Harvey Brooks (Bob Dylan, Miles Davis, The Doors)

Courtesy Harvey Brooks Video Blog

 

From the City University of New York, Queens College, session bassist and producer Harvey Brooks was the go-to player on the New York City studio scene in the 1960s and 1970s and helped to establish the instrument in modern popular music and jazz.

 

As the electric bass was essentially in its infancy, Brooks brought his understanding of blues, pop, soul, folk, and jazz to the instrument, appearing on such influential albums as Bob Dylan’s Highway 61 Revisited, Miles Davis’ Bitches Brew (with Dave Holland), Al Kooper’s Super Sessions, the Doors’ Soft Parade, and The Electric Flag’s A Long Time Coming, to cite a very select few few.

 

Harvey mastered the pocket, and no matter how far he extended the harmonic and rhythmic possibilities within a chord, he always managed define the changes. In the process he taught Miles to rock, added zest to Dylan’s libretto, and gave Mike Bloomfield the support he needed to extend the language of blues guitar.

 

HUFFINGTON POST / Tom Semioli: Harvey Brooks: Eleven Bass Players Who Belong in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame https://bit.ly/2hOLzO3 

 

Be sure to check out Harvey’s YouTube Video Blog and book “View from the Bottom.”  Harvey’s weapons of choice are the Fender Precision and Jazz basses, with LaBella strings, and Ampeg amplification.

 

 

 

Harvey Brooks Sound & Vision…

 

Bob Dylan: “It Takes A Lot to Laugh, It Takes a Train To Cry” https://youtu.be/SN1ACh8lzHg

 

Electric Flag “Groovin’ Is Easy” https://youtu.be/Zl29ULtQKXc

 

Super Sessions “Harvey’s Tune” https://youtu.be/QUT_NQ4tbTI

 

Miles Davis “Bitches Brew” https://youtu.be/Q26k14yBAnM

 

The Doors “Touch Me” https://youtu.be/8lVqEchxIxw

 

Boz Burrell (Bad Company, King Crimson)

Photo courtesy of Bad Company Com Photo courtesy of Bad Company Com

Photo courtesy of Bad Company Com

Boz Burrell, bassist by Tom Semioli

 

Artists/Bands: Bad Company, King Crimson, Alvin Lee & Mylon LeFevre, Jon Lord, Pete Townshend & Ronnie Lane

 

Seminal Sides: Bad Company (1974), Straight Shooter (1975), Run With The Pack (1975) – all with Bad Company 

 

Though Peter Overend Watts of Mott the Hoople was offered the gig first, the late Raymond “Boz” Burrell was the perfect choice for the iconic hard rock hit making machine Bad Company.

 

A former jazz crooner (The Tea Time 4, and The Boz People with Ian McLagan) who took up the bass at Robert Fripp’s behest as a member of King Crimson, the vastly underrated Boz plied his craft with innate simplicity abetted with a decidedly rhythm and blues disposition.

 

Dig Boz with Crimson “Ladies of the Road” https://youtu.be/1HPV5Gdq_q8

 

A fretless pioneer, Boz also waxed sides with Pete Townshend and Ronnie Lane (Rough Mix/1977), Alvin Lee and Mylon LeFevre (On the Road to Freedom / 1973), Jon Lord, Alexis Korner, and Chris Farlowe, among others.

 

Following his tenure in Bad Company, Boz worked with blues rock artist Roger Chapman, and most notably with Scottish blues belter Tam White, with whom he toured extensively until Burrell popped his clogs in 2006.

 

Among Boz’s weapons of choice included an Ampeg AMUB-1 Fretless bass, Fender Precision, Fender Jazz, MusicMan Stingray, a Lakeland 55-02 Five string, and a Fender Precision fretless.

 

When the original Bad Company reunited in ’99 (The Original Bad Company box set), Boz flexed his vastly improved harmonic chops on the five string!

 

Boz Burrell Sound & Vision: 

 

Boz on the 5 String for “Shooting Star” 1999 https://youtu.be/huQRD_RZxP0

 

Boz on his composition “Gone Gone Gone” https://youtu.be/kc0G7kDqCRg

 

“Can’t Get Enough” Live https://youtu.be/7p9mzYB–uI

 

Boz with….

 

Alvin Lee & Mylon LeFevre “Riffin” https://youtu.be/vl9oR4uQPlc

 

Jon Lord “Hollywood Rock and Roll” https://youtu.be/wIHq714ywBg

 

Tam White “Save Me” https://youtu.be/QqfBcjOH4mo

 

Pete and Ronnie “Heart to Hang On To” https://youtu.be/uQ4PIFeofd4

 

Boz Burrell Coda from Lou Loudhailer, who owns one of Boz’s instruments: I bought it frorm a little shop in Camden Town in 1982. I saw it and thought wow that’s the bass for me – although I’d never played a fretless until then. It was about £200… after I bought it the guy in the shop said ‘You just bought Boz Burrell’s bass’ – so I didn’t know until I’d paid for it – I was a fan of Bad Company so I was happy with that! I’ve played it ever since. I read somewhere that Boz didn’t get on with it which is why he sold it. But I love it. It’s got an early serial number. Plays and sounds amazing. I bought a new Cutlass with a carbon graphite neck a few years later when I was in the Red Guitars and played that until about 3 years ago when I replaced it with a Caprice.

