Behind
The Glass, Vol. II – Top Record Producers Tell How They Craft The Hits
By Howard Massey
Backbeat Books 2009, $24.99, pp332
At last! About ten years after that great, successful Volume I that by now
I almost considered
as being destined
to remain a "one of a kind" specimen, here’s Volume II of Behind
The Glass – Top Record Producers Tell How They Craft The Hits. The
"glass" in the title, of course, referring to the famous glass
panel behind which those producers and engineers who guide the creative process
usually stay – or stand (a role that, as the book successfully shows, remains
just as essential today, even in a world where the "glass" is often
of the virtual kind); with the book’s subtitle making explicit reference
to the skills of the artisan implied by the word "craft", while
implicitly referring to the apprenticeship system so essential for the health
of a profession (and, by implication, music) today greatly endangered by
the diffusion of "home studios", however technically evolved they
are.
Massey’s interviews initially appeared in Musician magazine, and then, after
Musician went under, in the pages of EQ. Many interviews now featured in
Volume II – 42 in all, plus two Producer Panels – had already appeared
in Home Recording and EQ magazines, though in abridged form. The interview
pattern remains the same as Volume I: a brief intro about who’s being interviewed, the interview text,
and a selection of not-to-be-missed audio material. With just a few exceptions
– the only ones that really bothered me were those with Tchad Blake and
Joe Chiccarelli – no interview here can be said to be "too brief" ("brief" here
being a relative term: it often happened to me that a single sentence became
the source of all kinds of thoughts, while the book rested on my table). The only thing I really found annoying was the fact that – just as it
was also the case with Volume I – all interviews bear no date of their
original taping session: which is not good, since it’s impossible to understand if we
are listening to somebody who’s quite good at anticipating things, or to somebody
who has thought a great deal about the (recent) past.
While Volume I was bound to have an easy life – who could remain cold when
confronted with a list featuring albums such as The Dark Side Of The Moon,
Revolver, "Heroes", Aja, Pet Sounds and Electric Ladyland? –
Volume II is quite good, too. There are familiar names such as Daniel Lanois
and T-Bone Burnett. Veterans such as Larry Levine (there’s a fine interview
about Phil Spector’s Wall Of Sound), Bruce Swedien (Michael Jackson, Quincy
Jones), John Simon (The Band), and Russ Titelman (here I found the part about Steve Winwood
to be of great interest). There are also those whose specialty
is live performances
(David Hewitt, Ed Rak), Jazz and Classical music (Steve Epstein), orchestras (Richard
Lush, John Kurlander), surround sound and film music (Steve Parr).
I happened to read interviews with people who I thought were unknown to me
(Kevin Killen) til I had a look at the list of their works (Peter Gabriel,
U2, Elvis Costello, Shakira). I discovered those names behind the music: Rodney
Jerkins (Destiny’s Child, Monica, Mary J. Blige), Darryl Swann (Macy Gray),
Ann Mincieli (Alicia Keys). I read interviews with people whose work was
at the foundation of the music of the 80s (and beyond): Hugh Padgham, Trevor
Horn, and Stephen Lipson. The real revelation for me were many names who
work in Nashville, the most interesting interviews for me being the ones with Kyle Lehning, Clarke Schleicher (one of the best ones in the whole book), and Trina Shoemaker
(whose CV features both Sheryl Crow and Queens Of The Stone Age). And I could
go on.
It goes without saying that many changes took place in the decade
separating the two editions of this book, the first that comes to mind
being the fast change when it comes to all things technical. Most interviews
bearing at least a trace of those changes, I’d define the two Panels that open and close the book
as those where it’s easier to see what changed. And while the two Panels in Volume I had
seen (US) East Coast and West Coast producers acting as main characters,
the two Panels here take place in London and Nashville. Which, in a way,
is only logical, if we consider how many studios in New York and Los Angeles have closed their doors.
With hindsight, it’s quite easy to see how slow-paced the rate of change was
at the ("classic") time of the interviews appearing in Volume
I – though at that time it appeared to be quite fast. Those important issues
of the time – such as: Which is the best way to mike drums? How do you know when a mix is done? How can one have the vocals "sit" in a track? Does everybody really need a producer? Digital or Analog? What are the worst traits of home recording?
– sat on a plane that moved quite slowly, this also being true of "quality".
The two Panels featured in the book – this being also true of quite a few interviews
– take place at a moment when Majors are in disarray, earnings and profits are just a hypothesis, recording budgets get lower and lower, equipment
maintenance becomes increasingly problematic. It goes without saying that
the "loudness wars" and the fact of listeners having tiny earbuds
as their main listening devices make the work of both producers and engineers
increasingly difficult. New worries – When is too much autotune really "too
much"? Are plug-ins really much worse than the "real thing"?
Does analog still have a place in the world? – now stand side-by-side with many
of the old ones.
By now I’m quite certain that the (future) publication of Behind The Glass,
Volume III is not a question of paper books
still being bought and sold. Will there still be a kind of
"music-making" that can be considered as a high-skilled occupation? In closing, I’ll quote
from George Massenburg’s Foreword (which presents a first-draft type of
explanation, and which deserves to be read in its entirety):
"Maybe that’s because today there are no ‘gatekeepers’ that recognize
great recordings (that is, great tunes, great performances, and/or great
innovations) and introduce them to a broader audience. Now, it’s many-to-many,
with what seems to be at once a hugely democratic opportunity and a denial
of the requirement for uniquely individual, idiosyncratic talent".
Beppe
Colli
© Beppe Colli 2010
CloudsandClocks.net
| Jan. 7, 2010