Tag Archive | "Don Henley"

Timothy B. Schmit prepares to take flight


 

By Chris M. Junior

With his brief West Coast solo tour scheduled to begin Nov. 25, Eagles bassist/singer Timothy B. Schmit checked in on Thanksgiving Eve to let fans know what they can expect at each show, plus shed some light on what his legendary band might be doing in 2012 and beyond.

Your tour starts on Black Friday. Does that mean you will be taking it easy on Thanksgiving so you don’t have a sleepy turkey hangover when you hit the stage in Phoenix?

Timothy B. Schmit: “Actually, I don’t have a huge thing planned for Thanksgiving. Two of my daughters have other plans; they’re grown up and starting their own lives. So it’s going to be my son – my youngest – and my wife and I: It’ll be real easy, midday, and then I’ll get ready to go out [on tour].”

On 2009’s “Expando,” your recent solo album, you handled more than just bass duties. Will you be jumping around from instrument to instrument on this tour or just sticking to one or two?

TBS: “Mostly I play guitar and a little bit of bass. I’m surrounded by some great musicians, friends of mine, who do jump around (laughs).

“We hand the bass off to quite a few people in this show. There are a couple of multi-instrumentalists. It’s pretty cool. I’m really having a good time. It’s my show, but I think it comes off more like a revue because I have a lot going on up there.”

In addition to songs from “Expando,” what else can fans expect to hear each night on this tour?

TBS: “A little taste of my past – a couple of Poco things, and of course a couple of Eagles things, the ones that I sing on. And maybe a favorite song or two of mine.”

Talk about the mental and physical differences between fronting a band for an entire show and when you’re onstage with The Eagles.

TBS: “It’s really a lot different. In many ways, it’s a lot easier to do my role in The Eagles and play in front of 15,000 or 20,000 people. As far as mental strain, it’s a lot easier to do that than to play a small place where I’m doing it all, where I’m at center stage at all times.”

Speaking of The Eagles, Joe Walsh recently talked about plans to celebrate the band’s 40 anniversary in 2012. Is a lengthy tour a strong possibility? And what about any archival or new releases?

TBS: “It’s interesting because I read that from Joe, too, and I meant to talk to him about that. We did our last [Eagles] show of the year last Saturday in Las Vegas, and we flew home together. I meant to talk with him about [what he’s said] because I’ve been saying the exact opposite (laughs).

“I have not heard any mention of any shows; there’s nothing on the books right now that I know of. I think eventually, when we do go back on the road – and I’m not even sure it’s going to be this next year or not – we will definitely have to do a lot of revamping of our stage show because we’ve been doing sort of the same thing for a long time.

“And we’ve played everywhere, so we’ve got to change it up a little. I think it’s smart to not go out really soon because we’ve been everywhere. You can’t go back to these same places if you were just there not too long ago. It doesn’t work out real well.

“But there are some things in the air regarding other possibilities, not just touring. There’s going to be a ‘history of The Eagles’ at some point, which will maybe be a two-part documentary. And maybe there will be some new music coinciding with that. I don’t know; this is all just unofficial maybes. This is stuff that’s been bandied about.

“There’s even been talk about a possible Broadway thing that has to do with the history of The Eagles, but that would be two, three, four years away. I don’t know; we’ll see what happens. I’m hoping that it’s not over, and I don’t really think it is. I don’t think anybody thinks it is; we’re just going to take a little break for a while.

“Almost everybody is doing a record. Both Don [Henley] and Glenn [Frey] are working on solo records, and Joe I believe is finished with his. And if I have the time, and it looks like I will, I’m going to be working on my next one.”

Timothy B. Schmit on tour (schedule subject to change):

Nov. 25: The Compound Grill – Phoenix

Nov. 28: Belly Up Tavern – Solana Beach, Calif.

Nov. 30: The Coach House – San Juan Capistrano, Calif.

Dec. 2: Cashe Creek – Brooks, Calif.

Dec. 3: Canyon Club – Agoura Hills, Calif.

Dec. 6: Rio Theatre – Santa Cruz, Calif.

Dec. 8: Tower Theatre – Bend, Ore.

