It hit me hard yesterday – how much I miss having and
playing with a band!
With the recent recordings I’ve played all the instruments,
usually starting with an acoustic guitar or piano and going on from there,
adding more guitars or piano/keyboards, strings, and individual instruments for
a particular track – dobro for Country Tales, harmonica, banjo etc.
As we record the song’s arrangement develops. Tim Palmer, my wonderful co-pilot who
engineers everything, gives me the space to try things, ideas that are in my
head. Four out of five times they don’t
work but when that one does …….. It’s
great to have Tim to bounce ideas off and being a musician himself too he has
valuable input.
What I miss though is bouncing off a group of musicians,
musicians who are far better at playing their instrument than I am, and sitting
together in a room, in various studios, in a field (we used to practice our
harmonies in a field just outside Cardiff), or harmonies on a beach in Santa
Barbara, (there have also been some not quite so nice rehearsal places, one in
LA comes straight to mind, but that’s another story!).
I’ve always said that I’ve been blessed with playing with
top musicians, right from the first band I played in when I was thirteen or so
in Cardiff, with an outstanding guitarist, Ian Devine, who played with Ludus,
and also Stratton and Devine. I’ve
mentioned Ian before and hopefully he’s going to play on a track for one of the
albums this year.
Another fine guitarist I played with in a later banc was,
and is, Tony Crooks, so emotional, so talented.
Tony played with Leo Lyons of Ten Years After in a band called Kick who
released a couple of albums, (Leo of course was used to playing with a certain Alvin
Lee……. enough said). Tony is about to launch a solo career after being in a
successful UK band.
The last band I really had included Marty Grebb, who was
Bonnie Raiit’s saxophonist and keyboardist; Chet McCracken from the Doobie
Brothers and Chris Pinnick on guitar from the band Chicago. We recorded at Danny Hutton’s studio in
Trancas canyon in Malibu (Danny was of course the driving force in Three Dog
Night, and he sang harmonies with me).
This was quite a few years ago, it’s been that long but
you’ve got to up your game with players like that.
I wish I was a better guitarist or piano player but when I
pick up a guitar or sit at a piano, I usually start writing, not
practising. Being proficient on an
instrument though means you can hear, and add, more elaborate parts, play a
riff better or of course provide a breath-taking solo, all of which adds to the
finished track.
There's also of course the magic of playing with a band that really clicks .......
It opens up though the debate about songwriting and who does
what in the band and gets what royalty. Spandau
Ballet appeared in court a year or so ago, three of the members sued Gary Kemp
for a share of the songwriting royalties.
Songwriting is where the real money is.
Kemp won, and deserved to.
For me, the person who turns up at the rehearsal, and sits down
and plays the basic chords with the lyrics and melody is the songwriter. The rest is arrangement. Should George Martin have received
songwriting credits?
Many bands now make an agreement to share royalties, Duran
Duran for example. Le Bon usually writes
the lyrics and various other members have written the music for their different
songs but all the songs are credited simply to the band. Lennon and McCartney of course used to credit
each other, regardless of who actually wrote the song. In later years of course they hardly wrote together
but the agreement stood, (Lennon often spoke about getting credit for Yesterday
for example and admitted he hadn’t written a single note or word of it, it was
all McCartney’s song).
It is one of the main causes of discontent in a band – one member,
the songwriter, is able to buy the mansion, buy the classic cars, the others
struggle – East 17 are a perfect example of this, with songwriter Tony Mortimer
still enjoying the financial rewards of writing songs like Stay Another Day
whilst the others are broke.
So, I’m going to be looking for musicians. In Nashville of course you’re spoilt for
choice with some of the best musicians in the world being based there, so it’s
exciting and nervy at the same time but I can’t wait.