Floodland...
- MadameButterfly
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1959... who played the piano? please.
it's all about circles and spirals
that ongoing eternity
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- weebleswobble
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well it certainly wasn't Pat, she was sleeping on the f**king thing
‎"We will wear some very loud shirts. We will wear some very wrong trousers."
- MadameButterfly
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and she was in her right!
was it actually Mr. E?
was it actually Mr. E?
it's all about circles and spirals
that ongoing eternity
that ongoing eternity
- methadrine
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Stating the bloody obvious since... well, forever.
- splintered thing
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I believe it is Andy...
as the day is long,
rain from heaven
rain from heaven
methadrine wrote:Search for 1959 in this interview...
http://www.zsd.co.za/~lucien/sisters/in ... .php?id=11
In that interview he says that he can't play piano.splintered thing wrote:I believe it is Andy...
He also mentions writing a saxophone song called New World Order. I'm sure I should probably know what it is but it doesn't ring any bells. Can anyone enlighten me?
- MadameButterfly
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Yeah that's what someone else also thinks.splintered thing wrote:I believe it is Andy...
It probably is anyway for one song, allowing his fingers to glide over the piano notes...
Thanks methadrine for that linky! Will have a good read in the near future.
Still, if anyone knows for sure, please let me know, just very interesting.
it's all about circles and spirals
that ongoing eternity
that ongoing eternity
'British music journalists never die, they waddle off to reveal their agenda for a derelict spiv nation in a media half-life more grotesque than anything I've ever been accused of.' Correct
The Chancer Corporation
I don't know, but always assumed it was The Man himself. The booklet liner notes don't mention any musicians, while Herr Eldritch does take the time, for example, to credit a dozen names from the New York Choral society.
So to me the only logical conclusion seems that Floodland is an effing one-man masterpiece
Don't you all think the passage in the interview from methadrine indicates the same? So he did the sax and piano on a synthesizer?
So to me the only logical conclusion seems that Floodland is an effing one-man masterpiece
Don't you all think the passage in the interview from methadrine indicates the same? So he did the sax and piano on a synthesizer?
The way he puts it is that he resampled a pre-existing track for 1959, because he can't play the piano as an instrument. Ditto for NWO as a sax track.stufarq wrote:In that interview he says that he can't play piano.
He also mentions writing a saxophone song called New World Order. I'm sure I should probably know what it is but it doesn't ring any bells. Can anyone enlighten me?
Clearly, buying a sampler and merely recycling chunks of other people's master tapes is not going to win you a lot of brownie points on Eldritch Boulevard, however fashionable it may be.
On the other hand, it's nice that I can write a piano song like "1959" or a saxophone track like "New World Order" without being able to play the actual instruments involved, and without having to let a session player get in the way of things.
The legendary Andrew Eldritch composition New World Order, described by the man himself as "a saxophone solo which takes ten minutes to convey one mixed emotion, and not sequentially either. It's one of the best things I've ever written" (UTR 14).stufarq wrote:He also mentions writing a saxophone song called New World Order. I'm sure I should probably know what it is but it doesn't ring any bells. Can anyone enlighten me?
Chris Sampson maintains it was played on the PA in the Summer tour in 1998.
New World Order was played at Gelsenkirchen, these days complete with spoken (actually more like a hiss) word vocal. What no-one's noticed is that the outro music that night appeared to be a ultra-rough demo of War on Drugs complete with screaming Varjak guitar feedback. Anyone else hear this? - Clicky
Eldritch specifically said that he can't play piano so it's not him. He might be able to bash out some basic stuff on a synth but that's too complex a piano part for a non-pianist. The other likely candidates would be Jim Steinman, who is known to have been in the area at the time, or perhaps a sequenced piano by the Doktor, although I'm not sure if the technology of the day was quite up to that. The sax sounds to me to have too much variation in tone to be synthetic so I'd vote for it being a real one. Which Eldritch can't play either.Sita wrote:I don't know, but always assumed it was The Man himself. The booklet liner notes don't mention any musicians, while Herr Eldritch does take the time, for example, to credit a dozen names from the New York Choral society.
So to me the only logical conclusion seems that Floodland is an effing one-man masterpiece
Don't you all think the passage in the interview from methadrine indicates the same? So he did the sax and piano on a synthesizer?
Actually, he doesn't list the members of the New York Choral Society. There's a list of thanks then the choir then more names. That second list isn't the choir. The first few names (Holly Sherwood, Curtis King, Brenda King, Tawatha Agee, Gina Taylor, Vaneese Thomas) are listed on the website (FAQ) as backing singers in addition to the choir.
But I've just had a closer look at those credits and noticed something else: near the bottom is Sid McGinnis, former guitarist with Peter Gabriel among others and resident guitarist on Letterman. His Wiki page (admittedly not very thorough) lists SOM as one of the bands he's recorded or toured with. So I looked up some of the other names:
Eric Troyer - keyboard player with ELO Part Two and Steinman collaborator
Eddie Martinez - session guitarist and Steinman collaborator
Lenny Pickett - saxophonist with the SNL house band among others
Steve Margoshes - Broadway composer (best known for Fame), Steinman collabprator and keyboard player
Mike Timoney - "veretran" keyboard player (released an album called The Astounding Sound Of The Cordovox)
Jeff Bova - Grammy Award winning keyboard player and Meat Loaf collaborator, once in a band with Eddie Martinez
Jimmy Bralower - producer and drummer(!)
