What the @;%*?! is this?

Achtung!

Welcome to Bops On The Head, a forum to share ruminations on all things "Mus-iK", what folks are listening to, wanting to know about, or rant on. Anything anyone feels like sharing relating to bands/artists/genres/equipment is welcome.

Let's have some fun, shall we?

Klang!

Tuesday, September 4, 2012

Trace

When asked to name "Progressive Rock" groups from the '70s most folks can come up with  Yes, ELP, Genesis, Rush, Focus, Gong, Flash, etc. One band that flew under the radar is a trio called Trace. They released 3 albums for Sire Records, the self-titled titled first album, "Birds", and "White Ladies". The core members were multi-keyboardist Rick van der Linden who gained fame with the group Ekseption, and excellent self-taught electric bassist Jaap van Eik. The great Focus drummer Pierre van der Linden (2nd cousin) made the debut album bristle with stop-start, jazz influenced rock steadiness and flair. After Pierre van der Linden's departure the group turned to Marillion drummer Ian Mosley for "Birds" who brought a more "rock fusion" aspect to the proceedings.

I can't recommend these albums highly enough to fans of keyboard dominated progressive rock. Rick van der Linden plays an arsenal of keyboards with intelligence, humor and incredible technique, and his writing is legit. Jaap van Eik is one of the most accomplished self-taught bassists I have heard, and also contributes electric guitar and a brief vocal segment to "Birds".  Drummers van der Linden and Mosley are excellent virtuosos and make me smile by how they serve the music.

"Desert Island" status.

Saturday, August 25, 2012

Who Remembers Quad Sound?

I'm old enough to remember when certain record companies and electronics manufacturers experimented with Quad sound. This was a unique "Dual Stereo" encoding system that required a special phono cartridge, a Quad compliant component and four speakers to reproduce. Sound like any recent audio technologies? Needless to say Quad was short lived due to less than stellar reviews, the price of admission and little software support (the few titles offered were mainly classical and pop).

My roommate and I went this one better using stuff we already owned. We put together a system that consisted of 2 AR Integrated amps, 1 pair of AR 3 speakers for the front, 1 pair of AR 4x speakers for the rear. I wired the speakers in a "Stereo Around" configuration that, no matter where you sat, you had a complete stereo sound-field. The results were spectacular! The sound was rich, warm, involving and filled the living room with ease. We could take advantage of our current LP and Tape collections without having to deal with format incompatibilities. At the time I had a Sony TC-355 reel to reel deck that had "Sound-On-Sound" dubbing facility which allows you to crudely overdub sounds. If this function was engaged with the "Monitor" on, you got incredible and variable echo effects. One night I was fooling around with this when some friends called. They had just dropped acid asked if they could come over to listen to music. I continued with my echo experiments until they arrived. I had left the tape deck going and audible. When they walked into the living room their voices instantly began echoing through all the speakers in glorious "Stereo Around" sound. They began laughing hysterically which, well, you get the idea.

I loved that system. After 30 some-odd years, multiple iterations, untold investments, I've finally put together an excellent system that accomplishes much of what that system did with just 2 speakers. Advances in digital amplifier technology, analog and digital source components, speaker designs and cable geometries can now yield unparallelled musical reproduction and amazing holographic imaging.

We live in a wonderful age!

Thursday, August 23, 2012

Didgeridoo: The Most Expressive Musical Instrument?

I first heard the Didgeridoo at a very early age on my dad's Folkways LP of Aboriginal music recorded on locations in the Australian Outback. I always thought it was a drum ( I was too young to read the liner notes) because of how the instrument is articulated.

Many years later I'd all but forgotten about the Didgeridoo when I read in Duke Ellington's biography, "Music is My Mistress", his account of hearing didgeridoos while on a musical ambassadorship state department tour of Asia. Duke considered the Didgeridoo to be the most expressive instrument he'd ever heard, and even incorporated the instrument on the album, "The Afro-Eurasian Eclipse". 