Dec. 9: Skagit Valley Casino – Bellingham, Wash.

Dec. 12: Kirkland PAC –  Seattle

Dec. 13: Aladdin Theatre – Portland, Ore.

Photo courtesy of Timothy B. Schmit

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Obituary: Kenny Edwards


Kenny Edwards died Wednesday afternoon, August 18 at his California home.  He was 64 years old. According to his website, “Your words, thoughts, generosity, & kindness eased his transition.  He was grateful for the love he was shown.”

In 1965 Edwards teamed up with Linda Ronstadt to form one of folk-rock’s most legendary bands, Stone Poneys who set the bar for the Southern California music scene and spawning the Ronstadt classic “Different Drum.” Following that up a few years later in 1968, Kenny Edwards joined forces with Karla Bonoff; both accomplished singer/songwriters, and in the early 70s again found his way back to Ronstadt which ultimately saw her music transcend into full glory.  Handling bass on extensive world tours, working closely with her in the studio, collaborating on songs, and helping with vocals, Edwards truly showcased his golden musical touch.

A career that spanned nearly four decades saw Edwards’s collaborative hand in hugely successful musical endeavors including work with Bonnie Raitt, JD Souther, Rita Coolidge, Warren Zevon, Jennifer Warnes, Don Henley, Wynona Judd, Ringo Starr, Vince Gill, and more.

Continuously working both in the studio and on tours worldwide, Kenny Edwards put out what now proves to be his final solo album, “Resurrection Road,” in late 2009, and is remembered as one of the most influential musicians among fans and fellow musicians worldwide.

Services and Memorial information to follow shortly.

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Slo-Leak ushers in a new ‘Century’ of the blues


By  Peter Lindblad

Charlie Carp (standing) and Danny Kortchmar (crouching) make up Slo-Leak. Photo courtesy of Mad Ink PR/Mick Rock

Charlie Carp (standing) and Danny Kortchmar (crouching) make up Slo-Leak. Photo courtesy of Mad Ink PR/Mick Rock
Given the acrimony and bitterness that accompanied The Eagles’ 1982 breakup, it’s no wonder Don Henley wanted to put as much distance as he could between himself and his former band.

To help him escape his past, Henley turned to Danny Kortchmar.

“When I was lucky enough to get the gig of working with him on his first solo album (1982’s I Can’t Stand Still), and then subsequent albums, the whole deal was to get an identity for him that was not based on The Eagles and that was really his own sound,” recalls Kortchmar. 

What was needed was radical reconstructive surgery.

“We… didn’t want to be L.A. folkies anymore,” says Kortchmar. “There’s like no acoustic guitar on the first album. [Henley] said, ‘No, it’s not going to have any acoustic guitar. We’re not doing anything Eagle-like — no steel guitar, no banjo, none of that L.A. country-rock crap. We’re through with all that.’”

In wiping Henley’s slate clean, Kortchmar made rough demos “… with drum machines and things like that, and they were dig-able,” he says.

Henley took a liking to the demos and kept referring to them during the recording of I Can’t Stand Still. “Don would say, ‘Let’s get it like the demo,’” remembers Kortchmar.

From that, Henley and Kortchmar developed a “shorthand” that would guide them through I Can’t Stand Still, which featured the single “Dirty Laundry,” a song Kortchmar co-wrote.

“We just had a bunch of rules that came about,” says Kortchmar. “Leave room for the melody. Don’t clutter it up so that Don doesn’t have a place to sing. Leave enough room for him to develop something. Keep it simple. Keep a groove thing going.”

That “groove thing” is the life force that drives Slo-Leak, the gritty, blues-rock duo Kortchmar formed in the mid-’90s with Charlie Carp, a guitarist known for his session work with Meatloaf, Aerosmith and David Johansen.

Their upcoming release, New Century Blues, finds the two combining the programming sorcery of Kortchmar with Carp’s gravel-gargling growl and the sly guitar parts of both men in a nasty brand of blues-rock that builds on what Kortchmar accomplished with Henley.

Influenced by electronica, hip-hop and dub music, Kortchmar, without hesistation, wants to take the blues to places it rarely, if ever, dares to go.

