By “former” New York City bassist Joe Iaquinto, who now resides in the Midwestern United States….returning to the land of his birth on occasion to devour Italian food in eateries of dubious renown….
In my generation (i.e. living in 1970s New York City) – hearing and having to play disco music in clubs was unavoidable. In hindsight, some of the music was downright fantastic; especially for bass players. We were up in the mix, given to thumb thumpery, and were afforded the attention typically bequeathed to our bandstand brothers and sisters. However at the time, the “stigma” attached to disco was overwhelming. It was considered purely commercial music with little or no “artistic value” by the ever present jazz, rock, blues, and pop elites.
As if to answer the prayers of those who couldn’t stand it any longer, punk rock began to infiltrate the music scene akin to lava spewing out and destroying all that was polyester, platforms, and satin! As I witnessed this massacre, I couldn’t help but cling harder to my beloved Earth, Wind & Fire, Doobie Brothers and Chicago records, wondering how anything good could come from this music of the streets. I consider myself musically openminded.
Yet most of the stuff I was hearing from the rehearsal studios in my then hometown was downright frightening! Working at the legendary Manny’s Music store on 48th Street in Manhattan – where artists spanning the Beatles to Miles Davis purchased gear, I was pushed further into the abyss by the number of people suddenly coming into the store and bashing on Fender Precision basses in the manner of Sid Vicious and Dee Dee Ramone: no disrespect…..
Then I heard the Laughing Dogs.
Yeah, they were playing CBGB and were classified as a punk band. To my ears they were head and shoulders above the common crop of three-chord, “1-2-3-4!!!” amateurs. These guys composed clever, interesting songs, they rendered strong vocals. In general, they were damn good rock musicians.
Bassist Ronny Carle (aka Ronny Altaville) was a chameleon; running the gamut from throttling his Rickenbacker and Fender Jazz basses in an 8th note frenzy to creating melodic lines that would make Macca proud. These guys were truly a power pop group with a punk attitude, slyly hiding their true intentions behind a wall of lo-fi bass and drum sounds. They gigged often with such soon-to-be-legends Blondie, Talking Heads, Mink Deville, and the Shirts – all iconic New York City ensembles. Their most punkish song, “I Need a Million” appears on the 1976 album Live at CBGBs. If you’re not familiar with the Laughing Dogs, do yourself a favor and check them out.
I absolutely love bands that can play multiple styles of music and do so with a sense of humor that keeps them from sounding contrived, and that’s these guys.
Check out “Lazy Road,” from their album, Pre-Colombian Gold, 1974-1976. It sounds similar to early Steely Dan. And pay rapt attention to Ronny Carle’s wonderful playing. “Low Life,” from the 1979 LP, The Laughing Dogs exudes enough jangly guitar and vocal harmonies to launch a dozen 1990s shoe-gazing pop bands!
I’m grateful to my dear friend and fellow New Yawker Larry Tepper, for providing me with lots and lots of Laughing Dogs material. Larry is also the guy who turned me onto Colin Hodkinson and Back Door way back when we were in high school. Hey, it’s what we bass players do, right? We pay it forward!
Ronny Carle Sound & Vision…
“Lazy Road” https://youtu.be/UxkEenY6e2I
“I Need a Million” https://youtu.be/kqceZjbFVXo
“Low Life Band From Brooklyn” https://youtu.be/e9ucPYeqL-k
Bassist Jack Daley (Lenny Kravitz, Beyonce, Little Steven & The Disciples of Soul, Joss Stone, Sara Bareilles, among many others) discusses his appearance with The Boss on SNL, his work as a bandmember and sideman, and his new Dug Deep recording studio in Asbury Park, New Jersey.
Writers/Interviewers: Tom Semioli, Mark Polott, and Joe Gagliardo. Editor: Mark Polott. Executive Producer: Mark Preston
Read Joe Gagliardo’s KYBP Jack Daley profile https://bit.ly/2YdTcDA
Photo by Bill DeMild Courtesy of John Regan Facebook Profiles
Sideman, bandmember, producer, composer, arranger, vocalist, recording artist, and bassist, among other titles, if we were to list John Regan’s entire curricula vitae we may break the internet – which is not necessarily a good or bad thing!
A master pocket and melodic player, among John’s credits include his extensive tenure with Peter Frampton, along with his work on stage and/or in the studio with Ace Frehley’s Comet, Dave Edmunds, Stephen Stills, John Waite, Patty Smythe’s Scandal, Rolling Stones, David Bowie, Robin Trower, Billy Idol, Mick Jagger, David Lee Roth, Michael Monroe, and John Phillips, to cite a select few.
John anchored Peter Frampton’s Grammy winning Fingerprints slab, released in 2006 (Best Pop Instrumental Album). He garnered a Best Rock Grammy nomination for the song “Off the Hook” from Peter’s Live In Detroit collection in 2000.
