Daisy Jones & The Six(43)
When everything was perfectly in place, I said, “All right, ‘Aurora,’ take one. Somebody count it off.”
Daisy: We played it the whole way through. All of us together. We just played it over and over. As a band. A real band.
I looked at Billy at one point and we smiled at each other and I thought, This is happening. I was in a band. I was one of them. The seven of us, playing music.
Billy: As Daisy and I were singing it, I had to do a few takes in a row to really warm up but Daisy hit it right out of the gate. She really … Daisy was a natural. And if you’re going up against somebody like Daisy, then yeah, that’s annoying. But if she’s on your team … wow. Powerhouse.
Artie Snyder: I was still getting a feel for how the album would sound and my team was still tinkering with the setup. The early takes sounded a little tinny, and that’s what I was focused on. When you start off on an album, with new people and different sounds, in a new studio and all of that … you really have to get your levels right, your mikes right. I was obsessive about that stuff. Until it was coming through clean on the cans, I could not focus on anything else.
But, even knowing that about myself, looking back on it … I can’t believe I had no idea. We were making a massive hit record. And I had no idea.
Daisy: I knew it was gonna be huge. I really think, even then, I knew.
Daisy: A few days later, I’m going through my journal, back at my place. I think maybe it was a weekend. And I find one of Billy’s songs in there. One that he wrote for the album. “Midnights.” I think maybe at the time it was called “Memories.” I must have packed it up with my things by mistake when we were back at Teddy’s. So I started rereading it. I probably read it ten times in a row, sitting there.
It was pretty sickeningly sweet. All about how Billy has these happy memories with Camila. But there were a few good lines in there. So I started scribbling on top of it. Playing with it.
Billy: The next time we met up at Teddy’s, Daisy handed me “Midnights.” I’d written it over the summer. It was pretty straightforward when I wrote it. But she handed it back to me, pen marks all over the place and I could barely read any of the words. I held the page in my hand and I said, “What did you do to my song?”
Daisy: I told him it was actually a great song. I said, “Turns out, it just needed a little bit of darkness to it.”
Billy: I said, “I understand what you’re saying but I can’t read what you wrote.” She got mad and snatched the paper out of my hand.
Daisy: I was going to have to read it to him. I started reading the first verse but then I realized that was dumb. I said, “Play the song as you wrote it.”
Billy: I got my guitar and I started playing and singing the words as I originally wrote them.
Daisy: I cut him off once I got the gist of it.
Billy: She put her hand on the neck of the guitar to shut me up. She said, “I get where you’re going. Start from the beginning. Give this a listen.”
Daisy: I sang him his song back, this time with my changes.
Billy: It went from a song about your best memories to a song about what you can and can’t remember. I had to admit it was more subtle, more complicated. Much more open to interpretation.
It was very similar to what I had envisioned when I wrote it, but just … [laughs] better than what I got on the page, frankly.
Daisy: I didn’t change a lot of his song, really. I just added in this element of what you don’t remember to highlight what you do remember. And then I restructured it, to include a second voice.
Billy: By the time she was done, I was really excited about it.
Daisy: Billy immediately went into writing mode. He took the paper from me, grabbed a pen, started reordering a little bit. That’s how I knew he liked it.
By the end, we’d taken this song that Billy had about Camila and we made it about so much more than that.
Billy: We played it for everybody down at the studio. Just her and me and the guitar, over in the lounge.
Graham: I dug the song. Billy and I started talking about a solo during the bridge. We were on the same page.
Eddie: I said to Billy, “This is good, let me get started on my piece on it.”
And Billy said, “Well, your part is written already. Just go with the guitar as I played it.”
I said, “Let me tinker with it.”
He said, “Nothing to tinker with. Daisy and I have been reworking this one back and forth. I’m telling you, play it like I played it.”
I said, “I don’t want to play it like you played it.”
He just patted me on the back and said, “It’s cool. Just play it like I played it.”
Billy: The rhythm guitar part was already done. But I said, “All right, man. Go ahead and try to see what you can come up with.” By the time we recorded it, he’d come back around to exactly what I played for him.
Eddie: I changed it up. He didn’t have it exactly right. There wasn’t only one way to play that song. I changed it up. And it was better. I knew how to play my own riffs. I knew what worked. We were all supposed to be taking our own shots. So I took my own shot.
Billy: It is very frustrating, when you know how something should be done but you have to pretend someone else has a good idea, when you know you’re just going to end up using your own. But that’s the price of doing business with somebody like Eddie Loving. He’s got to believe everything is his idea or he won’t do it.