“I wanted to be able to do something really different with blues, ’cause blues very much now has become this calcified entity where a guy comes out, and he plays a medium-tempo shuffle, and he does an impression of Stevie Ray Vaughan, and that’s what people think the blues is,” says Kortchmar. “And not to take anything away from that, because that is partly what the blues is, but those of us that love blues are called upon to take it to the next plateau, the next level of whatever that is.”

Repeating what blues greats of the past have done is not good enough for Slo-Leak. That much is apparent by how the duo reworks blues classics “Early In The Morning” and Willie Dixon’s “Spoonful.”

“The lyric is really dark,” says Kortchmar of the original “Spoonful.” “It’s a really dark, low-down, funky, from-the-swamp lyric. It sounds like something Langston Hughes would write. I mean, it’s poetry… and it’s got a real darkness and edge, a real strong edge to it. He says, ‘One spoon [of love] from [my] 45 will save you from another man.’ That’s bad-ass, you know. So, I figured the tune really has been done as an upbeat tune, in various kinds of ways. So, I said, ‘Let’s take the lyric and melody and get it to where it’s really, really spooky and low-down and bring new meaning to the lyric behind it.’”

Competing with the originators of the blues is fruitless for Kortchmar. He chooses to work off their templates and try to make something new.

“In my opinion, those Chess records that Little Walter and Muddy Waters made… you can’t beat that,” says Kortchmar. “That’s it. That’s as good as it gets for that kind of stuff. You can do imitations of it, but you can’t go any further than that. That’s the funkiest, raunchiest, most bad-ass stuff that I’ve ever heard, that anyone’s ever heard. Now, the idea is to take the elements of the blues and make something new with it.”

New Century Blues is a fresh take on an old standard. Its steamy, deep grooves are mean and menacing, and there’s funky bass everywhere, especially on the opening track, “Taillights.”

“[‘Taillights’ has] got that rolling bass line, and then Charlie and I are playing blues over the top of it,” explains Kortchmar. “But, it’s also got freaky chords (laughs)… a lot of different stuff happening to try to make it interesting.”

A multi-layered listening experience, New Century Blues is the bridge that connects the spirit of old-school blues with contemporary technology.

“It has kind of a traditional feeling in the melodies of it and the vocal of it, that delivery,” says Kortchmar. “It has a more modern feeling in the production of it. It grooves like an old record. It grooves like mad, and that’s the part that counts in my opinion.”

Diverse rhythmically, with a mandate to make asses shake, New Century Blues also sees Kortchmar telling tales about the dark side of fame and fortune. Trouble is lurking around every corner of “White Lines” and “Death By Hollywood.”

“We think the lyrics are funny as well,” says Kortchmar. “They’re dark, but they’re very funny… and I think a lot of blues lyrics are dark and funny.”

Kortchmar’s own battle with temptation and excess following the success of Henley’s Building The Perfect Beast (1984) and The End Of The Innocence (1989) is explored here, although Kortchmar is not out to exorcise any inner demons.

“I wouldn’t say [it’s] cathartic. It was too fun to be cathartic,” laughs Kortchmar. “Not that I was that heavy of a doper, but you know, it was the ’70s and ’80s, man. Nobody escaped unscathed.”

Wounds inflicted on Kortchmar during the wild times included a failed marriage. In
the aftermath, Kortchmar decided to clean up his lifestyle and move from Hollywood to Westport, Conn., where he met Carp, the one-time teen prodigy who, at age 15, left school to play guitar with Buddy Miles.

“As soon as I got to [Westport], the people I knew there starting talking about this great guitar player, Charlie Carp,” says Kortchmar. “So, I’d been hearing his name, and he probably had been hearing my name when I moved to the area. Finally, we met up and started talking about music, and I immediately dug him.”

Both loved the R&B, blues and rootsy rock ’n’ roll of the ’50s and ’60s, and they started out with a full-fledged band behind them that included ex-Paul Butterfield bassist Harvey Brooks. After 1996’s self-titled debut, logistical problems forced Slo-Leak to trim down to just Kortchmar and Carp for 1999’s When The Clock Strikes 12. That album signaled a change in course.

