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发表于 2004-12-25 15:49:00
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What about Bryan Johanson’s Hendrix tribute, “Pluck, Strum, and Hammer”?
DEARMAN On a project like this, Hendrix is going to be one of the first names that pop into people’s minds. You know: Great Guitar Figures in History. So, there’s quite a bit of expectation of what a piece like that might sound like, and Bryan defied all expectations. I remember talking with Bill shortly after I had gotten the part, and I said, “What does this have to do with Hendrix?”
You can hear some “Purple Haze” in there.
TENNANT The “Purple Haze” chord is in there; it’s in my part all the time—in different rhythms, of course. But the thing that John was saying is that if you listen for Hendrix, you’re really not going to hear Hendrix per se. You have to let it wash over you. There’s this Baroque element in it, too. I was wondering, “What the heck? This is more Baroque than Hendrix!” When we asked him about it, he said, “I thought it’d be cool, since Hendrix lived in London on the same block as Handel’s house, to put some circle of fifths in there.” To Bryan, it absolutely made sense.
How did your arrangement of the Chet Atkins pieces come about?
KANENGISER All of us have been hugely inspired by Chet, maybe John more than anybody. I picked up a recording of Chet’s tune “Blue Echo,” and I couldn’t get it out of my head. I heard him doing this echo that iterated four times, each time getting a little quieter, and I thought, “Why can’t the quartet, with four guitars, imitate that?” The effect is pretty nice. Instead of just doing the regular B section of that tune, there’s this other great Chet piece, “Country Gentleman,” his sort of anthem. The B section of “Country Gentleman” sounds almost Hawaiian, and I thought, “I’ll just go to the B section of that.” It made a nice transition. I wanted to make it even more Hawaiian sounding, so Andy and I ended up playing parallel voicings with slides. It’s fun to play slide on a nylon-string guitar.
DEARMAN The Chet piece was the first piece we recorded, and we thought that . . . Why’d we choose that?
KANENGISER Because we thought it was easiest.
DEARMAN Yeah. We had played it already, so we thought, “We’ll do something we know.” We played it through the first time, and Bob Woods, our producer, said, “OK, you guys. This piece is all about fun. So, let’s have some fun.” So we played it again. Then he comes in and goes, “Well, no. I mean, really, it’s gotta be fun!” So we’re all trying really hard: “OK, I gotta have fun now.” He was trying to coax us into a mood, which is an almost impos-sible thing to do. Sometimes he resorts to intimidation. That’s usually the most successful.
KANENGISER Yeah. “Are we having fun yet?”
TENNANT He really gets in there. He’s made some comments like, “You guys sound too much like classical musicians” or “worried too much about the notes” or “gotta untighten the sphincter.” [Laughs.] It’s good, because when you’re recording, you’re worrying about every little breath or rustle of your shirt. Everything makes noise, and you’re worried about it. In the end, the takes that make the cut are when you just go for it, where there are all kinds of extra noises.
You also included a tribute to the Romeros.
TENNANT The Romeros were an obvious choice, because they’re the reason we’re all here—out here in California and together. Of course, Celedonio wrote a lot of music, and Pepe had done a lot of arrangements. We’d played a lot of that stuff in the past, and we needed something that wasn’t so new that we’d have to spend a lot of time on it. So we picked the Pepe Romero arrangement “El Baile de Luis Alonso.” It’s one of their signature pieces, and we got the thumbs up from the Romero family to do it. They were really pleased.
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