82779_Shure_ OTWS13_V5.qxd 1/4/12 12:18 PM Page 1 82779_Shure_ OTWS13_V5.qxd 1/4/12 12:18 PM Page 2 W hen I was a kid, I learned about music from my father. Who was cool? Who was the next big thing? What are oldies? Dad really kept his fingers on the pulse of what was cool, and could tell a one-hit wonder from someone with longevity. When an artist made an album of songs worth purchasing, we’d make a trip to the local record store.… Anyone remember how common those were? Hours were spent poring over the crates, getting familiar with these artists I heard mentioned by dad or whose song I heard on the radio. About this time I was also introduced to something called Columbia House, a service that would deliver records to your door. You would thumb through their latest catalog and select which records you wanted that month. Four to six weeks later, the mailman would show up with a box full of records for you. I remember being there for that delivery of records and anticipating what new artists I would be exposed to that day. This was how I got my music. This was how I kept up with what was cool. Of course years later, I did develop my own tastes, and moved on to music my father just could not relate to; mostly rap records. As far as I remember, my father did continue to keep up with what was cool for quite a while. I explored all sorts of different genres and even rediscovered some things I just wasn’t ready for at a younger age. These days, I’m still all over the musical map with my likes and dislikes. I still make it a point to keep up with what’s cool, even if I don’t personally enjoy it myself. Today, I find myself buying so many albums that I don’t even have the time to get through them all. There’s no longer that nice four- to six-week buffer that Columbia House presented. I know the stuff is all good and worthy of a listen because I sampled it on iTunes or heard a glowing review on PRX’s “Sound Opinions.” I will get to it at some point as I always do, but it got me thinking: “Where does it end?” These days, my father concentrates on what he really enjoys listening to, not what the popular vote deems worthy. There are days when I feel he’s missing out on so much. He’s the one who showed me the way to cool music. Still, there are days when I stare at a stack of albums and think, “There has to be a simpler way. Do I really need to listen to all of these? Maybe Dad is on to something?” I’m not sure where and when he decided to be more selective in his listening choices. Don’t get me wrong; my father is still hip when it comes to most of his music selections. He just chooses to not spend time on keeping up with EVERYTHING out there. For now, I prefer it this way. This job and my extensive musical tastes keep me in the know and most times, the music I discover makes it all worthwhile, bringing me back to those childhood memories of enjoying the next big thing or one-hit wonder with my father. Still, I can’t help but think: “Will I ever get more selective with my listening? Will I be genuinely enjoying the same music my daughter does when she’s 20 years old?” Man I hope so, because I don’t want to miss a thing. Rock Out! On Tour with Shure® Editor Terri Hartman Managing Editor Cory Lorentz Associate Editor Davida Rochman Copy Editor Lou Carlozo Artist Relations Nelson Arreguín, Cory Lorentz, Richard Sandrok, Ryan Smith Art Director/Designer Kate Moss Writers Nelson Arreguín, Mark Brunner, Cory Lorentz, Richard Sandrok, Ryan Smith Contributing Photographers Stephen Jensen, Paul Natkin Printing Triangle Printers, Inc. On Tour with Shure is published once a year by Shure Incorporated, 5800 W. Touhy Ave., Niles, IL 60714-4608. Each separate contribution to Volume 12, Issue 1 and the issue as a collective work, is copyright ©2011 by Shure Incorporated. All rights reserved. All trademarks are property of their respective owners. All product specifications and appearances are subject to change without notice. Use of an artist’s name in this publication does not constitute an official endorsement of Shure products. Free Subscription! To receive your free copy of On Tour with Shure, please: • Go to www.shure.com • Fill out the enclosed postage-paid subscription card. • Send a note to On Tour with Shure, 5800 W. Touhy Ave., Niles, IL 60714-4608. We are not responsible for unsolicited material, which must be accompanied by return postage. All mail will be treated as unconditionally assigned for publication and subject to Shure Incorporated’s unrestricted right to edit and comment. Shure Incorporated assumes no responsibility for errors in articles or advertisements. Opinions expressed by authors are not necessarily those of Shure Incorporated. Cory Lorentz Managing Editor, On Tour with Shure editor@shure.com 2 www.shure.com 01/12 1K 82779_Shure_ OTWS13_V5.qxd 1/4/12 12:18 PM Page 3 10 4 Mic Check Your one-stop shop for contests, promotions, new endorsers and all the stuff worthy of sharing with you in case you missed it. If this is all brand new to you, I think it might be time to follow on us on Facebook and Twitter… table ofcontents 20 Black Star: Brooklyn’s Finest When Mos Def and Talib Kweli join forces and become Black Star, the hip-hop world takes notice and marvels at how easy these two make it look. There’s a uniqueness to their voices, their delivery and even the mics in their hands. 