Among John’s current projects is the band FOUR BY FATE which recently dropped its debut platter Relentless on The End Records/BMG
John Regan Sound & Vision…
Rolling Stones: “Winning Ugly” https://youtu.be/KFJdpheDs4A
David Bowie & Mick Jagger: “Dancing in the Street” https://youtu.be/AYd1x5m5Bj0
Frehley’s Comet:
“Rock Soldiers” https://youtu.be/XMpvBzkncFs
“Something Moved” https://youtu.be/e8kUsFdLfaE
Robin Trower “Under the Gun” https://youtu.be/-7Y7U1Cs91c
Peter Frampton:
“Breaking All the Rules” https://youtu.be/c2eGjNmeUdo
“Off the Hook” https://youtu.be/YHKpGo_NrZw
“Thank You Mr. Churchill” https://youtu.be/VuTuGy5RMoM
FOUR BY FATE: “These Times are Hard for Lovers” https://youtu.be/DBnP4qIM5pQ
Courtesy of John Regan Facebook
Courtesy of Pulp People Com
Bassist for the band Pulp in their Brit Pop glory daze (circa 1992-97), Steve Mackey was the consummate song player.
Providing the harmonic foundation for Messrs. Jarvis Cocker and guitarist Russell Senior, Mackey’s passages as rendered on a Fender Jazz and MusicMan grooved mightily. Among the few bands that lived up to the hype, Pulp were pop purveyors extraordinaire, and one would have thought they’d have lasted a lot longer but…such is rock and roll.
Following his tenure in said band, Mackey, who was also a composer, worked as a mixing engineer / producer with Florence and the Machine, M.I.A. and Arcade Fire, among others. Steve occasionally collaborated with his ex-mates on various projects including Weird Sisters with Pulp pontiff Jarvis Cocker.
Steve Mackey Sound & Vision…with Pulp
“Babies” https://youtu.be/38by00DGid0
“Common People” https://youtu.be/yuTMWgOduFM
“This is Hardcore” https://youtu.be/JXbLyi5wgeg
“Mis-Shapes” https://youtu.be/S0DRch3YLh0
“Something Changed” https://youtu.be/EFSdf_VeYG0
Courtesy of Pulp People Com
Photo by Tom Parr
By Joe Gagliardo
Bassist John Conte’s illustrious career performing and recording music is in full swing! His credits read like a who’s who in the music industry, covering multiple decades, artists and musical genres. For John, music has always been a part of his life.
His mom was a jazz singer and his dad a serious jazz aficionado whose record collection provided the soundtrack to John’s early years. Recalls Conte “some of my earliest musical memories were hearing recordings by Frank Sinatra, Nancy Wilson, Dave Brubeck, Wes Montgomery & Cannonball Adderley…”
But there were also some pop records being played around the house as well, and after hearing Simon & Garfunkel’s Bookends album at age six, John was moved to ask his mom for a guitar. His older brother Steve started out on drums, before making the guitar his main instrument a few years later. By ages nine and ten, the two brothers had started a band with a school friend of Steve’s. Inspired by The Beatles, The Monkees, and the eclectic mix of pop music on AM radio, they began writing their own songs and recording them on a portable tape recorder in the living room.
With John becoming more aware of Paul McCartney’s role in The Beatles, he began to gravitate toward the bass. For his tenth birthday he received a Harmony H-22 electric bass with the batwing pickguard.
While the Harmony was an inexpensive short scale bass, we now know that it was used by Muff Winwood on “Gimme Some Lovin’ and early hits by the Spencer Davis Group, as well as by Ronnie Lane on many Small Faces records. John still owns that Harmony bass, and it has been modified by substituting a P-Bass pickup for the original DeArmond pickup that was no longer working.
This bass has been a secret weapon for John when recording, because of its deep, resonant woody sound, and well defined “click” when played with a pick. John played that Harmony until high school, when he bought a ’77 Rickenbacker 4001, for $375.00. Playing in heavier rock bands, which began in middle school for John, would carry on through high school. “There really weren’t many other kids playing bass in a small suburban town back then, so it was known that I was a bassist,” says John. Eventually, the high school’s band director asked John to lend his talents to their jazz ensemble. This opened John’s ears to new sounds, techniques, and harmonic possibilities.
John received his first upright bass as a high school graduation gift and put it to use when he enrolled in the Jazz Studies Program at Rutgers. However, it was outside of the actual classrooms where John gleaned most of his learning. In setting out to learn the language of jazz, he immersed himself in the music, listening intently to classic albums while soaking up the bass lines of Ron Carter, Ray Brown and Paul Chambers.
Both on and off campus, John made it his business to make any jam session or accept any gig that he could, which sometimes included playing with future heavy hitters, Terence Blanchard (trumpet), Ralph Peterson (drums), and Frank Lacy (trombone).
After his college years, John began making the scene in New York City, hanging at open jam sessions, meeting other musicians and playing as much as possible. At this time, John’s musical focus was gravitating back towards and rock n’ roll, rhythm and blues, and pop. He began delving into the history of the blues, which seemed to be a natural outgrowth of his earlier affinity for the blues-based British rock bands such as Led Zeppelin, the Rolling Stones, Humble Pie, and Free.
Around this same time, John received a call from some of his former college mates, who were now on the road with Blood, Sweat & Tears. There was an opening in the bass chair, and John ended up on the road with BS&T, from 1985-1987. His first gig with the band was a trial by fire. “I learned the material by listening to a board tape from one of their recent live shows – no rehearsal. When I flew out to Seattle to do my first show, I hadn’t even met front man David Clayton Thomas.”
