
By Thomas Semioli
He is an icon of the instrument, and nearly competed in the Olympics as a free style swimmer!
A protégé who studied at the Prague Conservatory and Berklee College of Music, Miroslav Vitous arrived in New York City in 1967 and immediately found himself on the bandstand and recording studio with Chick Corea, Miles Davis, Freddie Hubbard, and Herbie Mann, among others.
Akin to many young jazz players in the late 60s, Vitous was open to electrified rock and rhythm & blues influences, which landed him a gig with Weather Report in 1971. As the anchor of Joe Zawinul and Wayne Shorter’s watershed ensemble, Vitous waxed slabs which are considered among the most influential jazz fusion history: Weather Report (1971), I Sing The Body Electric (1972) , Sweetnighter (1973) which also featured Andrew White on bass, and Mysterious Traveler (1974) which also featured Alphonso Johnson on electric.
Inspired by his native Czech folk music, along with such players as Scott LaFaro, Ron Carter, and Gary Peacock, Miroslav is a prolific solo recording artist, band member, collaborator, academic, and educator – among other titles, whose curricula vitae spans post-bop, fusion, avant-garde, big band and permutations thereof.
Among the more adventurous releases under his own name includes Universal Syncopations (2006) wherein Vitous bases his compositions on “symphonic samples” which he accrued over a seven-year period.
Vitous also leads a Weather Report repertory ensemble which continues the sonic, harmonic, and rhythmic explorations of the famed collective.
Dig Miroslav…
Weather Report Live 1971: https://youtu.be/iRJC5WeeNSI
“Synthesizers Dance” https://youtu.be/7RmXGzTUyOQ
Project Q Live 2013 https://youtu.be/gLcBOwvBn1s
Chick Corea “Now He Sings, Now He Sobs” https://youtu.be/eVeGH6JC-eE
From Universal Syncopations ll:
“Universal Evolution” https://youtu.be/yNoSADkgHLo
“Solar Giant” https://youtu.be/TE0B6iTAhiU

You think it’s easy to play bass with capes, drapes, nipped-in waists, high-collars, lace, and billowing frocks?
As bassist for the UK hit-making New Romantic movement ensemble Spandau Ballet, Martin John Kemp mastered his instrument in a matter of months and has anchored the Islington ensemble throughout its entire on-and-off career since 1980.
With a crisp tone abetted with flange, chorus, and delay that slices through Spandau’s hooky synth laden compositions, Kemp is an under-rated groove master who references soul, old school rhythm & blues, and funk. Martin is also an accomplished actor and director, appearing such programs as BBC East Enders, among numerous other roles.
Millions also know him as the co-host of the immensely popular podcast Rockonteurs with fellow bassist extraordinaire Guy Pratt.
Martin Kemp Sound & Vision with Spandau Ballet (a moniker suggested by writer Robert Elms who saw it scrawled across a wall in downtown Berlin…)
“Only When You Leave” from Live Aid ‘85 https://youtu.be/PX1kr7Oyzw8
“Through the Barricades” https://youtu.be/yn7HXmzxqV8
“True” https://youtu.be/bCkevvj_J2g
“Gold” https://youtu.be/ntG50eXbBtc


By Thomas Semioli
“Hey you! Don’t watch that! Watch this! This is the heavy monster sound!”
Among the most successful musical and video savvy ensembles to emerge from the UK’s late-1970s “2 Tone” ska revival were six barmy lads from Camden Town, London who appropriately dubbed themselves Madness.
With his Fender Precision perfectly tweaked low to further bolster the loveable lunacy of Suggs and his mates, Mark “Bedders” Bedford renders slinky walking bass passages and soulful motifs accented on the upbeat with a decidedly punk attitude that moved a generation – literally!
Doubling on upright, Bedders also waxed sides with Moz, Robert Wyatt, and also plies his craft with The Lee Thompson Ska Orchestra formed by the Madness saxophonist. In addition to his Fender P, Bedders among Bedders weapons of choice include the Bass Center Bruce Thomas Signature Bass!
Bedders with Madness!
“Our House” https://youtu.be/oXA6CLTDekw
“One Step Beyond” https://youtu.be/SOJSM46nWwo
“Night Boat to Cairo” https://youtu.be/lLLL1KxpYMA
“House of Fun” https://youtu.be/GJ2X9SANsME
“Baggy Trousers” https://youtu.be/Dc3AovUZgvo
Dig Bedders with Mozzer!
“Our Frank” https://youtu.be/HkqVB8ci1Wc
“Sing Your Life” https://youtu.be/nWszQj2ACw8
Dig Bedders with the Lee Thompson Orchestra Live! https://youtu.be/Fh-t0NTB7cw


