Blue Sky on Wednesday- Original release on Cassette 1998 

Chris started writing songs at the age of 12. His first recordings, being crude consumer home cassettes using 2 portable cassette recorders to over dub, back and forth; would prove to be the early blueprints for songs to come. In 1987, Chris purchased his first portable 4-track cassette recorder and began to record with a new technique he learned from The Beatles, bouncing mixes between tracks to create more open tracks to record. The skill here was to imagine what the song would sound like ahead of time, because once a track was locked into a bounce, there was no fixing it.   

Chris’s first professional music endeavors starts back in 1989.  Louis Philippe, president of Reindeer Records, a record label based in Portland Maine, discovered Chris, along with his then collaborator and best friend David Mercer during Portland’s annual Rock Off competition. An annual event showcasing the best High School rock bands in Southern Maine.  Louis commissioned Chris and David to write and record a song for an AIDS benefit album on Reindeer Records. The result was a song Chris and Dave wrote titled, “Fool’s Paradise”. Chris put together a trio named Small Fortune, also featuring Chip Ramsey on drums to record the song. Louis chose Barry Arvin Young, a longtime Portland musician, performer and sound engineer to produce the session for “Fool’s Paradise”.  Chris and Dave performed shows to promote the release.   

Chris continued to write and record songs, upgrading to a Tascam 464 and effects rack. Here Chris started to layer sounds and recorded a release on his own label Elsewhere Music. The result was a cassette titled “Blue Sky on Wednesday” featuring 7 songs. “Face” magazine, a popular Portland Maine music scene weekly newspaper, reviewed “Blue Sky on Wednesday”, and wrote this.  

“There are good songs. “That Someone” offers a clever explanation for bad behavior (That someone pretending to be me”). “Plant a Seed” is a straight pop song that sounds as if it grew from a flower power spore which somehow survived 30 years in suspended animation. “It’s All Over the World” is a reggae theme song from an imaginary Ed Wood film. “  

In 2019, going back to the original 4 track cassette recordings, Chris remixed “Blue Sky on Wednesday for digital release. Including “Fool’s Paradise” and “Victoria Vase” recorded as Small Fortune, featuring David Mercer. “Fool’s Paradise”, also includes Chip Ramsey on Drums. Chip would continue working with Chris in the band ECC. Recording “Like The Wind” and “Snatch” featured on “Chris Coyle’s Plastic Soul” release due 9/21/2020. 

All original tracks written, produced and performed by Chris Coyle on 4 track tape cassette.

Blue Sky On Wednesday

Blue Sky on Wednesday

Chris Coyle

Chris’s first professional music endeavors starts back in 1989. Louis Philippe, president of Reindeer Records, a record label based in Portland Maine, discovered Chris, along with his then collaborator and best friend Read more

Chris’s first professional music endeavors starts back in 1989. Louis Philippe, president of Reindeer Records, a record label based in Portland Maine, discovered Chris, along with his then collaborator and best friend David Mercer during Portland’s annual Rock Off competition. An annual event showcasing the best High School rock bands in Southern Maine. Louis commissioned Chris and David to write and record a song for an AIDS benefit album on Reindeer Records. The result was a song Chris and Dave wrote titled, “Fool’s Paradise”. Chris put together a trio named Small Fortune, also featuring Chip Ramsey on drums to record the song. Louis chose Barry Arvin Young, a longtime Portland musician, performer and sound engineer to produce the session for “Fool’s Paradise”. Chris and Dave performed shows to promote the release.

Chris continued to write and record songs, upgrading to a Tascam 464 and effects rack. Here Chris started to layer sounds and recorded a release on his own label Elsewhere Music in 1998. The result was a cassette titled “Blue Sky on Wednesday” featuring 7 songs. “Face” magazine, a popular Portland Maine music scene weekly newspaper, reviewed “Blue Sky on Wednesday”, and wrote this.

“There are good songs. “That Someone” offers a clever explanation for bad behavior (That someone pretending to be me”). “Plant a Seed” is a straight pop song that sounds as if it grew from a flower power spore which somehow survived 30 years in suspended animation. “It’s All Over the World” is a reggae theme song from an imaginary Ed Wood film. “

0:00/???
  1. 1
    0:00/3:57
  2. 2
    0:00/4:00
  3. 3
    0:00/2:53
  4. 4
    0:00/2:56
  5. 5
    0:00/4:21
  6. 6
    0:00/5:20
  7. 7
    0:00/3:29
  8. 8
    0:00/4:10
  9. 9
    0:00/3:26
  10. 10
    0:00/4:31
  11. 11
    0:00/3:59
  12. 12
    0:00/4:17
  13. 13
    0:00/3:02
  14. 14
    0:00/3:09
  15. 15
    0:00/4:58
  16. 16
    0:00/5:47
  17. 17
    0:00/3:41