 

Photo courtesy of Bad Company Com Photo courtesy of Bad Company Com

 

Phil Lesh (Grateful Dead)

Tom Semioli

He anchored one of the most intriguing, confounding, and beloved ensembles in the history of modern music. The Grateful Dead forged two camps in their storied career: those that adored them, and those that couldn’t (or wouldn’t) understand them!

 

Regardless, their importance cannot be denied.  Their concerts (of which I attended many) were fascinating incursions into the known and unknown, routinely incorporating elements of experimental, avant-garde, jazz, blues, folk, Middle Eastern, classical, Americana, country, bluegrass, musique concrète, and permutations thereof.  

 

The bandstand was their natural habitat – however despite the clueless journo detractors (refer to Frank Zappa’s quote on rock reportage), and their own admitted self-doubts in the studio, the Dead waxed several brilliant sides throughout their career.

 

Proletariat bassists are oft inculcated to commence their passages at the root and the downbeat then gradually progress harmonically and rhythmically outward – some more so than others.

 

Enter Philip Chapman Lesh, renowned for his long, strange, watershed trip steering the defiantly wayward ship christened Grateful Dead.  Along with his peers Jack Bruce (Cream) and Jack Casady (Jefferson Airplane) – Phil established the instrument apart from its upright bass, electric guitar ancestry.

 

Opined bandmate Bob Weir in a 2016 Guitar World interview “Phil is an iconoclast by nature, and I think he actually disdains the traditional role of the bass player…” 

 

On the Dead’s exploratory forays, Lesh often started “outside” and kept going – yet you could still decipher the essence of the song within his improvisations and motifs. Phil’s musical development on violin and trumpet along with his education in the avant-garde and classical genres taught him “the rules” – and how to break them.

 

Consider that Lesh was a novice on the instrument in the Dead’s early days, alas he had no preconceived notions of what a bass guitar was – or was not. Yet Phil could traditionally outline the changes with the commoners – while his tone constantly evolved by way of his continual curiosity and usage of state-of-the-art bass gear.

 

As such we can thank Phil for the modern boutique bass culture. Check out Phil on Live/Dead (1968) – for a player with a scant three years’ experience, Lesh displayed an extraordinary command of the instrument. 

 

In 2006 Phil penned his autobiography Searching for the Sound (Back Bay Books). Lesh also participated in many of the Dead post-Garcia ensembles including The Dead, The Other Ones, and he led Phil Lesh & Friends on several tours and recordings. 

 

If KYBP delved into Phil’s tools-of-the-trade, we might break the internet.

 

Several gear centric sites do a fine job of documenting Phil’s weapons of choice, check out: https://jam.buzz/extra/phil-lesh-gear-guide/

 

Dead archival releases abound since the band ceased to exist following Jerry Garcia’s passing in 1995.

 

I advise you to seek out the Dick’s Pick’s series which span their entire career, along with “official” recordings which neatly bookend the Dead – the cinematic, chaotic masterpiece Anthem of the Sun (1968) and the overly polished Without a Net (1990) wherein Lesh duels with Branford Marsalis.

 

“That’s It for the Other One” https://youtu.be/T0BZifioxdo

 

“Eyes of the Sun” with Branford https://youtu.be/2S7ZvaWLsmA

 

The Dead’s most accessible studio slabs – American Beauty and Workingman’s Dead (1970) along with the underrated From the Mars Hotel (1974) and the much-maligned Shakedown Street brilliantly produced by Lowell George (1978) – reveal the “inside” Lesh – which kept the Dead as grounded as they could ever be.

 

Upon Phil’s departure from this mortal coil, Phil’s surviving co-workers Bob Weir, Micky Hart, and Bill Kreutzmann’s collaborative social media post proclaimed “In one note from the Phil Zone, you could hear and feel the world being born. His bass flowed like a river would flow. It went where the muse took it.

 

He was an explorer of inner and outer space who just happened to play bass. He was a circumnavigator of formerly unknown musical worlds. And more.”

 

Phil on lead vocal for “Box of Rain” https://youtu.be/nxjvo4BRf-Y

 

Disco Phil on “Shakedown Street” https://youtu.be/I7hpKHPvRVQ

Jack Casady (Jefferson Airplane, Hot Tuna)

Photo courtesy of Hot Tuna Com Photo courtesy of Hot Tuna Com

Photo courtesy of Hot Tuna Com

The most stunning aspect of Jean Luc-Goddard’s film of Jefferson Airplane rendering “House at Pooneil Corners” atop a roof in midtown Manhattan on December 7, 1968 – weeks before the Beatles pulled the exact same filmed stunt replete with police intervention on Savile Row in London – is how it accurately captures the massive resonance of Jack Casady’s bass artistry ricocheting off the sooty Gotham skyscrapers on that frigid winter day. At the time Jack was playing a Guild Starfire II bass run through a Versatone amplifier.

Jefferson Airplane “House at Poolneil Corners” New York City https://youtu.be/vuwMEiNg3B8

Akin to his peer Jack Bruce, Jack Casady expanded the harmonic language of the bass with his fearless forays into the instrument’s upper register and his Hendrix-esque use of volume. Casady is essentially a blues man given to experimentation wherein he quotes raga, jazz, and folk – oft times in the same composition. At any given moment, on record or in concert – Jack utilizes an amazing arsenal of walking bass-lines, chords, and counter-melodies that no electric bassist previous to him ever dared.

