The Move, co-founded by bassist Christopher “Ace” Kefford were among the seminal British psychedelic-pop progressive rock ensembles of the late 1960s – early 70s. Appearing only on the band’s self-titled platter, Ace was a charismatic performer who, according to drummer Bev Beven “functioned as the group’s pouting glamour-man.” Akin to Brian Jones and Syd Barrett, Ace was a casualty of the psychedelic era.
A scrapped 1968 solo album produced by Tony Visconti which eventually surfaced in 2003, scattered recordings by the short-lived Ace Kefford Stand collective featuring drummer Cozy Powell, and a brief stint (and single) with the band Rockstar (1976) have further enhanced his legend.
Ace Kefford Sound & Vision…
The Move:
“Morning Dew” https://youtu.be/PJz2BOcufu8
“Flowers in the Rain” https://youtu.be/cT2exTHx8f0
“Fire Brigade” https://youtu.be/UVys3YPRLWk
Ace Kefford Solo:
“Save the Life of My Child https://youtu.be/9aWl44pcgeY
“Daughter of the Sun” https://youtu.be/1lzRA5B1q_g
Courtesy of Glen McCready FB
Timing in life is everything…
You know Glenn from his appearance in Know Your Bass Player Season Deux: His episode “Any Fool Can Play Guitar” https://youtu.be/hfqDIlybG9A is testimony to his stance as a “rock and roll lifer.”
He is player borne of the rock and roll trenches: working the clubs, the cafés, the social gatherings, public events, music venues large and small, among other gigs. McCready is a songwriter, singer, multi-instrumentalist, producer, engineer, and bassist. Glenn interprets the work of the masters in his band of grizzled veterans, Hell Or High Water. He waxes slabs under his own name too, featuring compositions that recall the golden Laurel Canyon era.
McCready’s latest effort I Hear Your Voice arrives under the moniker Bringing Down the House – a collaborative effort with Michael Sakoulas.
Says Glenn in the liner notes / press release: Broken hearts and broken lives, hope for the future and questions about the past. This is a lot of what Bringing Down The House is about. We took a different route this time, going for a quieter overall sound. Most of the songs are acoustic based and use percussion in lieu of a full kit on almost all of the songs. We tried to do some different things, from Michael’s bouzouki on the title track, to the walking bass line and unison vocal/guitar riff in, “Another Morning.”
A lot of the songs are pretty personal; as for the writing, we like to say the wand chooses the wizard. “Once In A Lifetime,” pretty much happened exactly as written, and was one of the few that started with the bass line. And, (before time) Takes It All Away” started out as a song about caring for people with dementia, and ended up being about me caring for my mom before I realized it… the wand chooses the wizard. There are the eternal questions about choices we make, “What Were (we doing)” and “Memories” letting someone know you wouldn’t want to be anywhere else after all these years, “Our Lives” and even some hope for society, “Voices Back.”
It’s been said that Bringing Down The House hearkens back to the old, “coffee-house” days of stories and songs. That sums it up pretty well. Just songs we hope everyone can relate to.
Timing in life is everything. Due to the pandemic we are denied the opportunity to hear BDTH live, which to my ears, is Glenn’s natural habitat. The stage and its intangibles, the dynamic of a performance, the high-wire is the “elan vital” of all rock and roll lifers.
Until the plague lifts we are all in lockdown – here’s the lowdown on Glenn and Bringing Down the House…
What have you been doing musically in the lockdown?
Actually, more writing than I’ve done in a long time!
Why a “mostly acoustic” album?
Michael and I love that whole, “singer/songwriter” and “Laurel Canyon” style, and I think we wanted to see if we could do a whole album in that style. And we wanted to be a little more… I guess thoughtful, both with subject matter and the lyrics themselves. What was really fun about this was deciding what to put where, instead of the usual bass, drums, electric guitar…etc. Michael got to play his bouzouki on one track, and mark my words, we’ll find more ways to work that in! I think one song has a “flute” solo. And all except one are just hand percussion instead of a kit.
It’s funny, when we were planning this, Michael referred to it as our, Rubber Soul. I sure hope so, because then I think came Revolver and Sgt. Pepper. That’s not a bad goal to shoot at.
Once again, what role does the song-cycle (aka “album”) play in a world of streaming, song-lists, and Tic-Tockery?