6 The Throwback Sounds of Fitz & The Tantrums A new band with an old sound and lots of soul to boot! The six killer musicians from L.A. have definitely hit their stride with the release of Pickin’ Up The Pieces. The music is a bit of a break from the norm and we hope it lasts! 8 The Civil Wars: A Chance Meeting Takes the Music World by Storm If you told Joy Williams and John Paul White that going to a songwriting workshop would change their lives, chances are they would smile politely, not believing a word of it. But that really is how this whole thing started. 20 10 Slash: An Iconic Look. A Sound Like No Other. The man in the top hat and leather has been inspiring guitarists since the first licks of “Sweet Child o’ Mine” and hasn’t stopped since. It’s just something he picked up as a kid. It’s so easy! 22 Roger Daltrey: Live Life to the Full and Go Out With a Bang! Not one for sitting on his bum, getting old and not utilizing his God-given talent, Roger Daltrey hit the road to bring The Who fans his version of Tommy: no theatrics, no ballet, no ice skating; just the music. Here’s how a last minute, one-night-only idea turned into a world tour. 14 Alison Krauss & Union Station: Snappy Banter, Faith in Shure and Bluegrass, Too! It could be the best live show you’ve ever heard, no matter what your musical tastes are. While equally respected as solo artists, something magical happens when Alison Krauss & Union Station play music together. 26 Hello Seahorse!: Rise Of The Beast So, we’re certain that a lot of musicians met on MySpace in its heyday. Some may have even formed bands or jammed together, but few can claim the success of the Mexican-based, dream-pop quartet that is Hello Seahorse! 16 Rob Halford: The Metal God Holds Court With Shure These guys practically invented the stuff, and now heavy metal’s finest is out spreading their farewells to the far points of the globe. It sounds like an ending, but Rob Halford has promised to keep screaming until his last metal breath. 16 28 Mastodon: This Time It All Started With Tacos Seek out the guys from Mastodon and buy them lunch, and they just might let you make their next album… Well, you should probably have a vision and some skill for them to take you seriously. Luckily, producer Mike Elizondo had those things and an impressive résumé to boot. 28 Molotov: The Voice Of The People No matter the language and no matter the country, the guys from Molotov believe the music speaks for itself. Sometimes controversial and difficult to interpret, these guys draw inspiration from keeping you guessing. 28 3 82779_Shure_ OTWS13_V5.qxd 1/4/12 12:18 PM Page 4 New endorsers Foster The People Find The Shure Guy New Endorsers Cults Delta Spirit M83 Neon Indian Smokey Robinson Colbie Caillat Boyce Avenue The Thermals Dawes No Te Va Gustar Enjambre Los Amigos Invisibles The Band Perry High On Fire My Chemical Romance Christina Perri Foster The People The Pains Of Being Pure At Heart Surfer Blood Molotov Far East Movement Justin Townes Earle Hello Seahorse! Mumford & Sons Mona The Civil Wars Talib Kweli Black Dub Of Montreal Straight No Chaser Devo Grace Potter & The Nocturnals Lenny Kravitz Chino y Nacho ChoQuibTown Look there … off in the distance … is that the Shure mobile? Okay, so following us on Twitter does have its advantages these days … aside from the witty banter and exclusive artist findings, we’re now going the interactive route and asking our followers to stay tuned on the day of a local Chicago or Nashville show for a chance to win Shure prizes. (Don’t worry L.A. & N.Y.C., you’re on our radar, too!) All you have to do is keep up with our Tweets on the day of a show (we’ll let you know which shows we’ll be at in advance), and then be one of the first ten people to come find us. We’ll be pretty easy to spot, just look for the guy in the Shure shirt, standing next to the car covered in Shure logos outside of the venue. We hope to see you all at the next big thing in Chicago or Nashville! For more info, visit www.shure.com/contests. New endorser Lenny Kravitz New endorser Colbie Caillat 4 We Got Two, Who Needs ’Em? So, your favorite band is coming to town and the show sold out in seconds? Well, we may be able to hook you up, if you’re lucky. Every month, Shure will pick a different band, at a different venue and in a different city and award a pair of tickets to one lucky, random winner. We kicked things off in December with a sold-out show in Minneapolis, Minnesota featuring Foster The People. January led us to The Civil Wars in Nashville … also SOLD OUT. We