Bass Magazine digs into the latest releases of albums, books, and videos involving all things bass

For the Love of Ron: Ron Carter and Friends 85th Birthday Celebration
In what was an absolute highpoint for an instrument that even in the age of social media remains too often overlooked, the grand master of jazz bass, Mr. Ron Carter, was honored at a packed Carnegie Hall concert on May 10, celebrating his 85th birthday. All bassists hold a sweet spot for the Detroit-born and raised, New York City-forged Carter, from his landmark early career with the Miles Davis Quartet and Quintet to his frequent solo projects that range from bebop to Bach. In between are thousands of recordings as a sideman โ chiefly in jazz, but extending to pop, R&B, Latin, and rap โ upon which he has established himself as the foremost architect of bass line construction.
An impressive collection of Carter devotees led the proceedings, starting with host Lester Holt of NBC News, himself an active bassist. Holt spoke eloquently and then introduced Stanley Clarke, who framed Carter as the superhero he is before bringing out drummer Lenny White for some comments. The pair then presented Carter with a custom Stanley Clarke Starcaster Bass, with โRon Carterโ emblazoned on the fretless fingerboard. The maestroโs first appearance onstage elicited a rousing ovation from a reverential audience that included Anthony Jackson, Ralphe Armstrong, and John Benitez.

Holt then introduced the first of three lineups of Carterโs choosing: His drum-less Golden Striker Trio, with pianist Donald Vega and guitarist Russell Malone (who appears on Ronโs 2003 album The Golden Striker). The three displayed a seamless sharing of ideas over the course of bass giant Oscar Pettifordโs โLaverne Walk,โ Carterโs own ballad โCandlelight,โ and Joe Hendersonโs โSoft Winds.โ Next, Carterโs Foursight Quartet took the stage, with pianist Renee Rosnes, tenor saxophonist Jimmy Greene, and drummer Payton Crossley (recently captured on the 2019 live side Foursight: Stockholm, Vol. 1). First up was Carterโs simmering, medium swing โ595โ and his catchy, fashion statement-acknowledging bossa โMr. Bow Tie,โ with each member featured. The strikingly conversational unit concluded the concertโs first half with two of Carterโs favorite standards: โMy Funny Valentineโ and โYou and the Night and the Music,โ the latter featuring a fervent bass solo.
Following an intermission that had Carnegieโs five levels buzzing about how special the night was, the Ron Carter Octet took the stage, poised to up the magic further. Fronting cellists E. Zoe Hassman, Sybille Johner, Dorothy Lawson, and Maxine Neuman, double bassist Leon โBootsโ Maleson, the returning Malone and Vega, and Lenny White on drums, Carter took on new roles: He both conducted and played on the traditional โAbide with Meโ; he provided expressive arco moments on his stately, Latin-tinged โEl Rompe Cabezaโ; and he switched to his piccolo acoustic bass (tuned ADGC, low to high) for his soulful melody reading of Leon Russellโs โA Song for Youโ โ no doubt with Donny Hathaway in mind.
Ron remained on the piccolo bass for a concert highpoint: his inspired melding of โSong for a Friend,โ which he wrote in tribute to his father, and the Miles Davis anthem โAll Blues.โ Carter was humble, humorous, and self-effacing all night, referencing how every time he played was another chance to get the song right. The octetโs closer, โJust a Closer Walk With Thee,โ brought to light the fitting setting of Carnegie Hall, for what we were experiencing was indeed Black classical music (shout out to show producer Gregg Kelman). With the departure of the octet, Buster Williams, who first anchored Carterโs landmark two-bass quartet in 1977, took the stage for insightful comments about the man and his music. And then all that was left was Carter, sending an enchanted audience home with a heartfelt solo rendition of โYou Are My Sunshine.โ With a final wave, he popped on his baseball cap โ and like he has with the bass, and with jazz, left the great hall a better place. โChris Jisi

