home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Comments: Gated by NETNEWS@AUVM.AMERICAN.EDU
- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!darwin.sura.net!paladin.american.edu!auvm!!"OUT,
- Original_To: ALLM
- Original_cc: OLIVOTTO
- Message-ID: <ALLMUSIC%92122107403741@AUVM.AMERICAN.EDU>
- Newsgroups: bit.listserv.allmusic
- Date: Mon, 21 Dec 1992 13:30:00 N
- Sender: Discussions on all forms of Music <ALLMUSIC@AUVM.BITNET>
- From: "OUT,
- OUT - YOU'LL NOT FEEL THE FALL-OUT..." <OLIVOTTO@ITNCISCA.BITNET>
- Subject: Don't kill me, I'm only wasting bandwidth! ;-)
- Lines: 130
-
- Hi all!
- I suppose that with Christmas drawing near we're all more or less
- taking it a bit slower than usual... except, maybe, for the unlucky ones
- at the .com nodes :).
- Therefore here are some hopefully interesting, occasionally funny,
- always insignificant ramblings about various and mixed-up musical subject.
- Something like ALLMUSIC's fruit salad; so, enjoy!
-
- Ciao, Marco
-
- *** *** *** *** ***
- 1. IPSE DIXIT
-
- "The maximum tension you can add [while playing] is stopping comple-
- tely."
- This was written by Robert Fripp in 1981, in one of his diaries on
- the second day of rehearsals of his band Discipline, soon later to evolve
- into King Crimson ("Fripp, Belew, Levin, Bruford" incarnation). Taken from
- the colossal scrapbook to "Frame By Frame".
-
- 2. NO TECHNOLOGY NECESSARY [aka IPSE DIXIT, pt. 2]
-
- A while ago Steve Lukather was asked to describe his favourite way
- to produce distortion. I quote from memory: "No trick - it's all in the fin-
- gers. No need to stack ten amps, no need to use boxes. Once one has a good
- overdrive from the amp that's enough. I once heard Jeff Beck play at home
- through a 20-watt amplifier, and he had exactly the same wonderful sound I
- had heard on his record. So, you see, it's only a matter of hands. Everyone
- has his own sounds in the finger."
- My unresolved question is: is it possible that Beck had used that
- very same amp on the record? Come on, Steve, get a clue...
-
- 3. THE MYSTERY OF THE DAMPED BASS
-
- Again, quoting from memory. Tony Levin in an interview, last summer:
- "I've often been asked how the bass sound at the start of 'Don't Give Up',
- in Peter Gabriel's _So_ was produced. OK, I'll tell you. My son was still a
- baby those days, and I had diapers almost everywhere. One had ended into my
- Fender Precision's box, and had slid under the strings just at the level of
- the bridge. Peter was so amused that he wanted me to try and play that way -
- and we found this beautiful sound, chunky but damped. For the live shows
- I finally got a real damper -- wouldn't have liked to go on stage with a
- diaper under the strings..."
- Another unresolved question of mine: was it a *clean* diaper, Tony?
- I hope so...
-
- 4. STABBING HIM IN THE BACK
-
- "Sure he plays 'Traintime'... but he gets the wrong chords!"
- This was said by an uncommonly jocular Peter Hammill after a chat about David
- Jackson, co-founder of Van der Graaf Generator, now more or less retired (he's
- not really into music anymore, he plays some solo shows occasionally [with
- saxes and tape recorder] and should have a CD out sooner or later). He plays
- that Hammill's song since "I would have liked him to write it five years
- earlier, so I could have played in it..."
-
- 5. IS REVERB SEXY?
-
- This is, in my opinion, one of the best quotes from reviews to our
- (TNR's) album "The Chessboard", written by our own Rev. Bob "Bob" Crispen:
-
- >production. To give two examples, the sax is way too far front in "The
- >Runner" and "The Path" is nearly (thank God only nearly) marred by what
- >might be called "Italian porno film reverb". In fact, the mixes are
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
- This has ended in the album of "weirdest and funniest things written
- about our work", up at The Noisy Room. The only thing I defend is that if one
- notices the reverb, then I can't imagine how horribly poor the film must be...
- 8-) 8-)
-
- 6. PUN OF THE YEAR
-
- After mixing down "The Chessboard", I exchanged some e-mail with
- Rachel (Becker, once on ALLMUSIC). Her remark was: "I suppose you have mixed
- feelings...". Well, quite a few, admittedly -- I usually do after a *mix*down!
-
- 7. YES
-
- Rick Wakeman declared that he first got seriously in touch with Yes
- when Chris Squire called him for rehearsals. The point is that he did - by
- phone - in the middle of the night. Rick swears that things went as follows:
-
- "Hello, I'm Chris Squire..."
- "What... do you know what time it is, man?"
- "Hang on a minute... yes, it's 3:30"
-
- On that very same night, "Heart Of The Sunrise" was born.
-
- 8. TURN IT ON AGAIN
-
- This one really happened to me with a girl who had come down at the
- studio to bring in a tape of her songs -- which she wanted me to listen.
-
- MARCO: "I think the last Tori Amos' album has some of the most cru-
- shing lyrics I've ever heard."
- GIRL: "Why do you say so...?"
- MARCO: "I find them disturbing because she's female to the excess,
- a bit like Anne Sexton -- if you know her."
- GIRL: "No, I don't -- but I am female to the excess too, wanna try?"
-
- [just in case you're wondering -- no, I didn't try :-)]
-
- 9. RADIOFREQUENCY EQUIPMENT?
-
- On stage, rehearsing -- dialogue between me and the sound engineer:
-
- ENG: "Can you give me the piano? Come on..."
- MARCO: "I'm playing..."
- ENG: "Then why nothing comes thru'?"
- MARCO: "Always playing..."
- ENG: "Hell..."
- MARCO: "Let me check the cables, wait a minute!"
- [...]
- MARCO: "Well, I seem to understand why you don't get it..."
- ENG: "Broken wire?"
- MARCO: "*NO* wire, fool..."
-
- [the reason was simple: passing by, he had seen the damper and pedal wires
- plugged in, and had thought that were the cables going out to the mixer...]
-
- 10. ALTERNATIVE TUNING
-
- This is for guitarists. One of the weirdest things you can try is
- as follows: from low to high strings -- E,A,D,G,B,C. That's it, the high E
- goes down two full tones. Thus the 2nd and 1st string are only half a step
- away. Don't change your fingerings! Simply play chords as you would usually
- do (mostly minor chords). Results can be amazing. And, maybe, I've just ma-
- naged to understand how Adrian Belew played "Heartbeat" on King Crimson's
- _Beat_. Not sure, but it sounds like there was this strange 1st string two
- steps down...
-