By Tom Semioli
I heard you on the wireless back in fifty- two, lying awake intent at tuning in on you… “Video Killed the Radio Star”
He’s the bassist who composed an anthem which, to my ears, most represents rock and roll’s ascent / descent from an artform into entertainment – or vice versa depending on your cultural disposition.
A multi-instrumentalist, producer, composer (spanning pop songs to soundtracks), collaborator, recording artist, publisher, studio owner, and label owner, among other titles, Trevor Charles Horn learned to formulate triads on the upright from his dad, who was a professional player.
Inspired by the major rock artists of the era – The Kinks, Stones, Beatles – Horn paid his dues toiling in several bands and working for a music publisher on London’s fabled Denmark Street, pitching songs and waxing demos.
In 1978, Trevor formed The Buggles with keyboardist Geoffrey Downes, a new-wave collaborative which cut their aforementioned signature hit and consequently enjoyed pop-star fame at the ripe old age of 30.
Then things got strange…
Sharing the same management team as ye olde progressive progenitors Yes, the burgeoning Buggles buddies found themselves in the group – which caused a major stir among fans who found the close-coiffed thin-neckwear lads anathema to capes, smoke machines, and LP side-long compositions.
Their first platter with Yes, aptly titled Drama (1980), was a modest success on both sides of the pond – however the support tour proved otherwise, given that the change from progsters to popsters was too much for both the band and their legions. As such, Downes remained with Yes, and Horn opted for a (safer) career as a producer, which is where Trevor hit his stride.
Among Horn’s numerous successes behind the console and as a collaborator include Dollar The Dollar Album, ABC Lexicon of Love, along with releases by Frankie Goes To Hollywood Welcome to the Pleasuredome, Art of Noise (which Horn was a member), Grace Jones, the Pet Shop Boys, Seal, Robbie Williams, Jeff Beck, and a few slabs with his old mates Yes and their various offshoots which were artistic and commercial triumphs.
For his accomplishments, Horn has garnered three Brit Awards, a Grammy, and an Ivor Novello Award. In 2011 his was appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBDE) for his services to the music industry.
On the topic of Trevor the bass player – as you would expect, he is the consummate song player. The last time we checked up on him, Trevor was anchoring The Dire Straits Legacy ensemble and The Trevor Horn Band, among other projects.
Dig these Trevor tracks…
“Video Killed the Radio Star” https://youtu.be/W8r-tXRLazs
“Living in The Plastic Age” https://youtu.be/S3Ecs07in7U
The Producers – Two Tribes Live: Trevor Horn, Stephen Lipson, Lol Créme, Ash Soan https://youtu.be/IBWY8oAnnww
The Trevor Horn Band “All The Things She Said” https://youtu.be/T231VgvcVx4
Yes “Tempus Fugit” https://youtu.be/vzxZzIiO84Y
Yes “Into the Lens” https://youtu.be/qXhYsMEjsZ8
Art of Noise “Close (To the Edit)” https://youtu.be/-sFK0-lcjGU
The Dire Straits Legacy “Walk of Life” https://youtu.be/iN8StueiLpw


