Jackets For The Trip was the final album Uphollow recorded. Whit and I formed the band 10 years earlier and changed drastically album to album. Uphollow was a punk band. For most of the '90s we were playing with Fugazi, Hot Water Music, Jimmy Eat World, Avail, and similar. Then in '99 all of our gear was stolen, I moved to Australia, Whit went backpacking in Europe. We stopped. I wrote a new album.
In 2001 I met Ian Cooke on "the internet" and he joined on piano and cello, we recorded that album, and by 2003 he started contributing songs. His first four were Kudos, Monster, Sleeping Bag, and Wine and Honesty, all on this album.
Whit wrote Stay The Night and The Writer, and I wrote the rest - so it was both a strength and a weakness to have three very different singers and songwriters. Oddly, about a third of the album was written in Spain. Whit was living there and Cooke and I were traveling there at the time (2001-2004).
Mostly what I remember is that this was the era of change from Tape or ADAT type recording using a board towards computer-based recording. I had just started using Nuendo and if I recall the basic tracks were recorded at a traditional studio with a big board and all that, then transferred to a drive that I recorded the overdubs on, at home. Then we brought everything back to mix at the studio on a physical board. All in the early days of that. Nuendo 2.0, if I recall.
During this era I was really becoming interested in surround sound generally, mostly because of the Cornelius Five Point One album - and happened to meet Bob Ferbrache at one of our shows. We hit it off and soon after started working on a 5.1 mix of the album.
With Bob, that means drinking wine with him until 4am while he LOUDLY plays you other stuff he is working on. It took a lot of wine (Cotes du Rhone varieties) and a lot of time to get it done. He taught me about hockey and prog rock and we became friends.
One interesting note is that Cooke re-sang Wine and Honesty, and I re-sang This First so the 5.1 is different in those regards. If I recall the reason was just that months had passed and we weren't happy with our initial performances.
Another item is that the last song Timed Clock was the first time I worked with Jamie White, who contributed to both The Fall I Fell and The Flight I Flew. I recorded guitar and vocal in his closet and he did everything else. I don't remember if it was before or after everything else, but completely separate, and I was uncertain if it should be included at all. Oddly, it acted as a preview of the direction I would go.
Throughout the mixing time, my buddy Zach Putnam was working on the visuals. Certainly now some look like screen-saver type stuff, but they were time-intensive, cool, and fun. Zach also did the Vasoon origami cello video later. Bob authored the DVD and figured it all out, which I recall being tricky for various technical reasons. There is an easter egg too, very of the time.
The title is a lyric in Wine and Honesty about actual jackets for an actual voyage the three of us did take, south to Portugal from Spain, but there is also a psychedelic trip side to it, and the shell cover image matched both the visual trippyness and the physical security of a sleeping bag type thing. Wine and Honesty is fantastic. Sleeping Bag is fantastic. Honestly, Cooke's songs and Whit's song The Writer are fantastic. I don't enjoy listening to my songs.
I just talked to Whit and his recollection was different, of course. He said he came up with the album title, from the Cooke lyrics, and said today: "songs can be sense of comfort as you're going through life, songs are this jacket to keep you warm."
Jackets For The Trip: original shell today, with CD cover from 2005.