In the '80s when I was the New Age buyer at The COOP I met a couple of nice guys who called themselves, "DidgeriDuo". Yup, 2 guys playing rhythmic set pieces on didgeridoos augmented by processed low frequency extension and sparse synthesizer shadings. Before you commit "Contempt Prior To Investigation", these guys put together compelling pieces that actually ROCK. I treasure these albums and have dubbed the cassettes onto CDRs which I've ripped into iTunes at high resolution. "Boom-Shaka-Laka!" 

The Didgeridoo is capable, in the right hands (Aboriginal master David Hudson is, for me, the best), of complex ranges of shading and by blowing using circular breathing techniques, beautifully primitive dancing and dream inducing rhythms.  

I feel a Walkabout coming on...

Wednesday, August 22, 2012

It Has Been Made Clear...I Am Painfully Out Of Shape!

This Monday evening my Auto 66 posse Tristram and Doug descended on my home, and we fired up the "Big Irons" for the first time in over a decade. It felt GREAT to interact in real time with these guys. What the session pointed out in black & white is I'm out of shape. When Doug launched into the fastest tune in the Auto 66 repertoire (Thanks Doug!) I lasted about 3 minutes before melting down and just stopping (insert out of breath gasping sounds here). SO, grateful for this data point I am looking to work on stamina. My plan is to play along with my iPod on Shuffle. Whether a Chopin Etude, The Ventures, Mastodon, Kirsty MacColl, NEU!, a Beethoven symphony, James Brown, Captain Beyond, Lee Fields, Steve Roach, Steve Reich, Funkadelic, Judas Priest...this will be my metronome and context source. I think this sounds like fun. Any drummers care to weigh in on this?

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

The Night I fell Over On Stage

When we had shows at the club Streets, my girlfriend Barbara loved to have the Someone & The Somebodies "Entourage" over for a hearty meal of anti-pasto, pasta with her incredible north Italian style tomato sauce that included sausages sourced from the neighborhood deli in Park Slope. We usually ate a lot because it was so awesome. Er, we also drank A Lot of wine with these meals. It just felt right at the time! We'd all stumble around to Streets and arrive just in time to set up and play. It was one of those nights in 1981 when I was reeling from one of Barbara's heady fetes. It didn't help that the audience was particularly hostile. At one point my bassist Tristram was hit in the left elbow by a full beer bottle. No chicken wire here! Half way through the set came one of our more complex pieces. The ending was a rapid fire cadence, "DAdadadaDadadadaDAdadaDA!" where I conclude by damping the ride cymbal on the last beat. Only this time I kept going, falling over my floor tom and crashing to the ground still holding the ride cymbal. My throne, floor tom, cymbal and a few microphones were scattered over the stage. I calmly picked myself up, got everything back in place and said, "Excuse Me". Right out of Cheech & Chong's "Up In Smoke". the night didn't get any better. Between songs towards the end of teh set the club DJ announced, "Would the owner of a Toyota sedan with New Jersey license plate #........ please come to the bar. Your car is on fire". Tris lowered his head in ultimate dejection. Yup, that was HIS car on fire. Rock & Roll!

Saturday, August 18, 2012

Who Are Your Favorite Wah-wah Players?

The first Wah-wah I heard was Eric Clapton on Disraeli Gears and I thought it was cool. His approach was on the beat with an accent hear and there, and after a few listenings I started to miss the wonderful tone from Fresh Cream.

I relegated the Wah-wah to, "novelty" status until I heard Jimi Hendrix's incredibly supple articulations on "Axis Bold As Love". Wow!...THAT's expression! His seemingly effortless ability to use the Wah-wah as an extension of his mind remains for me well, mind blowing. Just listen to any of the recent Experience Hendrix approved live recordings, especially "Winterland". When I listen to these performances I feel in the presence of a true genius who's emphasis on extracting every ounce of expression and emotion from his rig hasn't, for me, ever been matched. Thank you Jimi!

I have to give a shout out to the late, great Pete Cosey who anchored the lead guitar spot in Miles Davis' great acid rock "On The Corner" band. I saw Pete several times in this band and his use of the Wah-wah for pure effect is the closest I've heard a guitarist approach, "Phasers On Stun!". He could make the guitar sound like it was literally falling apart. Beautiful Pete!