think February may fall right in line with this whole, “ONE NIGHT ONLY/SOLD OUT” vibe we’ve got going. To find out if we’re coming to your town with your favorite band, visit www.shure.com/concerttickets. Get The Gig Summer Intern Competition Hey, all you college students and recent grads: Shure is now accepting entries for the 2012 Get The Gig Summer Internship Competition! One winner will be selected to experience a unique “inside look” at the music industry, and expand their professional skill set and career opportunities. Additionally, the lucky intern will gain real-world exposure to the engineering, design and marketing of Shure’s latest products and will learn how to outfit today’s talent with the right gear to produce the best sound possible— in the studio or on stage. “Here at Shure, we’re passionate about music—not only by providing gear to established musicians, but also by helping to cultivate tomorrow’s breakout artists,” said Cory Lorentz, Shure’s Artist Relations Manager. “As glamorous as an artist relations internship might sound, we want to find someone who isn’t afraid to roll up their sleeves, work hard, and learn something. There will be plenty of fun to be had, but we’re hoping this is the start of a promising career for someone. It’s going to be a summer job, not a summer vacation.” The Shure Artist Relations Department manages the relationships between bands and the Company, including, but not limited to, providing gear support, technical advice, and assisting in artist development. During the summer session, intern responsibilities may include providing support for social media initiatives; helping manage Shure artist endorsers; assisting in the evaluation of potential endorsers; working with the Company to negotiate endorsement contracts; and coordinating Shure-sponsored events, including clinics and trade shows. For a chance to be a part of the action, visit shure.com/getthegig and apply today. Î Î 82779_Shure_ OTWS13_V5.qxd 1/4/12 12:18 PM Page 5 The Invisible Star of Country Music’s Biggest Night Shure shared the spotlight with several of country music’s top artists and bands at the 45th annual Country Music Association (CMA) Awards show, which aired live on ABC-TV on Wednesday, November 9th. Monitor engineers Jason Spence and Mike Parker relied almost exclusively on the new Shure PSM®1000 Personal Monitor System for most of the live performances in Nashville. "The sensitivity and the noise floor on the PSM 1000 are amazing,” said Spence. “Sonically, the stereo spectrum is wide and the system has unbelievable clarity. What I can provide to artists with this system both sonically and in RF stability allows me to do my job better." For the broadcast, Spence and Parker used 14 channels of PSM 1000, with 28 receivers covering almost all of the performances on the main stage and on a satellite stage at the back of the Bridgestone Arena. Due to the varying distances of the two stages from the monitor mix position, they adjusted the output power on each of the transmitters with some at 10mW, some at 50mW, and others at 100mW to compensate for the different distances to each stage. "The diversity beltpack is a key benefit in our industry,” added Parker. “Artists must have and expect a solid RF signal first and the PSM 1000 is unmatched." On Tour with Shure 5 Î 82779_Shure_ OTWS13_V5.qxd 1/4/12 12:18 PM Page 6 Can you hear it everywhere? You turn on the radio, watch TV commercials and new TV shows and out of your speakers comes a classic song or a new song that sounds like it’s 20-40 years old. There’s something about the classics that just won’t go away… and we are very thankful for that! Younger generations are constantly being influenced by older generations. You can see it in their clothes, their hair styles, and in their music. So when we hear an old-style keyboard sound or a flute being featured in a pop music song, it can take some of us back to a time when tambourines were shakin’, the clothes were stylin’, and there was nothing else on stage but amazing musicians making us move to their grooves. We can thank new groups like Fitz & The Tantrums for introducing a new group of fans to a sound that ruled the nation so many years ago. We caught up with Michael “Fitz” Fitzpatrick and Noelle Scaggs in Nashville to discuss the group’s sound and how Shure now plays a part in it. 6 www.shure.com 82779_Shure_ OTWS13_V5.qxd 1/4/12 12:18 PM Page 7 ON TOUR WITH SHURE: You tracked Pickin’ Up The Pieces at your house. Can you describe some of the techniques you used to capture that Motown vibe but still make it sound like today? MICHAEL FITZPATRICK: We did record the whole record in my living room and it was basically what we had to do. We didn’t have a record deal and nobody gave us a penny to do it. We just had a will and a passion to get it done. My living room is not a recording studio space. It’s got wood floors and plaster walls. It’s not sonically correct, as most