Issue Eleven: Spins, Streams & Downloads

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

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

Adam Blackstone

Legacy [BASSic Black Entertainment]

Inspired by personal losses in the pandemic and cut in 30 days, Adam Blackstoneโ€™s stellar solo debut, Legacy, is at once unexpected and foreseeable: Unexpected in that, for the bulk of the 14-track effort, Blackstone mans his upright bass to anchor lush big-band arrangements of both standards and originals. Foreseeable given how the range of artists and musical styles he assembles here reflects his career as the premier musical director of the new millennium. Opening fittingly โ€œin the churchโ€ with the words of Kirk Franklin on โ€œNew Day,โ€ the colors of Blackstoneโ€™s upright and nimble horn ensemble are introduced. That leads to such swinginโ€™ tracks as Leslie Odom Jr.โ€™s take on โ€œFly Me to the Moonโ€; the Philly/Camden, New Jersey, tribute โ€œBack on the Strip,โ€ featuring Queen Latifahโ€™s vocals; โ€œBiggest, Greatest Thing,โ€ boasting the gospel duo Mary Mary and organist Cory Henry; and Jazzmine Sullivanโ€™s sultry interpretation of โ€œโ€™Round Midnight.โ€ Other upright and horn-infused ballads include the Chadwick Boseman tribute cover of โ€œIโ€™ll Be Seeing You,โ€ by his widow Simone; the sublime โ€œVulnerable,โ€ with Jean Baylor and husband/drummer Marcus Baylor; and the sweeping โ€œMy Winter,โ€ with vocalist Laurin Talese and keyboard ace Robert Glasper.      

On the bass guitar side, โ€œLostโ€ is a heady collaboration with jazz guitar giant John Scofield rife with expressive 5-string fills and step-outs โ€” as is โ€œAmongst the Stars,โ€ featuring Adam Blackstone Jr.โ€™s dreamy thoughts on the night sky. The title track, shouted out by Daโ€™ T.R.U.T.H and Jill Scott, pivots on old-school root-5th-octave jamming, with a brief, swung bridge on upright. Best of all is Blackstoneโ€™s cascading 5-string, backed by his group The Origin Band, on the swung funkfest โ€œTrue Praise.โ€ Blackstone as a solo artist? Believe! โ€“Chris Jisi

Songs for While Iโ€™m Away [Mercury Studios]

The Boys are Back in Town (Live at the Sydney Opera House, October 1978), CD, DVD & Blu-Ray [Mercury Studios]

In Songs for While Iโ€™m Away, โ€™80s chart-topper Huey Lewis proclaims that Phil Lynott was the best hard-rock entertainer heโ€™d ever seenโ€”a reminder of just how underrated Thin Lizzy was (and perhaps still is) within the rock pantheon. Despite driving hooks, twin lead guitars, lyrics saturated in working-class lore, and the charismatic presence of Lynott, Thin Lizzyโ€” although undeniably influential โ€” never seemed to capture the mainstream recognition they deserved.  

Songs for While Iโ€™m Away chronicles the life and music of Lynott, using archival footage, interview snippets from the man himself, and music from both the Thin Lizzy and Lynott solo catalog. Notable interviews with Lewis, U2โ€™s Adam Clayton, Metallica frontman James Hetfield, and former Thin Lizzy band membersโ€”including guitarists Midge Ure and Scott Gorham and keyboardist Darren Whartonโ€”as well as Philโ€™s wife Caroline Taraskevics and daughters Sarah Lynott and Cathleen Lynott, reveal an all-encompassing look at Phil, from his upbringing in the 1950s as a Black boy in blue-collar Dublin, and the racism he had to endure, to his rise to fame. One could argue about the lack of interviews with essential Lynott collaborators and former Thin Lizzy guitarists like Brian Robertson, Snowy White, and John Sykes, but as is the case with any documentary, there is only so much time to tell someoneโ€™s story. Despite these missing persons of interest, director Emer Reynoldsโ€™ documentary is engaging and holds together very well. Exploring Lynottโ€™s history and rippling impact on music, Reynolds examines him as a singer, songwriter, poet, father, and ultimately, cultural icon.

