Saturday, December 31, 2011

Absynthe Makes The Art Garfunkel


I was invited along to participate in this seemingly one-off show paying tribute to the folk heroes Simon & Garfunkel.  Little did I know what I was getting into.  Their songs are, as folk songs ought to be, based around the voice and the flow of words.  If, say for instance, the 2nd verse uses fewer words in the 3rd line, well, then the guitar plays a bar of 2 instead of 4.  The listener typically doesn't notice this.  They follow the words.  What that does is wreck havoc on the rhythm section.  You would hard pressed to find a bassist or drummer who has spent a lot of time playing through these songs.  It's not the kind of music that we choose to roll our sleeves up over and spend hours transcribing.  What I found is that there are certainly other challenges that many other styles of music don't present.  One song we didn't get around to was My Little Town, one they did together after their big break-up at the height of their career in 1970.  That song is amazing - it almost has no repeated chords, save for the final chorus.  It contains bars of 4 (of course), but also bars of 3, 5, and even a few in 6/8.  I was busy trying to maintain the forms, needless to say.

The band consists of Matthew Smith on guitar and vocals, JT Alessi on guitar, ukulele, and vocals, Jeff Fritz on guitar, keyboard, and vocals, Adrian Ash on drums and percussion, and myself.  We had a very nice show arranged: 3 sets with a mixture - all Simon & Garfunkel, the middle set being the complete album Parsley, Sage, Rosemary, & Thyme.  I made it to one rehearsal the Monday prior to the show.  I could have used more time, in retrospect.  To be honest, I spent quite a bit of time getting the tunes, learning them, charting them out, figuring out the key(!), reworking the charts after learning that I had the wrong keys...  It was a lot of "thyme" spent for a gig that was basically a "freebie"!  I had offered to sing lead on "America".  Well, that didn't go as planned.  I got lost and there isn't the option for a re-do in front of the audience.  Not great!  Well, the fellas helped with what they could and we got through it.  That was the low point of the show.  Most of it was wonderful.  Matt clearly knows the music inside and out - he played acoustic and electric guitars and sang impeccably.  JT brought his spectacular range to the proceedings and did a tremendous job on possibly the toughest vocal tune, that being Bridge Over Troubled Water.  Jeff did double duty, ably switching back and forth on guitar and keys while handling vocals on more than a few tunes.  Adrian added a lot - a tough job for a drummer when many of the tunes are simply guitar and voice.  He applied a "less is more" aspect to his technique, but also played some great lines on tuned percussion (that sounds cooler than saying "xylophone", doesn't it?).  I brought my Johnson fretless acoustic electric 4-string along with my little GK 12" combo.  I enjoy playing that thing and I certainly don't see others playing something like that very often.  It had a raspy tone which I need to investigate, but I did clear it up a bit.  I wasn't exactly what I had envisioned, but as the night went on, it sat in the mix rather well.  It's my go-to bass at home when I'm sitting in front of the PC learning these covers, so that is a comfort zone right there.  The crowd was indeed great, a much better turnout than we usually see on Thursdays.  I spoke with the great percussionist Luis Stefanell, a friend from back in my Wild Rice days.  Also met with one of my favorite singers, Kristen Justice, who I have performed with in the band Limelight.  Nice of her to come up and say hello.  Well, we have something tentatively planned for May 16, a Wednesday night.  That should give me some time to get this all sorted out!









 