I’m not sure there’s a real pattern all the way through to be honest. I know we wanted to end with something a little more hopeful than usual – “Voices back.” I know there is a mix of subjects, from saying goodbye to a loved one, before time to the, “what if?” questions we all have, “What Were we Doing.”
Did you work the songs out on stage before committing them to (metaphorical) wax?
A couple of them had been part of our live set, but we wanted to have a studio version, especially since Michael is such a better rhythm player than I am. He makes all of this stuff sound so much better. I think rhythm guitar is as underrated a skill as bass playing is, probably because it’s almost looked on as a support role. Some of the other songs were actually written during the recording process, so they’ve not had a chance to be road tested. I’m looking forward to playing some of these out.
Talk about your relationship with Michael – what makes your partnership click? Explain the yin-yang of Bringing Down the House?
First, we’ve been friends for forty plus years, so there’s no nonsense, we both know each other far too well. As far as the yin/yang… the best way I can explain it is that from the moment he picked up a guitar, I was there! All he ever wanted to do was play rhythm guitar. He’s the embodiment of, “Guitar George” from “Sultans of Swing” whereas I am a bass player first and foremost, but I play all the other instruments you hear on the record. Some better than others of course. I’m a little more open personality wise. Not that Michael isn’t, he’s actually one of the funniest guys I know, he’s just not as out there. And he’s absolutely more sensible than I am.
Not to dwell on doom and gloom, but a cure-all vaccine is the only way to return to gatherings as we know it in the performing arts – is there life after gigs? Can you adapt to a remote music career with videos and recording taking the place of live performance?
I think one of the good things about, “BDTH” is that we are actually built for small gatherings. The name came as a play on the whole, “Concerts In Your House” idea. The recordings are good because, hopefully it gives our audience the material we’re going to play out. Could we go remote? I suppose, but we’d rather not. And I can say that I am far better with an audience than not.
Bass players in quarantine / shelter tend to salivate over instruments during their isolation – what are some of your latest bass obsessions?
I have to say, I am loving my two P-Basses, the “Players” model and The Sting model, basically a ’51 so really, I’m good I admit I have been missing my Epiphone EB-3 lately, mainly for the humbucker for recording. And they’re cool looking as hell!
Also thinking about an acoustic, I’d love to do the whole campfire thing with Michael… and Tom Wipf…I’m hoping the third time will be the charm.
How can we hear I Hear Your Voice – list all streaming, hard copy options…
We have the old school CDs for now. I’m waiting for the word that it’s up in all of the usual outlets. Unfortunately, one aspect of this stuff that I’m really not very good at is the business/promotional end. But for now, you can email us at [email protected] and we can send one.
What is on Glenn’s playlist nowadays?
Obviously the “Canyon” and singer/songwriter stuff is always there, also lots of 60’s stuff. The Association is always somewhere nearby Also have rediscovered a bunch of albums, Odyssey and Oracle is criminally unknown here…
Glenn’s future – plans Hell High Water, Bringing Down the House, solo…
HoHW is doing a livestream in November 1st. We have played the NYC Marathon for the past dozen or so years, and even though there’s no marathon this year, we’re still playing. As far as solo, I think those days might be gone. Playing with Michael the way “BDTH” does, is really… truly… my favorite way of doing this. We’ve been friends for so long, and even back then, this is what I wanted… just two guys, guitars… and some songs and stories. I can’t imagine anything better.
Courtesy of Kevin Scott Music Com
There are bass players who realize their dreams….and there are the cats who anchor the legends.
Enter Kevin Scott – who has achieved both goals and more in his remarkable career.
Kevin’s musical journey commenced while he was in his teens, as a bassist in his dad’s bluegrass band. Then this Dothan, Alabama native heard Colonel Bruce Hampton and his life changed. He migrated to Atlanta where Hampton resided, and worked his way into the guitar legend’s band.
Touring and recording with Hampton raised Scott’s profile. He found himself on the bandstand with another legend, drummer Bernard Purdie for the ATL Collective’s yearly “James Brown’s Funky Christmas” wherein Scott serves as musical director. And yet more legends – guitarists Jimmy Herring, and Wayne Krantz have enlisted Kevin for recording and touring.
Scott established himself as a first call bassist in Atlanta, anchoring such ensembles as; Ruby Velle & The Soulphonics, Russell Gunn and Elektrik Butterfly, Whitney Tai, King Baby, Grant Green Jr., Mindi Abair, Fergie, FORQ, Wale, Monica, and Big Shanty, among others.
