Mo Foster Authors The History of British Rock Guitar (Huffington Post) by Tom Semioli

 

 

By Tom Semioli / Huffington Post / May 2014

 

Rock ‘n’ Roll is American music. In the late 1950s there were no UK role models for the electric guitar, except for a middle-aged player named Bert Weedon, who wrote a book at the time called Play In a Day. To learn the guitar we had to listen to solos by James Burton, Cliff Gallup, Chet Atkins or Buddy Holly — either on 78 RPM records, or radio stations such as Luxembourg or Voice of America. In addition, a post-war trade embargo which lasted until 1960 meant we couldn’t buy anything American — how could we play this music seriously without Gibsons or Fenders?” — Mo Foster

 

From the Baby Boomers who experienced the British Invasion firsthand and started a band, to the seventies teens who rummaged through mom’s closet to approximate the appearance of Messrs. Ferry, Bowie and Bolan in preparation for a high-school gig; to the scores of alienated youth who found salvation in the sounds of Robert Smith’s Fender Jazzmaster — some of us owe our lives, for better or worse, to British rock guitar.

 

Despite Mo’s above referenced proclamation, along with the general consensus that Americans officially invented rock ‘n’ roll by pillaging bits and pieces of country and blues whist cranking up the volume — and that Elvis was somehow referred to as “King” even in the presence of Chuck Berry — it was the Brits by way of The Beatles who transformed rock ‘n’ roll from adolescent novelty music to an art form that refuses to become irrelevant no matter how hard some celebrated personalities and television networks try. And for the record (pun intended), the Fab Four’s guitar-wielding peers, namely the Rolling Stones, Yardbirds, The Who, Kinks and Animals, made a lasting sonic imprint that the Yanks couldn’t touch. Even Jimi Hendrix had to migrate to London to be noticed. If American impresario Sid Bernstein had not made that historic phone call to Beatles’ manager Brian Epstein, we would have had to suffer through 50th Anniversary celebrations of Pat Boone, The Kingsmen, Bobby Rydell and Bobby Vinton!

 

Enter UK bassist Mo Foster — renowned amongst musos for his brilliant work in the recording studio and on stage with hundreds of artists including Jeff Beck, Van Morrison, Phil Collins, Gil Evans and the London Symphony Orchestra — and likely several uncredited sampled tracks by hip-hop artists. Mr. Foster has authored the definitive book on a subject that would have otherwise been lost for present and future generations of rockers: British Rock Guitar: The First 50 Years – The Musicians and Their Stories, which is available via Northumbria Press. From present day indie rockers to anyone who played in an amateur or pro band in the past half century, to the most dedicated followers of any permutation of rock’s limitless sub-genres — Mo Foster’s extensively researched and entertaining tome is essential reading.

 

Through Foster’s own vivid and oft humorous recollections along with momentous remembrances from the most recognizable musicians who were there when it all started, namely Eric Clapton, Paul Rodgers, Richard Thompson, Deep Purple bassist Roger Glover, Ron Wood, Roxy Music’s Phil Manzanera, Mike Rutherford of Genesis, John Lennon, Paul McCartney and George Harrison, to name a few — the reader is transported back to a romantic, adventurous age wherein guitars and amplifiers were fashioned from cigar boxes, tea chests, pencil cases, fuse wire and bread toasters.

 

For me, it was the realization that every player in Britain, including Jeff Beck and John Paul Jones, endured the same problems of having no access to good instruments — it was a leveling experience.

 

The images which run through British Rock Guitar are astounding — many of which have never been seen by the general public before.

 

Initially the photos were from my own collection — but slowly I was able to persuade the cast to look through their own cupboards and let me use the rare photos that turned up — many of which paint a picture of a very different time.

