Wanted: Back Story to this Tony Williams Drumset

SKF NOTE: My Kingdom for the first person who can tell us the back story to Tony Williams’s drumset in this photo. The photo was posted by Bruce Ditmas on Facebook. Bruce credits it to Norbert Brycht. Thank you everyone.

williams_tony

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Scott K Fish Interview: Jim Gordon

SKF NOTE: When Jim Keltner called me at Modern Drummer to ask if we would be interested in interviewing his friend, Jim Gordon, the answer was an unequivocal yes. It was a time when we MD Editors felt, to an extent, as if we were playing catch up securing interviews with the long line of drummers we felt deserved interviewing. I’ve said it before, but it bears repeating: before MD there were few published indepth interviews with drummers.

What I didn’t write in my 1983 introduction to this interview is that Keltner was asking about MD interest in a Jim Gordon interview for two reasons. Gordon’s career, of course, was enough to warrant a MD feature interview. But Keltner was also asking because he thought a MD interview might raise Gordon’s spirits. Gordon was feeling very low. In fact, five months after this interview was published, Jim Gordon murdered his mother. A very sad, tragic event in a remarkable music career.

Also, MD‘s yes was no guarantee Jim Gordon would say yes. But if MD was interested, then Keltner would float the idea with Gordon.

I don’t remember if I called Jim Gordon the night of this interview or if he called me. What I do remember, vividly, is that it was after normal work hours and I was alone in my room at the rooming house where I lived. I was neither expecting to interview Jim Gordon at this time, nor had I done any preparation for this interview.

That is, I was familiar with Delaney & Bonnie, Joe Cocker’s Mad Dogs & Englishmen, Derek & the Dominos, Gordon Lightfoot — but I hadn’t time to study Jim Gordon’s musical career. Ideally, I would have listened to as much as possible of his music, and read as much about him, prepared a list of questions/topics, before interviewing him.

But, as I say, there was no guarantee Jim would say yes to an interview. Our phone conversation this night was, in my mind, an introductory phone call. At first, I’m sure my goal was to gain Jim Gordon’s confidence and to set up a later day/time for our interview.

So when Jim was ready for an interview that night, I scrambled, not wanting to tell him I wasn’t ready, only to find out another day he had changed his mind. Fortunately I had a small cassette recorder, a land line telephone, and a Radio Shack suction cup mic on hand. I don’t think I had any blank tapes. Instead, I think I reused a couple of cassettes on hand.

I asked Jim Gordon my first question and then, as I like to do, just listened. Just let him talk and let the tape roll. I based my questions on what I knew about Jim Gordon, and thought of new questions based on the story Jim was telling me. For example, I was familiar with Gary Puckett & the Union Gap, Mike Post, Larry Bunker, and other people and things Jim spoke about.

Finally there was the issue of photos to accompany this feature interview. Again, we ran into whether or not Jim Gordon would be okay with a stranger/photographer taking a series of photos. We were also running up against the clock. If MD was going to publish this interview as scheduled, we needed photos.

Jim Keltner, I believe, suggested his son, Eric, take the photos. Eric was a young guy, but MD had used his photos in the November 1981 interview with his father. So I gave Eric Keltner the green light, Jim Gordon was okay with Eric coming to the house and taking photos, and those are the photos we used.

[SKF NOTE: 6/17/17 – Jim Gordon’s published interview is now available on MD‘s Archive Page.]

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Billy Cobham Obscure Endorsement Ads 1972, 1976

Down Beat May 20, 1976

Down Beat May 20, 1976

From Down Beat 12/21/1972

Down Beat December 21, 1972

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Newspaper Music Survey Neglects Jazz, Latin, and Classical Music?