Complementing the film is The Boys Are Back in Town Live at the Sydney Opera House October 1978. Previously released on VHS, Laserdisc, and DVD, this version presents the Thin Lizzy show in the highest quality that has been made available, with restored video and remixed audio from multi-tracks, as well as five additional songs from this set that have never been officially released. This performance showcases the electricity of these original rock & roll rebels โ€” Lynott, Scott Gorham (guitar/background vocals), Gary Moore (guitar/background vocals), and Mark Nauseef (drums) โ€” delivering searing versions of their celebrated anthems, such as โ€œJailbreak,โ€ โ€œThe Boys Are Back in Town,โ€ โ€œBad Reputation,โ€ and โ€œMe and the Boys.โ€ Lynott sure crafted memorable and indelible bass lines throughout Thin Lizzyโ€™s career, and on the anthems in particular, his use of walking lines, passing tones, approach notes, and other moves are clearly induced by his vocal melodies โ€” but his role as singerโ€“songwriter often overshadowed just how astute a bassist he was. โ€“Freddy Villano

Elvis Costello

The Boy Named If [Capitol/EMI]

On Elvis Costelloโ€™s profound latest effort with The Imposters, Davey Faragherโ€™s role as a key counter-voice to Costelloโ€™s vocals is stylishly heightened due to his being able to record his parts at home. He relates, โ€œIt was nice to be sent the songs, maybe in a rough state, but with the forms intact โ€” usually with the drum track recorded over Elvisโ€™ vocal and sometimes scratch guitars. Recording one song at a time and by myself, I had the luxury of experimenting with parts and sounds.โ€ The results are instantly apparent on the title track, with Faragher developing his own call-and-answer part in the verses and then soaring high for a melodic counter-line in the bridge. Locked tight, as always, with drummer Pete Thomas, he manages to infuse his steady and broken eighth-notes on โ€œPenelope,โ€ โ€œMistook Me for a Friend,โ€ and โ€œThe Differenceโ€ with the flavors of Motown, reggae, and punk rock โ€” the first featuring fun fills in the fade, the last accented with slapped sections and double-stops.

Elsewhere, Faragher deftly pivots between a half-time and double-time 6/8 feel on โ€œWhat If I Canโ€™t Give You Anything But Love,โ€ elevates the laid-back rocker โ€œMy Most Beautiful Mistakeโ€ with funky 16ths, develops the quasi-Bo Diddley pulse on โ€œThe Death of Magic Thinking,โ€ and wields an upright (which he started playing in 2020) for the swing-in-two โ€œTrick Out the Truth.โ€ Throughout, he matches song to bass tone splendidly, rotating among his โ€™58 Fender Precision, โ€™63 Hofner Club Bass, โ€™63 Gibson SG Bass, and DeTemple P-55 โ€” all through his Tonecraft Audio 363 Tube DI and sometimes his Vox V125 amp, overdriven. Pedals ranged from his โ€™70s Mu-Tron Envelope Filter to fuzz added by producer Sebastian Krys after the fact. As Elvis Costello told Bass Magazine in Issue 5, โ€œDavey can invent with the best of them.โ€ โ€“Chris Jisi

Andrew Levy

Unleash Your Funk Bass Potential With The Brand New Heavies [musicgurus.com, 2022]

On Unleash Your Funk Bass Potential With The Brand New Heavies, acid-jazz legend Andrew Levy shares the creative techniques and bass playing style that helped The Brand New Heavies become one of the most successful U.K. funk groups of all time. Along with guitarist Simon Bartholomew, Levy is a co-founding member and co-songwriter of the band, which rose to prominence in the early โ€™90s with successful singles such as โ€œMidnight at the Oasis,โ€ โ€œSometimes,โ€ and โ€œDream on Dreamer.โ€ The Brand New Heavies helped to define the acid jazz genre and have performed on countless high-profile shows and bills, including Top of the Pops, supporting James Brown at Wembley Stadium, and much more.

In his first online bass guitar course, Levy teaches the song structures, chord choices, and tension-building techniques behind some of The Brand New Heaviesโ€™ biggest hits. He also discusses his creative approach to making music and demonstrates how he expresses himself through riffs and rhythm. Throughout the 13-part course, Levy breaks down his signature bass lines to demonstrate how he creates ideas and how he creates his funk sound โ€” incorporating right- and left-hand placement and technique, as well as tone-control settings on his basses. He explains how he approaches writing a song, from starting with a drum beat to adding all the instruments. He also walks you through how to work with other players to create the final product. The course comes complete with interactive sheet music and backing tracks for easy practice.