Saturday, December 24, 2011

'Twas the Night Before Christmas Eve with Third Party at Pastis

I did my best to hang on tight and be the R&B superstar seasoned bass sub that I envision myself being in times like these.  With Fuji Fujimoto out in Vegas for the holidays (I think she has family there), I got the call from Steve Humphrey to come and fill in her big little shoes.  Their band Third Party, with Steve on guitar and vocals (Steve has amazingly little web presence so I don't have a link for this fellow - some people are smart like that), fellow Platinum performer Glen Perdew on keys and lead vocals, Randy Hutchinson on drums, and Fuji on bass, plays at Pastis virtually every Friday night, as they have for the past 7 or so years.  That's a long time to maintain a house band!  They understandably know a ton of songs.  Glen lives up to his moniker as the Human Jukebox!  I've never seen him stumped by any tune!  What did we play?  And I Love Her (yes, we opened with this The Beatles ballad), Always and Forever (Heatwave ballad I've even a thousand times but Glen guided me through it by holding his fingers up to indicate the next chord!),, Get Down On It, Ladies' Night, a Spinners medley of Could It Be I'm Falling In Love --> I'll Be Around, a Luther Vandross tune (? - forgotten title), Sledgehammer, Peg (I told you I play this one a lot!), You Shook Me All Night Long,  Boom Boom Pow, Rock With You, Wishing Well (Terence Trent D'Arby), I Can't Tell You Why, Shining Star, a very different groove/take on Stevie Wonder's Superstition, Play That Funky Music - from the looks of all of this, I'd say Glen went a bit easy on me.  We even did Honky Tonk Women - yes, with Glen on bass and me standing in the middle trying to sing and act it all out!  I could really hear myself, and by, does that ever make a difference!

Chord chart with lyrics for Could It Be I'm Falling In Love - one of my favorite Spinners tunes from the mid-seventies when they were under the heavy hand of producer Thom Bell.  This chart was augmented from an online source.  It's not perfect, but it will help you through the song - at least you will nail the Am7 after the Ebmaj7, which would surprise most of us if we haven't played it before!
My amp was giving me a bit of grief.  First off, I brought along my old SWR Goliath II 410.  I have lost track of what replacement fuse to use.  Whatever I'm using now is not up to snuff.  I blew it out right away.  This band is possibly the loudest I've ever been a part of.  I honestly couldn't keep up, volume wise.  I need to chat with Fuji to see what she's been bringing to the party all these years - she must have a decent rig to keep up with these boys.  Luckily, I also brought my Golight 115, so I made the switch during the break.  It never hurts to travel with a few extra pieces just in case!  I need the horn to be functional for clarity's sake.  For Sledgehammer I employed the octave effect, to simulate Tony Levin's bass track, which was actually played on his Stingray fretless bass and with some sort of octave effect (up or down, I'm not sure - that detail has never been discussed.  Octave down is usually the better sounding deal, at least for bass).  I also used the octave for Michael Jackson's Rock With You, in order to get that low Eb - I didn't have time to drop D, and besides, that might have messed my mind up with all those polychords written into that joint.

Steve is a great performer - very versatile and a terrific showman.  He's not shy about taking an outrageous solo or two!  Nice chops all around.  Glen is the human jukebox - the guy never messes up!  Really.  Randy is so strong and self-assured.  He was practicing these 16th note kicks - with his left foot!  It was slammin'!  His tempo throughout the night was perfect and unwavering.  It made me consider my pushing the tempo a bit - need to practice with the metronome perhaps...  A great band and a great experience for me to be a part of it for one night.












Monday, December 19, 2011

Platinum at The Intercontinental Hotel: The Night That We Couldn't Save Gus

This hotel has some history.  Last time I was here with Platinum, I ended up (don't ever do this, btw) wandering off while talking on the phone and missed the call for the third set!  Got there in time to begin the 4th song of the set (not before some potential future clients came by to check us out).  There, how's that for professional behavior?  This time, through some bad luck and karma, maybe excess holiday stress, Gus had to miss out on the gig.  It's not the place to go into details, but all things along these lines are avoidable.  The words to take away are to simply Keep It Simple (Stupid): ie KISS!  Do as you're told, don't try to get away with anything extra, life is complicated enough, we just wanna play some music, um, bring a book and sit quietly while on break.  Get the picture?