 

Among the enlightening visuals include: vintage print ads from respectable instrument companies such as Hofner to the countless fly-by-night outfits which sold guitars that essentially fell apart after a few plays; childhood shots of rock guitar maestros Paul Kossoff (Free), Gary Moore, Martin Barre (Jethro Tull), Andy Summers (The Police), Ritchie Blackmore, and Steve Winwood playing their earliest and most primitive instruments; the legends in their formative years — Chris Spedding, Allan Holdsworth, Mark Knopfler, Albert Lee, among others; dated business cards from future icons and obscure rockers; fly-on-the-wall photos from Abbey Road, UK dancehall gigs featuring soon-to-be rock stars, Hamburg’s infamous Star Club; and color portraits of some of the most collectible objects — portable mono record-players, guitar string packets, instruction books — essential to the telling of rock ‘n’ roll’s timeless saga.

 

Foster, who likely could have enjoyed an equally successful career as a stand-up comic, punctuates this timeless tome with several hysterical vignettes detailing the essence of life as a musician when rock ‘n’ roll was new — first gigs, auditions, tales of the road, toiling in the Red Light District (i.e. the recording studio), pranks on and off the bandstand, and a choice menu of wonderfully wicked quips from fellow musicians in the trenches.

 

Opines Mo in his postscript:

 

Fads may come and go, but the guitar is here to stay. It is the perfect accompaniment to the human voice…it was great fun to be around at a time when nobody knew anything, but, in a different way, it is probably just as much fun now. There’s so much more music to play.

 

Mo Foster – BRITISH ROCK GUTAR published by McNidder & Grace (2013)

 

 

Know Your Bass Player Waddafoam Hallafame

By Tom Semioli   *Warning: this essay contains irony, useful information, humorous irreverence and reasonable cause for debate…

 

Attitude is 90% of playing an instrument – to paraphrase (and thoroughly sanitize) one of Miles Davis’ many memorable quotes.

 

No instrumentalist on the bandstand nor the recording studio exemplifies the “carriage of cool” more so than the bass player.

 

In the electric / bass guitar realm, there are methods at our disposal for the instances wherein we need to scoop out the overtones, muffle to approximate the din of the doghouse, facilitate a percussive attack, or to simply dampen the strings.

 

Such practices include the time-tested traditional palm-mute (of which there are permutations – no pun) and the terrycloth fret-wrap  affixed with a Velcro strap attachment which is growing in popularity – especially with extended range players. Of the former, it is an essential technique for all serious (and amused) players.  The latter is a bit, shall we say, “pretentious” but different downstrokes for different low-end folks.

 

Note that the term “palm-mute” is misleading as the fleshy side of the hand is the body part which actually performs the deed. Purists tend to advocate the organic use of the palm/side-of-the-hand / left-hand finger mute.  I believe that these techniques leave too much room for inconsistency – especially for bassists who position their instrument hip-level or (gulp!) lower.

 

The left-hand finger mute, as widely heard on funk, jazz fusion, blues passages by Francis Rocco Prestia, Jaco Pastorius,  and Tommy Shannon respectively – affords a quick and effective percussive resonance and facilitates dead / ghost notes as well. 

 

Though palm and left-hand muting are indeed valuable tools which require no artificial elements – neither of these techniques exemplifies a bassist’s attitude quotient to the extent of the predominantly infallible hallowed “chunk” of polyurethane foam. 

 

Also known in the Know Your Bass Player community as “waddafoam,”  preferably in a urine yellowish or beige tone which consequently destroys the aesthetic of just about every bass finish save for natural wood, Olympic white, and butter-crème / vintage blonde. This strategically placed wedge adjacent to the bridge is, in my modest opinion, unmatched. For those who prefer a decidedly unassuming appearance, dark gray / black foam is the formal, socially acceptable choice – and compliments many bass finishes. 

 

Whaddya mean, waddafoam? The bigger the better, the fatter the funkier – depending on the pickup / bridge configuration of the instrument. The 4″ (L) x 2 1/2″ (W)  x 1/2″ (H) waddafoam appears to be the norm  as it affords virtually no sustain or moderate sustain with medium to heavy gauge strings.

