Buckley Moonwall: Love Me Do


by Traci Nubalo

The harmonica. It was that wailing harmonica sound that got both of them. And once it had them, it refused to let them go.

One of them picked up a guitar, learned to sing and never looked back. He became Buckley Moonwall, one of Second Life’s premiere musical artists. The other one became me, Traci Nubalo.

I write this blog.

Buckley Moonwall: I became obsessed with music at an early age, especially with writing and performing. I loved the harmonica sound on The Beatles’ “Love, Love Me Do".

Traci Nubalo: Wow, so did I! So did that inspire you to start playing? Or writing?

BM: Yeah, well, it all happened at once. I think I may have actually started writing before that, but it was all happening at the same time. I was a kid,pretending I was on the radio.

TN: Do you recall any of your early songs?

BM:
A few rhymes and lyrics but not much else. I've forgotten a lot of my songs over the years. C’est la vie.

TN: Have you been primarily a solo artist in your career, or were you also in bands coming up?


I've been addicted to writing since I was a kid. I've kept notebooks since I was fifteen; don't know how many I've filled up, but I‘m always trying to work with words. I'm always writing songs and listening to music and I'm interested in art and finding new ways to stretch my mind.


BM: I've had a few bands along the way, but I’ve never have been able to reconcile my acoustic style into a live band situation. So it was either rock and roll with some players (I love Led Zeppelin), or me with my acoustic guitar simulating the rhythm and lead, by myself.


TN: How did you land in Second Life?


BM: Pilgrim75 Swashbuckler (Pete Mroz) told me about it. He'd been on here for about a month and was starting to get pretty big here. I was fascinated with it from the start.


TN: When you first started played here, were you doing some of the songs you do now?


BM: Yes. I've always tried to be doing my own stuff, at least as many originals as covers. So, in writing over the last twenty or so years, I've got some songs that seem to resonate.


TN: When you write does the music appear first or the lyrics?


BM: Usually some guitar part will elicit a phrase and then they grow together. At a certain point I step back and ask, "What is it?" Maybe it needs honing, maybe not. I try not to second guess myself too much, but sometimes it takes me a while to get back to where I started.


I usually just sit with a guitar on my lap and songs develop out of where I'm at emotionally. But I never really sit down specifically to write. I just like spending time with my music.


At a recent Second Life gig, Moonwall opened with the set of covers from heaven. He would have given the late Mr. Lennon a run for his money on harmonica as he kick-started the evening with a fierce restatement of the Ray Charles blaster “What’d I Say”, ripping through a racy intro and then an improvised harp solo with a vengeance. A couple verses and a chorus later he slashed and sliced his way through John Prine’s “Automobile”, answering his own vocal verses with mouth harp hot enough to put a blind beggar to shame.


Then, as the partiers had just started to break a sweat, he adeptly downshifted back into “What’d I Say”, restating the theme with a tinge of a reggae backbeat. Finally, to the delight of the dancers, he magically morphed it into a soul-satisfying rendition of “All Along The Watchtower” - much more Hendrix than Zimmerman. On this night he was a master saucier, and what a spicy gumbo he was cooking up!


Astonished, I took a quick peek at my watch. The entire journey had taken fifteen minutes.


* * * * *



TN: How would you describe your music?


BM: Well I guess you could say that I play in somewhat of a folk style, though I don't like calling my solo music "folk".


TN: Yes, what you do is rather indefinable style-wise. In a good way.


BM: “Roots" is a nice word. Or maybe “organic.”


When Buck used these two words - “organic” and “roots” I was reminded of the one comparison that most strongly seems accurate in describing his work as a whole - writing, performing, and relating to his live audience: Bruce.


I simply can’t attend an inworld Buckley Moonwall concert without being reminded of how he feels like Second Life’s very own Bruce Springsteen.


I’m a veteran of at least a couple dozen Springsteen concerts, and I hold The Boss in the highest regard as a writer and performer. And, while I fully expect Buckley to disagree with me out of modesty, I see him in that same category of style. And equally as adept in talent. Check out these lyrics from an original song called “Turn Out The Light” that Moonwall debuted on that same night:



She left her twenties somewhere behind her it was the dark before the dawn. She learned to lie about the bruises she wore collars and sleeves. Between denial and excuses she never found the time to leave.