people would consider it. So rather than fighting that by trying to put blankets and soundproofing up, we just said right away that we’re going to let that character and that signature of the room be another presence on the record. I had this one crappy old little microphone—and rather than trying to close mic everything, what I did was far miking for everything, and sometimes very far away from any instrument where I would basically let the organ or the bass going through an amp swirl through the room, and let the room sort of enhance the sound. And what happened when you put all the layers on top, that density of that room sound just got wider and deeper. That was one of the things that gave this life and this warmth to the record. The other thing I did was to not use any EQ on a lot of stuff. I found the instruments naturally spread across the frequency spectrum, I didn’t really touch them that much. I think that those techniques really helped us to be able to get that Motown sound. When we were tracking the drums, literally one mic like four feet from it or slightly above, was like a classic Motown technique for getting drums. You just compress it a little hard and you get that rawness to it that makes those songs so memorable. OTWS: There’s a strong undercurrent of artists who are throwing back to music that their parents may have introduced them to growing up. Does your group fall into this category and how do you feel about this resurgence of artists that are ‘all about the music?’ NOELLE SCAGGS: For me, this resurgence of good music—I should say music that is not necessarily about what you can do in the studio—it is refreshing. The first time I heard bands like Poets of Rhythm coming out of Germany and Sharon Jones & the Dap Kings when I was actually IN Germany, it was the first time I had ever heard her band. It was like WOW—somebody like this exists and they are not from the Motown period and they are doing this music and they can actually sing? Wow! I think that’s what’s been happening for groups like ourselves, with this younger generation of people who are looking for something more than Britney Spears or more than Lady Gaga. They can appreciate that, but they can also appreciate this and our new take on this sound, one that they have probably never been introduced to before. I think it’s great for artists like us because had this resurgence not occurred, if Sharon Jones & the Dap Kings not hooked up with Mark Ronson and created the sound for Amy Winehouse, there probably would be no US. We would not be accepted the way we wanted to in the States. Probably overseas it “FOR US, IT BECAME REALLY IMPORTANT TO MOVE TO THE WIRELESS SYSTEM… I WAS SPENDING AT LEAST 15% OF MY SHOW ENERGY LITERALLY MANAGING THE CORD OF MY MICROPHONE.” –Michael Fitzpatrick would be different. It’s a beautiful thing to be at home and be in your country and being respected as musicians who are worth their salt. I love it and hope it continues. I hope people are not afraid to take that leap and do something that is really genuine and be themselves creatively. OTWS: Besides the music, there’s the promotion side of things. Do you feel that it’s easier with all of the Internet methods to promote your band than it was for bands of the past or does it take up more of your time? MF: In one regard, it’s easier, you have more access but at the same time, you are fighting against 100 times more information that’s out there and everyone has an even shorter attention span than they had 10 years ago. So, it’s a blessing and a curse all at the same FITZ &THE TANTRUMS time. What I believe in, from doing this and having this experience now, is that you can do that stuff but if there isn’t the interest or something driving people … you know, a tree can fall in the forest and no one will hear it. So, there’s got to be a certain amount of awareness and you also have to be patient to literally build that from two fans to 100 to 1,000 to 20,000 and keep having those connections. I would say that the Internet is pretty incredible when you do have a certain amount of following. We did a semisuper secret show in Toronto. Basically, through word of mouth and Tweeting it, we got almost 1,000 people there over a 24-hour period. That is the power of technology. OTWS: Talk about your first experience using Shure mics and why the Beta 58®A works for you. NS: I love it. The Beta 58 for me has been amazing. Just even having a wireless mic that belongs to you when you don’t have to worry about people’s germs on the heads of them…. But generally what I’ve found was that it really worked well for my voice—it was the perfect mic. I’ve also tried the KSM[9] and this one just really sits better for me. It’s the mic everybody uses. MF: The [Beta]58 is what I’ve always sung through in almost every single venue I’ve ever sung in. So to have my own and it be wireless … because not everybody does the kind of show we do where there’s that much