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Jack’s work with his lifelong collaborator Jorma Kaukonen in Hot Tuna, which is steeped in traditional blues and rag-time in a semi-acoustic / electric setting, is equally groundbreaking in its execution. Hendrix invited Jack to play on Electric Ladyland – it’s a pity Jimi never made a full album with him.

Of all the remarkably progressive and innovative musicians who came to prominence during the psychedelic Summer of Love era – Casady remains among the most revolutionary.

Dig Tony Senatore’s rendition of “Crown of Creation” https://youtu.be/nrM_ba46R3s

Casady 1_opt.jpg Casady 1_opt.jpg

Paul McCartney (The Beatles, Wings)

The Guv’nor!

Everything that’s been written about Sir Paul has been written, everything that’s been said, has been said…so allow me to say something new…

Of James Paul McCartney’s marvelous feats as a bassist, the two which never fail to impress me are his passages for “Do You Want to Know a Secret,” and “Lucy In the Sky with Diamonds” – especially in the chorus of the latter.

“Do You Want to Know a Secret?” https://youtu.be/uRQ7ecvU56k

The parts are technically simple – I could teach them to an able beginner in a few lessons. However Paul’s bass playing on those songs characterizes this extraordinary man and his music. In every phase of his storied career, Macca’s bass magic springs from his exquisite voice leading.

“Lucy In the Sky with Diamonds” https://youtu.be/naoknj1ebqI

His note choices defy custom and thus weave conventional chord changes together into a grand, multi-colored musical tapestry. And Paul renders it all by way of his splendid rhythmic intuition – played purely from the heart. I don’t know dance nor ballet from bullocks, but to my ears, the totality of Sir Paul’s bass artistry moves akin to Nureyev, Alvin Ailey, Fred & Ginger, and Gene Kelly.

My advice to pop music bassists, when you’re asked to contribute bass to a new composition, the first question you ask yourself is “what would Paul McCartney do here?”

John Deacon (Queen)


Photo courtesy of Queen Online Com Photo courtesy of Queen Online Com

Photo courtesy of Queen Online Com

By Thomas Semioli

He was the most unassuming member of an iconic ensemble renowned for their pomp, circumstance, and groundbreaking canon who, incidentally, composed some of Queen’s most enduring hits including “Another One Bites the Dust,” and “You’re My Best Friend.”

John Richard Deacon – who also penned “Spread Your Wings, and “I Want to Break Free” among others –was the rhythmic and harmonic tether  that linked the diverse talents of Freddie Mercury, Brian May, and Roger Taylor.


queen 1_opt.jpg queen 1_opt.jpg

Equally skillful in a supportive role or stepping into the spotlight as evidenced in his oft sampled “Under Pressure” motif and his astounding upper register lines in “Millionaire’s Waltz” – John was among the early adopters of Leo Fender’s innovative MusicMan StingRay bass, which he used on stage in the late 1970s. For studio recordings John’s weapon of choice was Fender Precision, including the active model which came out in the early 1980s.

Dig John with his active Fender Precision on “One Vision” https://youtu.be/-OGd4gplxQM  

A poised player who enhanced the talents of his more visible band mates – John Deacon’s artistry as a bassist and writer was an integral catalyst to Queen’s many artistic and commercial triumphs.


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Deacon, now retired whilst his peers continue to tour as a Las Vegas inspired Queen revue, plied his final bass passage on the track “No One But You (Only the Good Die Young)” which appears on the compilation Queen Rocks (1997).

Dig John on “Millionaire’s Waltz” https://youtu.be/H-P0VznfK_E

Dig Tony Senatore’s rendition of these beacons of Deacon!

“You’re My Best Friend” https://youtu.be/DmSQWVckbaE

“Somebody to Love” https://youtu.be/IGI4gOFCV6A

“Millionaire’s Waltz” https://youtu.be/PKUzJeHKsgE

“Bring Back Leroy Brown” https://youtu.be/OfyeFxQ0nsk

“Jealousy” https://youtu.be/mQXch5C3Wcg


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Bill Wyman (Rolling Stones, Rhythm Kings) Includes Video Interview

Photos Courtesy of Bill Wyman Com

 

Bob Dylan opined that sans the former William George Perks – aka Bill Wyman, the Rolling Stones were merely a dance band.

 

With all due respect to Bill’s fine replacement, Darryl Jones, and dance bands – Dylan is correct once again. Older and wiser than his band-mates, Wyman brought the aesthetic of the upright to the Stones – pulling the frets out of his Framus instrument and thus creating the first known fretless bass guitar.

 

An electrified disciple of Willie Dixon with a stage presence which exudes the essence of cool, Bill’s brilliance is founded in his intuitive use of rhythm and space. Wyman often played half-time on up-tempo songs – which, along with Charlie’s jazz chops, enabled the Stones to swing like no other rock band before or since.

 

An author, photographer, and amateur archaeologist, Bill fronted his versatile blues / jazz Rhythm Kings ensemble for the past few decades which featured a rotating cast of his famous friends including Eric Clapton, Peter Frampton, Mark Knopfler, George Harrison, Georgie Fame, Gary Brooker, Paul Carrack, Mick Taylor, Andy Fairweather-Low, and Gary US Bonds among many others – now in his 80s, Wyman is, for all purposes, retired.

 

Among the most influential bassists of the rock era, The Bass Centre in London crafted a Bill Wyman signature bass which looks as great as it plays. 

