He anchored the first and most influential of many incarnations of John McLaughlin’s Mahavishnu Orchestra.
However before Rick Laird assumed rock star status on electric bass with the classic lineup of McLaughlin, Billy Cobham, Jan Hammer, and Jerry Goodman – he was an upright player who served as the house bassist at Ronnie Scott’s Jazz Club in London in the early 1960s. Rick backed many of most revered artists of the era, including Sonny Stitt, Buddy Rich, Sonny Rollins, Stan Getz, Chick Corea, and Wes Montgomery to cite a few. Rick’s credits as a sideman also include Eric Koss, Yusef Lateef, and Richie Cole.
A student at Berklee College of Music in Boston, the Dublin-born Laird’s fluid lines, warm tone, and tuneful solo break on “One Word” from the classic Birds of Fire (1973) album exemplified fusion at its finest – melding rock and jazz into a coherent, mind expanding listening experience – as opposed to a serving as a showy platform to display instrumental dexterity.
Among Rick’s voltage enhanced weapons of choice were the Fender Jazz, S.D. Curlee, and Dan Armstrong. Aside from his accomplishments as a musician, Rick forged a successful career as a photographer.
Rick Laird Sound & Vision….
“One Word” https://youtu.be/GWT6xt6QMpQ
“Now You Know” https://youtu.be/FQHNabnyyuM
Rick on BBC TV with the Victor Feldman Trio https://youtu.be/LLwvdv5oWVw
He is the last Gypsy standing….
Billy Cox is a spectacularly soulful bassist who, to my ears, brought out the best in Jimi Hendrix as evidenced by the flawed-but-brilliant concert slab Band of Gypsys (1970) along with numerous studio/ live archival Hendrix releases with Cox featuring drummers Buddy Miles and Mitch Mitchell.
As Jimi frequently utilized odd time signatures and was given to multiple key modulations in a single composition – Cox possessed an amazing ear, impeccable dexterity – and an intuitive sense of where Hendrix was headed harmonically, rhythmically, and spiritually.
I understand that Cox and Hendrix collaborated on the direction of the bass passages. Their chemistry was as extraordinary as it was versatile – these cats could go anywhere! A finger player working a Fender Jazz bass, Cox coaxed a warm tone from his instrument with sufficient edge to navigate Jimi’s sonic forays.
Raised in the rich musical environment of Pittsburgh, Billy and Jimi initially collaborated in the United States Army 101st Airborne Division band in 1961. Following their discharge from military service, they worked the “chitlin circuit” and formed The King Kasuals Band in Nashville, which featured members who would later emerge as the Muscle Shoals horn section – playing on countless hit records.
When Hendrix split to find fame, fortune, and eventually misfortune, Cox honed his craft on sessions, club dates, and television shows including The Beat in Dallas, and Night Train in Nashville.
Jimi summoned his Army buddy – for musical and personal reasons – in 1969 as his life and career were spinning out of control. Cox became Jimi’s emotional and musical anchor. Hendrix disbanded the Experience for the more experimental Gypsy Sun and Rainbows collective which featured percussionists and a second guitarist. That ambitious yet shambolic ensemble, which appeared at Woodstock 1969, was eventually trimmed down to the tighter trio Band of Gypys with Billy and drummer Buddy Miles.
Jimi’s BOG waxed one official album during the guitarist’s lifetime – the aforementioned performance set which was captured on New Year’s Eve 1969/70 and released as a contractual obligation.
Over the years, Hendrix fans, journos, and the like debated the merits of BOG versus the landmark impact of the Jimi Hendrix Experience. Granted, Buddy Miles is an “acquired taste.” Just 22 at the time, Miles had already waxed two slabs under his own name. He was the exact opposite of Experience drummer Mitch Mitchell, favoring pocket grooves borne of funk and soul rather than busy, polyrhythmic jazz flavorings. Buddy was also an emotive improvisational vocalist whose gospel informed flair might have been a bit too much for rock audiences to digest at the time.
To my ears, JHE and BOG were apples and oranges – two totally different ensembles with a contrary modus operandi despite the fact that they shared the same bandleader.
BOG never had a chance to develop in the studio or on stage. Perhaps they were ahead of their time, perhaps it was just the hard realities of the marketplace. Pressure from “management” forced Jimi to re-vamp the Experience with Billy in the bass chair in place of the more rock-oriented Noel Redding. To my ears, Billy was not the optimum choice for a loud, rock trio – though he certainly had the chops and creativity to forge a hybrid rock / rhythm and blues bass approach ala John Paul Jones in Led Zeppelin.