Frank Zappa. Talk about totally unique. Developing his style to suit what he was writing for The Mothers Of Invention, Frank invented an inimitable feel for the Wah-wah. Zappa's ability to articulate triple "Wah" inflections while executing hellacious 32nd note rapid-fire staccato attack leads is so uniquely audacious I have never heard anyone else, even Zappa's lead break transcriber Steve Vai. Eat Frankie's dust all you Cali GIT-Heads!

Who are your favorite Wah-wah players?

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

How Loud Is Loud?

When I was at The COOP music department in the '80s I got to see a lot of bands compliments of the labels. There were some great shows (The Kinks, Bryan Ferry, Paris Combo, Lou Reed touring "New York" with The Feelies warming up, Laika & The Cosmonauts) and some not so great shows (Motley Crue with Ratt opening, and they go downhill from there).

3 major act heavy metal shows that came my way all happened at the Worcester Centrum. First Up: Iron Maiden on the "Somewhere In Time" tour. Our seats were 25 rows back and 15 rows up on the stage right (audience left) side. The SPLs were so ridiculous that the bass, bass drums and lead vocals were pounding our chests. NO KIDDING!! Luckily Sylvia brought ear plugs. Next up: Judas Priest touring "Ram It Down". Similar seat placement. Chuck and I were prepared with ear plugs. As soon as "The Hellion" began blaring from the PA ear plugs were inserted. Half way through the second tune, "Metal Gods" I had to take the ear plugs OUT! The sound was immaculately put across to draw the audience in, not blow them away. We were able to relax, get into the songs and sing along. And Last: Van Halen touring "5150". Worst case scenario, loud and muddy/honky..."There's Only ONE WAY TO RAWK!"...NOT! C'Mon! The audience deserves better than that! And the performance was, as my rock critic friend Tristram Lozaw put it in his Herald column the next day, "Pathetic".

Also, I remember, during the "Live Aid" concerts broadcast from Britain, a "Loudest Band In The World" face-off between Black Sabbath and Judas Priest. Sabbath sent up the slowest "Iron Man" even the rabid fist pumping fans timed out on. The Priest weighed in with their send-up of Fleetwood Mac's, "The Green Manalishi (With the Two Prong Crown)" complete with much KK Downing feedback and blistering breaks. Sabbath won. Fewer amps but louder amps wins over many well-placed and tightly tweaked amps. Go figure.

If any of you folks have favorite "Ear Splitter" shows please share! 

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

To Match Grip Or To Parade Grip?

When I was 15 I took 6 weeks of drum lessons with the great local percussion instructionist extraordinaire, Dick Demers. We focused on "Set Control" as I had a basic fundamental vocabulary. After observing me he commented, "I see you use the Matched Grip popularized by Ringo Starr. Did he influence this?" "No, I just find this grip suits my style of rim-shot based attack." "Interesting you should say that. I find the Parade Grip actually gives me more power and flexibility, making it very easy to switch gears from feathering to sharp rim-shot attack. Would you like to try this?" "Okay, it works for Charlie Watts who I prefer over Ringo, so I'll give it a try." This approach is a paradigm shift! I found that switching between Parade and Matched grips really opened things up, A LOT. I angled my snare around 2 degrees forward, positioned my hi-hats to be easily reached with the left hand, brought my ride as close as possible angled almost vertical. Dick always questioned the ride positioning but hey, it works for me! As I began playing out and the emphasis veered towards hard rock/progressive blues rock Ala Mountain, Jethro Tull, ELP, etc., I weighted my approach more to the Matched Grip (turns out the great Jethro Tull drummer, Clive Bunker did the same shift as they began playing larger stages). By the time I co-founded the band Someone & The Somebodies in '79 I was a confirmed Matched Grip slugger. My rim-shot accuracy had improved to over 90%. The upside was I sounded way more powerful than I was actually hitting the snare. The downside was I more consistently cracked my left index finger, sometimes severely enough to draw blood and bleed all over my snare. I became quite adept at keeping the beat while licking blood from my hand! After Someone & The Somebodies broke up in '85 I hung up the sticks and became more involved on keyboards in my experimental electronic band Dervish with Somebodies lead guitarist Rob Davis. When I was urged out of retirement in '90 to join the Goth Country band, Why Fatman, Why?, I toyed with the Matched/Parade switch-off approach but I wasn't ready for it so stuck with Matched to get up and running quickly. After another long hiatus, I've set the kit back up and am taking time to be as open as possible on this. Any of you drummers out there care to chime in?