Levy is a self-taught musician, so donโ€™t expect a lot of theory or technical jargon. His approach is much more organic and visceral, based on the instincts he cultivated as a session player early in his professional career โ€” some of which youโ€™ll also learn about, including a session with Jamiroquai โ€” and the influences of his formative years. Levy grew up in London, the son of Jamaican parents, listening to an eclectic mix of music that runs the gamut from reggae to British pop radio to classical and jazz. As for specific artists, he says his biggest musical influences include James Brown, Vicky Anderson, Level 42, Shalamar, Chic, Herbie Hancock, George Duke, George Benson, Marvin Gaye, Thin Lizzy, Miles Davis, Phyllis Hyman, and Earth, Wind and Fire.

One of the most insightful aspects is seeing just how strong Levyโ€™s right-hand attack is, and understanding how that has been such an integral element of The Brand New Heaviesโ€™ sound. So, if youโ€™re interested in absorbing Levyโ€™s wisdom about funk-style bass playing, Unleash Your Funk Bass Potential With The Brand New Heavies is your chance to learn from a bona-fide icon of the low end. โ€“Freddy Villano

Yiorgos Fakanas

Topaz [fakanas.com]

Athens-based bassistโ€“composer Yiorgos Fakanas is perhaps best known on these shores for his collaboration with Anthony Jackson on the pairโ€™s propulsive 2009 record Interspirit. On his ambitious latest effort, Fakanas finally lays to wax an historic, six-part jazz suite he was commissioned to write in 1993 that marked the first pairing of a full string orchestra and a jazz octet by a composer in Greece โ€” โ€œa continuous conversation between the two,โ€ as he describes it. In addition, the revisit inspired eight new pieces that stand on their own. All 14 tracks are interpreted by Fakanasโ€™ usual assemblage of local and international jazz all-stars, here including drummer Horacio โ€œEl Negroโ€ Hernandez, as well as keyboardist Steve Weinghart and tenor saxophonist Bobby Franceschini (both frequent sidemen with Victor Wooten). The majestic opener, โ€œAromi,โ€ finds Fakanas handling melodies and taking a soaring solo on his Fodera 4-string. He then underpins โ€œPower of Willโ€ with his hard-swinging walking lines.

The title-track suite begins soon after, launched by Yiorgos issuing 16ths with Jaco-like intensity on โ€œPart 1โ€ and โ€œPart 3,โ€ building โ€œPart 2โ€ around his compelling chordal part, and adding an Afro-Cuban edge to โ€œPart 5โ€ and โ€œPart 6.โ€ Post-suite highpoints include the mythic, bass-led ballad โ€œJoyful Songโ€ and fertile Fakanas solos on the multi-hued โ€œGarden,โ€ the cinematic โ€œInterlude,โ€ and the surging โ€œValentine Mood.โ€ The global view? Fakanas remains a major composer who also happens to be a badass on bass guitar. โ€“Chris Jisi

Lips Turn Blue

Lips Turn Blue [MIG Music]

Mike Mullane has been a first-call journeyman bassist in rock, funk, Americana, and R&B since the 1980s for many bands in Rochester, Buffalo, Syracuse, and Toronto. Heโ€™s played with Lou Gramm (Foreigner), members of Aerosmith (Brad Whitford and Tom Hamilton), Steve Fekete (Avril Lavigne, Gwen Stefani, America) and Stuart Kimball (Bob Dylan). His latest project, Lips Turn Blue (LTB), teams him with late Talas singer and Buffalo legend Phil Naro and guitarist Don Mancuso of Black Sheep fame.

LTBโ€™s eponymous debut is an intelligent and raucous slab of classic-sounding rock & roll, with Mullaneโ€™s rock-solid bass-playing philosophy of โ€œplay the song, not your instrumentโ€ at the heart of the bandโ€™s music. He explains, โ€œYouโ€™re there to support the groove, the harmony, and the melody, and doing that can take many forms.โ€ For example, on the song โ€œCrazy in Love,โ€ heโ€™s basically playing whole-notes. โ€œIt works โ€” itโ€™s what the song needed,โ€ he attests. LTB also covers the Beatlesโ€™ โ€œHey Bulldog,โ€ where he gets to throw down on Paul McCartneyโ€™s classic lines.