By Tom Semioli
“I’m hooky by name, hooky by nature!”
A legend, innovator, multi-instrumentalist, composer, producer, author, club owner, educator (University of Central Lancashire) , and anchor of two of iconic ensembles, he is an instantly identifiable master of the electric bass… which all began when a shoddy amp forced to him to render upper register motifs and develop a chordal approach to the instrument…and the rest, as they say, is history.
Peter Hook’s tenure in Joy Division and New Order embraced (and practically invented) post-punk, dance, alt-rock, electronica, and permutations thereof.
With Joy Division, which Hook founded with Bernard Sumner after witnessing a Sex Pistols performance at the Manchester Lesser Free Trade Hall in 1976, Peter’s unique approach to the instrument served as a countermelodic foil to Ian Curtis’ linear melodies.
With New Order, Hook focused more on the pocket, forging dance rhythms which served a supportive role amid the din of synthesizers and polyrhythms. The impact and influence of Joy Division and New Order on modern rock and pop is incalculable. Numerous artists cite them as a touchstone as recording artists and performers.
Though he mostly waxes sides with his beloved Yamaha BB1200 (he purchased several when the model discontinued) Hook has recorded and performed with numerous instruments including extended range, Gibson EB, Hondo Rickenbacker, Ecleshall, and Shergold Marathon, among others; which he abets with a wide array of effects. In 2010 Peter had basses constructed from wood from the dancefloor of the Hacienda club where New Order made their bones.
Following his rather acrimonious departure from New Order, Hook has been active as a bandleader, and collaborator, among other endeavors.

Hooky with author, influencer, KYBP superfan, hunk Geoffrey Dicker!
Joy Division …
“Wilderness” https://youtu.be/tZhKV32Vf7U
“Love Will Tear Us Apart” https://youtu.be/zuuObGsB0No
“Transmission” https://youtu.be/6dBt3mJtgJc
New Order …
“ Leave Me Alone” https://youtu.be/JEJpmDUMKco
“The Perfect Kiss” https://youtu.be/x3XW6NLILqo
“Blue Monday” https://youtu.be/LQaehcfXvK0
“Regret” https://youtu.be/71ZHVmSuBJM
“Sunrise” https://youtu.be/KQfV-9tv6Ag
With Freebass featuring Andy Rourke and Mani…
“The God Machine” https://youtu.be/SMiKVwInp7g
Peter Hook and The Light at the 2020 Salford Music Festival https://youtu.be/1bjUYyePhyo