When not on the road, and back home in New York City, John became part of the “Under Acme Blues Night” with his band the Hudson River Rats. The ‘Rats’ were a blues / r&b band, and their fellow founding members included,Rob Paparozzi (harmonica, vocals), Steve Conte (guitar, vocals), and BS&T alumnus Tom DeFaria (drums).
The Blues Night was hosted by producer/writer/musician Jeff Kent, from the jazz/rock band Dreams. This weekly gig became quite the scene, with many other producers, musicians and celebs dropping by to sit-in with the band, including Phoebe Snow, Carole King, Cyndi Lauper, Etta James, Willy Deville, Bernard Purdie, Will Lee, and Julian Lennon.
The Rats’ residency at the Acme Bar & Grill helped put John on the map musically in New York City and led to another route as a session musician. John stayed busy for the next two decades recording for film, television, record dates and jingles. Among many memorable sessions was a date with producer Tony Visconti and David Bowie, working on a track for The Rugrats movie -the song was later cut from the film…. rats!
The studio work further sharpened John’s playing skills as the music was often put together in the studio, without charts, requiring focus and creativity in a compressed period of time.
Notes John “there is a thrill in finding that crucial, perfect bass part that can help give a track its identity or even its hook. Whether it is a four-minute pop song or a thirty-second jingle, the part is always ‘out there in the air’ somewhere, you just have to keep plugging away until you find it. There are situations in which the music requires the bass to generate more interest or movement – and then there are situations where the opposite is true. I think it’s invaluable as a bassist to be sensitive to that.”
In addition to his reactionary and improvisational abilities, John has a great love for serving the song. He has a knack for being supportive while still creating interest for the ear, which could be a bass line that adds slight variations as the song progresses, or it can be that tasteful move into the upper register in the third verse or final chorus. It can also be deciding when not to play, like Andy Fraser not playing during the verses of Free’s classic “All Right Now.”
Often it’s just a certain bass sound that can inject the personality that a producer is looking for in a track, which is why John usually brings several different basses to a recording session.
Through the session scene, John and brother Steve also met singer / songwriter Kyf Brewer. Together they would form the band Company of Wolves with rock n’ roll veteran Frankie LaRocka (Scandal, David Johansen, Bryan Adams, Jon Waite) on drums.
They were signed to Mercury/Polygram records, and their eponymous release in 1990 is a hard-rocking effort, with great vocals, songs and musicianship. The Wolves, who have a kind of cult following to this day, toured extensively, had chart activity with album tracks, and released two videos to MTV, “Call of the Wild” and “The Distance.”
John’s bass on this record is driving and tasteful and can be heard clearly in the mix. John does a brief solo in the song “Can’t Love Ya, Can’t Leave Ya” and the first two bars of the solo are reminiscent of Danny Klein’s bass line in “Hard Drivin’ Man” from the J. Geils Band’s legendary Full House Live record.
According to John, he first heard the Full House Live record while in one of his early teenage bands. It rocked his world and informed him about what it was to be a great live rock n’ roll band. And back then John would have never dreamed that one day he’d be working with J. Geils’ front man Peter Wolf!
Company of Wolves carried on until 1992, and also released the albums Steryl Spycase and Shakers & Tambourines, the latter being a collection of their demos prior to being signed by Polygram. You can hear these titles on iTunes and Spotify or get a physical copy at www.ryfrecords.com
Post Wolves, John and Steve Conte have released other records together. Their band, Crown Jewels, released two LPs, Spitshine (1996) and Linoleum (1998). In addition, ‘The Jewels’ were voted one of the ten best unsigned bands in America by Musician Magazine in 1997. A few years later, and simply calling themselves ‘The Contes’, the brothers released the album Bleed Together in 2003. Many of the songs from all three of these releases have been licensed for use in film and television.
After a short tour in Joan Osborne’s band and a year on the road with Rosanne Cash, John joined up with the legendary Southside Johnny (SSJ) & the Asbury Jukes. John has been laying down the low end for The Jukes since 2008, touring the U.S. and Europe extensively.
He has also recorded several albums with the Jukes, their Pills & Ammo record being a highlight for him. He was also a member of another project called Southside Johnny & The Poor Fools, where all five of the band members served as rotating drummers. They released the album Songs From the Barn in 2012.
One memorable SSJ gig was playing at the annual Stone Pony Summer Stage Show before 4,000 loving SSJ fans, and having ‘that other guy from Asbury Park’, Bruce Springsteen, join them for an impromptu forty-five minute set.
John also mentions a SSJ gig that was challenging and bizarre: “we were playing outdoors for the NHL’s Hockey Winter Classic at Yankee Stadium. The temperature during soundcheck was seven degrees, and the cold wreaked havoc on the instruments as well as the band members. By the end of the that soundcheck, I was using my left elbow to fret notes on my fingerboard, sliding up and down the E string – and using a thumb pick on my right hand. My fingers were unusable!”
In addition to the SSJ recordings, John also appears on LPs by Peter Wolf, Fools Parade (1998) and Sleepless” (2002); Ian Hunter, Rant (2001); Rachael Yamagata, Happenstance (2004); Amy Rigby, Little Fugitive (2005); Garland Jeffreys, The King of In Between (2011); and Steve Forbert, Early Morning Rain (2019), to name just a few.