 

Dig this extraordinary clip of Bill with the Stones rendering “19th Nervous Breakdown” https://youtu.be/FoNSFFhyEi8

 

Bill Wyman as guest on David C. Gross and Tom Semioli’s NOTES FROM AN ARTIST Radio Show / Podcast 

Bruce Thomas (Elvis Costello & The Attractions) Interview by Joe Gagliardo

By Joe Gagliardo

 

Bruce Thomas’ tough melodic lines as anchor of Elvis Costello & The Attractions have inspired numerous players. Revered by his peers, a Beatle, and rock fans worldwide, Bruce’s outstanding career on stage and in the studio, before, during and after The Attractions, is the stuff of legend.

 

What did Bruce mean to Elvis’ Attractions?  Bass Player magazine noted that “his bass lines consistently [bring] Costello’s songs to a new level with tasty, melodic parts that fit perfectly with the chords, melody and lyrics.”

 

Referencing “Everyday I Write the Book,” BP proclaimed that Thomas’ bass lines were “full of playful syncopations, chords, feel changes and slides, [and that] his part masterfully straddles the fine line between careful support and break-from-the-pack creativity.”

 

Bruce had no formal music training. Like many of us, as a kid he pressed his ear to the radio under the bedsheets at night to hear the bass. Radio Luxembourg was his pop music station of choice – among the shows he tuned into featured a broadcast from The Cavern in Liverpool, affording him the opportunity to hear bands that emerged on the heels of the Beatles’ success.

 

The Shadows were the first band Bruce saw perform live, and his attention was immediately drawn to legendary bassist Jet Harris and his signature red Fender Precision bass, which matched Hank Marvin’s red Fender Stratocaster guitar.  The song “36-24-36” – a bass driven instrumental – was among Bruce’s favorite songs.  Johnny Gustafson, the bassist with The Merseybeats, also caught his attention.  Bruce describes the four cornerstones of bass as Paul McCartney, John Entwistle, Duck Dunn, and James Jamerson.

 

Bruce never desired to be a guitarist.  Being attracted (pun intended) to the instrument by the music he was hearing, he tried to construct a bass using telephone parts as a pickup with a Spanish guitar bridge. It had an eleven-note octave on it because, somewhere along the way Thomas lost count!

 

Though Thomas had an affinity for bass, his gig as a harmonica player led to his first gig as a bassist. Inspired by the role the harmonica played in the music of the Rolling Stones, The Yardbirds, and the British r&b and blues groups, Bruce was working the mouth harp in a local band, The Tremors.  One night the bass player didn’t show, and without even a brief rehearsal – the absent bassist’s blonde Epiphone Rivoli was handed to Bruce and he had to wing it.  From that point on, he became a bassist – practicing for hours on end every day along with records, radio, and the television.

 

While toiling for newspaper company in the mid-60s, he and two of his co-workers, Paul Rodgers and Mick Moody would often discuss music and artists such as the Paul Butterfield Blues Band.  As their friendship developed, Bruce was invited to join their band, The Roadrunners, which was a rhythm and blues, Motown soul ensemble.

 

Paul Rodgers had been The Roadrunners’ bassist- however he wanted to concentrate on singing and fronting the band. Hence Bruce took over, using Paul’s Vox bass, that is – until the neck perpetually bowed and the action got higher and higher to the point where Bruce was pulling the neck back in order to hit the right notes. The use of that instrument came to an abrupt end when the neck snapped.

 

The Roadrunners moved to London to seek fame and fortune, but broke up quickly thereafter.   Fate was kind to Paul Rodgers who went on to play with Paul Kossoff, Andy Fraser, and Simon Kirke in Free, and later, with Mick Ralphs and Boz Burrell Bad Company, and Queen + Paul Rodgers, and is rightly considered one of the greatest rock vocalists of all time.

 

Mick Moody found success as well, joining Whitesnake, a band led by David Coverdale that would go on to platinum sales and filling arenas worldwide. Bruce auditioned for a pre-Fleetwood Mac Peter Green and Jeremy Spencer collective.  Though that experience culminated in a “great two-hour jam,” Peter politely informed Bruce “you’ve got all the notes…but you don’t quite put them together.”  According to Bruce it was too early in his playing career. Yet that incident was more than made up for years later when he and Peter Green jammed at the Marquee Club, and later played together on Peter Bardens’ solo album, The Answer.

 

Bruce had far better luck with keyboard player Peter Bardens, who formed the band Village – an organ, bass and drums trio.  Following that audition, Bardens told Bruce “you’ve got the notes! And you’re the only player I’ve heard all week who can actually swing!”  That was a heavy compliment, considering the line up in Bardens’ previous band had included Mick Fleetwood, Rod Stewart and Peter Green!

 

Village worked up a jazzy rhythm and blues repertoire featuring material by the likes of Jimmy Smith and Miles Davis. The band earned a residency at the prestigious Marquee Club, where support acts for Village included Elton John and Brinsley Schwarz.

 

Each week, Village invited special guests to perform with them, giving Bruce the opportunity to hone his skills working along London’s best musicians. Among those guests once again was Peter Green which Bruce recalls as a highlight of his career.  It wasn’t just talent or technique according to Thomas, “yes, he had taste and fire, but his playing came from deep inside of his soul … it is rare to hear someone play as deep as Peter Green.”

 

By 1971 Bruce was playing with renowned guitarist Tim Renwick in Quiver. The band created a buzz, playing at a celebrity party the Stones held by the river at Bray; gigging with Pink Floyd; and supporting The Who in their prime during their Who’s Next tour.  One of the band’s biggest fans was a drummer, who years later would become part of a legendary rhythm section with Bruce—his name was Pete Thomas.