Mullaneโ€™s bass tracks were all recorded direct, no amp: Bass to Tech 21 VT Bass Deluxe to Focusrite Scarlett 2i2 to Logic Pro X. โ€œThe VT Bass Deluxe is my go-to preamp when recording,โ€ he says. โ€œIโ€™ve had engineers say, โ€œDonโ€™t forget to bring that pedal.โ€ Mullane also reveals that his tone changed from song to song, citing the fact that he doesnโ€™t have what he would consider a signature sound. โ€œI used a few different basses, changing it up depending on what I thought the song called for.โ€ Instruments included an โ€™81 Fender Precision Bass, Carvin/Kiesel Brian Bromberg Signature 5-string, mid-โ€™80s made-in-Japan Fender Jazz Bass Special, and a 2000 Spector NS-4CR โ€” all of which use active pickups and preamps, except for the passive Fender Jazz. Mullane would record his bass tracks and then send it to producer Steve Major with no effects or processing. โ€œOn a few songs Iโ€™d send a couple versions with the clean sound and suggested processing, like chorus or dirt. Weโ€™d then talk about the final bass sound as it related to the final mix.โ€

For an album that has such a cohesive vibe, itโ€™s interesting to note that LTB was written and recorded entirely remotely by sending tracks back and forth. โ€œIโ€™m used to writing collaboratively in the same room, so this was all new to me,โ€ he says. Generally, the writers Naro and Mancuso would collaborate and send a basic outline to Major, who would then send out a basic mix. โ€œThen weโ€™d all put our tracks down and send it back to him,โ€ explains Mullane. โ€œIt would then go through reviews, rewrites, and recuts. There were a bunch of variations, but that was the basic process.โ€

Youโ€™ll likely catch a whiff of classic Foreigner from LTB, which makes sense as Mancuso was the guitarist for Lou Gramm in Black Sheep. So, if youโ€™re into radio-friendly, AOR-style classic rock dripping with melody โ€”and featuring an insanely underrated singer in Naro โ€” give LTB a spin. โ€“Freddy Villano

Long Distance Calling

Eraser [earMUSIC, 2022]

Cinematic in scope, and most certainly a career highlight, Eraser brings Long Distance Callingโ€™s (LDC) particular brand of instrumental music to a new generation of progressive rock fans. For 16 years now, the Germany-based four-piece has been delivering ethereal yet colossal music that manages to somehow bridge the gap between Floyd and Maiden. Yielding eight instrumental rock/progressive metal full-length records to date, LDCโ€™s last, and seventh, studio album, How Do We Want To Live? (2020), charted at #7 in Germany, and Eraser stands to build off that milestone.

A direct and heartfelt tribute to the gradual erosion of nature at the hands of mankind, Eraser is dedicated to the worldโ€™s endangered species, with each song representing one particular creature facing extinction. From the thunderous wake-up call of the opener โ€œBladesโ€ (dedicated to the rhinoceros) to the epic, haunting bombast of โ€œ500 Yearsโ€ (dedicated to the Greenland shark), to the sizzling intricacy of โ€œBlood Honeyโ€ (the bee), to the sonorous, slow-motion devastation of the closing title track (wherein humanity itself is the focus), LDC has conjured a wildly evocative and diverse collection of instrumental songs.

LDC has a knack for blending the atmospheric elements of Pink Floyd with more Iron Maiden-esque power metal without ever sounding forced. In their deft hands, and through the lens of their own creativity, they seamlessly meld these elements into tight-knit and cohesive sounding music that tickles the imagination. Holding it together is bassist Jan Hoffman, whose playing on Erasercrackles with energy, and is as nuanced and articulate as one might expect from someone like John Myung or Bryan Beller or even Karnivoolโ€™s Jon Stockmanโ€”venerable prog low-enders with an understated ability to shred who mostly ply their trade through tone and temperament. Check out โ€œKamilahโ€ or โ€œGiants Leavingโ€ for prime examples of his rich, gritty tone and tactful performances. If โ€œless is moreโ€ is the golden rule, Hoffman gets straight-As for how he applies himself to LDCโ€™s music. His bass lines always seem resourcefully implemented, balancing melody with groove, and exercising the appropriate amount of restraint that elevates the songs into โ€œThe whole is greater than the sum of its partsโ€ territory. Itโ€™s a skill that few bands master truly artfully. Again, Pink Floyd comes to mind.

Over the course of their career, LDC has taken bold leaps into the future and, in doing so, theyโ€™ve become a modern benchmark for imaginative, progressive, and proudly eccentric heavy music. Immersive, progressive, and endlessly inventive, Eraser is another entrant into that fray for this most idiosyncratic of bands. โ€“Freddy Villano

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Chris Jisi   By: Chris Jisi