 

The skinny 4″(L) x 1/2 (W) x 1/2″ (H) waddafoam is pictured above on my 21st Century American Fender Precision and similar to those found under the ashtray of older Fender basses and other models including the MusicMan StingRay (that’s Leo for ya!). Observe that the MMSR has individual mutes embedded in the bridge and can hardly be described as a “wadda” – yet its visibility warrants KYBP waddification.   

 

The slimmer waddafoam is a viable option as it allows for modest sustain with medium and heavy gauge strings while significantly quickening the note decay. Light gauge players have no reason to mute!  More consistent than the palm or the fret-wrap which tends to slide down the neck of the instrument, waddafoam mutes are far more reliable physically and sonically, regardless if you are a finger or plectrum player. 

 

From  James Jamerson (whose wad was hidden beneath his Fender bridge ashtray, as was custom in the early days of the instrument) to Sir Macca (a wadder with Wings and The Beatles) and his countless bass offspring, to modern players spanning the globe–  waddafoam is the sound, vision, and attitude of thumped greatness. But most of all, it is the epitome of bass unflappability.

 

It takes personal conviction to waddafoam in public view – be it on a gig or a session date, as we risk ridicule from the conservative motely. Though in this woke age of 2020, waddafoam players are garnering praise in their overt quest for the perfect and appropriate bass tone.

 

As such, Know Your Bass Player salutes the players who proudly display their waddage on stage and in the studio. 

 

Congratulations to the Inductees – Know Your Bass Player Waddafoam Hallafame 

 

Brian Stanley (Garland Jeffreys / Beach Boys / Bryan Adams)

 

 

Sir Paul McCartney (The Beatles / Wings)  

 

 

Kenny Aaronson (Stories, Bob Dylan, Billy Idol, Rick Derringer, The Yardbirds, Dust, Joan Jett…)

 

 

Bob Babbitt (Motown Funk Brothers)

 

 

Ric Grech (Blind Faith, Family, Traffic, Gram Parsons…) 

 

 

 

Robert Jenkins (Flooded Tomb, KYBP Austin Bureau Chief)

 

 

 

Suzi Quatro 

 

 

Carl Radle (Eric Clapton, Derek & The Dominoes, George Harrison, Leon Russell, Delaney & Bonnie, Joe Cocker….)

 

 

Greg Ridley (Spooky Tooth, Humble Pie) 

 

 

 

Jerry Scheff (Elvis Presley TCB, The Doors, Richard Thompson, Elvis Costello, Nancy Sinatra, Mick Jagger…)

 

 

 

Phil Chen (Jeff Beck, Rod Stewart, Robbie Krieger…) 

 

 

 

Bobby Vega (Sly Stone, Etta James, Santana….)

 

 

 

John Deacon (Queen)

 

 

 

Joe Iaquinto (Peter Cetera, Billy Preston, Branscombe Richmond and the Renegade Posse, KYBP Cub Reporter…) 

 

 

 

David Keyes (Van Morrison) 

 

 

 

Klaus Voormann (Manfred Man, George Harrison, Ringo Starr, John Lennon, Harry Nilsson, Carly Simon…)

 

 

 

Mark Polott (Haystacks Balboa, Urban Blue, KYBP Editor) 

 

 

 

John Cardone (The Sixties, John Ford Band, Mike Barry)

 

 

Tony Senatore (Genya Ravan, KYBP Adjunct Professor) *MusicMan StingRay Individual Mute Category

 

 

Carol Kaye (Wrecking Crew)

 

 

Emory Gordy Jr. (Elvis Presley, Gram Parsons, Emmylou Harris, John Denver…)

 

 

Jon Rogers (Mike Quashie, Michael James Orchestra)

 

Glenn McCready (Hell or High Water)

 

 

 

Philp Cohen (Tom Clark & The High Action Boys) 

 

 

Stephen Stills (CSN&Y, Joni Mitchell)

Renowned for his iconic status as a singer, songwriter, recording artist, and guitarist, Stephen Stills, akin to his contemporary Ronnie Wood, is an exemplary bassist.