Following Jimi’s passing, Cox can be heard on several posthumous studio and live recordings such as The Cry Of Love (1971), and Rainbow Bridge (1972) among others, and the numerous reissues of the New Year’s Eve concerts such as Band of Gypsys 2 (1986), Live at the Fillmore East (1999), Machine Gun: The First Fillmore East Show (2016), and the massive Songs for Groovy Children: The Fillmore East Concerts (2019).
Attention Billy Cox – Jimi Hendrix shoppers: for the best of Billy and Jimi on stage – I advise the original Band of Gypsys (Capitol 1970) live set. For the best of Billy and Jimi in the studio, I advise First Rays ofthe New Rising Sun (1997).
Billy waxed a solo side Nitro Function in 1971 which was a fine attempt to recreate the aesthetic of his work with Jimi. His additional outings were essentially Hendrix tributes and blues exercises.
Cox also recorded and toured with Charlie Daniels, and J.J. Cale among others wherein his soulful inclinations were unfortunately non-existent.
In the 1990s Billy, Buddy Miles and Mitch Mitchell began appearing in Hendrix repertory ensembles which garnered acclaim aplenty on the festival circuit and carried the magic of Hendrix to new, younger audiences. Several high-profile rockers, including Jack Bruce, participated in the projects.
Nowadays Cox appears with Experience Hendrix and owns a video production company.
As was the case with Noel Redding, many fans and music scribes conject on the what-ifs on the topic of Jimi’s bass players. Would more harmonically adventurous players such as Jack Casady, John Entwistle, Jack Bruce, or Sir Paul have pushed Hendrix to greater heights?
I think not. In my estimation, Billy Cox was the perfect player to commandeer Jimi’s next artistic move. His elastic passages afforded Jimi a foundation to further explore and expand the language of his instrument. Jimi’s artistry didn’t allow for additional soloists – there was no need to. In fact, when BOG grooved together they formed a singular force. Cox and Hendrix also shared similar backgrounds and paid their dues together. There is no substitute for shared experiences!
Fact is, the Experience with Noel and Band of Gypsys with Billy enabled Jimi to create his timeless canon. They were essential to his greatness. When it came to choosing the players, Jimi Hendrix got it right both times.
Billy Cox Sound & Vision…
Billy Cox anchoring Freddie King, Little Milton, Joe Simon, Venice Starks, The Beat Boys from Hoss Allen’s 1966 Rhythm & Blues Revue https://youtu.be/vsKCDTN6zEo
Band of Gypsys
“Power to Love” https://youtu.be/YQ3EWmdEki8
“Them Changes” https://youtu.be/BHU5Le-2d6k
“Power of Soul” https://youtu.be/W-M16K6UlQg
“Machine Gun” with interviews https://youtu.be/W-M16K6UlQg
Jimi Hendrix:
“Freedom” with Interviews https://youtu.be/VjOViXpa7Ns
“Foxy Lady” Live https://youtu.be/zv97c3W6lw8
“Voodoo Child (Slight Return)” Live https://youtu.be/qFfnlYbFEiE
“Purple Haze” https://youtu.be/cJunCsrhJjg
Billy Cox Nitro Function: “Powerhouse” https://youtu.be/YNkwEPYFaog
Photo courtesy of Deep Purple Com
By Thomas Semioli
Courtesy of Vigier
From the City University of New York, Queens College, session bassist and producer Harvey Brooks was the go-to player on the New York City studio scene in the 1960s and 1970s and helped to establish the instrument in modern popular music and jazz.
As the electric bass was essentially in its infancy, Brooks brought his understanding of blues, pop, soul, folk, and jazz to the instrument, appearing on such influential albums as Bob Dylan’s Highway 61 Revisited, Miles Davis’ Bitches Brew (with Dave Holland), Al Kooper’s Super Sessions, the Doors’ Soft Parade, and The Electric Flag’s A Long Time Coming, to cite a very select few few.
Harvey mastered the pocket, and no matter how far he extended the harmonic and rhythmic possibilities within a chord, he always managed define the changes. In the process he taught Miles to rock, added zest to Dylan’s libretto, and gave Mike Bloomfield the support he needed to extend the language of blues guitar.
HUFFINGTON POST / Tom Semioli: Harvey Brooks: Eleven Bass Players Who Belong in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame https://bit.ly/2hOLzO3
Be sure to check out Harvey’s YouTube Video Blog and book “View from the Bottom.” Harvey’s weapons of choice are the Fender Precision and Jazz basses, with LaBella strings, and Ampeg amplification.