 

The Sutherland Brothers, Iain and Gavin, were prolific songwriters for Island Records, and had their songs covered by other artists, including Rod Stewart (“Sailing”). They used studio players on their records, including members of Quiver.  At the suggestion of the Brothers’ manager, the bands joined forces, and quickly went into the Island Records studio where Muff Winwood produced their single, “You Got Me Anyway,” which was a hit in the UK and U.S.  The band, now known as The Sutherland Brothers and Quiver (“SB&Q”), supported Elton John at the onset of his popularity in the early 70s.

 

Suddenly, the band was playing large, prestigious venues including Madison Square Garden, the Hollywood Bowl, and football stadiums.  One of the early shows on the tour involved an additional band on the bill, Steely Dan.  Bruce was a fan of the band and its debut LP Can’t Buy A Thrill – admiring their stellar songwriting, musicianship, arranging, and production.  Bruce’s yen for Steely Dan almost killed his chance to be an Attraction…

 

Following his tenure in SB&Q, Bruce was hoping to hook up with Wilko Johnson, who had recently left Dr. Feelgood.  That gig didn’t pan out, so Bruce, feeling something new was percolating in the music scene, kept his eye on the “Musicians Wanted” column of Melody Maker.  One day he saw an ad seeking a bass player and keyboard player for a “rocking pop combo.”  He had recently read an article about a performer who was being touted as the next big thing and was in search of a backing band: Elvis Costello.   Bruce’s intuition led him to think this ad related to Elvis Costello.

 

Bruce dialed the number, connecting with the office of Elvis’ label, Stiff Records and asked the receptionist about the artist who placed the advertisement. Her response was “he’s like Buddy Holly on acid!” Bruce immediately heard a voice in the background, later confirmed to be Elvis, shouting, “ask him who he likes!” Suzanne the receptionist did as she was instructed.

 

“What bands do you like?”

 

“The Rumour and Steely Dan…”

 

“Get rid of him!” the male voice shot back!

 

“No, I think you should give him a chance!”

 

Suzanne gave Bruce the details for the audition. And not long after, she became…. Mrs. Bruce Thomas.

 

Bruce purchased the records, learned the bass parts, and nailed the gig with the help of the drummer – Quiver’s biggest fan, Pete Thomas.   According to legend, manager Jake Riviera was checking Bruce out, and Pete told Elvis and Jake, something to the effect that “if you don’t get this guy, you must be mad,” and that likely sealed the deal.

 

Among  the most popular songs in The Attractions repertoire and a hit record on FM radio in America, “(I Don’t Want to Go to) Chelsea” is notable for Bruce’s prominent bassline, which was a spikier version of the riff John Entwistle played at the end of the live version of “My Generation.”  Bruce’s basslines not only drove many of the songs, but he advocated for the name The Attractions because it was similar to Motown’s Temptations. And it stuck.

 

Bruce was a member of the Attractions from 1977-1988, and from 1994-1996, recording several albums, singles, and EPs, and touring the globe incessantly. His favorite records include This Year’s Model, Get Happy (twenty songs bursting with energy and melody, most under two minutes, many done in one take, and with few overdubs) and the baroque pop classic Imperial Bedroom.

 

All of Elvis’ albums with The Attractions are a showcase for Bruce’s stunning basslines. One that always jumps out at me (and scores of bassists) is “Lipstick Vogue” from the very first Attractions long-player This Year’s Model.  Bruce has no idea where that hyperactive skittering bass part came from; he just started doing it.  He has, however, explained the origins of some of the other songs.  “The bass on ‘The Beat’ is like Paul McCartney’s on ‘Taxman,’ with additional flourishes you might hear on a guitar.  ‘You Belong To Me’ is a reworking of a Solomon Burke riff.”

 

The title track “This Year’s Girl” is a hybrid of the Stones’ “Stupid Girl” and The Beatles’ “You Won’t See Me.”  The bass line on “Pump It Up” was a combination of multiple songs.  Rhythmically it was the same as “The Price of Love” by the Everly Brothers, the notes came from Richard Hell and the Voidoids’ “You’ve Got to Lose.” And he even filled the last space with the riff from the Kinks’ “You Really Got Me.”

 

In another twist, the bass on the chorus of “Pump It Up,” quotes “In The Mood,” as a tribute to Elvis’ dad, Ross McManus, whose band, Joe Loss and his Orchestra, used the song as its signature tune.

 

As per Bass Player magazine’s description of Bruce’s playing on Model, “Bruce rules the sonic landscape with killer tone, wicked articulation and inventive lines that seem to jump out of the mix and whack you across the face…it’s a must for any rock bassist seeking some inspiration.”  Bruce’s parts on “Pump It Up,” “Chelsea,” and a number of other songs were played live in the studio, in one take!

 

A turning point for the band (and the history of rock and roll) was their legendary appearance on Saturday Night Live in December 1977.  Overnight they went from a band for people in the know, to a band everyone knew.  Before they hit the stage, Bruce and John Belushi duetted on a Willie Mabon song in the dressing room.  Turns out Bruce’s rhythm and blues days served him well that night, as Belushi was asking if any of the band members were into the blues.  It was a big night for Bruce and the band from beginning to end.