The honesty - especially within the context of a topic as dark as spousal abuse - just brought tears to my eyes. It can rightly be compared thematically to Bruce’s “Streets of Philadelphia” (gay/AIDS awareness) or “Blood Brothers” (veterans issues).


I’ve long felt that it took a lot of artistic confidence and sensitivity for Springsteen to take on these dark-yet-significant issues in his work. Certainly, he took some large-scale career risks in championing such controversial themes. But he did them (and quite a few others) powerfully and poetically, and Buckley seems willing to put himself on the line in that same way.


In concert Moonwall has a fascinating way of assembling guitar, vocal and harp parts. He not only states the basics of the song, he also knows how to slam the instrumental parts against one another sonically, creating complex and aggressive stacks of sound. He’s also learned how to make those same parts just tickle one another to create some delicately-interwoven instrumental figures.


Quite frankly, there were times in this mini-set where the musical/vocal artistry and the pure live fire was so great that it rivaled many of the best live Springsteen shows that I’ve seen. Virtual or not, Buckley is a master musician who works his audience as well as anyone in either world. He also stands up as a true poet, lyrically.


* * * * *


TN: I’ve always been fascinated with the themes and poetry in your lyrics. Would you like to choose one or two songs and fill us in on how they came together?


BM: Sure. I wrote one called “Too Short to be a Man.”


TN: *smile*


BM: I was doing a set in Nashville, and noticed a woman sitting near the stage watching me closely and making all kinds of gestures and faces. I didn't know what she was up to, but being young and single, I decided to approach her afterwards.


She proceeded to cut me to shreds saying I needed to work on this and I needed to do that, etc. When I got back to my table my friend asked what she wanted, hoping for something real interesting. I said, without thinking, "She said I was too short to be a man."



TN: Excellent.


BM: I went home and a day or two later I wrote it. I was proud of my follow through on that one. That one had a definite beginning. Most of them aren't so easy to trace.


TN: How long did it take to build an audience here in SL?


BM: Not long. I was lucky and got hooked up with Kat Vargas and her team. They really got me going, and since Charmm Magic took over, it has been very easy for ole Buckley. She works very hard and is very good at what she's working on.


TN: You have one of the more passionate followings in Second Life.


BM: They've put up with a lot from me here, lately.


TN: Tough summer, huh?


BM: Yes, the summer has been difficult and I haven't been on SL nearly as much as I would have liked. My life is usually pretty unstable, but this was rough.


TN: How are you doing now?


BM: Feeling great, and settling in - getting ready to get back on SL a whole lot more.


TN: I know a lot of people missed you here.


BM: Yeah, it's tough, I find a lot of fulfillment playing here. It gives me a lot! And I don't mean just lindens. The lindens are nice, though. I sure would like to start to make a living doing this.



TN: And you deserve to.


BM: "Deserves got nothing to do with it" - Clint Eastwood, "The Unforgiven".


TN: What do you love most about performing in SL?


BM: I love reaching so many people every performance - it's incredible. it's all over the world. I love trying out new songs. A lot of times I've written songs when I wasn't actively performing and they just sat there. I've forgotten a lot of songs because of that. It's exciting to play new material.


TN: Let’s switch gears and talk technique for a moment.


You have this amazing chunky guitar style. What’s the secret to making that so tasty? Are you playing mostly in standard tuning or do you use alternative tunings?


BM: I’m not sure what to say about it, except that I’ve been writing a lot with an open tuning, but I play mostly standard tunings live. I never took lessons. It‘s all basically organic.


TN: Who do you admire, instrumentally?


BM: Well, I'd have to say Jimmy Page and George Harrison. But then, again, I admire a lot of players. My favorite might change every time something catches my ear, which is often.


TN: By the way, George is my favorite Beatle.


BM: Yeah, he was really beautiful. I loved his playing and I loved his songs too, although John was probably my favorite. He would have been 69 today, I just saw in my chat.