Harvey Brooks Sound & Vision…
Bob Dylan: “It Takes A Lot to Laugh, It Takes a Train To Cry” https://youtu.be/SN1ACh8lzHg
Electric Flag “Groovin’ Is Easy” https://youtu.be/Zl29ULtQKXc
Super Sessions “Harvey’s Tune” https://youtu.be/QUT_NQ4tbTI
Miles Davis “Bitches Brew” https://youtu.be/Q26k14yBAnM
The Doors “Touch Me” https://youtu.be/8lVqEchxIxw
Photo courtesy of Bad Company Com
Boz Burrell, bassist by Tom Semioli
Artists/Bands: Bad Company, King Crimson, Alvin Lee & Mylon LeFevre, Jon Lord, Pete Townshend & Ronnie Lane
Seminal Sides: Bad Company (1974), Straight Shooter (1975), Run With The Pack (1975) – all with Bad Company
Though Peter Overend Watts of Mott the Hoople was offered the gig first, the late Raymond “Boz” Burrell was the perfect choice for the iconic hard rock hit making machine Bad Company.
A former jazz crooner (The Tea Time 4, and The Boz People with Ian McLagan) who took up the bass at Robert Fripp’s behest as a member of King Crimson, the vastly underrated Boz plied his craft with innate simplicity abetted with a decidedly rhythm and blues disposition.
Dig Boz with Crimson “Ladies of the Road” https://youtu.be/1HPV5Gdq_q8
A fretless pioneer, Boz also waxed sides with Pete Townshend and Ronnie Lane (Rough Mix/1977), Alvin Lee and Mylon LeFevre (On the Road to Freedom / 1973), Jon Lord, Alexis Korner, and Chris Farlowe, among others.
Following his tenure in Bad Company, Boz worked with blues rock artist Roger Chapman, and most notably with Scottish blues belter Tam White, with whom he toured extensively until Burrell popped his clogs in 2006.
Among Boz’s weapons of choice included an Ampeg AMUB-1 Fretless bass, Fender Precision, Fender Jazz, MusicMan Stingray, a Lakeland 55-02 Five string, and a Fender Precision fretless.
When the original Bad Company reunited in ’99 (The Original Bad Company box set), Boz flexed his vastly improved harmonic chops on the five string!
Boz Burrell Sound & Vision:
Boz on the 5 String for “Shooting Star” 1999 https://youtu.be/huQRD_RZxP0
Boz on his composition “Gone Gone Gone” https://youtu.be/kc0G7kDqCRg
“Can’t Get Enough” Live https://youtu.be/7p9mzYB–uI
Boz with….
Alvin Lee & Mylon LeFevre “Riffin” https://youtu.be/vl9oR4uQPlc
Jon Lord “Hollywood Rock and Roll” https://youtu.be/wIHq714ywBg
Tam White “Save Me” https://youtu.be/QqfBcjOH4mo
Pete and Ronnie “Heart to Hang On To” https://youtu.be/uQ4PIFeofd4
Boz Burrell Coda from Lou Loudhailer, who owns one of Boz’s instruments: I bought it frorm a little shop in Camden Town in 1982. I saw it and thought wow that’s the bass for me – although I’d never played a fretless until then. It was about £200… after I bought it the guy in the shop said ‘You just bought Boz Burrell’s bass’ – so I didn’t know until I’d paid for it – I was a fan of Bad Company so I was happy with that! I’ve played it ever since. I read somewhere that Boz didn’t get on with it which is why he sold it. But I love it. It’s got an early serial number. Plays and sounds amazing. I bought a new Cutlass with a carbon graphite neck a few years later when I was in the Red Guitars and played that until about 3 years ago when I replaced it with a Caprice.
Tom Semioli
He anchored one of the most intriguing, confounding, and beloved ensembles in the history of modern music. The Grateful Dead forged two camps in their storied career: those that adored them, and those that couldn’t (or wouldn’t) understand them!
Regardless, their importance cannot be denied. Their concerts (of which I attended many) were fascinating incursions into the known and unknown, routinely incorporating elements of experimental, avant-garde, jazz, blues, folk, Middle Eastern, classical, Americana, country, bluegrass, musique concrète, and permutations thereof.
The bandstand was their natural habitat – however despite the clueless journo detractors (refer to Frank Zappa’s quote on rock reportage), and their own admitted self-doubts in the studio, the Dead waxed several brilliant sides throughout their career.
Proletariat bassists are oft inculcated to commence their passages at the root and the downbeat then gradually progress harmonically and rhythmically outward – some more so than others.