A finger / plectrum player, among Kevin’s primary weapons of choice is a weathered vintage Fender Precision. Scott’s funky disposition serves the singer and the song – he’s also a prolific soloist. Keep up with Kevin Scott at www.KevinScottMusic.com
KYBP hat tip to Scott Gordon: Says SG “Kevin Scott is one of the baddest bass dudes out there! He’s my favorite young gun…at 35 he is the most versatile bassist …and a super humble guy to top it off. Jesse from St Paul and the Broken Bones has taken a few lessons with Kev and even bought most of the gear that Kev uses!”
Check out Kevin Scott’s KnowYourBassPlayer Spotify Playlist….
Kevin Scott Sound & Vision…
Bruce Hampton: Live https://youtu.be/_C73ELythTs
Wayne Krantz: Under Cover Pop Tour https://youtu.be/ornbl4lqBQ4
ATL Collective Live with Nigel Hall https://youtu.be/E_v1R8CciUE
Ruby Velle “It’s About That Time” https://youtu.be/oTR_ls5a4MQ
Elektrik Butterfly “War Pigs” https://youtu.be/sJI9lgu1sDM
Wale “Ambition” (Kevin served as co-writer on this #1 hit) https://youtu.be/O7ZbM7ak8uw
Photo by Drew Burke – Courtesy of Kevin Scott Music Com!
Courtesy of St. Paul & The Broken Bones Com
It’s all about the pocket!
Born into a musical family in British Columbia, Canada, Jesse Phillips studied music at Loyola University in New Orleans. His original goal was to be a music teacher, however fate intervened…
Collaborating with singer Paul Janey, Jesse co-founded an “alternative soul” outfit which they dubbed The Secret Dangers. Switching their moniker to St. Paul & The Broken Bones, the duo waxed an EP before they hit the stage. Enlisting simpatico musicians, SP&TBB cut their first indie album which garnered attention aplenty in the major rock rags including Rolling Stone, and Paste, among others.
Their first national TV appearance on CBS This Morning put them on the map commercially. In 2015 the Rolling Stones chose them as their support act on several shows.
Drawing influence from the elite Stax, Motown, Muscle Shoals, TSOP players – Phillips is a master of the pocket….outlining the changes with grace notes and harmonic extensions which reach out of the bass cabinets and grab the listener!
Phillips’ main weapon of choices are Fender Jazz and Precision, and Reverend basses.
Jesse Phillips Sound & Vision…
Live on CBS This Morning “Flow With It” https://youtu.be/JOtMs1FzWN8
“Call Me” https://youtu.be/z7s9A3s8iv8
“Apollo” https://youtu.be/mHEPoG11EtE
“Grass Is Greener” https://youtu.be/pb8yga8kygU
“I’ll Be Your Woman” https://youtu.be/rrFmJik2cVg
Courtesy Drive By Truckers Com
A producer, indie label and studio owner (Dial Back Sound), bassist with the garage rock quartet The Dexateens, and current bassist with Drive-By Truckers, Matt Patton plies his craft with time tested pocket grooves and an occasional melodic flourish amid the sonic din of his bandmates.
Matt’s weapons of choice include Fender Precision and Danelectro basses.
Check out Dial Back Sound: http://www.dialbacksound.com/
Matt Patton Sound & Vision….
The Dexateens
“Makers Mound” https://youtu.be/JYg0WPcZ7zc
“Naked Ground” https://youtu.be/dFdhBGiByLM
“Take Me to the Speedway” https://youtu.be/A6N1ctwRIeE
Drive-By Truckers
“Thoughts and Prayers” https://youtu.be/tkD4xSqNVII
“What It Means” https://youtu.be/mY0qOCUy27Q
Bassist, singer, songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, recording artist, Shonna Tucker was raised near Muscle Shoals, Alabama on a steady musical diet of soul and country!
During her eight-year tenure in the Drive-By Truckers, Tucker afforded the alt-rockers a decidedly rhythm and blues underpinning.
Tucker peppers her pocket grooves with funky grace notes, tasteful rapid fire riffage, and slippery harmonic extensions – all in the service of the song.