 

Stills simultaneously serves as both a melodic player given to upper register motifs, and a pocket player on various CSN&Y sessions and permutations thereof, and with Joni Mitchell. His work on the debut CSN self-titled slab (1969) stands among the greatest rock bass albums of any era. Stills weapons of choice include Fender and Guild basses. 

 

 Stephen Stills Sound & Vision…

 

Crosby, Stills, Nash:

 

“Suite: Judy Blue Eyes” https://youtu.be/OvGfQCsfzUo

 

“Wooden Ships” https://youtu.be/AdiuqQ7xm30

 

Joni Mitchell:

 

“Night in the City” https://youtu.be/OwDkXIK8msM

 

Tony Senatore Renders “Carey” https://youtu.be/eWMfuSErCOg

 

Crosby Stills Nash & Young:

 

“Carry On” https://youtu.be/lh67x9iDCjg

 

“Teach Your Children” https://youtu.be/dQOaUnSmJr8

 

Fifty Years On: Dee Murray & Rock’s Greatest Live Album 11.17.70

 

By Thomas Semioli

 

Who’ll walk me down to church when I’m sixty years of age, when the ragged dog they gave me has been ten years in the grave…

 

To my baby boomer generation, the live album revealed the true mettle of a rock and roll recording artist. 

 

The mercifully truncated single concert slab or the more exotic and oft bloated twofer or threefer or monstrous four-fer*, replete with gatefold and perhaps a poster, was a treasured keepsake for those of us who experienced a band on stage.

 

And for those that never had the chance to witness such an event, it was a testimonial to the power of the music rendered in the moment.

 

Relatively easy and inexpensive to produce, record, release and generate cash for the record company and to a lesser extent, the artist – the live album remains a godsend of the rock era.

 

The self-indulgence, pomp and circumstance, and sheer majesty of such collections – usually enhanced with overdubs (try singing and playing in tune every night on a grueling tour) and augmented crowd noises, is to be treasured.

 

The extended jams, the occasional re-arrangements, muddy mixes, medleys, musical missteps, and sheer bloatedness and gargantuan excess of the platform merits endless celebration – simply because if rock and roll is indeed the art-form of “over the top-ness” so be it the live album as its enduring monument.

 

It is a medium that belongs to us. By the 1980s the live album was mostly archaic – reserved for jam bands and the like. In the 1990s with the (mostly) low-level musicianship of the alt-rock genre, live albums descended into historical documentation status. Mere product. By 2000, the game was over.

 

The list of rock artists whose concert recordings which wore out on the turntable is, in a word, astounding:

 

The Allman Brothers Live at the Fillmore East (1971), The Who Live at Leeds (1970), Cheap Trick At Budokan (1979), Rolling Stones Get Yer Ya-Ya’s Out (1969), Grateful Dead Europe ’72 (1972), Jimi Hendrix Band of Gypsys (1970), Deep Purple Made In Japan (1972), Peter Frampton Frampton Comes Alive (1976), Thin Lizzy Live & Dangerous (1978), Little Feat Waiting for Columbus (1979), Cream Wheels of Fire (1968), Joe Cocker Mad Dogs & Englishmen (1970), Grand Funk Live Album (1970) Grateful Dead Grateful Dead (1971), Lou Reed Rock and Roll Animal (1973), Mott The Hoople Live (1974), Leon Russell Leon Live (1975), Humble Pie Rockin’ the Fillmore (1971), The Band Rock of Ages (1972), Yes Yessongs (1973), Van Morrison It’s Too Late to Stop Now (1974), Emerson Lake & Palmer Pictures at an Exhibition (1971), King Crimson USA (1974), Bob Seger Live Bullet (1976), Rush All The World’s a Stage (1976), The Byrds Untitled (1970), Genesis Seconds Out (1977), David Bowie David Live (1974), Queen Live Killers (1979), Neil Young Rust Never Sleeps (1979), Judas Priest Unleashed in the East (1979), Motorhead No Sleep ‘Til Hammersmith (1981), Warren Zevon Stand In the Fire (1980), Santana Lotus (1974), Joni Mitchell Miles of Isles (1974), Frank Zappa and the Mothers of Invention Fillmore East (1971) and Roxy & Elsewhere (1973), Genesis Live (1973), Lou Reed Take No Prisoners (1978), 10cc Live and Let Live (1977), Velvet Underground 1969 (1974), Crosby Stills Nash & Young Four Way Street (1970) ….. and *Chicago Live at Carnegie Hall (1971) – a four album box set with horn solos! Whoa! 