SKF NOTE: The Chicago Daily-Herald asks non-subscribers to take a reader survey in order to read an online a news report on the closing of a renowned store called The Drum Pad. Fair enough. But whatever the Daily-Herald intends for the data it collects, this question is totally skewed against jazz, latin, and classical music. At least! That is, unless people who listen to those music genres are not of interest to the survey maker.

daily_herald

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Lee Young: The Reason Motown Got Away with Something Like That

Lee Young

Lee Young

SKF NOTE: I recently found, and started posting here, transcripts of short phone interviews I did in the early 1980’s while gathering data for my five-part Modern Drummer series, The History of Rock Drumming. It may be hard to believe in 2015, but in the early 1980’s there was very little written about the history of Rock drummers.

Who played on hit and/or legendary Rock records was sometimes tough to unravel. Even having a positive drummer’s name wasn’t a guarantee. Sometimes a reliable source would give a positive ID for another drummer playing on the same record. Sometimes more than one drummer did play on the same record (overdubbing.)

Who are the drummers on Motown‘s records? That was the biggest mystery of all. The top Motown drummers: Benny Benjamin, Pistol Allen, Uriel Jones — were not well known names. Once their names were known it was not easy identifying them on the records. Add to that a handful of studio drummers who said they recorded many Motown sessions — what a tangled web.

Some of the Motown drummer confusion came from Motown‘s way of recording sessions. Some studio drummers, such as Earl Palmer, told me of Motown recording song demos in Los Angeles, and then overdubbing singers or singing groups, and turning out hit records.

In this interview, Lee Young tells me about Motown‘s practice of paying Detroit studio musicians to record “all week long.” Mr. Young, at the time of this interview, was Vice President of Motown‘s Creative Division in Los Angeles. He was also a great drummer and brother to tenor sax giant, Lester Young.

As I’ve said in my other postings from these History of Rock Drumming backgrounder interviews, I don’t know if the info here is new. But I think it should be in the public square if, for no other reason, than serving as a fact-checking source.

You can see in my original typewritten transcript below, I was asking Lee Young “about the Musician’s Union and Motown recording illegally.”) At the risk of making this intro too long, I want to add that I was not playing gotcha with Motown, I wasn’t trying to get anyone in trouble. My goal was simply to identify certain drummers who left an indelible mark in Rock drumming history.

Lee Young: I can give you this much information: The reason Motown got away with something like that is because they were in Detroit. The same rules didn’t apply in Detroit as they did in New York or Los Angeles because in a city like that, they’re so glad to have people to record.

They [Motown] used to put musicians on salary and let them record all week long. You’re not allowed to do that, really. Because you pay with three-hour sessions. Three hours constitutes a session.

You couldn’t do it in any other place, but Motown could do it in Detroit because they were bringing something to Detroit. They were bringing employment to people, I guess. So I think the union looked the other way.

Each jurisdiction will let things go on in their area that, if the National office ever found out about it, they’d come down on them. But nobody ever really found out about this until after they [Motown] became successful.

Sure, many musicians have really squawked about it, but they made the deal at the time because they didn’t have anything better to do.

Scott K Fish: It was a steady gig?

LY: It was a steady gig. See, they [Motown] were playing them [the studio musicians] like $125.00 a week, but they would record every day.

SKF: So it was like a 9-to-5 job for them?

LY: It was. It was. See, it was great for them because they were getting this bread. But, see, you wouldn’t have been able to do that here [Los Angeles] or [in] New York or Chicago. So I think it was like one hand washes the other, really. They [Motown] were fortunate enough…. Because they would not have been able to get started, really, if they had not been able to do that. They just stayed in the studio around the clock, seven days a week.

The musicians knew what they were doing because they go their bread. Everybody knew what they were doing. It was not a viscious thing.

They do that now to a degree. They’ll make demos now…. They have a demo scale at the union, and once [a demo] became a record, if they sell the master [tape], then you have to go back and pay them full scale.

That goes on now all over.

Scott K Fish Lee Young transcript page 1

Scott K Fish Lee Young transcript page 1

Scott K Fish Lee Young transcript page 2

Scott K Fish Lee Young transcript page 2

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