movement. For us, it became really important to move to the wireless system because I found that I was spending at least 15% of my show energy literally managing the cord of my microphone: tripping over, getting it tangled and really just taking away from my ability to really engage the audience. So [it’s great] to be un-tethered … walk anywhere I want; I can even go into the audience with it, which broadens the way we engage with audiences. It’s life-changing for me, really. Theirs On A Budget Lead Vocals UR2/Beta 58®A* PGXD2/Beta 58A* Backing Vocals UR2/KSM9* PGXD2/SM86* Kick Beta 52®A PG52 Snare SM57 PG57 Toms Beta 98AMP/C PG56 Hi-Hat KSM137 PG81 Overheads KSM32 PG27 Saxophone UR14D/Beta 98H/C PGXD14/Beta 98H/C Monitors PSM® 900 PSM 200 *wireless system On Tour with Shure 7 82779_Shure_ OTWS13_V5.qxd 1/4/12 12:18 PM Page 8 M oments in time: Sometimes we forget, sometimes we remember. I won’t forget the time when someone told me about this great new group that had just performed at the Belcourt Theatre in Nashville the night before I was there. Everyone was raving about them, even Taylor Swift! “They’re called The Civil Wars … just a guy and a girl, it was amazing!” said one engineer at the Belcourt. Grabbing my iPhone, I quickly started to investigate. I was excited to learn that I already knew who one of the two persons in this group was — Joy Williams. I had seen Joy sing several years ago on a Dove Awards show. I watched a video and was mesmerized at how well their voices blended. I looked up pictures of them singing live and in most cases, they were on a pair of SM58®s. YES! So, what’s next? Contact management, see if they are interested, get them to try out mics, and hopefully sign them on to be endorsers of Shure. That’s exactly what happened! What happened after that was totally unforeseen but in a way, amazingly justified. This wonderful duo, whose harmonies reminded me so much of Simon & Garfunkel, would go on to catch the attention of and open up for one of today’s most popular artists — Adele. While on the road, videographer Allister Ann captured this interview for us. (You can also see the video at www.shure.com/artists) ON TOUR WITH SHURE: Let’s go back to that writing session when you first met. What were your first impressions of each other and how long did it take during that session before you both knew something special was developing? JOY WILLIAMS: We met at a songwriting gathering in Nashville. I had no idea who John Paul was, and he had no idea who I was. I really 8 www.shure.com didn’t know anybody in that writing room, but out of the 25 writers that were gathered, we were being put in a room together to write— the very first write of the day. Through the “Hi’s” and “Hello’s” and getting to know each other a little bit, it was kind of strange once he started playing the guitar and we started singing together. The blending of the voices was just something that I’ve never experienced 82779_Shure_ OTWS13_V5.qxd 1/4/12 12:18 PM Page 9 before. It was a strange day. I just remember being totally surprised by the whole experience… happily, though. It didn’t take too long before we decided that it needed to continue to be looked into. OTWS: Who are some of your inspirations musically and non-musically? JOHN PAUL WHITE: I would say that for myself that my inspirations are more non-musical nowdays than they used to be. JW: You mean like authors? JPW: Yeah … like [Charles] Bukowski and [Richard] Brautigan. We both read a lot, we watch tons of movies and we draw from that. Also, we draw from our families and from people around us. We probably get more lyrical fodder out of that sort of thing. Musically, the things that I draw from are typically things from another time — a bygone era. I’m not sure exactly why that is, but most of the things that inspire me are things that are a little bit older, or they were things I grew up with that continue to move me, like a lot of old country music. Kris Kristofferson, Roger Miller, Townes Van Zant, Willie [Nelson], Johnny Cash and stuff like that. But also more melodic stuff like The Beatles, Zeppelin, Queen … all those sorts of things. I pull from all different areas. JW: I tended to be a little bit more in the jazz and pop world growing up. I would also say family too and everything you said would be influences of mine too. I’m a huge Steinbeck fan … love Flannery O’Connor. Yeah, we’re both very “bookish.” Musically, for me, I think mine would be Billie Holiday, Ella Fitzgerald, Joni Mitchell, Joan Baez, The Beach Boys, The Carpenters … the list goes on and on. I feel like I keep getting inspired by music that I’m hearing but those artists are the ones I keep going back to, everything from Janis Joplin to current day music. A lot of it is the stuff I can find on vinyl at a record store a long time ago too. That tends to be the world of our influence. OTWS: What were your reactions when you found out that Shure wanted to work with