       

For my money ($3.98, Sam Goody), the best of the motley is Elton John’s 11-17-70.

 

Originally a WABC-FM radio broadcast from A&R Studios in New York City, the gig was never intended for a release. However, given the flood of bootlegs circulating, along with Elton’s rocketing popularity, MCA Records decided to put out an official version. The 80-minute concert was edited down to 48- minutes in a new running order. It appeared on retail record and 8-track racks April 9, 1971 as a single platter.

 

11-17-70 could be considered the birth of the piano power trio. Drummer Nigel Olsson, bassist Dee Murray, and Sir Elton ripped through deep cuts from John’s repertoire, which at the time included two American slabs,  along with a few contemporary covers. Their improvisatory disposition merits comparison to Cream, the Allman Brothers, or a small jazz ensemble led by Miles, ‘Trane, or Bill Evans.

 

The live interpretations hardly resembled Elton’s orchestrated studio renditions – which, for some reason, were cut with studio cats and not this agile road band.

 

By this juncture in their career Elton, Nigel, and Dee were a seasoned outfit, riding the wave of the piano player’s first forays of fame and fortune. Forging a three-way musical dialogue, Nigel created a rhythmic anchor for Dee and Elton who expanded the harmonic boundaries of John’s compositions and Bernie Taupin’s cinematic libretto.

 

Murray worked a Fender Jazz, favoring the bridge pick-up, which cut like a knife yet retained the warmth of a traditional bass. I can’t help but think that Jaco heard these recordings and decided to try that tonal adjustment to his own liking.

 

On 11-17-70 Dee reveals himself to be a maestro accompanist. His deft meld of chords, arpeggios, chromatic runs, staccato phrases, sustained passages, and endless combinations thereof – to my ears, evoke comparison to Jack Bruce, James Jamerson, and Scott LaFaro.

 

But don’t take my word for it, listen to the album in it’s 1996 remastered, bonus track format:  

 

“Bad Side of the Moon” https://youtu.be/ah9OS-ziAcI

 

“Amoreena” https://youtu.be/ddJl5QccBHc

 

“Take Me to the Pilot” https://youtu.be/cC1ocO0pVgs

 

“Sixty Years On” https://youtu.be/rRngmF-AcFQ

 

“Can I Put You On” https://youtu.be/ZIp-gn3xmMc

 

“Honky Tonk Woman” https://youtu.be/s5EbECPUO88

 

Medley “Burn Down the Mission, Get Back, My Baby Left Me” https://youtu.be/I370NFAPt8E

 

Coda: Tom Semioli / Huffington Post “11 Bass Players Who Belong in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame”

Dee Murray https://bit.ly/2UBjiyg

 

 

Dark Horse: Lockdown Lowdown “There’s A Moon Tonight”

 

What Steely Dan were to jazz rockers, Dark Horse is to DIY rockers! They do things on their own terms – albeit in modern times.  A “loose” collective helmed by the father / son duo John and Jack Russell, Dark Horse makes records. Sort of. Depends on how you define a “record.” John Russell is a product of the golden album era of the 1970s. Jack Russell is a product of John Russell and inherited his dad’s musical pedigree and love of LPs. When National Record Day (which is every day in the Russell household) rolls around, these cats are on it, scooping up the rarest new sides.  That aesthetic extends to their body of work. When they have something to put out – they do. Only it’s in the streaming world. No hard copy, which is the way it is (mostly) nowadays. Yet their long-players, EPs, and singles exude the magic of polyvinyl chloride platters.