Monday, July 30, 2012

The "1 Slice Rule"

After having some initial success and filling the coffers with hard earned shekels, my band Someone & The Somebodies decided it was time to "Move On Up" the recording studio food chain and booked several sessions at Blue Jay. Richie Blackmore's Rainbow preceded us. The first day was the typical " Get The Sounds Day". The engineer, a guy named Bruce, said he'd read the session notes for the first Van Halen album where Ted Templeman had Alex Van Halen record each drum separately, and that's how we were going to execute. If any of you drummers out there have tried playing your cymbal parts "ala carte" I'm here to say, "Bah Humbug!". After a few run throughs the band collectively assessed that Templeman was either an idiot or had "mis-remembered" the facts. So, on with the plan. A plan based on "want" is not a plan. We REALLY REALLY WANTED a perfect take of the tune Tristram and I brought from our first band The Molls called, "People Are Dumb". This was a neo-punk tune and my part was 16-32nd notes to the bar. We did about a baker's dozen takes. Even if the rhythm section performed well enough for prime time, it was always something: The middle section was too long/too short or "what the f*ck??", one or both guitarists flubbed the ending, or the ARP 2600 would melt down. And after the 12th take I melted down. We called it after 10 hours of frustration with Tristram and I acknowledging this was not meant to be, and we should write a list of tunes for the next day's session. After an evening of drug and alcohol infused analysis we stumbled into an 11:30AM session around 12:15. Bruce looked up from the console, "You're late!". The reply is not worth recounting. We demanded food and Bruce produced a stack of menus. We chose pizza and due to the lateness we each had just one slice. We nailed a performance of "Working In A Coal Mine" on the first take, and the day rolled on with first take keeper after first take keeper . From then on the mandate for tracking sessions became, "Gentlemen, 1 Slice Rule!"

Friday, July 27, 2012

Are Drum Solos Necessary?

I'm listening to "Radiolarians 1" by Medeski, Martin & Wood and all of a sudden there's a drum solo from Billy Martin which train wrecks the proceedings. I like this guy for his chameleon-Esq in context rhythming.  He can really get it going to help his band-mates reach new heights collectively. The only drum solo I've actually liked is Ron Bushy's well composed segment from "In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida". It is elegant in it's simplicity, moves through motifs smoothly and segues quietly into the organ solo. Ginger Baker's Cream contribution "Toad" remains for me one of the most tedious workouts because there is no compositional commitment to the tune for setting up an appropriate context. I much prefer what he does in ensemble, his Afro-Beat inspired recordings produced by Bill Laswell are wonderful and his work with Jonas Hellborg sets new standards. I've seen a few Billy Cobham solos and while technically astounding, leave me cold because they exist for themselves. For me context is key. Surf rock drummers flail wildly, good progressive rock drummers apply symphonic techniques to embellish, funk drummers mine feel like veins of precious ore. In my own approach, I embrace the Jim Keltner Mantra Of Humility, "I try not to call attention to myself". Drummers please chime in!

Thursday, July 26, 2012

"I Like All Kinds Of Music"