you? JPW: When I heard that Shure wanted to work with us, I had a pretty good idea that they thought we were someone else… JW: [Laughs.] We checked the email a couple of times to make sure that they didn’t accidentally send it to us. JPW: …or that Shure had a major drinking problem, and we really didn’t care if either one of those things were the case because we jumped on with both feet. I’ve been using Shure stuff since as long as I can remember, singing in SM57s and SM58®s all of my life. JW: Me too. JPW: So, it was always kind of the standard. So, when they reached out to us about doing some collaboration, it was a complete… JW & JPW: No-brainer. JW: That was weird… JPW: Not really. OTWS: Talk about when you tried out the KSM9 vocal mics for the first time. What did you like about them and why do they work so well for both of your vocals? “The mics we sing through are one of the most important parts of the chain of everything we do. We didn’t take that decision very lightly, but it was a pretty easy decision.” –John Paul White JW: [Laughs.] When we tried out different mics with Ryan at Shure, all of them had their qualities about them that we really loved but we kept going back to the KSM9. I just felt like there was a richness to it that it picked up in both of our voices. From my feminine voice and your masculine voice, I felt like it still captured all of the nuances in both of ours in a really interesting way. It was an immediate response that I had in terms of picking that mic for our live performances and I haven’t looked back since. JPW: We didn’t necessarily set out to both use the same microphones. That was never a criterion on how to choose them. But for whatever reason, and it’s kind of exclusive to these mics, there’s clarity, top to bottom, in either one of our voices. They also really shine through whatever PA we are playing. THE CIVIL WARS Sometimes the monitor situation is better than others but it is always crisp and clear. As singers, we need that. We need to be able to discern what is going on because we are not a big rock band where we can hide behind walls of sound. It’s [her] and I and my guitar most of the time. If we are not on pitch, if we are not on our game, then it’s readily apparent. The mics we sing through are one of the most important parts of the chain of everything we do. We didn’t take that decision very lightly, but it was a pretty easy decision. OTWS: John Paul, you used a Shure SM7B to track your vocals on the Barton Hallow album. Why does this mic work for you in the studio? JPW: The SM7 was the mic that I used on pretty much every vocal on Barton Hallow and probably the EP before that. That was before we had started talking to Shure about collaborating. That was another one of those mic shoot outs. Charlie Peacock [producer] had mentioned that it was his secret weapon microphone. He has access to lots of extremely high-end microphones, vintage things and quirky things. It just seemed to fit what we did better than anything else. It was a more accurate representation of how my voice works. It also worked really well with my Martin [acoustic guitar] and with all the other things we were adding to the tracks; it kind of sat where it needed to be sitting. It’s not an incredibly scientific process most of the time. It’s kind of like picking out a guitar. You can’t really explain exactly why a certain guitar works for what you do. For me, I’m not that great at explaining why a certain microphone works better than others. It’s just one of those gut things that when you hear it, it’s like, “Alright, that’s the one…there’s no point in changing it.” There are some bands that tend to play with the technology track to track and try different vocal mics, different guitars and different guitar sounds. That’s not really what we do, or as yet, that’s not what we do. We have this thing we do. We try to showcase the songs as much as possible then dress them up. So far, it’s been the perfect complement to my voice. Theirs On A Budget Vocals KSM9 SM86 Guitar Cabinet KSM313 PG27 Concertina SM58 PG58 On Tour with Shure 9 82779_Shure_ OTWS13_V5.qxd 1/4/12 12:18 PM Page 10 10 www.shure.com 82779_Shure_ OTWS13_V5.qxd 1/4/12 12:18 PM Page 11 When you see the hat, you know who it is. There are many products and people in this world that have an identifier. It is that “brand awareness” that products and artists strive for: to know that when people see it, they are immediately thinking of that product or artist. Slash takes that one step further with his instantly recognizable guitar sound. When his leads kick in, that guy under that cool hat immediately pops into your head—Slash! Shure got to spend a few minutes backstage with the man who remains an influence to many and continues to be influenced by the masters before him. ON TOUR WITH SHURE: Growing up, when was the first moment you knew you wanted to become a guitar player? SLASH: That’s a good question … the second I picked