 

Given the uncertainty of COVID, which has stopped all live performances, Dark Horse goes cinematic. The song / video for “There’s A Moon Tonight” is John flying solo, with music production by bassist / multi-instrumentalist Andy Greatorex, and Amanda Greatorex chirping in the background. Sophia Russell turned on the camera to capture the moment.

 

John Russell in his favorite under-garment “look here everyone, I’ve got this fab new song….”

Says John:

One morning this past Spring I woke up with a riff in my head. This surprised me because it had never happened to me before. I got out of bed, picked up my guitar, played the riff a few times, and started to hum a melody over it.

 

I played the riff for a couple of days, then started to think about lyrics. Around that time, I had also been leafing through an art book and saw a painting of Paul Revere, riding on his horse with the moon glowing in the night sky. I thought about Revere making his famous ride, warning his fellow countrymen of the dangerous invasion that was about to happen. And then I suddenly made a connection: to the 2020 pandemic – another dangerous invasion. The lyrics to the song came quickly after that….

 

Follow Dark Horse on Spotify…

 

 

John Carey

Courtesy John Carey Net

A wizard, a true star….

 

Versatility be thy name. Bassist, composer, educator, humorist, recording artist, sideman, producer, author, journalist, band-member, collaborator, muti-instrumentalist … John Carey is a fixture on the New York City music scene. His impressive body of work spans theater, assorted varieties of session work; rock, jazz, folk, funk and permutations thereof on stage and on record.

 

Carey’s tome, The Working Bassist, What You Really Need to Know to Survive in New York City (2008), is essential reading for any player seeking to squeeze out a living on our instrument. 

 

Utilizing a variety of instruments in assorted configurations from the trad-4 to extended range, fretless, along with effects aplenty; John’s eclecticism is reflected in his expansive canon.   

 

This cat can play anything with authenticity and expertise. John’s ever-expanding list of projects, releases, gigs, and collaborators would break the internet, so keep tabs on JC by way of JohnCarey.Net and PlanetBassNYC on YouTube.

 

John Carey Sound & Vision…

 

“Hard Vision”  https://youtu.be/htjlZl9qZGY

 

“Son of the House” https://youtu.be/3iGnrL5PZRo

 

“So Bold” https://youtu.be/FYxr_Jzt8k8

 

“California” https://youtu.be/JB4lPlhQJSE

 

“Revelry Now- Someone Like You” https://youtu.be/x-qtGWg2poM

 

Margaret LaBombard (Slyboots)

Courtesy Margaret LaBombard FB

 

“If a song makes you feel something, you can thank the bass player!”

 

Whilst willingly winnowing her musical aspirations as a high-school student Margaret LaBombard made her F clef bones on trombone long before her interest electric bass tones, of which she intones “we bass players are all connected by the low frequency…”

 

A student of KYBPOF Season One star Mike Visceglia and KYBP confidant John Carey (we’ll get you on film soon, I promise), among others, MLB grooves gracefully with an occasional melodic extension on the trad-4 and extended range 5.

 

Her main gig is anchoring NYC based new-wave-ish popsters Slyboots with KG Noble.  

 

Margaret LaBombard Sound & Vision

 

“If We Could Let Go” https://youtu.be/bET0zLUdsnA

 

“Kicking the Stars” https://youtu.be/Q3lmz8HV6hM

 

“Beautiful Loser” https://youtu.be/IuE4qHp3cKs

 

Courtesy of Slyboots Com

Lothar Meid (Amon Duul II, Passport)

 

A young, impressionable Lothar Meid was initially introduced to the instrument when he heard American rhythm & blues from the U.S. troops stationed in his native German town.

 

Meid took up the bass in his teens, and soon found himself on the bandstand backing The Drifters and other soul, vocal groups when they toured military basses, an experience which eventually led to an impromptu jam with Jimi Hendrix in late 1966.