TN: Wow!


BM: That's what I said.


TN: I’m glad I'm not getting older! LOL


BM: Me three.


TN; So…what's next for Buckley Moonwall?


BM: I’m looking forward to regaining my presence in Second Life. I have a few things I’m going to try to get going to give my shows a little bit more pop. But mainly it's just going be more of the same, only better.


I’m still writing, of course, and I have some new ones. And, the goal is to be on tour by next summer in RL.


I’m just about to release two new CDs: “Redemption” and “Confessions of a Hummingbird Farmer.” The first one is full production, the second is really intimate - acoustic.


TN: When will we hear them?


BM: Hopefully by Christmas.


TN: You seem to have quite a loyal and loving SL fan base. How does it feel knowing that so many here look forward to seeing your next performance with such intensity?


BM: It's an amazing feeling to have a "fan club". It reminds me that in my Second Life I'm doing pretty good, you know.


TN: Well, this is your chance to speak directly to your fans out there. What do you want to say to them?


BM: Well, Buckeroos, it's been a long, hot, dry summer, and I want to thank y'all for hanging around and waiting for me. I promise there's a tall, cold, foaming glass of Buckley coming your way real soon!


Tone Uriza: Ain’t Nuthin’ But The Blues




By Traci Nubalo


One of the things I did to make a living in professional music was to promote concerts. I enjoyed the shows themselves, but sometimes strange things would happen that made it a tough gig.

At one point I booked a show with the great Muddy Waters - the Father of the Blues. He was on tour with Pinetop Perkins on piano, and Bob Margolin on guitar - a dream blues band, to be sure! The only venue I could get for that night was a former movie theatre that I would sometimes use for concerts. I’d had a few successful shows there but the drawback was the dressing room situation. The only available area was an upstairs room that had been used as the projection booth. It was a dank, airless kind of a place, with the huge, musty projectors still sitting in the middle of the room. Also, the performers had to walk to the stage from the back of the audience, something that’s never popular with artists.

I had successfully put on Squeeze in the theatre, as well as former Fairport Convention guitarist Richard Thompson, but as the Muddy Waters play date neared I started to feel a little bit insecure about having to put such a stellar (let’s face it, legendary) artist back there. I cleaned the room like crazy, and found a few carpets that I put here and there. But no matter what I did, the room just looked like crap.

I met Muddy and his wife in front of the theatre that afternoon and rather sheepishly led them up the narrow staircase to the “dressing room.” Once inside the ugly place, Muddy said not a word, just looked away. But Mrs. Waters tore into me with a vengeance shrieking, “This is the room for the Father of the Blues?” After several minutes of verbal abuse all I could think to do was to mumble an apology and head for the door as soon as I could.

All day I just felt terrible. I felt a little bit better when showtime arrived, though. During the day I had devised a clever way around the entrance problem. I had the band slip onto the darkened stage without Muddy and begin the opening riffs of his classic hit “Mannish Boy”. The crowd jumped to its feet when they heard the disembodied voice of the legendary Muddy Waters sing “I’m a man!” On my signal, the huge spotlights swung around to the back of the theatre and there he was, microphone in hand, moving slowly down the left aisle singing and shaking hands along the way. I was just beside the stage and when he reached me I began to back away a bit, still embarrassed by the earlier scene. But he grabbed my hand and pulled me into a full hug and said, “Baby, it ain’t nuthin’ but the blues!” The crowd erupted at this comment, but I was the only person there who knew what he really meant. He smiled and kissed my cheek and made his way to the stage singing, “I’m a man! I spell M…A…N”. My heart soared!

Of course, I’ll never forget that scene, and I was thinking about it as I prepared to interview Second Life’s own Big Daddy of the Blues, Tone Uriza.

Traci Nubalo: Tone, it's almost stereotypical that blues players run into tough times. Has that been true in your career?

Tone Uriza: I can answer that with an anecdote that happened to me early on. The very first blues band I put together found itself without a bass player one day and I was lucky enough to get a bass player that was experienced and could really play the blues.