up the guitar. A friend of mine had one. That moment that I picked up the guitar, I was off and running. I didn’t aspire to play guitar prior to that, so it happened within a couple of hours. I think he taught me how to play “Smoke On The Water.” I just dropped everything else in my life at that point and I’ve been playing guitar ever since. OTWS: How did that make you feel? SLASH: There was a certain amount of excitement that went along with that. I was always surrounded by music growing up and I always liked music. I didn’t know that I wanted to play an instrument. So as soon as I played guitar, there was a certain sound about lead guitar that really had always excited me. Any rock ’n’ roll song, if it had a lead break in it, was the part that I looked forward to the most. As soon as I realized I could make that sound myself, with this particular instrument … that was it. It was a combination of a lot of feelings I suppose. OTWS: Are there any younger guitar players you have taken notice of and what is so interesting about them? SLASH: The kind of rock ’n’ roll guitar that I got turned on to growing up has become a bit few and far between, especially on the airwaves. When Jack White [The White Stripes] came out, I thought that was really cool. I think Jonny Greenwood [Radiohead] is great. I’ve been touring with Ozzy and Gus G., his new guitar player, is a phenomenal metal guitar player. I haven’t really been listening to anybody other than the same people I’ve always listened to, which are a lot of guitar players that I grew up with and still have a lot of influence on me. I still tend to go back and listen to them. Keith Richards, Mick Taylor, B.B. King … Rick Nielsen. We just jammed with the guys from AC/DC. Gary Moore, who just passed away, had a huge influence on me. Joe Walsh is great. It’s an endless list: Jimi Hendrix, Eric Clapton, Jeff Beck—all those guys. SLASH OTWS: You’re on Twitter, Facebook and a few other social media networks, gaining a whole new generation of audiences. How have these new media outlets helped you, and is it difficult to keep up with them? SLASH: Facebook and Twitter have been great because it gives me a chance to sort of talk to fans in real time, directly, which I think is great. I never really liked relying on press releases and magazines to sort of get information out accurately. So, it’s beneficial in that way and I can say whatever it is about whatever subject I feel like talking about. I can tell them what shows are coming and anything in particular I feel should get out there. So that’s really cool. It is hard to keep up with. At one point, I was talking to fans directly on Twitter and it Theirs On A Budget Lead Vocals UR2/Beta 58®A* PGXD2/Beta 58A* Backing Vocals SM58 PG58 Kick Beta 91A PG52 Snare SM57 PG57 Toms Beta 56®A PG56 Hi-Hat KSM141 PG81 Overheads KSM32 PG27 Guitar UR14D* PGX14* Guitar Cabinet KSM313 & SM27 PG27 & PG57 *wireless system On Tour with Shure 11 82779_Shure_ OTWS13_V5.qxd 1/4/12 12:18 PM Page 12 got to be just overwhelming. I was spending all my time typing away. If I didn’t have a guitar in my hand, I’d have a BlackBerry in my hand. I had to give that up. All things considered, I think it’s definitely a development in communication that has been really beneficial. OTWS: On your new CD, you’ve got fellow Shure endorsers Adam Levine and Ozzy Osbourne as guest performers. That’s quite a range of singing style. How did these two artists come to join you in this project? SLASH: My solo record that I just came out with last year was basically a way for me to get people to come in and sing on my record, as opposed to me always playing on everybody else’s. That was the crux of the whole thing. I wrote a lot of different material. I just listened to whatever it was I was working on and thought who would sound right on this particular piece of music. There were a lot of variables and styles, as far as the music was concerned, so it called for a lot of 12 www.shure.com different types of singers. Yeah, from Ozzy to Adam Levine — definitely a big jump there but it worked. OTWS: You have two wonderful children, London and Cash. What has fatherhood done for your life and are they showing any early musical abilities? SLASH: Fatherhood has just given me another sense of responsibility. I’m a pretty self-absorbed musician and I have been for a long time. So having kids has sort of brought me out of my shell in that sense. It’s given me a different dynamic about life in general. They’re great kids and very, very smart. It definitely adds a whole new dimension to my existence. As far as music is concerned, they love music. One of them has picked up the piano by ear and it’s pretty interesting to watch that develop. The other one has gone through a bunch of different instruments and has settled on guitar at this point but I’m sure that’s going to change. So we’ll see how it goes. It’s one of those things where I encourage it but I’m not