
Posted on Oct 14 2019 11:52 PM
The whole process of making records changed dramatically over the course of the 90s. I started the Mel-tones in 1993, we couldn't afford to use a proper studio with an engineer. Our first output was a cassette (8 songs I think) that we recorded on an old reel to reel live with no overdubs. We bought blank cassettes, made copies on a dual tape deck, printed labels on an dot matrix printer, and I hand drew the cover art. Why I think we sold literally dozens of them!
In 1995 we got a deal with Snatch Records in England to produce a four song 7", but we had to cover the cost of recording. The reel to reel had died by then so we recorded using to Radio Shack PZM mics into a hifi VHS machine. Live, no overdubs. I did the artwork in MSPaint.
I moved to Montreal in late 1995 and reformed the Mel-tones with new players. We managed to gig enough to save dough so that by 1996 we were able to record a full length album, this time with an ADAT in a friend's basement, and were lucky enough to work with a music placement guy in NY who fronted money for us to release the album on CD on our own Halakahiki Records. That was "Surfin' at Black Point".
We were able to release another Halakahiki CD in 1998 called "Surf Before Sunrise", and recorded a final set of four songs that we never released before I moved out to California in Sept 1998.
Sometime in the early 2000's, the NY music promoter put out a "best of" CD on his Lovecat label comprising most of the tracks on "Surfin' at Black Point" and "Surf Before Sunrise" called "Surf Sensation". In 2004 Stan-o came out from Montreal and we recorded a new album, this time with Shig Komiyama playing drums, released by Lovecat as "Surf! Spy! Space!"
So, all told we made a cassette, a 7", and two CDs in the 90s, with a best of and new CD in the 2000s.
Of course, since getting to California I've been in a few bands, The Mach IV (2 albums) and Meshugga Beach Party (3 albums), but new technology has made recording and releasing an album a much more cost effective endeavor.
Anyway, I know the Mel-tones were far from influential like many of the bands listed above, but another 90s surf band data point.