Nick Beggs, bassist, by Tom Semioli
Seminal Sides: Nick is yet another cat wherein if you discover his name in the credits, buy (stream) the slab! However for our purposes , do check out… Kajagoogoo White Feathers (1983), Genesis Revisited with Steve Hackett (2012), Do Nothing Till You Hear From Me, The Mute Gods (2016);
Artists / Bands: Kajagoogoo, The Mute Gods, Fish On Friday, Howard Jones, Steve Hackett, Gary Numan, Alphaville, Belinda Carlisle, Emma Bunton, John Paul Jones, and Steve Wilson to cite a select few.
You’re too shy shy, hush-hush, eye to eye…
It is paraphrased (by this writer) that “if you remember the 1980s – then you weren’t really there.” However, I was there, and I vividly recall the first time I heard this inescapable pop ditty “Too Shy” underpinned by a killer slap bass passage as rendered by Nicholas Beggs.
This Winslow, Buckinghamshire native first came to prominence as the anchor of the early ‘80s chart-topping, teen heart-throb Brit collective which worked under the moniker of Kajagoogoo – a name inspired by the sounds an infant (and a few heads of state…) utter in an attempt to communicate.
As is the fickle fate of many in the music biz, Kajagoogoo commercially flamed out following their fine dance-pop debut White Feathers (1983) upon the exit of their (gorgeous) lead singer Limhal (Christopher Hamill), and despite waxing two rather commendable platters under the truncated Kaja calling- card. They called it day in ’85 though they’ve since reunited on occasion.
Yet the demise of the ‘Googoo, as we affectionately refer to them, did not derail Beggs. In fact, it was just the beginning of an adventurous career as a prolific composer, collaborator, producer, clinician, vocalist, sideman, educator, journalist (Bass Guitar Magazine, Loudersound, Music Radar ) solo recording artist, and record label executive (A&R Phonogram), among other endeavors.
Among Beggs’ projects which beg recognition include prog ensembles Iona, Fish On Friday, and The Mute Gods.
Nick has also toured and/or recorded extensively with Howard Jones, Steve Hackett, Gary Numan, Alphaville, Belinda Carlisle, Emma Bunton, John Paul Jones, and Steve Wilson to cite a select few.
Nick’s weapons of choice include a MIDI modded out Chapman Stick (“Virtual Stick”), Fender Jazz (fretless), Spector 4,5, fretless), a Manson Double-Neck Nick Beggs Bass, Rickenbacker 4003, MusicMan Stingray, Wal (4,5 string), and Vigier Arpege, among others.
Beggs enjoys a high profile in the bass community – there are numerous videos and features wherein he demos products, lectures on the craft, discusses his approach to the instrument(s) and his life philosophies which are worthy of your exploration! Beggs is a strong proponent of music education – advising bassists to read, study theory, technique, and above all “listen” and play in as many situations as possible!
We had him selected for a KYBP on Film interview in 2019 however scheduling prevented our meeting, but when we return, we’ll talk with Nick.
In the meantime, dig these Beggs bass guitar and stick tracks:
Kajagoogoo “Too Shy” https://youtu.be/rkpG4XApJ28
Kaja “The Lion’s Mouth” https://youtu.be/tU_ik6msJDM
Iona “Flight of the Wild Goose” https://youtu.be/0nKiOCLcnMU
Fish On Friday “Letting Go of You” https://youtu.be/0nKiOCLcnMU
The Mute Gods “Feed The Troll” https://youtu.be/7oinol5pNWY
The Mute Gods “One Day” with Alex Lifeson https://youtu.be/9oO4PQDemQE
With Steve Hackett working a Rickenbacker 4003 “Tubehead” https://youtu.be/LRbvUtTTutA and “Everyday” https://youtu.be/KUZdQnMKuNQ
Howard Jones Acoustic Trio “What Is Love” https://youtu.be/FhtFZGOfrXc
“Portrait of Tracy” “Words Fail Me” https://youtu.be/7u-FwNLPyOk
Beggs Plays Steve Wilson (snack and nail file included) “Personal Shopper” https://youtu.be/uROM05_ARxc


No ensemble captured the zeitgeist of the MTV era more so than Duran Duran and their bassist Nigel John Taylor. Though oft derided as “video stars” more so than musicians, this Birmingham lot had the chops as players, recording artists, and performers to go the distance and then some as they remain a force – albeit nostalgic – on the bandstand and recording studio. Nice work if you can get it!
Profoundly inspired by David Bowie’s Berlin-era anchor George Murray, assorted Roxy Music players, and Chic’s Bernard Edwards (John now owns his MusicMan Stingray bass), Taylor’s basslines – as played on an Aria II model – waxed with Duran Duran and the super group that actually lived up to its name – The Power Station- created the hooks that made the hits.
Aside from Duran x 2, John has cut solo sides, authored a fine memoir In The Pleasure Groove, acted on film and television, and collaborated with simpatico pallies including Steve Jones, Duff McKagan, and Matt Sorum in Neurotic Outsiders.

John Taylor Sound & Vision…
Duran Duran
“Last Chance on the Stairway” https://youtu.be/quqp_PeWc6A
“Tiger Tiger” https://youtu.be/3pScycbJX60
“Rio” https://youtu.be/nTizYn3-QN0
“Notorious” https://youtu.be/Z9z0e1Wm64M
Power Station
“Get It On Bang A Gong” https://youtu.be/O2vHbXI2p4k
“Some Like It Hot” https://youtu.be/Hw1t7OCESUw
Neurotic Outsiders
“Jerk” https://youtu.be/bOs3wBAfwMo
Coda: Taylor’s chorus enhanced tone and nifty combination of finger and slap style was in such high demand in the 1980s that I ventured to Denmark Street in London to appease the US producers who employed me and brought home an Aria II bass for sessions as said instrument was not available stateside in them days! That’s how influential they were.