The young Anthony Baker came to the rescue just in time - we had Gus' drums more or less all set up.  Yes, it was a complicated evening.  Anthony played better than I've ever heard.  Of course, we both used to be in Wild Rice, so I've heard him a bunch over the years.  One twist on this night was we were debuting a new (for us) tune: Edwin McCain's I'll Be.  For some reason, Kevin wanted the acoustic version.  So I played guitar along with Derek, Glen played bass, and there wasn't much else on that one.  I enjoyed playing guitar, but as luck would have it, I had no signal during the tune.  It sounded okay during the soundcheck.  I guess my battery died in the interim.  What great fortune!  I moved up to a vocal mic and tried to feed my acoustic sound into it - didn't really hear it in the mix...  Hopefully we'll do it again one day and I can be a bit louder!  Glen had a real good night in that he also played drums on the Bon Jovi 2-fer.  He killed it!  BTW, great fretless work G-Clef - I was diggin' your big sound from my vantage pont.  You are convincing on the low end.

Seriously, what a true musical force that man is.  I'm playing with him this Friday and will need to brush up on my hip-hop and such.  It shall be a challenge to fill in for the beautiful and funky Fuji Fujimoto!

Green room chillin'
Gettin' ready for the stage.
Anthony
Glen
Anton (with fro), Derek, & Anthony
Looking kinda like a Village People reject
Anton & Derek
Kevin working the crowd
Kevin & Virginia

Saturday, December 17, 2011

Padriac's in December

It was so crowded in Padriac's that Brent & I joked that it must be the wrong night for us to be there!  Tough when we set up at the front and there's an occupied table where the "stage" is.  It took a while for them to clear out - the place was filled up so there weren't any free tables...  I could have played with Billy Batts at the Capital City Club after all - and then hopped up to Pad's.  Hindsight is wonderful, but the time I do try that is the time when we are expected to start early.  You can't win.  Eventually, we moved the table and chairs outside and got our stuff in place.  I always help with the main on the other side of the door - running the speaker wire over the door through the shades.

We played a good mix, including some we haven't done in a while: The Smithereens' A Girl Like You was a personal highlight.  The crowd was thin after we got going - lost people to overall volume, I believe.  Strange all around.

Dancing girls...
Cliff - had his 2nd daughter since I last saw him!  Congrats Cliff!
Brent
Martay



Monday, December 12, 2011

Four in Four (including my return to Platinum)

As gig schedules go, most any musician can tell you that there are dry spells and then there are times when you're almost too busy.  Hard to complain about the latter predicament.  That said, it has been a busy week as far as my life goes.  My sister-in-law Celia is expecting her first child (with hubby Cyrus, of course).  Her baby shower was on Saturday, so that was a resource tap for us, as Sabina was hosting it in the Virginia-Highlands area.  Spencer had a tonsillectomy as well as an adenoidectomy on Wednesday, so that was suitably stressful and certainly a sleep deprivation procedure for all of us.  Rough going with the recovery (a regular occurrence to be up with him from 3 to 4 a.m.), but he's only 3 1/2, so it's probably the best time to take care of that.  Jack had been sick this past week, so his birthday party was moved to this Sunday - the day of another important holiday gig.  Whew!

I ended up playing 4 gigs this weekend through all of the madness.  Thursday I was back with Adrian and the Ashes to Ashes Band (aka The Adrian Ash Group, or TAAG).  We always manage, through no fault of anybody's, to play on the coldest night of the week - lately.  It was chilly.  Hey, ya gotta be ready for the elements.  A pair of long johns can make you a bit more comfortable in the chilly night air.  I respectfully would request of Java Monkey to up the ante on their patio enclosure.  If they invested in new plastic curtains, improved lighting, new/more/proper working heating elements, perhaps a fresh coat of paint, well, I suppose it's not my business...  We are out there and nobody else is... Well, really, who would want to sit out there in the drafty environs?  Ah, I guess the expenses would quickly add up...  There, got that off my chest - always grateful for a paying jazz gig and they feed us as well - you know I just want them to be successful...  

The music went well.  We had Guy back with us, and we played some great stuff - a lot of energy for the course of the evening.  Broke out a couple of new charts that Adrian suggested: Steely Dan's Peg and Do It Again.  Good stuff that I've played many times before with other groups - hey, I even sing Peg when I'm with Martay.  





Charts for Peg and Do It Again submitted by Adrian,
meticulously  leveled and cropped by  yours truly.