James Ray you may already be familiar with
Kevin Mekon, many will already know, is Kevin Lycett, The Mekons' original guitarist
Holly Sherwood is also, yes, a Steinman collaborator
Couldn't pin down Tony K, Ann Rainone, Phil Wilfen, Steve Watson, Dave Kentish, Daniel Mass, Keith Herd, Carl Harrison, Pedro Moncada or Derick Johnson. However, there's a Derrick Johnson who played bass with the 52nd Street Band.
Some of the others in the top list (Claire, Kenny Giles, Jez Webb, Pete Turner) are known Sisters associates.
Looks like everyone was credited after all. The first list is various friends, associates, roadies, live crew etc. The second one is the singers and musicians on the album, including guitarists, a saxophonist, several keyboard players and even a possible bass player. And, for some reason, a drummer. Perhaps he helped with arrangements for the Doktor.
Mystery solved? Does lap of honour, trips over own shoelaces, embarrasses self in front of lots of people including girl he was trying to impress. She'll never share her dolly mixtures with me now.
Ta muchly.copper wrote:The legendary Andrew Eldritch composition New World Order, described by the man himself as "a saxophone solo which takes ten minutes to convey one mixed emotion, and not sequentially either. It's one of the best things I've ever written" (UTR 14).
Chris Sampson maintains it was played on the PA in the Summer tour in 1998.
New World Order was played at Gelsenkirchen, these days complete with spoken (actually more like a hiss) word vocal. What no-one's noticed is that the outro music that night appeared to be a ultra-rough demo of War on Drugs complete with screaming Varjak guitar feedback. Anyone else hear this? - Clicky
- theparadox2010
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Ann Rainone, is one Particia Morrison, so I was told a few years ago,
Daniel Mass, Danny from Salvation,
Dave Kentish, Big Dave, i believe, use to linger about in the early years n also helped the mussion,
Phil Wilfen, once again, from the early years, summat to do with lights or sound or roadie.
Daniel Mass, Danny from Salvation,
Dave Kentish, Big Dave, i believe, use to linger about in the early years n also helped the mussion,
Phil Wilfen, once again, from the early years, summat to do with lights or sound or roadie.
we're better than the birthday party, but not as good as motorhead, that makes us pretty damn good!!!!
- MadameButterfly
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Indeed it is!Sita wrote:I don't know, but always assumed it was The Man himself. The booklet liner notes don't mention any musicians, while Herr Eldritch does take the time, for example, to credit a dozen names from the New York Choral society.
So to me the only logical conclusion seems that Floodland is an effing one-man masterpiece
andcopper wrote:The way he puts it is that he resampled a pre-existing track for 1959, because he can't play the piano as an instrument. Ditto for NWO as a sax track.
Clearly, buying a sampler and merely recycling chunks of other people's master tapes is not going to win you a lot of brownie points on Eldritch Boulevard, however fashionable it may be.
On the other hand, it's nice that I can write a piano song like "1959" or a saxophone track like "New World Order" without being able to play the actual instruments involved, and without having to let a session player get in the way of things.
Ta for that info! The New World Order stuff at first read seems to ring a bell, I'll check the books I have, but I'm sure a bell is faintly ringing in my memory.copper wrote:The legendary Andrew Eldritch composition New World Order, described by the man himself as "a saxophone solo which takes ten minutes to convey one mixed emotion, and not sequentially either. It's one of the best things I've ever written" (UTR 14).
Chris Sampson maintains it was played on the PA in the Summer tour in 1998.
New World Order was played at Gelsenkirchen, these days complete with spoken (actually more like a hiss) word vocal. What no-one's noticed is that the outro music that night appeared to be a ultra-rough demo of War on Drugs complete with screaming Varjak guitar feedback. Anyone else hear this?
it's all about circles and spirals
that ongoing eternity
that ongoing eternity
Thought a couple of those names sounded vaguely familiar.theparadox2010 wrote:Ann Rainone, is one Particia Morrison, so I was told a few years ago,
Daniel Mass, Danny from Salvation,
Dave Kentish, Big Dave, i believe, use to linger about in the early years n also helped the mussion,
Phil Wilfen, once again, from the early years, summat to do with lights or sound or roadie.
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The master...Les Dawson.
A MASSIVE easter egg to anyone who comes up with a 'Les does piano' version of the piano track. It'd be a suitable tribute to all the s**t sisters cover versions out there.
C'mon, you know you can do it.
A MASSIVE easter egg to anyone who comes up with a 'Les does piano' version of the piano track. It'd be a suitable tribute to all the s**t sisters cover versions out there.
C'mon, you know you can do it.
My car's faster than your mum, but not as dirty.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9nNGlaiVypUGripper wrote:The master...Les Dawson.
A MASSIVE easter egg to anyone who comes up with a 'Les does piano' version of the piano track. It'd be a suitable tribute to all the s**t sisters cover versions out there.
C'mon, you know you can do it.
- Jeremiah
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I seem to remember Carl Harrison being a member of one of James Ray's bands. (Gangwar or Performance)stufarq wrote:
Couldn't pin down Tony K, Ann Rainone, Phil Wilfen, Steve Watson, Dave Kentish, Daniel Mass, Keith Herd, Carl Harrison, Pedro Moncada or Derick Johnson. However, there's a Derrick Johnson who played bass with the 52nd Street Band.
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You're right. Carl Harrison was a member of James Ray And The Performance ... see Band/Recording Personel...
http://sisterswiki.org/Mexico_Sundown_Blues
http://sisterswiki.org/Mexico_Sundown_Blues
Another name I thought I should recognise but couldn't place. Kept thinking I must have been confusing him with Carl McCoy.Jeremiah wrote: I seem to remember Carl Harrison being a member of one of James Ray's bands. (Gangwar or Performance)
Anyway, what's the consensus? Do we have the Floodland band?