In 2013 John was tapped to do a brief tour in the UK with Billy Joel, just as the piano man was coming off a four-year hiatus. One of the highlights of that tour was playing the song “Blonde Over Blue”, which Billy had never performed live before. John was also part of the Billy Joel and Twyla Tharp Broadway show, Moving Out, subbing often for bassist Greg Smith.
Billy Joel “She’s Always A Woman To Me” and “Blonde Over Blue” https://youtu.be/CUhkHYxFsBs
John’s versatility as a bassist has enabled him to perform with a diverse group of artists, including: Rosanne Cash, Gavin DeGraw, Joan Osborne, Jon Bon Jovi, Rachael Yamagata, Natalie Merchant, Patti Smith, Marshall Crenshaw, Sarah Bareilles, Ian Hunter, John Waite, Marc Cohn, Oz Noy, Jeff Golub, Paul Shaffer, Rita Wilson, Steven Van Zandt, Felix Cavaliere, Donovan, Chuck Berry, Howard Tate, Darlene Love, Eddie Brigati, Al Kooper, Denny Laine, Leslie West, Willie Nile, Peter Yarrow & David Johansen.
In his youth, The Who Live at Leeds was another LP that blew John away. He feels it’s like “the blue-print for playing in a ‘power trio’ -in the Who’s case, with an additional front man!” As a result, John has gigged in many trios over the years, and is currently involved in two such groups.
One of them is a “Piano Power Trio” called, The Early Elton Trio. It features fellow Asbury Juke Jeff Kazee on keys/vocals, and Rich Pagano (Patti Smith, Roger Waters, The Fab Faux) on drums/vocals. Inspired by Elton’s loose and live 11-17-70 album, the band focuses on Elton’s early records and the jamming sensibilities of the Dee Murray and Nigel Olson trio tours of 1970-1972. According to John, it has been described as “Elton – before the duck suit, blow, and binge shopping!”
Early Elton Trio “Take Me To The Pilot” https://youtu.be/r86QcA99nk0
Another trio where all the three members get to stretch out and jam is The Prisoners of 2nd Avenue. The band features guitarist/vocalist, Jimmy Vivino (Conan O’Brian band leader, Levon Helm, Donald Fagen) and drummer/vocalist, Rich Pagano. This power trio celebrates the music of the Fillmore East days, covering an era of music from 1968-1972.
In terms of basses, John has quite a collection, not as a collector, but rather to be able to get the right sound for whatever gig he is playing. In addition to the Fender Precision, John is also a huge fan of short scale and semi-hollow basses and he has several in his collection, including his Harmony H-22, a ’67 Gibson EBO, ’64 Silvertone w/single lipstick pickup, Gibson EB3 reissue, a ’73 Fender Music Master, and a Guild Starfire 2 reissue.
With Early Elton Trio, John mainly uses his sunburst ‘64 Fender Jazz bass. His go-to basses with the Asbury Jukes are a Fender Precision bass, and a short scale Jerry Jones Longhorn. For the Poor Fools, where they were doing Americana, folk and blues, he mostly played a 1960’s German-made Hoyer. It is a semi-hollow, short scale bass with two F holes, and it can mimic an upright bass quite well.
His upright bass is a Kay from the early 1960’s (see photo above). John’s current rig with the Asbury Jukes is an Aguilar AG500 Head, with Aguilar DB 4×10 and 1×15 cabinets. As with his instruments, he has an array of bass heads and cabinets that he uses depending on the gig.
There are many ways you can see and hear John play live-with the Asbury Jukes, Early Elton, The Contes, Prisoners of 2nd Avenue, or whatever band / project he is currently performing with. Simply follow him on Facebook – https://www.facebook.com/john-contebass/
Check out John’s playing below, along with background from John about what he was trying to achieve in those songs!
The Contes “So Much For Love” https://youtu.be/uz0odMf_Ovs
My brother Steve and I had self-produced our previous two albums and for this one we wanted an outside ear. We asked Producer Andrew Hollander to co-produce with us and help pare down a list of thirty songs to twelve songs. “So Much For Love” was a song that Steve had written a decade before, and had done a 4 track demo of it that sounded sort of like a Buddy Holly song – with emphasis on “strummy” acoustic guitar & a bright tempo. We knew we wanted to do something different with it but had never played or performed the song as a band. We were using the amazing Charley Drayton on drums for the session (Keith Richards, B-52’s, Paul Simon, Fiona Apple). He was just getting into town the day of the session, so there had been no opportunity to rehearse or to talk anything over. Andrew suggested we slow down the tempo considerably and get away from such a poppy feel.
We wanted to get a dirtier vibe and feel to it, so I decided to make the bass a bit overdriven and play as if it were the rhythm guitar – the main drive of the track was coming from the bass. I was playing my old Harmony H-22 bass through an Acoustic 140 amp into an Ampeg 4×10 Cabinet. The 140 head is only 120 watts – and despite it being solid state it breaks up nicely with a pleasing distortion. We talked about the arrangement & rehearsed it once.
When we decided to hit record, the first take was magic, so that’s the take that we used! I’d say that on this track, I was channeling the phenomenal Colin Moulding, bassist for XTC.