Carmine Appice
Guitar Zeus 25th Anniversary Box Set [DEKO Entertainment, 2021]
Legendary rock drummer Carmine Appice (Vanilla Fudge, Rod Stewart, Blue Murder) has re-issued his Guitar Zeus recordings into the recently released Guitar Zeus 25th Anniversary Box Set, a massive collection of four LPs, three CDs, full-color booklet with never-before-seen photos, and interviews conducted by acclaimed journalist Martin Popoff. Featuring Slash, Brian May, Ted Nugent, Yngwie Malmsteen, Neal Schon, Richie Sambora, Zakk Wylde, and many more, this 35-track release is a consummate collection for any rock guitar enthusiast. Luckily for bassists, thereโs some stellar four-string work as well.
Except for the songs โTime to Set Alarmsโ with Bob Daisley, and โThis Time Aroundโ with dUg Pinnick, former Firm and Blue Murder fretless monster Tony Franklin handles bass duties on the entire album. According to Franklin, all of the original basic tracks were recorded in 1995 and 1996. โCarmine, Kelly [Keeling, vocals and rhythm guitar], and I played live in the studio,โ he recalls. โEverything was analog, 24-track multitrack. We had a powerful natural chemistry between us, and everything flowed pretty easily.โ
For recording, Franklin went directly into the board with his bass, but he also used a Tech 21 Sans Amp. โThe guitar version,โ he clarifies, โwhich added a lot of growl and overdrive. The engineer, Phil Kaffel, did a phenomenal job of capturing the sound and vibe of the three of us.โ
Indeed, the chemistry runs deep on songs like โFour Miles High,โ an unusual riff that continually turns around on itself. โI had to forget about counting and play it by feel,โ says Franklin, describing the songโs complexity. โPerfect Dayโ is another track where the band sounds completely dialed in, and it provides the ideal foil for Franklinโs fretless bass playing. Itโs a heavy atmospheric ballad with beautiful chord changes โ the bass is very cello-like, melodic, and quite adventurous. โI like to think if Paul McCartney played fretless bass, this is what it would sound like.โ
Though his signature fretless playing abounds on Guitar Zeus, Franklin also got to exercise one of his lesser-known but equally potent skillsets: that of songwriter, by way of the albumโs current single, โMystified,โ which features Tommy Thayer (Kiss) on lead guitar, and Derek Sherinian (ex-Dream Theater) on keyboards. โIt was originally very mellow, mostly acoustic,โ he says, remembering aspects of the song he originally crafted many years ago. โI reworked the middle and ending solo sections to fit the Guitar Zeus vibe. They were originally in 4/4; we turned them into 7/8. The song is about a spiritual meditation experience โ to be mystified is to be enamored by a mystical experience.โ
Guitar Zeus was the first full-length recording that Appice and Franklin did together after their stint in the epic Blue Murder with John Sykes of Whitesnake. โWe still had the same vibe and chemistry,โ he remembers. โGuitar Zeus stands as some of our finest work together. Iโm happy it has been re-released. I hope more people get exposed to it. Itโs powerful stuff.โ โFreddy Villano
Check out the official video for โMystifiedโ

Rev Jones
In the Key of Z [Dark Star, 2021]
A little-known fact about bassist Rev Jones is that when heโs not touring or recording with such A-list rock acts as the Michael Schenker Group, Leslie West, and Steelheart, he serves as George Thorogoodโs guitar tech. Why does this matter? Well, when it comes to popping out solo records, you donโt just get the bass bonanza youโd expect from someone as fleet-fingered as Jones โ you also get an album full of well-crafted songs and performances that sound like a balanced band. โI have this process of playing the crap out of Georgeโs guitar before the band goes onstage to make sure it will hold tuning, because he plays really hard,โ explains Jones. โSo, during this process I usually end up writing these little tongue twister-type riffs.โ Jones says at least six of the song ideas on In the Key of Z started out during this pre-show ritual.
In addition to producing In the Key of Z at his home studio in Oklahoma, and writing or co-writing all 12 tracks, Jones also played guitar, double bass, keyboards, mandolin, ukulele, and tambourine. The songs themselves represent Jonesโ distinctive takes on thrash and metal, as well as a few unexpected yet way-cool forays into country and folk. โMost performers are trying to be too serious or cautious,โ he says. โBut Iโve never allowed myself to be pigeonholed as a performer. Great music should always sound fearless.โ
Bass tracks on In the Key of Z were cut using his Dean Signature bass with Bartolini pickups through his Phil Jones (no relation) bass rig and a plethora of Maxon effect pedals, depending on the tune. The album has an organic, live-sounding vibe, despite the contributors recording remotely. And even within that now-common collaborative template, Jones admits to engaging in a slightly different recording process than most people. โI program a scratch drum part, and then I play all the guitar, bass, keys, and mandolin. Once that and the guitar solos are complete, I head into the studio with Jeff Martin to cut the drum tracks.โ Jones says this process, of doing drums last, opens up Martinโs ability to throw in โoddball drum fills and accentsโ without it affecting the way any of the music is played. โWhen I write these songs, I hear a certain feel and rhythm that could easily be altered by doing the drums first. One little alteration of the feel can change the riff drastically.โ Jones says this is why In the Key of Z has such a live-sounding vibe. โJeff is playing to the song, not to the click, so it still pushes and pulls.โ
Whether itโs the smart-ass ferocity of โLollygaggingโ or the monster-riff veracity of the title track, every cut on In the Key of Z rocks with the creative confidence Jones is known for. Itโs clear from these performances he still finds joy in plugging in, turning up, and blasting off, in just about any direction he pleases. โItโs all rock as far as Iโm concerned,โ he concludes. โEven where the songs have a folk or country feel, the guitars are heavy โ the bass, mandolin, and ukulele feel heavy, too. The goal was for it all to sound like me.โ โFreddy Villano
Check out the official video for โLollygaggingโ here:

Primus
Conspiranoid [ATO, 2022]
Currently on the road for their Tribute to Kings tour, which pays homage to Rush by featuring performances of the entire 1977 album A Farewell to Kings, Les, Ler, and Tim surprised their fans with an unexpected EP titled Conspiranoid. The three-song journey reminds us exactly what makes Primus unique, and exactly how wildly and strangely talented they are, as the material evokes all of the best characteristics of this unconventional band. The opening title track boasts an 11:31 run time, to which Claypool remarks, โWe were just due to release a long, winding, bastard of a song.” The track starts out with a climactic build centered around a lead melody played by Claypool before it careens into a blazing fast riff and then dissipates into a classic Primus groove. This sonic territory is exclusive to the DNA of the trio and serves as a launching pad for Claypoolโs vocals, which dissect the current state of paranoia and false information. The song takes many more twists and bends before kicking into the second track of the EP, โErin on the Side of Caution.โ Running at about a third the length of its predecessor, the song is all about Claypoolโs wild tone and quirky fills. The final track, โFollow the Fool,โ finds Claypoolโs bass laced with effects and droning notes before kicking into strange pocket rhythms, and then progressing into speedy finger-runs and blazing fretboard acrobatics. Overall, this EP is a gift for Primus fans and serves as another reminder of exactly what Claypool can do on the bass. The material is enough for any bass lover to geek out on while still admiring how weird and unapologetically unique this outfit has always been and always will be. โJon D’Auria

Warpaint
Radiate Like This [Virgin, 2022]
On their first album in six years, Warpaint returns with their highly anticipated new installment of post-rock magic. The record was originally written in early 2020, but due to the pandemic the band decided to hold back on releasing their fourth effort until they could properly tour to support it, and it was most definitely worth the wait. Jenny Lee Lindberg reminds us exactly why sheโs such a bass talent on Radiate, as her reverb-coated Rickenbacker plays a pivotal role on each of the LPโs ten songs. Her retro-soul grooves on โStevieโ echo the laid-back sentiment of the album, which takes its time to unfold on each track, while tension is built through the tightknit work of the rhythm section and the alluring vocals. โChampionโ features a more upbeat tone thatโs locked in with Lindbergโs precise simplicity. โLike Sweetnessโ allows the bass to take the lead alongside drummer Stella Mozgawa, who delivers a rimshot-filled groove. While Radiate might not have as many danceable moments as previous Warpaint albums, it maintains the bandโs overall feel throughout โ which could best be described as a euphoric gloom with bright moments of light bursting through. Jenny Leeโs bass is definitely one of these bright lights. โJon D’Auria

Norm Stockton
Grooves & Sushi [Stocktones Music]
Renowned Southern California bassist and educator Norm Stockton remains a joyful presence in the music world, while continuing to grow as an artist. On his third album, he once again expands his voice as a composer and orchestrator, opting for such colors as bass clarinet, cello, and trumpet for a set of high-powered funk-fusion and introspective ballads. The openers, โZigged When Ya Should Have Zaggedโ and โLunar Mints,โ establish the nuanced vibe and nice compostional development, the latter featuring Stocktonโs sinewy solo. The ballad โA Wristwatch on Mars,โ featuring guitarist Mark Lettieri, summons vintage Jeff Beck. โBlizzardโ and โWith a Touch of Avalancheโ get more muscular, driven by drummers Gregg Bissonette and Chris Coleman, respectively, along with Stocktonโs potent thumb.
Back on the ballad side, Stockton displays his deft chordal skills on the bittersweet โField of Broken Glassโ and the enigmatic โOnly When I Exist,โ and he chooses the perfect foundational and solo tone via his Kala U-Bass for the haunting โAmber.โ The disc ends on an uplifting note with the ensemble-driven โMirrorsโ and the funk throwdown โNormenclature.โ Choose the deluxe edition and youโll be treated to 12 episodes of Grooves & Sushi, in which the band enjoys a world-class sushi meal while having revealing conversations about careers and the track at hand, intercut with footage of the track being recorded. Also included are video performances of each song, more clips of band members sharing tips and industry stories, a bass gear rundown, Normโs Grooving for Heaven instructional series, and his first two albums, Pondering the Sushi and Tea in the Typhoon. Whether throwing down on his MTD basses or channeling his inner Anthony Bourdain, Stockton is in the groove. โChris Jisi