As an electric – upright session player / collaborator, Tucker has waxed sides with Booker T., Betty LaVette, Son on Shade with Alabama Shakes Heath Fogg, Pegi Young and the Survivors, and Billy Ray Cyrus to site a few. She cut her sole solo slab today under the moniker Shonna Tucker and Eye Candy featuring tracks aplenty with pop overtures. Her latest EP is entitled Dreams of Mine.
Shonna’s weapon of choice is a vintage Fender Precision.
Shonna Tucker Sound & Vision…
Drive By Truckers: “Used to Be a Cop” https://youtu.be/kvJ-lWOZMYg
Booker T. “Potato Hole” https://youtu.be/CjA0YJPmLQ0
Son on Shade “Tell Me How Long” https://youtu.be/7BOhfgJ9j6g
Betty LaVette “Before The Money Came” https://youtu.be/SBhKZtyIMNI
Pegi Young “You Won’t Take My Laugh Away From Me” https://youtu.be/wQYAvi5NTgk
Shonna Tucker & Eye Candy: “Since Jimmy Came” https://youtu.be/55nw-oeObPs
Courtesy of Alabama Shakes Com
Give thanks to the great state of Alabama, home to such music legends as Hank Williams, Wilson Pickett, Tammy Wynette, Percy Sledge, Lionel Ritchie, Candi Staton, Chuck Leavall (Allman Bros., Rolling Stones) Odetta, Sun Ra, and Nat “King” Cole to cite a select few.
In a few years we may add the name Alabama Shakes to that esteemed list. While a high-school student in Athens, Zac Cockrell approahed singer Brittany Howard about making music together. Recalls Howard “I just knew that he played bass and wore shirts with cool bands on them that nobody had heard of…”
Rather than cover artists that inspired him such as David Bowie and assorted prog-rockers, Zac, Brittney, guitarist Heath Fogg, and drummer Steve Johnson began to compose as a team. After paying their dues working clubs throughout the south, they scored a record deal and the rest, as they say is history.
In addition to their sold-out gigs and nearly two million platters sold, Alabama Shakes has garnered four Grammy Awards, along with several NME, Brit Award, and Q Award nominations.
Their meld of southern rock, blues, and soul is most representative of the state they call home.
Cockrell works the pocket akin to his Alabama Muscle Shoals ancestors, sticking close to the root notes with harmonic extensions that embellish the singer and the songs. His weapon of choice, as you would expect is a vintage Fender Precision, LaBella flatwounds, and a waddafoam at the bridge!
Zac Cockrell Sound & Vision…
“Hold On” https://youtu.be/nin-fiNz50M
“Don’t Wanna Fight” https://youtu.be/nin-fiNz50M
“Future People” https://youtu.be/JbR999N5MiA
In Season Deux of Know Your Bass Player on Film, Rob Stoner comments on Johann Sebastian Bach’s importance to modern day bassists.
“Bach’s left hand is were bass started….” https://youtu.be/eTGeRO3aqSA
By Tony Senatore
Johann Sebastian Bach might seem an unlikely role model for aspiring bass players, but his influence looms large for many. Jack Bruce considered Bach “the ultimate in bass players” and asserted that bassists could learn everything that there is to know in conventional harmony from listening to him. When reflecting on my earliest experiences as a bassist, Bach’s Six Suites For Violincello Solo as well as Sonatas and Partitas for Solo Violin were integral in developing my overall concept.
Perhaps the best example of Bach’s influence on bass guitar is Glenn Cornick’s work on Jethro Tull’s Stand Up (1969). The third track on side one of this seminal record was Ian Anderson’s arrangement of J. S. Bach’s “Bouree.” Cornick’s solo over the changes of “Bouree” was radical and revolutionary for the time.
I recently learned the track for a video featured on Know Your Bass Player, and noted some similarities between Cornick and Steve Swallow, both tonally as well as stylistically.
I asked Steve if Bach factored into his approach as a bassist, and if he was aware of Cornick, since they were contemporaries.
Steve conveyed that neither Jethro Tull nor Glenn Cornick provided any influence or inspiration, but that he shared Cornick’s “clear fondness for Bach.”
He continued,” I consider Bach the ultimate source of contrapuntal bass lines, and the Cello Suites the one essential bass text. I know the ‘Bouree’ Tull played, and I used it as lesson material when I taught in the mid-70s at Berklee, and I appreciate that Glenn nailed it without pretense, as a bass player should.”