The Contes “Bleed Together” https://youtu.be/WglNRVRcoXY
This is another song that came together in the studio. It was also a song written by my brother many years prior, and his original 4 track demo was very folky sounding and a bit more up tempo. Brother Steve came up with some beautiful guitar parts & sounds, which along with his poignant/soulful vocal, inspired my playing on this beautiful ballad. I played a 1964 Hofner Club Bass on this- with flat wound strings of course.
Ian Hunter “Purgatory” https://youtu.be/gPbpJox3cjs
I used my Acoustic 360 with the amazing built in fuzz engaged – Think, Larry Graham on some of those Sly records, or Jaco when he kicked in some fuzz with Weather Report. I played my ’73 Rickenbacker 4001 and used a direct signal along with the amp – although it sounds like ALL amp on this track. Thinking about it, I was going for a soul/funk/rock hybrid… somewhere between Sly & Family Stone, Kool & the Gang meets Zeppelin, Mountain, and MC5.
Funny – when Ian saw me pull out my Rickenbacker in the control room he said: “I hate Rickenbackers”, and he mumbled something about Chris Squire. I mean, I love what Chris Squire does, but I assured Ian that I don’t go for that type of thing on the Ric. I told him that I used flat wound strings and that I think more like McCartney or Tommy Stinson from the Replacements, who had used a Rickenbacker bass for a while, with a more gritty, punk attitude.
My good friend Andy York, who was producing the record with Ian, encouraged me to stand my ground with the Rickenbacker. In the end, everyone loved the way it turned out, including Ian.
Peter Wolf “Pleasing To Me” https://youtu.be/zML4VaUUZIY
This is the one song I played upright bass on for the Fools Parade album. Before we would record a track, Peter would have us all go into the control room- this was in the days before iPods. He had his huge CD binder he would take out, then he would start that manic fast talking DJ lingo that he is so skilled at, and he would whip out a disc, begin de- scribing the track that he was about to play by such & such an artist, when it was recorded, what was going on at that time in history, and how it made him feel when he heard it. The songs he played for us were mostly old soul and R&B, often some obscure stuff that I hadn’t heard of. He’d play three or four different tracks from different artists…he’d whip us up, and get us in a certain mood or headspace. Then we would go out and cut the track.
Drummer, Shawn Pelton and I had done a lot of recording together, and I remember this one coming together pretty easily. I love the sound & feel of this track- it’s really got an old soul thing to it. Hats off also to my good friend and brilliant musician, Kenny White, who produced these sessions.
Southside Johnny & The Asbury Jukes “Umbrella In My Drink” https://youtu.be/iMu7RdeXVPE
This track was done for the Pills & Ammo album back in 2010, a really good time song written by Johnny & Jeff Kazee and also features Gary U.S Bonds singing with Johnny. I used my Jerry Jones Longhorn on this. I was going for that muted thing like NRBQ’s Joey Spampinato, who’s playing I am pretty infatuated with. Shawn Pelton on drums again here. We know each other’s playing quite well, so it was a lot of fun to play. It really swings in that N’awlins fashion.
Rachael Yamagata “Letter Read” https://youtu.be/JhFiChQtB6Q
I can’t say enough about Rachael as an artist, writer, singer, and performer. I consider it an honor to have played on her major label debut. All the tracks I played on for this album were recorded in a very organic fashion. The basic tracks all being done live at Compass Point Studios in the Bahamas.
The drummer on this track is the Spin Doctors’ Aaron Comess – another buddy of mine who I have logged many musical miles with. Aaron is also a frightening jazz player- and we can intersect there. With a lot of space to improvise, we take some turns that make this track a bit of a wild ride, but we always come back to support the song. On this track, I played a late 90’s Epiphone Rivoli reissue. I often play with a pick and my fingers in different sections on the same take or performance.
I have a way of tucking the pick away in my hand and switching to my fingers, and then switching back again. It sounds like I am doing that on this track – but honestly, I can’t be sure. It could be that I am just alternating between playing staccato really far back near the bridge on certain lines in a higher register, and then moving back toward the neck for other sections.
That’s the thing about that bass – it’s like two different instruments in one – two very distinct sounds when you play in those two different positions with your right hand or left, if you’re a lefty!
Courtesy of Aguilar
It’s dance music for people standing still, a torrent of motion for a frustrated world on pause.
Bassist Bryan Walters helms Texas post-punk pop-dance trio Don’t Get Lemon – DGL for short. Inspired musically (and aesthetically) by Depeche Mode, Stone Roses, New Order/Joy Division, Human League, various Danish synth-pop purveyors, and The Cure to cite a few, Walters works the pocket amid the din of a thundering backbeat and massive keyboard resonance. In fact, he’s the only cat playing the changes!
Garnering praise aplenty from the indie rock media, DGL has the songs, the attitude, and the chops to go the distance and build upon their influencers’ collective artistry.
As per the band’s press agent: Bryan has had his hands on a bass from an early age and has played in genres ranging from deathcore to new wave, post punk to atmospheric black metal, and post hardcore to ambient. At present, Bryan is rocking out with a Gibson Les Paul Jr Tribute DC bass, has a revolving pedalboard that leads into an easy to manage Ampeg BA-115V2.
