them is a hard choice.

GLONO: Is this “it” as far as the new, not rough sounding material from this period? Or were there any songs that were left out for other reasons?

LC: There is other music. In some cases the tracks not used seemed too different to fit in, and in one case we didn’t even know from where, when or who was on a track (that we discovered right near the end of mixing) so it was left off. There is the possibility that unused tracks of decent quality could be used as compilation tracks, or such, in the future.

GLONO: And what about the pre-1995 and post-1997 era? Have you begun to catalog that stuff?

LC: Ha ha. Not yet. We’ll be backing up all the recordings we have in storage soon, and then I have to catalog all the songs and individual tracks. It will take a long time…

GLONO: Are there live recordings in the archive?

LC: There are. Work on cataloging the live recordings could happen after the studio work is done. When that will be, I don’t know. I have a lot of work ahead of me right now!

GLONO: In your review of the Beatles’ Love in Tape Op you mention some studio trickery (combining takes, time compression, etc.) involved on one song on New Moon that had a flawed guitar track. Which song was it?

LC: “New Disaster.”

GLONO: Were there other times you wanted to do things like this but resisted?

LC: There were very tiny edits made to fix things, mostly really to clean up extraneous noise, like tape deck punch ins!

GLONO: How “finished” do you think the songs on New Moon were?

LC: Most of the ones that were tracked on the 8-track 1/2″ machine were pretty well done, the same as tracks from Elliott Smith or Either/Or. I was really just balancing the mix and adding very simple, light EQ or compression to some tracks. Nothing fancy or over-the-top.

GLONO: Can you describe your process of mixing? I know mixing can mean a lot of different things to different people. You transferred tracks into Pro Tools, and then what?

LC: Put the individual tracks up on a console, like you would with tape. Then just balance out levels so it makes sense. I would reference “leaked” MP3 versions for mix ideas, and reference Elliott Smith or Either/Or as they are from the same time period and Elliott was involved in the mixing. I tried to use similar panning and level choices as what he had done in the past. The songs were mixed out of the board (Allen & Heath Saber) back into Pro Tools (at 96 kHz/24 bit) through Apogee Rosetta 800 converters both directions. The tape deck for playback of the original tapes was a Tascam 48, loaned to us by Chris Walla of Death Cab For Cutie.

GLONO: Was it pretty much adjusting levels, or were you more “active” (adding effects, etc.)?

LC: Some effects, not much on voice (maybe a little echo a few times). I just really tried to mix in the same ways that he had done before – make the new CD fit in with Elliott Smith or Either/Or. Even mastering involved trying to match those CDs.

GLONO: Some people refer to Smith’s early recordings as “lo fi.”

LC: Whatever. All that matters is that the music connects to people in the end.

GLONO: But he was pretty comfortable in the studio, wasn’t he?

LC: Very comfortable and knowledgeable in the studio.

GLONO: Do you know what kind of gear the stuff on New Moon was recorded on?

LC: Tascam 38, Mackie 1604, Langevin CR-3A, SM57, Audio-Technica Pro37r. Basic stuff.

GLONO: Were there technical challenges in turning these recordings into releasable quality?

LC: Some tapes had gone “sticky” and had to be baked [explanation of tape baking via Larry’s pal Eddie]. We hired Mr. Toad’s in San Francisco to do that work and they would bake the tape and then transfer to digital files. In a case like that you might only get one chance to recover the music off the tape, so the question of not using Pro Tools (or possibly another deck) is kinda moot. They also transferred 16-track 2″ tapes that I didn’t have a headstack for at the time (I do now).

The 1/2″ 8 track 15 ips format is fairly crummy as far as the “good” things that analog can offer. Transferring each song individually before mixing allowed me to get the best levels off tape and maximize the quality of each song. But it was a pain!

GLONO: Many of these songs have been passed around by fans as mp3s of varying quality over the years. For people who have heard those mp3s, how much of a surprise will there be in hearing New Moon?

LC: I think many of those MP3s are from cassettes copied off Elliott’s rough (or possibly semi-finished) mixes. I think the sound is certainly better on New Moon, and there are songs that I have never seen leaked before.

GLONO: People think of Smith as a gloomy guy, but I’ve read that he was actually playful and fun to be around. Got any stories that might reveal this “other” side of him?

LC: He was certainly not a one-dimensional person! One of my favorite memories is seeing him sitting on a couch with my stepdaughter on her birthday. She was a teen and a big fan of his music and it was so nice of him (at Joanna Bolme’s prompting) to come over that day and talk with her.

He could be very funny as well, moonwalking, musical jokes and silly shit. We had a good time building Jackpot! Recording Studio and working on sessions. I miss him still.

GLONO: We do too.


New Moon will be released May 8 on Kill Rock Stars. Buy it.

Painting Jackpot! Recording Studio...

Photo courtesy of Jackpot! Recording Studio.

KRS-era MP3s:

Between the Bars from either/or (KRS 269)

Some Song from Needle in the Hay 7″ (KRS 239) and Some Songs compilation CD (KRS 276)

Lucky Three, a film by Jem Cohen with music by Elliott Smith

Previously: Elliott Smith Rarities Comp from KRS. More

8 thoughts on “GLONO Interview: Larry Crane, Archivist of Elliott Smith’s Estate”

  1. Elliott died before I discovered his music and now I feel like this CD is going to be my only way to live in his moments.

  2. I really like this interview, I am a big elliot smith fam and I have never heard of you before. I am glad that there are people like you out there who appreciate music like this. I have not bought the album yet but will in the next couple of days.

    keep on trucking.

    rm.

  3. This is incredibly retrospective, which is my intent. I must’ve picked up this album two years ago, and it reamains my favorite piece of work by Elliott. That some unreleased recordings could be so excellent speaks volumes about the artist. And I am very thankful someone would be true to his vision. Its not perfect of course (did I hear that Elliott’s family took the more drug related tracks off of Basement on a Hill?), but its better than Courtney Love giving away Kurts guitars to random kids, right?

  4. I have oftern wondered who has most of the recording gear that elliott used on his early material? Tascam 38, his yamaha acoustic etc? I also live in Portland Oregon right off of Division and recently purchased a Tascam 38… So naturally it got me thinking…? I noticed that there was also a Crumar Performer… String synth from the 70’s in the Lucky 3 videos and of course his 38. Well, I bought a Crumar Performer 2 years ago from a guy 4 houses down from the rose garden where parts of that was filmed… I noticed later of course that there was an old crumar in that video or I would have never sold it… A lot of people already know that elliot lived in Ladds Addition Portland Oregon on 16th st. A couple hundred yards away is a long and beautiful street aligned with 100 yr old 75ft elm trees… Of course the street is called Elliott, and many have speculated thats where he got the idea to change his name from Steve which he thought sounded too much like a jock. Good thing! Anyway somebody shoot me an email if they have more information about his gear used at the time… I’m building a studio here in my 3rd story attic which overlooks Ladds Addition… Anything at all owned by Elliott would be extremely inspirational to say the least! Also if anyone wants a like new 2003 copy of the Willamette Week article about Elliots life and music, I have about 20 of them left… Wonderfully written with many of his friends interviewed such as Pete Krebs, Joanna Bolme and a few others… Thanks for this interview and thank you Larry Crane for being true to his music!!! Michael Sjobeck [email protected]

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