I love getting that answer to the question, "What music do you like?" My first answer, "Cool. How about some Sardinian Bagpipe music?" "Uh, er, okay?" "All righty then!" "Hm..this is a bit er, harsh?" "Now worries, how about some Swedish Two-Step dances done in the heavy psychedelic style by Kebnekajse?" "Really?" "Here Ya go!" "Are the guitars in tune and do the singers ever harmonize correctly?" "Ah, bit of a stretch, eh? Here's something more straight laced by by  a German band called Guru Guru" "What kind of music is this and do they ever play a normal rhythm?" "Okay, Krautrock not your thing it seems. Hm...Ah!..Hawkwind keep the beats simple and the tunes are not very complex" "What's with all the noises swirling around and what's an argon accumulator?" "Maybe something in a world music groove....Ah!...How about some Thai Shadow Music from a tape my bass player picked up in Bangkok? It's a bit long but the beat is easy" "Are those out of tune harmonicas and when does the beat change?" "Ah..a bit too far east? Let's see....Ah!..Here's some beautiful secular Bali Gamelan music by E. Koestyara and Group Gapura" "It sounds like someone is pounding a cleaver on butcher block and playing with kitchenware. What's that shrill chirping and does the low frequency throb ever stop?" "Okie Dokie...Hm...Jazz!...Here's John Coltrane's famous Quartet live at The village Vanguard" "Do the sax player and drummer ever calm down? And why does the piano player have to pound so hard?" "Post be-bop isn't for everyone...Let's try something else....Here Ya go!...This is a great trio called Scorch!" "Why is the guitar so distorted. Yikes that's the bass?? Oh my, the guitar player seems a bit stressed and the drummer isn't making any sense" "Okay, Finnish free jazz not your thing obviously....Dance!...This band Kraftwerk always gets me up" "I know this! Sprockets!!"

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

Who's Your Favorite Drummer?

As a drummer I get this question from people I meet for the first time 99.9% of the time. How can I possibly pick ONE drummer?? That's like asking "Who's your favorite author?"! So, I thought I would go on a stream of consciousness musing on the drummers, living or not, who continue to inspire me. The first drummer called to my attention was Gene Krupa for his work on Benny Goodman's "Carnegie Hall Concert of 1938", on 78 lacquer from my dad's wartime collection. Dad couldn't get enough of his breaks in "Bei Mir Bist Du Schon", always saying, "LISTEN to that DRUMMER!" every time he put that one on the Garrard 401 turntable.  Buddy Rich for his work with Count Basie, Billie Holiday and Charles Mingus. My dad and I loved how fast Buddy could roil it up with boundless energy. I love Charlie Watts for his consistency, accuracy on the snare and behind the beat jazzy R&B feel. Jim Gordon not for his work with Derek & The Dominoes rather for the rock-steady beats he laid down on Michael Viner's Incredible Bongo Band album, "Bongo Rock" especially the break in "Apache" which is one of the most sampled beats ever. Bill Bruford for his awe inspiring acrobatic/ultra flexible/take no prisoners poly-rhythmic assaults as the drum chair for Yes in their early years, and especially the incredible King Crimson band featuring John Whetton on bass. Robert Wyatt of Soft Machine who could play in one time signature and sing in another. Cleve Pozar who was asked to join Weather Report several times, and I had the amazing experience to play in a band with this genius. Greg Errico of Sly & The Family Stone who I actually did see in performance with Weather Report. Terry Cox of Pentangle who could effortlessly shift from traps to hand drums played in the Renaissance dance and Moondog poly-rhythm styles to tabla. Keith Moon of The Who for sheer audacity, playing fills that no one else would dare attempt and pulling them off 99% of the time. Corky Laing of Mountain who revolutionized hard rock drumming and laid the template for generations to come. John Densmore of The Doors for rock solid grooves and contextual adaptability. Lenny White for his work in Return To Forever, I saw him in performance effortlessly chewing gum against whatever he was doing with his limbs. Bill Ward of Black Sabbath for hanging in there coping Tony Iommi's multiple riff shifting compositions. Billy Cobham for just being him. Jack DeJohnette who continues to drive passionately, able to leap from light and bouncy to fire breathing dragon of death in an instant. Brian Keenan of The Chambers Brothers who kept me dad's attention through the long version of "Time Has Come Today", "This drummer is really keeping it interesting!" Jim Keltner for his "I don't try to call attention to myself" humility in the service of music. John Garner of Sir Lord Baltimore for balls to the wall kicking it out while attempting to sing lead vocals. Tony Williams for his work with the great Miles Davis Quintet from the late 60s and The Tony Williams Lifetime band with Larry Young and John McLaughlin. Elvin Jones for what he accomplished in the 3/4 time signature. Robbie McIntosh for his work with Brian Auger's Oblivion Express which blows away anything he did with Average White Band. Klaus Dinger of NEU! for being happy with Teutonic 4/4. Jaki Liebezeit of Can who still defines "Human Beatbox". Ndugu Leon Chancellor for his jaw dropping agility with George Duke's great electric trio of the mid 70s. Jimmy Carl Black for his contributions to The Mothers Of Invention. Chris Frantz of Talking Heads for his conviction and authority, especially live. Billy Hart for his work on the extended Herbie Hancock/Eddie Henderson sessions for Columbia and Capricorn. Billy Higgins for his elegance and sympathetic approach. And finally, the great Mel Taylor of The Ventures who inspired me to become a drummer and play music.

