As mentioned above, the studio is a simple room. It has square walls, ie. no visible wall geometry designed for audio clarity, and no real acoustic wall treatments. The 1950s era ceiling tile would add some absorption although it was probably just the standard material at the time.
Though the room is mundane its magic lives on. There were some old amps for us to use and Mark drummed on a house set of Ludwig’s. It felt right to play my 1968 Telecaster bass that I’d purchased in Memphis on a previous tour. There wasn’t much separation of amps or drums in the room so each player’s sound would bleed into the others’ microphones. That’s not a problem so long as you play correctly and don’t need to fix mistakes by punching-in. It also works best if everyone keeps their volume down, which was difficult for our rock-deafened group. We eventually dialled in a nice balance and rolled through the songs, picking notes gingerly and taking cues from one another.
There’s really no wrong way to record, as long as the artist is achieving the sound they desire. For us that meant doing live takes, and keeping the ones which overall, despite minor sonic imperfections, captured a song’s essence to Molina’s enigmatic standards. That’s how we approached it at this session too while breaking three of our normal practices. First, Jason usually strove to record on analog tape but we were recording digitally. I don’t think there was an in-house tape machine so it was an easy decision. Second, there are headphones in the session photos, whereas typically Jason didn’t like singing with cans on and when possible we would opt to simply hear him live in the room. Third and most surprising is that Jason allowed slap-back reverb on his vocals, which I can only credit to the studio’s charm and history because that sort of thing was usually censured.
We tracked four songs at Sun. The two that appear on Fading Trails, “Memphis Moon” and “Talk to Me Devil, Again” were new tunes from what I remember - we would have learned them at soundcheck the day before. When I listen to the tracks I hear them as new or seeming new. Jason would often switch up his guitar tuning or the key a song was in, sometimes to accommodate a vocal range. That made songs feel new even if they were previously-played. One way or another the songs feel fresh and Molina’s voice sounds woody, clear, and confident; refreshed from a few months off the road and whetted by the acoustic shows over the winter.
The additional two songs were definitely not new but got a fresh spin. Our group of players had performed “Hold On Magnolia” countless times on stage but had not recorded the version released on the Magnolia Electric Co. album. Here we had a chance at it and got a nice sweet take. “Trouble in Mind” was one of the occasional cover songs that would come out on tour. Covers were ephemeral and wouldn’t necessarily ever get a studio treatment, so this arrangement of one of Jason’s favorite tunes is a gift.