He was polite and fit in nicely, but one day he took me aside and said, “You know you haven't lived the blues so it’s hard for you to play the blues.” And he was right. It wasn't until I went through a divorce and other things in my life that I got what he was saying.

TN: Wow!

TU: I think that that stereotype is kind of deserved in that getting in touch with those deep feelings is tough when you are from a comfortable lifestyle and very young. There are always the exceptions, like Jonny Lang.

TN: Yes, but few and far between. How did you get started as a blues player?

TU: Well I grew up in the southwest US in a little mining town west of Tucson called Ajo, Arizona. My dad played guitar, as did my uncles.And my maternal grandfather played guitar in the brothels along the Mexican/US border at the turn of the century. So it was in my blood so to speak.

But growing up in a predominately Mexican/Western environment I wasn't able to get the kind of guitar instruction I was seeking, which was rock and blues. So I began to teach myself by ear. This was at age 9.

When I graduated from high school I moved to Tucson, Arizona to study digital electronics at the community college. At the same time I started playing anywhere around town they would let me.

Before I finished my associates degree I started working for a digital electronics company during the day and played at night. I haven't stopped since, except for the day gig. I gave that up in 1989 to play full time.

TN: We in Second Life know you as a blues player, but my ear tells me that there are some other influences going on at the same time.

TU: Oh yeah, absolutely. I am fascinated by the blues and the influence it has had on all other American musical art forms like rock & roll, jazz, R&B, funk. So to me the name blues means so much more than the traditional acoustic two- and three-chord progressions.

TN: Personally, I enjoy that hybrid although some of the blues purists look down on that. They tend to not enjoy anything but straight ahead blues forms. Have you run into any of that here?

TU: LOL Yes, just once. There’s a fellow from Germany in SL who hates me playing anything other than the old traditional blues. He still comes to my shows but if I am not playing the dobro when he rezzes he leaves. *giggles*

TN: Let’s talk tech for a minute. What equipment are you using these days in your SL performances?

TU: I use a Marshall MXL 990 recording condenser mic for my vocals, a Marshall 991 condenser mic for my acoustic guitars, and a Line 6 PODxt for my electric guitars. That’s all mixed on a Behringer Xenyx 1202 FX mixer. The acoustic guitars sound better if a mic is on them rather than straight in.

TN: Okay...that implies multiple guitars. Which ones do you use the most?

TU: I use the electric guitar more, usually a Fender Stratocaster. I have two. One is a 1977, and one is a 1979.

TN: Both pre-Japan then.

TU: Yes. I only buy American-made Strats. And for acoustics I use a 1933 Gibson or a late model Ibanez acoustic/electric.

TN: Great, thanks! The reason I asked is that your sound is very clean, but it's obvious that you are using some degree of effects.

TU: Yes. And I also have a Regal dobro. That’s the POD xt. It's an amp/effects modeler.

TN: Yes, and boy does that sound killer!

TU: It's awesome. And the software lets me control everything on it from my computer.

TN: You just recently started using the dobro in your SL shows, right?

TU: Yes. The dobro is something I have had for a long time but I would consider my self an electric blues player. I only started using it after I experimented with the sound.

TN: In my humble opinion, adding the dobro gives your show a very tasty new dimension in the sound.

TU: Thank you.

One of the things that I love about going to see Tone Uriza in Second Life is that, just as he describes here, he’s not afraid to move away from the traditional twelve-bar blues format, even within a song which is usually confined to that form. He’ll shift into an off-time signature, or move into modes which are jazzier and freer than straight-ahead blues.

He opened one recent SL set with the Booker T. Jones/William Bell classic “Born Under a Bad Sign” and held pretty much to the straight-up 4/4 time, only tossing in some very natural guitar accents and little syncopations here and there for color. Yet he completely owned his remake of Muddy Waters’ “Hoochie Koochie Man”, tossing in references to ‘7,000 lindens’ and other localizing lyrics which the audience, of course, loved. (By the way, Tone had no idea that I was going to use the Muddy Waters story as the opening of this piece, and I was thrilled to find him playing three songs from the Father of the Blues on the night I was there to cover his set).

