https://bangnzdrum.blogspot.com/2019/12/expressions-to-avoid-in-recording-studio.html
Sunday, 29 July 2012
36 Rules For Bands - The Wit of Steely Dan
https://bangnzdrum.blogspot.com/2019/12/expressions-to-avoid-in-recording-studio.html
Expressions to avoid during a recording session
EXPRESSIONS TO AVOID
During A Recording Session
See also: 36 Rules for Bands
Automatic Man - cosmic funk prog anyone?
Mike Shrieve was already a big name from Santana |
How did this cosmic funk prog band come to be?
When Mike Shrieve left Santana in 1975, he was keen to develop a band project and so got together with guitarist Pat Thrall and jazz keyboard player Todd Cochran, also known as Bayete.
Shrieve met Thrall when he collaborated with Steve Winwood and the Japanese percussionist Stomu Yamashta on the ‘Go’ albums. Bayete, an established jazz player, had the songwriting skills and it was his influence that would prove to be the greatest in terms of the band’s direction. The fourth member of the band was bassist Doni Harvey.
"We moved to London to do the record, which we were really excited about. We just couldn’t seem to get it together live, though. We had a falling out and the rest of the band moved to LA and made another record without me, and that was that.”
Doni Harvey continued to play sessions and for a time was a member of the fusion band Nova. I saw Nova play a support slot at the Hammersmith Odeon around 1978. Harvey obviously modelled himself on Jimi (the spelling of his name is a giveaway – and see back cover photo of Automatic Man) and on this night he was pulling all the Jimi shapes and moves. It was remarkable but also faintly ridiculous.
I’ll stick with Cosmic Funk Prog.
Monday, 16 July 2012
Green is good - in praise of Scritti Politti
There is a school of thought that much of the music made in the 1980s sounds awfully ‘of its time’ here and now, because it was created on the first wave of polyphonic synthesisers and drum machines. The sound of boom-boom-bap with EQ up the wazoo.
As a drummer myself, I confess that I succumbed to the lure of the drum machine at the time, because I thought it had to sound like ‘I Feel For You’ to pass muster with my peers. I was probably right at the time, but ever since then I have disliked music made without ‘proper’ drums. With one exception - Scritti Politti.
I can honestly say I love just about everything Scritti have ever done. I thought The Sweetest Girl should have been a massive hit in the early 80s. I can still remember the thrill of hearing Wood Beez for the first time on Anne Nightingale’s Sunday night show in 1984.
The album Cupid & Psyche '85 was such a revelation and it has stood the test of time remarkably well. That's because underneath all the studio gloss is a collection of artfully composed and wonderfully played songs.
Recorded mainly in New York using the very best session players and singers, the songs have a rich melodic feel and a syncopated funk that became a trademark groove on this and the following album, Provision.
Green, Gamson and Maher with Miles Davis |
Even now, the current incarnation of Scritti Politti doesn’t play live much. Green is not the most comfortable performer and it would clearly be a struggle to faithfully recreate the sound of the records.
But they do a remarkable job considering, in the few gigs they have played in recent years. Green's musical accomplice Rhodri Marsden is surrounded by laptops and keyboard kit he has painstakingly programmed with the original parts. And most remarkable of all, Green really does sing like that in real life; no studio trickery needed.
As luck would have it, while I was in London in December 2007, I saw Scritti were playing one show at the Luminaire, a small club on Kilburn High Road. It was two weeks before Christmas. Green, sporting a red check shirt and Grizzly Adams beard, had decided it would be a Christmas party. So he arranged for each band member to choose their favourite book to be sent out into the crowd as a ‘pass the parcel. When the music stopped, another layer of wrapping could be removed. They passed out mince pies.
On his last album, ‘White Bread Black Beer’ Green showed he didn’t need the production genius of Arif Mardin to craft music of depth and imagination. He obviously has a store of great music still to release, as he played quite a few of them at the Luminaire. He admits to finding it hard to finish songs, so we just have to wait patiently to hear what’s next from the sweet voiced Mr. Gartside.
This post originally appeared on The Word magazine blog on 16 January 2010. I have re-posted it today in honour of the final shut down of that blog. The conversation continues at a new site www.http://theafterword.co.uk/