He made the transition to short scale and a smaller amp partly in order to get a higher punchier tone for some post punk without having to go 6 string, and partly due to giving his back a break from playing T-40s and Grabbers while lugging around a Peavey Classic 400 and Ampeg 8×10/2×15 cabs.
Keep tabs on DGL here: Music | don’t get lemon (bandcamp.com)
Bryan Walters Sound & Vision with DGL
“Motion with No Name” https://youtu.be/Fi-NCHfMNqM
“The Modernist” https://youtu.be/cZ7HR6ZLxzU
“Futures Lost” https://youtu.be/7x9pN140juQ
“Idle Eyes” https://youtu.be/utg41ez27rY
Courtesy of The Call Band Com
Singer / songwriter / multi-instrumentalist Mike Been was the founder of the alternative / pop-rock ensemble The Call – a fiery collective formed in San Francisco circa 1980. Championed by Robbie Roberston and Garth Hudson (who guested on their albums), Peter Gabriel (“The Call are the future of American music…”), and Jim Kerr of Simple Minds, The Call scored a few hits and widespread critical acclaim, yet never quite broke from their hallowed cult status.
In 1986, Been switched to bass upon the departure of founding bassist Greg Freeman, and temporary bassist Jim Goodwin, who was the band’s keyboardist.
Been also waxed two solo slabs, acted in Martin Scorsese’s film Last Temptation of Christ, and worked with his son Robert who formed the Black Rebel Motorcycle Club.
Recalls KYBP’s Joe Iaquinto: If you were watching MTV in in the 1980s, you undoubtedly heard The Call. Their two biggest songs, “I still Believe, ” and “Let The Day Begin” were propelled by the robust vocals and muscular fretless bass playing of front man Michael Been. Been favored an Ampeg fretless AUB ‘Scroll Head’ bass, which he played with a pick. His bass parts were quirky and bold, mixing conventional choices with melodic punctuation and fretless flights of fancy. I saw The Call open for Simple Minds at the Greek Theater in Los Angeles, in 1986, and they were wonderful, with Michael Been’s riveting performance at the heart of the whole thing. At a time in music when the electric bass was being nudged aside by synthesizers and eighth-note jockeys, Michael Been, who died in 2010, held up a middle finger to all that came out swingin’. May he rest in peace.
Jim Kerr – Courtesy of The Call Band Com:
A little over two decades ago I had the pleasure and honour to spend a fair amount of time with Michael Been while touring America. Simple Minds may have been the headliners, however there was no doubt that is was us who looked up to our opening act – The Call – fronted by none other Michael Been. We may have just topped the Billboard charts but we all knew it was Michael who was the “real deal” especially in comparison to ourselves, who at that time had buckets of chutzpah well enough to disguise for the most part the fact that by enlarge we were still well wet behind the ears.
Michael in turn had already lived “an artist’s life,” having traveled far and wide both in body and mind from the dusty back roads of Oklahoma. A preacher and a teacher no doubt, he was always much more than your usual “ten a penny” careerist ‘80’s rock star. That said as driven as he was with his beliefs, the very ones that infused his music; Michael far from sanctimonious, was always a hoot to be around.
To my mind, he had a similar soul that one perceives in true American greats such as Robbie Robertson and even Dylan himself. But even more wonderfully he also had the wickedly spirited comedy of John Belushi draped all around him. For that reason I easily recall the difficulty in picking myself up off the floor numerously after he had acted out one of his genuinely hilarious anecdotes. As I say, it was a pleasure and an honour to have hung around with Michael Been, and for that reason it is with sadness and with feelings of extreme fondness that I recall this warm and friendly man only hours after his sudden death.
That The Call were denied the kind of commercial success that their music merited, is an obvious understatement. Too American for the Europeans perhaps, and too English sounding for the American mainstream, Michael’s face was more suited to Biblical epics than the once ubiquitous MTV. (Beards and bellies were not associated with authenticity back then in MTV land. And Michael to be frank was way too authentic to take seriously the falsities needed to play the success game.) For that reason I was not surprised to see him turn up in Martin Scorcese’s The Last Temptation Of Christ.
Michael Been may have departed but I am convinced that his songs will live on and continue to be discovered by the on coming generations. I look around the current musical landscape in search of those coming through who may be cut from the same cloth as Been was. Today that search is fruitless, but I would never give up hope. Hope was what the music of The Call was all about. This may explain why many thought our bands made for a great bill, and with so much in common.
Jim Kerr (Simple Minds)
August, 2010
Mike Been Sound & Vision:
The Call:
“Let The Day Begin,” “I Still Believe” https://youtu.be/R3yKxDvuumQ
“I Don’t Wanna” https://youtu.be/iExRMyRgMrI
“Everywhere I Go” https://youtu.be/Vi-CfLsgLyk
By Thomas Semioli – Photos Courtesy of Norbert Putnam’s Official Website
He has forged and indelible imprint on popular music as a bassist and a producer.
You would be hard pressed not to have heard Norbert Auvin Putnam on over 9,000 recordings which span just about every genre of contemporary music.