Then there’s the dobro. By way of introduction to some, the dobro is essentially a guitar with a metal resonator plate attached where the sound hole would normally be. It provides a sustained metallic sound perfect for blues, bluegrass and other “earthy” styles. It’s either plucked or played with a slide. Big Daddy usually tosses a couple of dobro songs into his set, my favorite being the haunting Lowell George song “Willing”. And like he said, he plays a model of dobro which gives him darn near 100% sonic control. During “Willing” this puts the instrument front and center with a gorgeous tone and vibrancy not available on the old Opry-style dobro (traditionally played through a microphone).

Another amazing component of Tone’s show is the vocals. He sings in a rare high, soft-yet-powerful voice. But underneath he somehow lays in an awesome gravelly texture. It gives the songs crystal clear lyrics, combined with that world-weary longing that helps the singer to tell the blues tale. Like many of the great things in music, it turns out that his singing came from necessity.

TN: Tone, a lot of your fans comment on your voice. You have developed a wonderful style of singing.

TU: It's funny because I never intended to be a singer. But I have always liked being independent and self-sufficient so I started doing it all from running my own band, owning my own PA, and booking myself. So that eventually led to doing all the singing as well.

TN: Not the first time I've heard that said!

TU: Yup.

TN: What do you think it is about SL that makes this music scene so dynamic and entertaining?

TU: Well, in the real world you are judged so much on appearance whether you are good or not and SL has leveled that playing field immensely. Here you are judged purely on your sound, and how hot you can make your avie! *giggles*

TN: There’s a benefit to understanding how to entertain, as well. And you score very highly in both the sound and the entertainment areas. One of the things I love about your shows is your audience. They LOVE them some Big Daddy!

TU: Awwww. Well I feel very blessed. I so enjoy playing the blues for people. Over the years I have questioned myself about my commitment, wondering if I do it because I really love the music or if I need the attention.

Now that I have been doing it for almost 30 years and I am going to be 55 in January, I have realized that the happiest moments in my life were when my family got together at my uncle's house and everyone would bring out the instruments and sing together. And ever since then, every time I get onstage whether real or virtual, I am trying to recapture those moments. So the audience is always a part of my shows, like my family. And I treat them that way. Perhaps that is why they love being there.

TN: Yes. And your shows contain not only great playing and singing, but a lot of laughter.

TU: Yes. My family loved to laugh. I want everyone to walk away happy, because I do every time I get to play.

TN: One of the things that your audiences seems to enjoy is making YOU laugh, too.

TU: *giggles* I'm probably one of the few performers that the audience likes better when I mess up and blow it in the middle of the song. But it is all an "in the moment" thing for me.

One of the things that all this experience has taught me is that perfection is boring; and fun almost never is.

I also want to say that I never imagined that the two things I enjoy in life the most would come together for me. I love playing music and I love playing with computers. So Second Life has been a natural fit from the very first day.

As the close of the hour neared, some requests were shouted from the crowd about “that dog song”. Tone cranked the volume and the distortion waaaay up and launched into Muddy Waters’ monster blues piece “Baby Please Don’t Go”. Leaning hard on the bottom strings he sliced through the opening riffs using almost a Texas boogie feel. Then, shifting to a darker voice, all low and growly, he snarled and moaned his way through a ten-minute tale of kink and desire, with stops along the way at spanking, oral love, dog-style sex, and shackles. Cranked to the max, he ended with a laugh and a howl, leaving the audience breathless.

The crowd erupted into wild applause and some even wilder comments. “Holy yummyumms, that was great, Tone!” said one woman. And from a couple dancing in the back: She - “We need some private time after that song!” He - “Woof.”

TN: Could you go a little deeper into your relationship with your SL audience? How do you feel about them? What would you like to say to them?

TU: I am very blessed to have an audience in Second Life. At a time in my life when most of my peers are struggling to maintain their audiences in RL, I am reaching more and more people on the internet. I play everyday and can pay my bills because of my fans and audiences. Do you have any idea what that means to a musician?

It means the world to me. Thank you guys so much! It reminds me of how lucky I am.

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