Enter Philip Chapman Lesh, renowned for his long, strange, watershed trip steering the defiantly wayward ship christened Grateful Dead. Along with his peers Jack Bruce (Cream) and Jack Casady (Jefferson Airplane) – Phil established the instrument apart from its upright bass, electric guitar ancestry.
Opined bandmate Bob Weir in a 2016 Guitar World interview “Phil is an iconoclast by nature, and I think he actually disdains the traditional role of the bass player…”
On the Dead’s exploratory forays, Lesh often started “outside” and kept going – yet you could still decipher the essence of the song within his improvisations and motifs. Phil’s musical development on violin and trumpet along with his education in the avant-garde and classical genres taught him “the rules” – and how to break them.
Consider that Lesh was a novice on the instrument in the Dead’s early days, alas he had no preconceived notions of what a bass guitar was – or was not. Yet Phil could traditionally outline the changes with the commoners – while his tone constantly evolved by way of his continual curiosity and usage of state-of-the-art bass gear.
As such we can thank Phil for the modern boutique bass culture. Check out Phil on Live/Dead (1968) – for a player with a scant three years’ experience, Lesh displayed an extraordinary command of the instrument.
In 2006 Phil penned his autobiography Searching for the Sound (Back Bay Books). Lesh also participated in many of the Dead post-Garcia ensembles including The Dead, The Other Ones, and he led Phil Lesh & Friends on several tours and recordings.
If KYBP delved into Phil’s tools-of-the-trade, we might break the internet.
Several gear centric sites do a fine job of documenting Phil’s weapons of choice, check out: https://jam.buzz/extra/phil-lesh-gear-guide/
Dead archival releases abound since the band ceased to exist following Jerry Garcia’s passing in 1995.
I advise you to seek out the Dick’s Pick’s series which span their entire career, along with “official” recordings which neatly bookend the Dead – the cinematic, chaotic masterpiece Anthem of the Sun (1968) and the overly polished Without a Net (1990) wherein Lesh duels with Branford Marsalis.
“That’s It for the Other One” https://youtu.be/T0BZifioxdo
“Eyes of the Sun” with Branford https://youtu.be/2S7ZvaWLsmA
The Dead’s most accessible studio slabs – American Beauty and Workingman’s Dead (1970) along with the underrated From the Mars Hotel (1974) and the much-maligned Shakedown Street brilliantly produced by Lowell George (1978) – reveal the “inside” Lesh – which kept the Dead as grounded as they could ever be.
Upon Phil’s departure from this mortal coil, Phil’s surviving co-workers Bob Weir, Micky Hart, and Bill Kreutzmann’s collaborative social media post proclaimed “In one note from the Phil Zone, you could hear and feel the world being born. His bass flowed like a river would flow. It went where the muse took it.
He was an explorer of inner and outer space who just happened to play bass. He was a circumnavigator of formerly unknown musical worlds. And more.”
Phil on lead vocal for “Box of Rain” https://youtu.be/nxjvo4BRf-Y
Disco Phil on “Shakedown Street” https://youtu.be/I7hpKHPvRVQ
Photo courtesy of Hot Tuna Com
Photo courtesy of Bass Centre – Norman Watt-Roy Signature Bass
At the height of the punk era, a time wherein musical skill and instrumental prowess were frowned upon, therein emerged England’s most cherished cadre of musical misfits who played their respective arses off: Ian Dury and the Blockheads – anchored by Norman Watt-Roy – who steered the ensemble as they seamlessly fusing jazz, music hall, funk, and traditional rock ‘n’ roll.
Profoundly inspired by Jaco (note Watt-Roy’s use of a signature Pastorius motif in “Hit Me With Your Rhythm Stick” https://youtu.be/0WGVgfjnLqc Norman Watt-Roy’s bass-lines danced amid Mr. Dury’s wicked cockney word-play, hysterical character sketches, and farcical sexual humor which were rooted in Lord Upminster’s astute observations of everyday British life.
Producers often called upon Norman to contribute his multi-genre expertise – Clash fans note that it was Norman who rendered the fantastic dub reggae bass parts on Sandinista (1980).
Norman recorded and toured for thirty plus years with guitar icon Wilko Johnson and worked extensively with the surviving Blockheads in the UK pubs, keeping the waggish flame of the dearly departed Ian Dury burning into the 21st Century. Norman’s bass artistry can also be heard with Frankie Goes to Hollywood (“Relax”), Wreckless Eric, Nick Cave, and Roger Daltrey, among others, including Wilko and Roger’s collaborative Going Back Home (2014).