 

While recording the Armed Forces album in 1979, Bruce received an unexpected call in the studio asking whether he wanted to do a recording session with Paul McCartney, as if anyone could or would turn down an invite from Paul!  When Bruce arrived at Abbey Road Studio 2, he found a “rock orchestra.”  There were three of every instrument, all playing live in the studio akin to legendary producer Phil Spector’s “Wall of Sound.”

 

The two other bass players were John Paul Jones of Led Zeppelin and Ronnie Lane of the Faces.  When Bruce told Paul he had taken a few of his motifs over the years, to Bruce’s surprise, Paul picked up a bass, and played a few licks from “Chelsea.”

 

The “Rockestra Theme” that was recorded that day won a Grammy for Best Instrumental Performance in 1980, and Bruce got to reprise his recordings with Sir Paul, as well as some Little Richard songs, when both Elvis and The Attractions and Sir Paul were on the bill for the benefit for Kampuchea which took place at the Hammersmith Odeon.

 

“Rockestra” https://youtu.be/zeeTlfbsKL8

 

Bruce’s second brush with a Beatle involved John Lennon and Yoko Ono.  Mrs. Lennon was assembling an album of her songs as a memorial to John, and Elvis and the Attractions contributed a New Orleans and Meters-inspired version of “Walking On Thin Ice,” a track produced by Allen Toussaint.

 

Thomas feels that Imperial Bedroom (1982) marked a watershed moment in his playing.  On “Shabby Doll,” he plied the riff with the added-9th harmony that a jazz bassist had shown him years earlier.  On “Human Hands,” he rendered a verse using bass chords, and on “The Loved Ones,” he came up with a walking bass line that could walk alongside Paul’s brilliant passage on “All My Loving.”

 

Though there were breaks in the action, Elvis and The Attractions had a stellar career in the studio, and on stage, and it culminated with their 2003 induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

 

Outside of his tenure in The Attractions, Bruce did plenty of studio work, including a session with the notoriously moody Chrissie Hynde.  The project included a new group of players, as the founding Pretenders bassist and guitarist had passed, and the original drummer Martin Chambers didn’t play on the record.  Bruce appeared on only one track, “My Baby,” due to creative differences as to the approach i.e. functional playing versus creative playing. Admonished Ms. Hynde “in The Pretenders we don’t go above the fifth fret!”

 

Among Bruce’s more pleasant experiences was recording with John Wesley Harding – with Pete Thomas, including a killer version of Tommy James’ classic “Crystal Blue Persuasion.”  Bruce recorded with Al Stewart, Madness, Billy Bragg, and Tasmin Archer, among many others.  Bruce was especially impressed with Suzanne Vega, helming the bass chair for her album 99.9 F. Bruce used a Danelectro Longhorn on the Vega recordings, as well as on many of his other studio sessions.

 

Bruce also collaborated with his nephew – writing and producing dance and “chill-out” music under various names.  That music was pressed onto 12-inch records and was popular with DJs spinning music in the dance clubs back in the days when vinyl was the preferred medium.

 

In 2017 Bruce recorded a ten-track collaborative album with singer-songwriter Spencer Brown entitled Back To The Start. The partnership started informally when Spencer asked Bruce to listen to a few songs he was working on…and Bruce came on board to play and arrange the record.

 

Style: One of the first bass parts Bruce learned was Booker T & The MG’s classic “Green Onions.” Though it was an easy three-note riff (rendered by original MG’s bassist Lewie Steinberg, and not Duck Dunn, whom it is often attributed to) more importantly, it taught him how to play a groove.  In terms of his active bass lines, Bruce attributes that influence to Jack Bruce and the Fresh Cream LP, as well as to McCartney and Entwistle, along with US players such as Jamerson, Phil Lesh, and Jack Casady. In the Attractions, he had the ability to play the active bass lines he created, in part, because Elvis told the band early on that there would be no guitar solos in his band, so it gave Bruce space to play creatively.

 

Approach: In terms of Bruce’s approach, timing is his priority, and melodically distinctive notes come in second.  Tone is also essential to Thomas – he stresses that the tone of a bass guitar emanates from the player. That is, where you hit the strings, how near to the bridge, tension and relaxation, how you release the note — and many other factors!

 

Elvis and The Attractions mostly played live on backing tracks when recording their LPs. However, Bruce altered his work method in the studio with other artists.  On occasion he would render a guide part to help the musicians while the basic track was recorded, then cut his final track when the overdubs and vocal parts were done.  When putting the master bass part on, he would not concentrate on binding the chords to the rhythm.  Instead, he would try to tie the vocal to the drums, taking harmonic cues from the vocal melody and inflections, and bring the voice and drums together.

 

At the height of The Attractions popularity, Bruce was famous for his “salmon pink” Fender Precision bass, strung with Rotosound Round Wounds gauge 55-115 (nowadays he uses Base Centre Elites with a more conventional 45-105). Back then a P bass cost a fortune in the UK – almost a year’s salary for working class players. Bruce’s purchased a used Precision, and stripped it back to the wood grain, and added a tortoise shell scratch plate. When he attempted to replicate Jet Harris’ instrument, faded fiesta red, the color turned a shade of pink. He would sometimes add a wad of foam by the bridge to have better articulation of the notes.

 

Unfortunately, Bruce’s pink P was stolen from his car while he was in Los Angeles working sessions. Though he tried to find a suitable replacement, it wasn’t simply a matter of replacing an early 1960s P-bass, as he had made many modifications to it. Bruce had reshaped the body and the neck, rewired it and re-sprayed it. As a result, after much searching with no luck, he concluded that he would have to reproduce it from scratch.