 

A prog-rock pioneer, multi-instrumentalist and solo recording artist, Lothar worked with Klaus Doldinger on various projects and with KD as the anchor of the German jazz rock collective Passport. Meid commenced a four-year stint in Amon Duul II in 1971. Blending their space / psychedelic / folk rock yearnings with supportive and countermelodic passages, Meid was also a prolific composer with ADll, and occasionally assumed a lead vocal or two.

 

In his later years Meid participated in various reunion shows with Amon Duul II and Passport until he popped his prog clogs in 2015.

 

Lothar Meid Sound & Vision….

 

Amon Dull ll…

 

“Between the Eyes” https://youtu.be/ZkSAsYjL54s

 

“Eye Shaking King” https://youtu.be/1eFLGZ14lek

 

Live 1971 https://youtu.be/3gWd_41sLc4

 

Lothar Meid Solo…

 

“Django” https://youtu.be/hvrEFUqMnMs

 

“Die Helden aus dem Undergrund” https://youtu.be/iQhsCD9jaxs

 

Passport: “Shirokko” https://youtu.be/kFY105dd_y4

 

Amon Duul circa 2009

Vivien Garry (Vivien Garry Trio / Quartet)

By Thomas Semioli

A woman’s place is in the groove!

 

She was a bass player who helped erase the gender line in America’s preeminent artform at the height of its popularity. ‘Twas a time in the 20th Century wherein female presence on the jazz bandstand was usually reserved for chirpers and hoofers. Enter Vivien Garry, born in 1920 and working the doghouse as a pro by the mid-1940s. Ms. Garry waxed sides for independent jazz record imprints aplenty, and scored a major label deal with RCA Victor as a bandleader- a rarity for bassists regardless of their biological disposition. 

 

In ’46 vivacious Viv formed the Vivien Garry Trio, and later Quartet with her renown guitarist – husband Arv Garrison.  Among Garry’s collaborators included another barrier breaking woman of note, violinist Ginger Smock. Vivien also anchored ensembles featuring top cats such as Shorty Rogers, Shelly Manne, Jimmy Giuffre,  Ricky Jordan, and Eddy Edell.

 

 Vivien Garry Sound & Vision….

 

“Hopscotch” https://youtu.be/BBVQ2vmPsBU

 

“Operation Mop” https://youtu.be/6BZuEHTefaA

 

“A Woman’s Place is In the Groove” with Ginger Smock https://youtu.be/HCkWdmJMbBE

 

Mike Howlett (Gong, Strontium 90)

 

He’s the cat who produced the iconic 80s Flock of Seagulls hit “I Ran (So Far Away)!”

 

Bassist Michael John Gilmour Howlett commenced his music career as the bassist for the Aussie pop ensemble The Affair in the late 1960s. In 1973 Mike took over the bass chair in the prog rock collective Gong, wherein he also made significant contributions as a composer. When he split from Gong, he joined what would later become The Police – serving as “lead bassist” with Gordon Sumner working the pocket, Andy Summers, and Stuart Copeland.

 

Howlett has forged  a Grammy Award winning career behind the console, producing such artists as Joan Armatrading, The Alarm, OMD, China Crisis, Thompson Twins, and Sniff ‘n’ The Tears,  and the above referenced FOS, among others.

 

A label owner, former chairman of the Music Producers Guild, and educator (Queensland University of Technology, University of South Wales, among others), Howlett has participated in various Gong reunions over the years and has collaborated extensively with various members of the band.

 

 

Mike Howlett Sound and Vision…

 

Strontium 90 with Sting, Sumner, Copeland:

 

“Visions of the Night” https://youtu.be/hdiokgQ5VbQ

 

“New World Blues” https://youtu.be/xP9ySV44lso

 

“Lady of Delight” https://youtu.be/kx8PBAn0e_o

 

Gong

 

“The Isle of Everywhere” https://youtu.be/VXhb0vsgfZE

 

“Wingful of Eyes” https://youtu.be/ehbowA_pzJE

 

Hoffnugg / Howlett “Vitality” https://youtu.be/sanDGnJgo7A

 

Courtesy Mike Howlett FB