Bringing his contemporary jazz yearnings to the forefront, Mr. Watt-Roy waxed his first solo album in 2013 entitled Faith & Grace (Ian’s nickname for Norman).
Faith & Grace: “He’s the man with the face, from outer space, on his faith and grace” bellowed the late, truly great Ian Dury of his virtuoso bassist Norman Watt-Roy. Behold this fascinating glimpse into the madcap musical mind of Mr. Watt-Roy – the anchor of the aforementioned cockney bard’s iconic Blockheads, UK studio ace, and Wilko Johnson’s go-to player for the past few decades and counting.
On his lone solo slab, revel as Norman references his signature passages among the ten tracks, including a swingin’ rendition of his celebrated “Hit Me With Your Rhythm Stick” which provides the foundation for “Save It” featuring Sara Gillespie, along with new twists on the magnificent motifs to “Magnificent 7” and Frankie Goes to Hollywood’s “Relax” as found on “Norman! Norman!” http://bit.ly/2DV6vxp
Flexing his jazz funk punk soul pedigree – and wicked sense of humor as evidenced in various vocal vignettes by his fallen bandleader – the incomparable Norman Watt-Roy tributes his idol Jaco on “John and Mary” and “Papa Chu Pap,” and waxes autobiographical in “Me, My Bass and I.”
The Bass Centre has honored Norman with a signature “Blockhead Bass” which is among its most popular models!
Norman Watt- Roy Sound & Vision…
With Ian Dury:
Live 1977 https://youtu.be/yVYkR4SB2R8
Live 1999 Ronnie Scott’s https://youtu.be/_sNykJnVqcA
Sex & Drugs & Rock ‘n’ Roll: https://youtu.be/BCaPTNhwK-4
With The Clash:
“Magnificent Seven” https://youtu.be/dj1Nf850Lys
With Wiko Johnson & Roger Daltrey: https://youtu.be/LeoKCJNI-k4?si=nJBJKyGGddumP3_W
Will Lee: Huffington Post / Tom Semioli- Eleven Bass Players Who Belong in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame https://bit.ly/38WUMh2
As the work of late night talk show host David Letterman is now written into media history, we cite the immeasurable contribution to American culture and the arts by Dave’s unwavering musical stalwarts for his entire thirty-three year career on late night television: bandleader Paul Shaffer and bassist Will Lee.
Assuming the mantle created by Doc Severinsen’s legendary NBC Orchestra as heard on The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson – Paul and Will’s groundbreaking tenure in the World’s Most Dangerous Band (with guitarists Hiram Bullock and Sid McGinnis, drummers Anton Fig and Steve Jordan) and later, The CBS Orchestra (with additional members Felicia Collins, Bones Malone, and Frank Greene among others) brought the language of rock, blues, soul, folk, country, jazz fusion, and funk to the great American Songbook.
I’ve witnessed Will on scores of club dates since the 80s. Not only is he the consummate sideman – his stage demeanor and boundless enthusiasm – regardless of how many people are in the venue is a declaration of the reverence he has for his audience, his craft, and the music.
Will’s formal music education commenced at the University of Miami (his dad would later become Dean of the School of Music) wherein he switched from French horn to electric bass. Inspired by The Beatles, Motown, Will quickly developed a reputation as a first call session player in New York City during its studio golden era of the 1970s / 80s. He toured and/ or waxed sides with artists spanning B.J.Thomas, Horace Silver, Bette Midler, Barry Manilow, The Brecker Brothers, Herbie Mann, David Sanborn, Boz Scaggs Diane Schuur, Herbie Hancock, Lyle Lovett, Oz Noy, Tom Scott, Neil Sedaka, Carly Simon, Frank Sinatra, Phoebe Snow, Ronnie Spector, The Spinners, Spyro Gyra, Ringo Starr, Steely Dan, Cat Stevens and Barbra Streisand to cite a very, very select few.
In addition to his matchless work as a sideman (and vocalist), Will also waxes sides under his own name and you can catch him on the bandstand with The Blue Birds of Paradise and The Fab Faux.
Will Lee Sound & Vision…
Letterman Jam segment “Dance to the Music” https://youtu.be/NhjBDiMckwU
Keith Emerson with The World’s Most Dangerous Band https://youtu.be/mqC-Ne88gWA
Brecker Bros. “If You Want to Boogie” https://youtu.be/m0kZg5oV1mg
24th Street Band “Pocket Change” https://youtu.be/6sJioYef510
Will solo “Fooled Him” https://youtu.be/zSXwLv0vt3Q