I played the Tobias and brought the GK Backline 12" combo.  That little amp can put out a nice little thump considering it's size.  My Genz Benz is still in the shop.  I have to say I'm a bit disappointed in the turn-around time for them.  I called last week and it hadn't even been looked at yet.  Do they realize that I'm writing about them - ready and eager to sing their praises, but just as eager to lay it down as I see it.  So far I don't have much with which to be impressed.  They specialize in re-coning speakers, and the owner (or manager) is a bass player himself.  What is the deal?  In these parts, we call it "customer no-service" (a la Clark Howard)!

Adrian, 1 week before his graduation from GSU with a Masters Degree!

Guy on guitar & Jason on flute.


The weekend was special in that I was asked to return to play with Platinum: Friday at The Metropolitan Club off Windward Parkway in Alpharetta; Saturday at Coca-Cola Headquarters on North Avenue in Midtown .  It has been 3 months since I performed with this group.  In my absence, they've worked up a couple of new tunes: Moves Like Jagger and JLo's On the Floor.  It was a great thrill to stand up there next to Gus and Glen and try to remember all of the pretty notes I'm empowered to hit through the course of 2 nights.  Both were high profile corporate parties, one being for Coca-Cola, of course - it really doesn't get much bigger of a client in the city of Atlanta!  We did admirably, as their shows are always a slick production.  It was nice to hear some positive feedback.  Derek, Anton, Gus, and the rest of the gang were very complimentary.  It sounds like I might have been missed.  I certainly did know the songs fairly well, so for somebody else to walk in and play is going to be a bit of a different vibe.  There are many excellent players out there with Wooten/Patitucci/Miller chops, but it does take a bit of humble-pie-itis to truly play for the song and nail all those wonderful kicks that Gus interjects.  Saturday we ended up learning (at the last minute) Whitney's version of I Will Always Love You  for an attendee to sing with us.  She nailed it!  What a performance - we also had a guest saxophonist join her.  Well done all around.  I was also asked to sing Sweet Home Alabama - not easy to get through with all of these great vocalists in the band!  We had to extend the song as one of the guests of honor couldn't make it to the stage in time...  Sadly I didn't snap any pics of us either night.  I think I was just trying to "get 'er done" with little fanfare.  It's a rather serious affair.

Free drinks dispensed from these machines in the main lobby!



Sunday was Jack's birthday party and my gig (plus extended rehearsal) at North River Church of Christ.  Brent Whiten (A-list drummer, lead vocalist, trumpet titan, producer, music instructor, husband/father of 3, bandleader of The Brent Whiten Orchestra, all around seriously nice dude) hired me and for that I am grateful.  The list of tunes was impressive:  Donny Hathaway's This Christmas, The Temptations' Silent Night, The Drifters' White Christmas, Amy Grant's Grown-Up Christmas List - some of these are challenging!  I made charts for them all and sent them to Brent - I think it helped.  He was relieved to know that somebody had been working on them.  The rehearsal took over 2 1/2 hours to get through everything - the show was about 70 minutes in length.  It was fun and actually easy - I was in the orchestral pit along with everybody else.  My Stingray sounded nice - a rare gig that I opted to go without any processing.  Sometimes dynamics are nice!  Here are some tell-tale charts for your perusal.


This bass transcription of Donny Hathaway's This Christmas 
was in a recent issue of Bass Player magazine.
I put the various pieces together to create a 2-page PDF chart, saved here as a jpg.
Donny played this part on keyboard bass - what a performance he pulled off!
I didn't nail the high multi-note licks but I got most of it.
A chord chart for Chris Tomlin's arrangement of
Angels We Have Heard On High.

Chord chart for Grown-Up Christmas List as performed by Amy Grant.
A David Poster production that has his unmistakable harmonic stamp all over it.
This one took me the most time to generate - modulations and unwieldy key centers.

Brent led the precedings and also found his way into the horn section!







2 guitarists watching and learning.

1 bassist not watching nor learning.

Lead vocalist of While You Were Sleeping.