Courtesy of Oteil Burbridge Com
He is a virtuoso of the instrument, and among of the elite players in the jam band / improvisational fusion (jazz / funk / world) sub-genres. Oteil Burbridge started off as so many bass player do, on drums!
Recognizing his multi-faceted musical talents, Oteil’s mom encouraged her son (whose name translates as “explorer”) to investigate additional instruments including violin and trumpet. Honing his chops in his native Washington D.C. club circuit, Burbridge garnered national attention aplenty as the anchor of the experimental Aquarium Rescue Unit – an ensemble which featured members of jam-band giants Phish, Phil Lesh & Friends, and Blues Traveler among others.
Burbridge took over the Allmans bass chair in 1997 following the departure of Allen Woody. He waxed the band’s final studio slab – the underrated Hittin’ the Note (2003) wherein he worked the five string and appeared and numerous live sets. To my ears, Burbridge’s work with the Brothers echoed Berry Oakley as Oteil was given to working the pocket which occasional upper register flourishes. Burbridge also took an occasional lead vocal with the band.
Among Oteil’s high-profile collaborations included Dead & Company helmed with Grateful alumnae Bob Weir, Billy Bill Kreutzmann, and Mickey Hart along with John Mayer. He also joined founding drummers Butch Trucks and Jai Johnny Johnson in Les Brers. Burbridge also served as the harmonic and rhythmic anchor of the Tedeschi Trucks band – which garnered a Grammy as for Best Blues Album in in 2012 for Revelator.
Burbridge has recorded under his own name and as a bandleader – Oteil Burbridge and The Peacemakers. Among his notable session credits include Gregg Allman, Warren Hayes, Herbie Hancock, and The Zac Brown Band.
Oteil has been cited by this writer in Huffington Post for his tenure in the final incarnations of the Allman Bros. Band as deserving of Rock and Roll Hall of Fame honors with Lamar Williams, David Goldflies, and Allen Woody. 11 More Bass Players Who Belong in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame (2016) Link: https://bit.ly/2EZx1Lf
A truly diverse and prolific cat – keep up with Oteil at www.OteilBurbridge.com – gear heads be advised to check out OB’s extensive collection of basses – ranging from the trad-for to the six string…
Oteil Burbridge Sound & Vision…
Aquarium Rescue Unit: Live at the Jacksonville Jazz Festival 1996: https://youtu.be/lzxVxC5kLMQ
Allman Brothers: “Instrumental Illness” https://youtu.be/Z1_6HPpTuuU
Dead & Company “Comes a Time” with Oteil on lead vocal https://youtu.be/-zHpenigs3k
Tedeschi Trucks Band “Midnight in Harlem” https://youtu.be/K1J04ugcdi8
Les Brers “Every Hungry Woman” https://youtu.be/zOhYD5TfUrM
Oteil & The Peacemakers “Subterranea” https://youtu.be/zOhYD5TfUrM
Given the high profile of his band, and the even higher profile of the singer and guitarist he so ably serves, he is probably the least recognized of his profession among the iconic collectives in the history of rock music. In fact, he may be more recognized for dating super-models! Nice work if you can get it…
Working a Fender Precision or Fender Jazz or permutations thereof, Adam Charles Clayton possesses an instinctive grasp of rhythm and space. His phrasing is fueled by dub, soul, and reggae influences- and he expresses more in three cyclic notes than many of his peers whose fingers fly up and down the neck of their instrument.
As U2 have evolved over the years, so too has Adam’s artistry with regard to melody, rhythm, and harmony.
Adam Clayton Sound & Vision:
“New Year’s Day” (Inspired by the Polish solidarity movement, this monster bass passage commenced as Clayton’s botched attempt to decipher the chord changes to Visage’s synth-pop hit “Fade to Grey.”) https://youtu.be/f8BtB4C3Vi8
“You’re The Best Thing About Me” https://youtu.be/nd_EYo96lmo
“Staring at the Sun” https://youtu.be/q4Gr8Lf2Bzo
“Gone” https://youtu.be/2Dc3sbCVgXY
“Get On Your Boots” https://youtu.be/JcDNilZbZg8
“I’ll Go Crazy” https://youtu.be/4q_AHAMVQ9c
“Mysterious Ways” https://youtu.be/TxcDTUMLQJI
Courtesy U2 Com