John Taylor with author, influencer KYBP Super Fan Geoffrey Dicker

He is the Mac in Fleetwood Mac!
Seminal Sides: John Mayall & The Blues Breakers with Eric Clapton; Then Play On (1969), Future Games (1971), Mystery to Me (1973), Fleetwood Mac (1975), Rumours (1977), Tusk (1979), Live (1980), Say You Will (2003).
The late, truly great British blues guitar icon Peter Green was clever to name his fledgling ensemble for drummer Mick Fleetwood and former tax inspector / bassist John Graham McVie. Acknowledged among the most identifiable and flexible rhythm sections in rock history, Fleetwood’s bona fide Mac is a consummate song player – from pop to improvisatory blues.
Born in London in 1945, John commenced his musical journey as a teen, moving from trumpet, then to guitar, and then to bass when his dad purchased a snazzy Fender akin to Jet Harris – which must have cost a small fortune in the economically depressed post-war UK!
McVie’s tenure in John Mayall’s Blues Breakers commenced when he was still relatively new to the instrument. Yet McVie help set the template for standard rock blues electric bass: working the lower register, outlining the changes, plying subtle harmonic extensions, and supporting the resident god-like guitar hero with a fat tone.
As with The Rolling Stones’ Bill Wyman, Mac’s approach evokes how Willie Dixon might have sounded had he played electric – which is quite logical given that his boss John Mayall (who hired and fired Mac several times) tutored the emerging musician, and was a staunch Dixon devotee.
Blues Breakers with Eric Clapton (aka “Beano”) is among the most influential albums of the classic rock era. Note that McVie and drummer Hughie Flint worked the pocket in the service of Mayall and Slowhand with a decidedly swing feel.
John McVie Sound & Vision…
John Mayall & The Bluesbreakers
“All Your Love” https://youtu.be/rUUEtCBhn_Q
“Steppin’ Out” https://youtu.be/PkulcvRkd4I
With Fleetwood Mac, and its various singer / songwriter / “front persons” including Peter Green, Jeremy Spencer, Danny Kirwan, Bob Welch, Christine McVie, Stevie Nicks, Lindsay Buckingham, Dave Mason, Rick Vito, Billy Burnette, Neil Finn, and Bekka Bramlett, McVie waxed inventive passages in support of the superstar singers and their chart-topping songs and album tracks. Often the subject of his ex-wife Christine McVie’s songs on Rumours, McVie’s weapons of choice included the Fender Jazz, Precision, and Telecaster Bass, and Alembic. Nowadays he’s a Lakland man. In 1992 John waxed his sole solo slab John McVie’s Gotta Band with Lola Thomas.

McVie also worked the occasional session, most notably with Warren Zevon on the classic track “Werewolves of London” with Mick Fleetwood helming the drum chair: https://youtu.be/iKtPOC3VqGs
And dig these Deep Mac tracks…..
“Rattlesnake Shake” (Then Play On / 1969) https://youtu.be/ob5Q_daCOB8
“Coming Your Way” (Then Play On) https://youtu.be/JCEqKVDsa0E
“Station Man” (Kiln House / 1970) https://youtu.be/YSZJFWn7OM4
“Sands of Time” (Future Games / 1971) https://youtu.be/1Jkp34jMeEw
“Child of Mine” (Bare Trees / 1972) https://youtu.be/F–ImFAn8oU
“Revelation” (Penguin / 1973) https://youtu.be/chcRAWh8Tik
“Miles Away” https://youtu.be/3za5HwkfuVQ and “Hypnotized” (Mystery to Me / 1973) https://youtu.be/fDzXbdxeeHI
“Bermuda Triangle” (Heroes are Hard to Find / 1974) https://youtu.be/f83nXE0TBvA
“Rhiannon” (Fleetwood Mac / 1975) https://youtu.be/jQAK6sVovUk and “The Chain” (Rumours / 1977) https://youtu.be/kBYHwH1Vb-c
Photos Courtesy of Fleetwood Mac . Com