“I had all this gear and was capable of creating a lot of music myself, says Kortchmar. “We just decided to start using what we had right there, and with the album When The Clock Strikes 12, that’s our first album in that direction — a lot of samples, a lot of loops and a lot of programming, and then us playing the blues on top of it.”

All this electronic experimentation might shock those familiar with Kortchmar’s history. A session musician known for helping usher in the singer/songwriter era of the ’70s, Kortchmar spent the mid ’60s toiling with New York City bands like The Kingbees and The Flying Machine, which included James Taylor. He makes reference to the group in the song “Fire And Rain” (“Sweet dreams and flying machines in pieces on the ground”).

A brief stint in The Fugs, with Kortchmar appearing on their Tenderness Junction album, was followed by a move to California with bassist Charles Larkey. The two would join King in the star-crossed trio The City. The group’s one album, the Lou Adler-produced Now That Everything’s Been Said, was a commercial failure, but it gave Kortchmar something more valuable.

“What I learned working on that record I used on every subsequent record I played on and produced,” says Kortchmar. “Lou Adler is a brilliant producer. He doesn’t say much. He doesn’t have to. He just does little things and suddenly, all hell breaks loose. During one tune, he turned around and said, ‘Let’s try compression on this.’ Suddenly, this beautiful compression just saturates the drums and the overhead cymbals. It was unbelievable.”

Kortchmar applied his education in two seminal works, starting with Taylor’s 1970 breakout album Sweet Baby James. When the two were in The Flying Machine, Kortchmar knew Taylor was headed for bigger and better things.

“He had started writing songs when we had The Flying Machine,” says Kortchmar, “and all the songs he wrote were really good. They all had that essence of what we love about James now.”

Then came the chance of a lifetime: the opportunity to play on King’s 1971 classic Tapestry.

“I started working with Carole years before she made Tapestry, and I started playing on her demos, and that was actually about the first time I was in the studio… ,” says Kortchmar. “She had seen The Flying Machine downtown at a club called The Night Owl. This is in the mid-’60s. And so she had me come in and start playing on her demos, which was a complete eye-opener. It was like going to Harvard or something. I mean, she’s so brilliant.”

From there, Kortchmar’s reputation as a top-flight studio musician spread, and he would work with artists like Linda Ronstadt, Jackson Browne, Harry Nilsson, Warren Zevon, and, of course, Henley.

Now, he has a chance to establish his own identifiable sound with Slo-Leak.

“I was always kind of seduced between jangly guitar rock and like hard-core R&B and all this stuff,” says Kortchmar. “It all spoke to me. So, at one point, I spent a lot of years just saying I’ve got to do one or the other. Now, I’m thinking, ‘Hey, why not let my music be informed by all these things.’”

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Album Review — Slo-Leak: New Century Blues


By  Peter Lindblad

The brainchild of ace session musicians Charlie Carp and Danny Kortchmar, known
mostly for his work with a solo Don Henley in the ’80s, Slo-Leak mashes up traditional blues guitar with a dense, swampy thicket of funky, down-and-dirty electronica on the duo’s third album.

While such an illicit coupling may enrage blues purists, the combination of organic and programmed elements provides deep, dark grooves and a hard-hitting, multi-dimensional aural experience that wallows in sleaze. Smoldering tracks like “Death By Hollywood,” “White Lines” and “Crazy Mixed Up World” have all the sweaty charm and Skid-Row ambiance of a seedy motel, but the grim reality is tempered by a devilish sense of humor and the impossible-to-deny temptation of their serpentine hooks. Soaking cautionary tales in the whiskey-and-cigarettes growl of Carp, Slo-Leak begins this foray into cyber-blues with the sinewy, bass-driven “Taillights,” and by the time the predatory prowl of “House Of Cards,” reminiscent of Peter Gabriel’s “Digging In The Dirt,” comes ’round with its chunky, computerized R&B grind, it’s clear Carp and Kortchmar have bad intentions in mind.

For all its modern ways, this record, which features clever guitar figures from both men, manages to capture the original spirit of the blues (see “Sold For Parts”), while, at the same time, charting its future course.   

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