Wednesday, July 18, 2012

In Awe Of Pat Martino

I first heard Pat Martino during a party at a friend's apartment in 1975. I walked into their room and became transfixed by some of the most articulate post-bop guitar playing. Clearly under the spell of Wes Montgomery but already developing a new voice. The album was called, "Pat Martino - Live!" and the tune was "Sunny". What Pat Martino accomplished on that tune is reputation making. Relying more on instinct than "taught" methods of improvisation he takes chorus after chorus. Just when you think he has nothing more to say, he takes it to another level, again and again. He has become one of a handful of musicians whose albums I buy immediately upon hearing they are released. His latest effort, "undeniable: Live At Blues Alley" is a return to the in your face organ based groups with which he cut his chops, and is well, "undeniable". His talents as a guitarist and composer extraordinaire are enough in and of themselves. What makes his story so compelling for me is in 1980 he underwent major surgery to address a brain aneurysm that almost took his life. As a result of the operation he experience selective amnesia, forgetting much of his playing technique and large parts of his musical experiences. Through intensive rehab, the help of friends, and listening to his records he learned how to play again. How grateful we are to have him back. I consider Pat Martino a National Treasure, a true bearer of the torch who shows no signs of slowing down any time soon. Thank you for all the great work to date Pat and wishing you many more creative and fulfilling years to come!

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Remembering Jon Lord

Deep Purple co-founder and keyboardist Jon Lord has passed away at 71 years of age after losing his battle with pancreatic cancer. I discovered Deep Purple on their second album,"Book of Taliesyn" on Bill Cosby's label Tetragrammaton Records. At this stage they were still doing a lot of covers and Jon's arrangements of "Kentucky Woman", "River Deep, Mountain High" and the iconic "Exposition/We Can Work It Out" medley really got me hooked. My parents even liked Deep Purple, especially on the later albums "In Rock" and "Fireball" when Jon and guitarist Ritchie Blackmore would exchange modal lead breaks. My mom, who was schooled at Longy in Cambridge MA under Nadia Boulanger and E Power Biggs, loved how Jon would go out of key during his breaks and his aggressive guitar-like fuzzed out sound. It was his open mindedness and "follow the muse" approach to arranging that made Deep Purple stand out from the crowd. Just take the mid-section of "Fools" from "Fireball" for example. Even earlier he composed the first "Concerto for Group and Orchestra" and in later years became a prolific composer of classically oriented works. His contributions to the canon of Rock are undeniable and he is deserved of mega tributes. Thank you for all the excellent work Jon!

Wednesday, July 4, 2012

Celebrate Your Favorite American Musician Today

Happy 4th of July! In the spirit of celebrating America take a few minutes and listen to your favorite American musician, even if it's Uncle Donny singing in a drunken stupor by the pool, or my favorite living American icon of the guitar, Mr. Billy Gibbons of ZZ Top.  When Jimi Hendrix appeared on the Dick Cavett show he was asked, "Are there any guitarists currently playing whom you like?" and Hendrix answered, "There's a guy down in Texas by the name of Billy Gibbons who's doing some good things."  Certified Testifyin'! Time to put on "ZZ Top Live at Rockpalast 1980" and bask in Texas Sizzle. Rock On America!