Photo by Wade Gradia
Greg Lake, bassist by Tom Semioli
Lady Supermarket with an apple in her basket, knocks on the manager’s door…
Seminal Sides: King Crimson, Court of the Crimson King (1969) and In the Wake of Poseidon (1970); Emerson, Lake & Palmer, ELP (1970), Tarkus (1971), Pictures at an Exhibition (1971), Trilogy (1972), Brain Salad Surgery (1973), Works Volume 1 (1977)
Among the most influential, innovative, and revered ensembles of prog rock’s golden era were the original configurations of King Crimson, and Emerson Lake & Palmer – both fronted and anchored by vocalist, bassist, songwriter Gregory Stuart Lake. Prompted to take up the electric bass at the behest of his school buddy Robert Fripp – Lake’s work on Court of the Crimson King (1969) was watershed – his adventurous passages bolstered the ensemble’s frenetic forays into classical and jazz in a rock context.
Said Lake on his website “…there is a common thread throughout all the music. The forms may be different, but each one to some degree draws upon inspiration from the past. I am as proud to have been as influenced by people like Elvis and Little Richard as I am by composers like Copeland and Prokofiev and I’m honored when other musicians regard me as one of their inspirations.”
With ELP, Lake’s bass artistry served as the rhythmic and harmonic bridge between his two virtuoso mates as they broke ground on each ensuing release. Lake, akin to Sir Paul, Brian Wilson, and Joe Osborn, was a master of upper register countermelodies. His weapons of choice included the Fender Jazz, and later, the Alembic.
Greg’s excellence as a bassist was matched by his excellence as a singer and pop composer: “Lucky Man” (a song he wrote at the age of 12), “From The Beginning,” and “Still You Turn Me On,” among others are defining recordings of the classic rock era.
Though his solo career and various ELP reunions – including one incarnation with Cozy Powell in the drum chair – failed to generate any significant attention beyond hard-core fans, Lake’s legacy with King Crimson and ELP as a bassist, singer, composer, and producer is matchless – and worthy of rediscovery and further evaluation by 21st Century schizoid prog rockers! .
“21st Century Schizoid Man” live at Hyde Park 1969 https://youtu.be/MM_G0IRLEx4
“Cat Food” https://youtu.be/uQuAboEvags
“Lucky Man” https://youtu.be/lmT2KvF4P5g
“From the Beginning” https://youtu.be/a9kXfW2gIcw
“Still You Turn Me On” https://youtu.be/McNQqH3RGGI


He anchored several top bands in his native New Zealand including Healing Force, Chain, and a collective which worked under the moniker of “Mississippi” – which later changed their name to the Little River Band. Bassist Charles Turu Tumahai migrated to London and answered an anonymous Melody Maker classified ad planted by Bill Nelson for Be Bop Deluxe, and the rest, as they say, is history.
Why Be Bop Deluxe’s smart meld of progressive, glam, and power pop never achieved wider commercial success ala Roxy Music and David Bowie remains a bona fide rock and roll mystery….
Tumahai came on board for Be Bop’s second album Futurama (1975) and was featured prominently on the band’s finest studio set Sunburst Finish (1976) which featured FM radio staples “Fair Exchange,” and “Ships in the Night.”

In addition to his accomplished backing vocal skills, Tumahai, who mostly plied his craft with a Fender Precision and Telecaster bass, incorporated reggae, funk, hard rock, disco, and jazz influences into Nelson’s mesmerizing tales of romance and space exploration.
Following the demise of Be Bop, Charles toiled in a few more bands, most notably Tandoori Cassette, which featured former members of Jethro Tull (Barrimore Barlowe) and Nazareth (Zal Cleminson).
In 1985 Tumahai returned to New Zealand, working as an activist on behalf of Maori offenders in the country’s prison system, and as an educator. Sadly, Charles passed in 1995 while working in the Auckland District Court of a sudden heart attack at the age of 46.
Charles Tumahai Sound & Vision…
Be Bop Deluxe Live at the BBC 1976 “Ships in the Night” and “Fair Exchange” https://youtu.be/I6j6Yo4tjPM
…and Live at the BBC “Forbidden Lovers” and “Down on Terminal Street” https://youtu.be/lPDzqllyGH4
Healing Force: “Golden Miles” https://youtu.be/NEmsy0UgqoA