 

When Bruce informed Barry Moorhouse of the Bass Centre in London  of his mission to replicate his signature instrument Barry felt that other players would be interested in having a similar bass, hence the creation of the BT signature model bass as part of their new British Bass Masters series.

 

http://www.basscentre.com/british-bass-masters/bruce-thomas-profile.html

 

Bruce is also partial to Danelectro basses, which he used during the 1990s on stage and in the studio with The Attractions, and in the studio with other artists.  He likes the Danelectro Longhorn Rumor with the built-in Chorus, and Hodad basses.  Over the years, Bruce has used multiple basses, including a Gibson EB-0, Fender Mustang, Fender 6-string, Hagstrom 8-string, Hamer 8-string, and Hamer 12-string.

 

His bass rigs have gone from a Traynor Mono Block with two cabs each containing 2 x 12s and a 1×18, to two Ampeg SVTs, to two early Trace Elliot heads with 4 4×10 cabinets stacked side-by-side.

 

For a deeper dive into his life and music career, check out Rough Notes…and Grainy Images, published in 2017, which is both an autobiography and cultural history, covering his entire career in music.

 

His website https://www.brucethomas.co.uk/ is also a wealth of information.

 

Select Bruce Thomas tracks with The Attractions!

 

Elvis and the Attractions-Live-Théâtre de l’Empire à Paris (1979) https://youtu.be/rzsWpYQ2mIs

 

“Lipstick  Vogue”  https://youtu.be/J3sqZUMgcX4

 

(I Don’t Want to Go To) Chelsea-Live at Rockpalast https://youtu.be/ITx5vzQi0go

 

“Oliver’s Army” https://youtu.be/LrjHz5hrupA

 

“Everyday I Write the Book” https://youtu.be/V1d4r9awjKE

 

“Pump It Up” https://youtu.be/3Y71iDvCYXA

 

(“What’s So Funny ‘Bout) Peace Love and Understanding https://youtu.be/Ssd3U_zicAI

 

With Suzanne Vega:

 

“99.9F” https://youtu.be/uEvjFThqmq0

 

With Spencer Brown:

 

“Back to the Start” https://youtu.be/QYM1EIztn4I

 

“Thursday” https://youtu.be/_XLMbZE_ZvA

 

“Fall On You” https://youtu.be/nUWj_OiGf1s

 

Herbie Flowers (Lou Reed, David Bowie, Elton John)

Courtesy of Herbie Flowers Com Courtesy of Herbie Flowers Com

Courtesy of Herbie Flowers Com

“Being a bass-player is like being a truck driver… you’re paid to arrive on time and safely at your destination!” – Brian Keith “Herbie” Flowers

 

Just another day on the job? Probably! In a career that has spanned over a half century, Herbie Flowers is not only among the instrument’s preeminent players, and most prolific studio cats – he created two of rock’s most mind-blowing bass passages, all in a successful effort to earn double wages!

 

With a blue Fender Jazz he purchased from Manny’s in New York City for $79.00, this Isleworth Middlesex protégé helped to establish the electric bass on stage and in the studio by way of his instantly recognizable tone which he augments with a plectrum, coupled with his adventurous phrasing and melodic instinct. On every track Flowers has waxed, he melds his classical and jazz pedigree with a profound love of soul and blues.

 

An upright / electric and tuba player, Flowers’ resume is a study in 20th Century pop music history: Serge Gainesbourg, Harry Nilsson, Roger Daltrey, Brian Ferry, Henry Mancini (“Pink Panther”), Frank Sinatra, Cat Stevens, Sky, Bing Crosby, Elton John, David Bowie, Melanie, Al Kooper, David Essex, Marc Bolan, and Paul McCartney, along with numerous sides produced by Mickie Most, Richard Perry, Gus Dudgeon, Shel Talmy, and Tony Visconti simply skim the surface of his extraordinary body of work. Flowers also did a stint in the London Symphony Orchestra and has anchored scores of film and television scores and theater performances.

 

A witty scribe (read his blogs), solo recording artist, composer, university educator, and engaging stage performer – to list Flowers’ pop / classical / jazz / credits would break the internet, so we advise you to explore www.HerbieFlowers.Com if you need to know exactly what he played on, what he wrote, which bands he led, along with humorous anecdotes regarding his childhood, military service, and observations of the human condition.

 

If it were only for his contributions to Lou Reed’s “Walk on the Wild Side,” and “Rock On” by David Essex – Flowers would still be legend.

 

Herbie’s repetitive, major 10th interval glissando from the I to the IV chord, doubled with an upper register contrapuntal melody afforded Lou the radio (and career defining) hit he so desperately needed. It’s that rare groove that grabs you in the first few bars.