Tuesday, July 3, 2012

"Oh Yeah, THAT Guy"

I was visiting my friend Chris O'Dea in Northampton after he'd moved there in '75. We had become friends after he introduced himself at one of the shows by my band, The Molls. I brought along some gems including "Puzzle" by Mandrake Memorial which he loved immediately, fired up his tape deck, then realized the album was too long for the only tape on hand, a 60 minute cassette...oops. For his share he pulled out a 7" and said, "This is beyond heavy!", and cued up a song called, "White Line Fever" by Motorhead. Ouch! It was snake bitten love at first decibel. I love these guys. Their recorded output is staggering. Lemmy Kilminster's muse is a fertile beast for sure. Highlight albums for me include "Another Perfect Day" with Brian Robertson of Thin Lizzy replacing original guitarist "Fast" Eddie Clarke. The story I've heard is Robertson agreed to do the album only but the band hadn't found a suitable string slinger by tour launch so the band made him an offer ($$!!) he couldn't refuse to do the tour. They came to the Paradise rock club in Boston on this tour and my Someone & The Somebodies mates Tristram Lozaw and Rob Rand (sound man extraordinaire!) went along. as pre-show entertainment, WBCN sponsored an air guitar contest. At the urging (alcohol fueled) of my mates I joined in, to a Judas Priest song I didn't know, won the contest, and WBCN DJ Tony Berardini bought me a beer (OH Boy! Prizes were er, lacking back then, no offense Tony). Time for the show! Rob produced foam ear plugs just as the first chords erupted. To say Motorhead were amped beyond the abilities of the Paradise sound system would be conservative. They were so loud the front of house system collapsed followed in short order by the stage monitor system, and you could STILL hear Lemmy screaming over the din. THAT'S Rock & Roll my friends! At one point Rob turns to me with a fiendish grin and mouths, "Take the ear plugs out!". I complied. The sound went from "rrrroooaaarrr" to "SSSSIIIINNNNGGGE!!!". Couldn't get them back in fast enough. A highlight of the stage antics came when Lemmy crossed the stage and shook his sweat drenched hair at Robertson covering him. Robertson's expression was priceless. Great show. In the following years, not every album was stellar, but one standout gem, "Orgasmatron" was produced by Bill Laswell. Of all people! It was a fine effort with songs, "Deaf Forever", "Claw" and the title track. Fast forward. My friend Brendan was over recently, we were listening to Motorhead's recent live set, "The World Is Ours Vol. 1". Brendan recalled an interview with Lemmy where he was given a few blind listening tests. The interviewer played a Bill Laswell tune and Lemmy says, "I've got NO clue as to what the F*CK this is", the interviewer says, "This is Bill Laswell. He produced 2 of your albums", Lemmy says, "Oh yeah, THAT guy".