He commenced his career as an upright player with an old, discarded doghouse which belonged to his father, who worked the Memphis circuit long before Norbert was born. So profound was Elvis Presley’s influence on the young Florence, Alabama native in the 1950s that Putnam adhered a white stripe boarder to his bass akin to Presley’s anchor Bill Black. Putnam would go on to wax hundreds of tracks with Presley.
Among the original and most important players in the Muscle Shoals music scene – Putnam, along with David Briggs (who also enjoyed a stellar career as a producer), Kenny Buttrey, and Jerry Carrigan, and others founded the iconic Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section. A collective whose profound influence was felt not only among American musicians, but the stalwarts of the British Invasion – namely The Beatles and the Rolling Stones. Contemporary artists also reference Putnam’s timeless canon – you can hear Norbert’s influence from hip-hop to pop, country, folk, blues, and beyond.
Working his ’58 Fender Precision, Putnam brought his deep knowledge of jazz and rhythm & blues to the pop music lexicon. An innovative, enthusiastic player given to rhythmic diversity, a deep resonant tone, and inventive harmonic embellishment, to my ears Putnam’s contribution to the instrument is comparable to the impact of James Jamerson, Paul McCartney, and Jaco Pastorius, to cite a select few.
As Putnam toiled in an era where record jackets didn’t always include credits, his name is not widely known to the general public. To skim his resume – you’ve heard Norbert with Tony Joe White, JJ Cale, Henry Mancini, The Pointer Sisters, The Monkees, Ray Charles, John Stewart, Bobby Goldsboro, Kris Kristofferson, George Harrison, Eric Anderson, Steve Goodman, Dolly Parton, Willie Nelson, Mickey Newbury, Elvis, Joan Baez, Dan Fogelberg, The Mighty Clouds of Joy, Lonnie Mack, and Donovan….
Norbert also anchored Area Code 615 – an ensemble that essentially created “country rock” and Americana as we now know it. Though the album was not a commercial success, its influence is incalculable.
As a producer, Putnam’s credits are equally astounding: he helmed watershed sides by Jimmy Buffett, Joan Baez, Dan Fogelberg, The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, Buffy St. Marie, and Kris Kristofferson, to cite a select few.
Norbert’s tome Music Lessons Volume 1: A Musical Memoir (2017) is essential reading!
Learn more about Norbert via his website: Norbert Putnam Official Website (musiclessonsbynorbertputnam.com)
To list Norbert’s most significant tracks would break the internet!
By Tony Senatore:
Norbert Putnam’s approach to the bass guitar has always been something that resonated with me. About 15 years ago, I emailed him to let him know that his influence loomed large in my overall concept. I never thought I would hear back from him, but I did. He was gracious, and the way he treated me was befitting of a man of his legendary status. He gave me his home phone number and told me to call him if I ever needed advice or help regarding my musical journey. Seven years later, I took him up on that offer, but to be clear it was not for me, but rather a new artist that I believed in that had just moved to Nashville. Norbert extended his offer of advice to my friend, although I’m not certain as to whether she took him up on his offer. Norbert and I are not friends, and I am not quite sure if he remembers me, but what happened in our brief exchange was very important to me. It is the story of a largely unknown musician who felt the need to let a famous musician know that his work gave his life meaning, but most importantly, the revelation that the legend cared.
Norbert Putnam Sound & Vision:
Watch Norbert with Buck Owens and Ray Charles on Hee Haw 1970!
“Crying Time” https://youtu.be/VJPwfkosk60
“Don’t Change on Me” https://youtu.be/VhpXWfcWmkg
“You Don’t Know Me” https://youtu.be/6GX8UalMq8k
Elvis Presley “Unchained Melody” https://youtu.be/ir6mdEdAQjY
Area Code 615 “Hey Jude” https://youtu.be/By_4hKHvH1g
Joan Baez “The Night The Drove Old Dixie Down” https://youtu.be/wanJQC5KAfo
Arthur Alexander “You Better Move On” https://youtu.be/FBBeRPwrZAs
The Tams “What Kind of Fool Do You Think I Am” https://youtu.be/dhwkdVYQ0gQ
Tommy Roe “Everybody” https://youtu.be/zU5OD2xRgl8
Roger Miller “King of the Road” https://youtu.be/oHtoayjVLAY
Tony Senatore Plays Norbert Putnam with Dan Fogelberg:
“The Power of Gold” https://youtu.be/W985k84iiHI
“Love Gone By” https://youtu.be/enTBbel2wPE
“Dancing Shoes” https://youtu.be/C6Pz6CqCCG8
“Heart Hotels” https://youtu.be/qBneyIli0D4
“Promises Made” https://youtu.be/PXF6AeiYAG8
“Promises Made” Breakdown https://youtu.be/FmBd5H8F6Kk “
“Nether Lands” https://youtu.be/w9yGMzgk0-Q
Courtesy of the Brubeck Institute
In jazz circles he was referred to as “The Senator.”
Born in Chicago in 1923, Eugene Joseph Wright anchored one of the most popular and influential jazz ensembles in the history of the artform – The Dave Brubeck Quartet.
Commencing his career as a high-school big band bassist with the Dukes of Swing, Eugene joined Brubeck in 1958 and served as bandleader’s harmonic and rhythmic foundation for the next decade.