 

Lou Reed “Walk on the Wild Side” https://youtu.be/oG6fayQBm9w

 

Herbie takes a walk on the financial side: https://youtu.be/7AwFq1u6gzU

 

Herbie explains the passage in musical terms: https://youtu.be/XBXUP5GqYJs

 

Once again, Flowers blew minds (and home audio speakers) on David Essex smash hit “Rock On” (1973). Akin to his ingenious plot to earn twice his pay for Lou’s signature song, Herbie double-tracked his part. Significantly detuning the E string which was further enhanced with a wobbly delay effect, Flowers upped his remuneration for the day’s work from £12 to £24! An astonishing passage – it sounds like nothing before it, and nothing has sounded like it since

 

“Rock On” https://bit.ly/2RUebt9

 

Herbie Flowers Sound & Vision…

 

David’s “Space Oddity” https://youtu.be/5PgdZDXg0z0

 

Sir Elton’s “Country Comfort” https://youtu.be/0MxT31Nqysw

 

Harry’s “Jump Into the Fire” https://youtu.be/CfjNpgZ4C5Q

 

Der Bingle “Beautiful Memories” https://youtu.be/O-EVdjlUCCA

 

Marc Bolan “Dandy In the Underworld” https://youtu.be/82FB5OC-AOo

 

Watch Herbie guffawing aplenty with Blue Mink “ The Banner Man” https://youtu.be/x66xQ1rK2q0

 

Sir Paul “No More Lonely Nights” https://youtu.be/rlplvX07Li0

 

Chris Spedding “Hurt By Love” https://youtu.be/3xIrw3Nitjg

 

David Bowie “Rebel Rebel” https://youtu.be/8jxhpOYNcDY

 

With Melanie “Lay Down Stay Down – Candles in the Rain” https://youtu.be/MaiT8gATzxc

 

Watch Herbie on Top of the Pops with Sky “Tocatta” https://youtu.be/GX1elWIvP58

 

Dig video of Marc Bolan’s funky remake / remodel of “Jeepster” with Herbie outfitted in overalls! https://youtu.be/mcLT7Ubz7H0

 

Herbie anchors Ziggy Souldust – From David Live “Watch That Man” https://youtu.be/S_ho5el2_7o

 

Courtesy of Herbie Flowers Com Courtesy of Herbie Flowers Com

Courtesy of Herbie Flowers Com

Norman Watt-Roy (Ian Dury’s Blockheads, Wilko Johnson, The Clash)

Photo courtesy of Bass Centre - Norman Watt-Roy Signature Bass Photo courtesy of Bass Centre - Norman Watt-Roy Signature Bass

Photo courtesy of Bass Centre – Norman Watt-Roy Signature Bass

At the height of the punk era, a time wherein musical skill and instrumental prowess were frowned upon, therein emerged England’s most cherished cadre of musical misfits who played their respective arses off: Ian Dury and the Blockheads – anchored by Norman Watt-Roy – who steered the ensemble as they seamlessly fusing jazz, music hall, funk, and traditional rock ‘n’ roll.

 

Profoundly inspired by Jaco (note Watt-Roy’s use of a signature Pastorius motif in “Hit Me With Your Rhythm Stick” https://youtu.be/0WGVgfjnLqc Norman Watt-Roy’s bass-lines danced amid Mr. Dury’s wicked cockney word-play, hysterical character sketches, and farcical sexual humor which were rooted in Lord Upminster’s astute observations of everyday British life.

 

Producers often called upon Norman to contribute his multi-genre expertise – Clash fans note that it was Norman who rendered the fantastic dub reggae bass parts on Sandinista (1980).

 

Norman recorded and toured for thirty plus years with guitar icon Wilko Johnson and worked extensively with the surviving Blockheads in the UK pubs, keeping the waggish flame of the dearly departed Ian Dury burning into the 21st Century. Norman’s bass artistry can also be heard with Frankie Goes to Hollywood (“Relax”), Wreckless Eric, Nick Cave, and Roger Daltrey, among others, including Wilko and Roger’s collaborative Going Back Home (2014).  

 

Bringing his contemporary jazz yearnings to the forefront, Mr. Watt-Roy waxed his first solo album in 2013 entitled Faith & Grace (Ian’s nickname for Norman).

 

Faith & Grace: “He’s the man with the face, from outer space, on his faith and grace” bellowed the late, truly great Ian Dury of his virtuoso bassist Norman Watt-Roy. Behold this fascinating glimpse into the madcap musical mind of Mr. Watt-Roy – the anchor of the aforementioned cockney bard’s iconic Blockheads, UK studio ace, and Wilko Johnson’s go-to player for the past few decades and counting. 

 

On his lone solo slab, revel as Norman references his signature passages among the ten tracks, including a swingin’ rendition of his celebrated “Hit Me With Your Rhythm Stick” which provides the foundation for “Save It” featuring Sara Gillespie, along with new twists on the magnificent motifs to “Magnificent 7” and Frankie Goes to Hollywood’s “Relax” as found on “Norman! Norman!” http://bit.ly/2DV6vxp  

 

Flexing his jazz funk punk soul pedigree – and wicked sense of humor as evidenced in various vocal vignettes by his fallen bandleader – the incomparable Norman Watt-Roy tributes his idol Jaco on “John and Mary” and “Papa Chu Pap,” and waxes autobiographical in “Me, My Bass and I.”       

 

The Bass Centre has honored Norman with a signature “Blockhead Bass” which is among its most popular models!

 

Norman Watt- Roy Sound & Vision…

 

With Ian Dury: 

 

Live 1977 https://youtu.be/yVYkR4SB2R8

 

Live 1999 Ronnie Scott’s https://youtu.be/_sNykJnVqcA

 

Sex & Drugs & Rock ‘n’ Roll: https://youtu.be/BCaPTNhwK-4

 

With The Clash: 

 

“Magnificent Seven” https://youtu.be/dj1Nf850Lys

 

With Wiko Johnson & Roger Daltrey: https://youtu.be/LeoKCJNI-k4?si=nJBJKyGGddumP3_W