Monday, July 2, 2012

The Night I Saw Passport

One of my favorite rock/jazz-ish bands from the '70s was Passport from Germany, led by Saxist/keyboardist/composer Klaus Doldinger. I became interested in Passport because of the unique cover art on their second album. When I turned over to the back side saw that John Mealing, a founding member of the great band IF, was the keyboardist. Intrigued I picked the album up and was pleasantly surprised. The compositions were melodic, evolved well and the band actually rocked. I automatically picked up their next album, "Looking Through". The rhythm section had changed to include drummer Curt Cress, bassist Wofgang Schmid remained and Mealing was replaced by Kristian Shultze. From the opener, "Eternal Spiral" it is obvious this band has something to say. The compositions are even more spectral, Schultze's multi-keyboard/synthesizer shadings and Fender Rhodes abilities add a perfect balance to Doldinger's sax and keyboard textures, and drummer Curt Cress brings an updated "Cobham-esque" attack that bassist Schmid locks into with hard bite and precision. This lineup would record several of my desert island records including, "Cross-Collateral" and "Infinity Machine". With each new effort the rhythm section of Cress/Schmid becomes more muscular, flexible and telepathically insane. The first section of the 13 minute title track, "Cross-Collateral" is a fine example. I played this to a sax player friend who quipped, "The sax player's just playing pentatonic bullshit, but the rhythm section is incredible". I informed Peter the "bullshit artist" wrote, arranged, produced all the music plus played synthesizer/string machine and clavinet. "Uh, okay he's really good!" I was working at the New England Music City store in Kenmore Square (on the corner where there is a convenience store now, for those who would remember), and the Atlantic sales rep came in to say Passport were conducting a 10 city US tour and The Jazz Workshop Boston was on, and did anyone want comp tickets. YES!!! It was a beautiful summer's evening on the appointed show date, the band had been to Fenway Park, and keyboardist Kristian Schultze was wearing a Red Sox jersey and cap. The rest of the band assumed the stage quietly, tuned up, then were introduced by Klaus Doldinger's German label head. I make no apologies for what I'm about to say. Passport were simply jaw-dropping. They played 2 sets and the albums "Looking Through", Cross-Collateral" and "Infinity Machine". They began by equaling the studio sonics then surpassing that by gradually increasing the house volume until the band became presented a through the biggest, cleanest stereo I'd ever heard. At the intermission I got to chat with bassist Schmid who asked, "Can you hear Curt?" to which I replied, "Yes, very clearly." to which he replied, "That's good because the drum microphones haven't arrived yet so now you know how good he REALLY is!" I sought out Kristian Schultze and found him at the bar, introduced myself, said how much I enjoyed his contributions to the Passport palette, and I played keyboards in a local group, "The Molls". He said, "Thanks Jon! It's great to meet another keyboard player, would you like to see my setup?" (OH YEAH!!). He took me to his stage area and walked me through his arsenal. When we came to his synthesizer I asked him what brand. "It's a Ah Kah Ess (AKS) what do you think?" "The pin-grid interface reminds me of a Putney VCS I played a few years ago." "Ja Jon! It is based on that. Do you like this way of programming?" "It's more intuitive than the ARP 2600 we use in The Molls, but that's an unfair comparisson don't you think?" (Much laughter). The second set had the drum mics in place and The Jazz Workshop rocked! This band, 4 hugely talented musicians, working through excellent compositions and sounding more like 6 people, presented themselves in a league of their own. For me, the music of Passport remains viable, intense and persistent. If you are a fan of jazz rock with the emphasis more on the progressive rock side, I can't recommend Passport enough. Thanks Guys!

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Goodbye To An Old Friend

Sadly, Judas Priest have hung up the spurs. They might not be your cup of tea but they wrote some fine rock tunes that are melodic, musical which feature excellent guitar work and soaring vocals. While hits like "Breaking The Law", "Livin' After Midnight", "Desert Plains", "Out In The Cold" and "You've Got Another Thing Comin'" are truly great, I enjoy their story setups and monster depictions above all. From the album "Defenders Of The Faith": I love "Jawbreaker" about a mythical beast which features a mind-boggling workout from KK Downing. The futuristic 'Man against Machine' battle saga "The Sentinel" with killer rapid fire trade-offs between KK Downing and Glenn Tipton. The doomsday masterpiece, "Some Heads Are Gonna Roll" with a killer chorus and H-Bomb lead breaks. From the "Ram It Down" album: The Terminator styled post apocalypse fight to the death of "Blood Red Skies" with KK Downing again delivering a scorching break that prompted my friend Rob on first listen to blurt out, "He's picking every note!". From the masterpiece "Painkiller": The tale of a nocturnal killing creature "Nightcrawler". The Nuclear reactor disaster scenario "Metal Meltdown" featuring well, lead breaks that sound like reactor cores melting down! The "Ripper" Owens years were not kind sadly because even though he could sing the catalog with incredible authority his lyrical abilities lacked, and the tunes written by Tipton/Downing showed clearly that Rob Halford's pen was the catalyst that pulled everything together. That being said the albums "Angel Of Retribution" and "Nostradamus" with Halford returning showed clear signs that he might have been "cherry picking" from his portfolio, perhaps saving what he thought as better efforts for his band "Halford". When KK Downing departed before the final tour citing an un-workable situation I really wasn't that surprised. I have heard interviews with him and seen his webcam video postings to fans as band spokesperson and he is a class act. I wish him all the best and look forward to his next outing. Judas Priest was his band that he formed with bassist Ian Hill. To all the members of Judas Priest I thank you for so much inspiring work.