Among Wright’s seminal recordings with Brubeck included Time Out (1959). Eugene served as the rhythmic catalyst for the group which also included saxophonist Paul Desmond, and drummer Joe Morello. Noted Brubeck, Wright “grounded the group” and afforded them the opportunity “to play other tempos and do polyrhythmic things and he wouldn’t budge from this grounded beat.”
Wright also helmed Dave and Lola Brubeck’s The Ambassadors (1962) with Louis Armstrong and Carmen McRae, a jazz musical which addressed the Cold War, and Civil Rights movement, among other themes.
An educator and author Wright headed the Jazz Department at the University of Cincinnati and worked with the International Society of Bassists.
A true giant of the instrument, Wright was a prolific sideman and collaborator on record and/or on the bandstand with artists including Billie Holiday, Sonny Stitt, Cal Tajder, Kenny Drew, Gene Ammons, Errol Garner, and Red Norvo, to cite a very select few.
Bassist Robert Jenkins Remembers Eugene Wright:
Many listeners may not know who Eugene Wright was, and at the time I didn’t, either. But, as the bassist for one of the most popular jazz quarters ever, just about everyone has heard him play bass.
I first heard Eugene Wright play bass around 1990 when I was a young metal head who was just beginning to explore the vast realm of jazz. I had recently purchased my illicit copy of The Real Book and was looking for jazz tunes to learn. Coupled with a CBS Records compilation CD, I stumbled across a song called Take Five by the Dave Brubeck Quartet.
My first thought was, “Hey, an easy bass line!” Well, kind of. I found the line easy to play but when I played with other musicians, or along with the recording, it was difficult for me to get the timing and feel just right.
This was the genius of Eugene Wright’s playing. His lines were understated and he was a master of sitting “in the pocket”, holding the time and rhythm steady for the graceful solos of Paul Desmond and Dave Brubeck. One could even argue that Eugene is why their solos are so graceful; because his sonic canvas and foundation was so secure. His playing as often understated and he performed the duties and responsibilities of a bassist flawlessly.
The bass playing of Eugene Wright is a big part of why I continued to explore new, different music. His style helped me to understand how to survive in what can often be a cutthroat genre of improvisation. I owe him some recognition.
Eugene Wright passed away on December 30, 2020 at the age of 97. His contributions to music, jazz, and bass playing are nothing short of immense, if only, like his playing, somewhat graceful and understated.
Eugene Wright Sound & Vision…
Dave Brubeck:
“Take Five” https://youtu.be/ryA6eHZNnXY
“Blue Rodo a La Turk” https://youtu.be/ocWgSfz2bjk
“The Real Ambassadors” https://youtu.be/YtbN0cNIRJg
“The Wright Groove” BBC TV https://youtu.be/gKjaFo2Tp5c
Kenny Drew: “Bluesville” https://youtu.be/SoNpcPofTwQ
Paul Desmond: “Take Ten” https://youtu.be/kot5N5WFBAU
Gene Ammons: “My Foolish Heart” https://youtu.be/U59U4vLEkr4
Courtesy of the Brubeck Institute
Rock and roll is rife with artists who blaze a trail that others dare not to tread, and in the process, reinvigorate the artform, shaking the establishment to its very foundation and inspiring those that follow. Among those hallowed ensembles that take no prisoners are The Viletones, a “first generation punk” Toronto collective helmed by Steven Leckie.
Punks? I guess you could say that.
To my ears The Viletones draw from their enlightened, rebellious elders Elvis, Buddy, Lou, Penniman, Zimmerman, Lennon, Jagger, Morrison, James Brown … and make it their own. Loud guitars, taut melodies, and a libretto that speaks to the masses. Legends worthy of rediscovery – they sound as fresh now as they did during the Trudeau era. In the ranks of their bassists included Screaming Sam Ferrara, on whom Leckie reflects.
If you don’t get The Viletones, you just don’t get rock and roll….
By Steven Leckie: singer, songwriter, The Viletones
I always called Sam “The Costra Nostra Bowery Boy,” due to his “Italian street sense.” Sam is Italian, and music is his blood.
He played his Hofner Beatle Bass since ‘77, he was always giving on stage and off. He was in The Viletones for five years and played on every release but our first one. Before his tenure in The Viletones he was in The Ugly for a year and played on their releases.
Following The Viletones, he fronted his own band called Screaming Sam and The Problems -wisely figuring out front men were the problem!
Footage of him in all three bands can be seen and heard on You Tube.
Give Screaming Sam doing his own “Do You Like It,” a view: it’s gonna change how you feel certain music. He was that guy in the band that you told: “play ya da-da-da- yeah” and in five minutes you had a very cool song.
He’s been doing art installations the last few years, dig, he always sells each art piece he makes. I just love the guy.
Stephen Leckie bedecked in KYBP swag….
Screaming Sam Sound & Vision:
The Viletones:
“Outta My Mind” https://youtu.be/vsH6s7jsPU8
“Nothin’ On You” https://youtu.be/6N0CQv0nJtA
“Leave Me Alone” https://youtu.be/KEq2H6oCuhM
Screaming Sam & The Problems:
Live 2014: https://youtu.be/TmZc6obckFs
“Another World” https://youtu.be/Ik4zRfbYoVQ
“Do You Like It” https://youtu.be/PArANJaMnMU