going to push them in to it. OTWS: Can you think back to the first time you used Shure? SLASH: The first time I used Shure, I remember working in a rehearsal studio in Hollywood when I was about 17 or 16 and recognizing the name Shure on the microphones that we were using in rehearsal. I was just familiar with Shure because it was something that Robert Plant was using and a myriad of other singers so I knew that it was a quality piece of gear. OTWS: You also have the new Shure Ribbon mics on your amp cabinets. Your engineers are really enjoying the sounds they are getting. What difference have you noticed? SLASH: The Shure Ribbon mics that I use on my amps just give a certain amount of clarity, especially in the high end that I didn’t have before. I’ve used SM57s forever, but they just add another dimension to the sound that you can’t get with just an SM57. 82779_Shure_ OTWS13_V5.qxd 1/4/12 12:18 PM Page 13 On Tour with Shure 13 82779_Shure_ OTWS13_V5.qxd 1/4/12 12:18 PM Page 14 From the moment you hear their voices, their instruments, their talent, you are hooked and captivated. Alison Krauss and Union Station can divert the attention of even the hardest of heavy metal fans and make them stare in amazement. Each member of this group is well respected as a solo artist. Put them together, GRAMMYs start gravitating their way like steel to a magnet. They have a new album out called Paper Airplane, their first release since 2004. Shure has enjoyed an amazing relationship with this group and we got the opportunity to sit down with them while on tour at the historic Ryman Auditorium and talk about how Shure continues to be a part of their legendary performances. ON TOUR WITH SHURE: There’s great diversity from each one of you, as far as musical tastes are concerned. How about non-music related hobbies? What are some things each of you like to do? BARRY BALES: I like to hunt and fish and fish and hunt …“outdoorsy” stuff like that. JERRY DOUGLAS: Catch and release… BB: I’m trying to perfect that. DAN TYMINSKI: Mine’s easy: golf, golf and more golf. [Looking at Ron Block] You don’t do anything non-music related. RON BLOCK: That’s not true. I read a lot and I write also. BB: College boy. JD: I like to talk about fly fishing. [Laughs.] Someday I hope to go. If a certain band would get off the road long enough where we could 14 www.shure.com go do something like that. BB: No, we just need to play in the right places… when the water is not… [Raises his hand up above his head.] JD: You want water? Let’s go over to Norfolk. BB: What about you Alison? ALISON KRAUSS: Do some counter wiping… JD: Whoa! Explain. [Alison motions her hand like she’s wiping a counter—everyone laughs.] OTWS: Individually and combined, you’ve all accomplished so much. Are there certain goals you are still looking to accomplish, whether it’s playing with certain artists or playing certain places in the world? 82779_Shure_ OTWS13_V5.qxd 1/4/12 12:19 PM Page 15 AK: I’d have to say if we ever felt like we’ve reached our goal then we would be finished. I love the fact that we keep growing as a group and that doesn’t get old, to want to make better records and to grow as a group. OTWS: You’ve been touring for many years? What is it about touring that keeps you coming back out on the road? RB: Catering. JD: Car payments. BB: Show dates. JD: Tuitions. I love music. I just like to play. I especially like to play with these guys and in front of as many people as possible, in a room big enough to do it in. It’s fun to just go out and play music. That’s what we’re supposed to do and as long as we can keep doing that, that’s what we’ll do. BB: You don’t have to over think it. You get one shot at it. You find out immediately if it’s good as opposed to in the studio, where you have to go through it and put it out to see if people like it. If you’re on stage and they like it, you know right then, which is always a plus for me. AK: And if they don’t, you know it right then as well. OTWS: There’s an element of comedy that I see at a lot of bluegrass shows that I do not at, say, a rock show. Can you talk about where this comes from and has it always been a part of this genre? JD: Flatt & Scruggs and Bill Monroe. Early bluegrass acts always had a part of their show that was a comedy act. Most of the times, with Flatt & Scruggs, that was the Dobro player and the bass player who would dress up in polka-dot suits, black some teeth out and wear some funny hats. We don’t do that. We just black out some teeth. BB: We’re not that funny. DT: We might be the exception to that rule. JD: We have some snappy stage banter. [Jerry points his finger at Alison.] BB: I think maybe a lot of that came from the music and the audience they were playing for. A lot of times, country people, especially on the early morning radio shows in the little section of time, are trying to have as much variety as they can. They do bluegrass, the fiddle tunes, a gospel song, throw in a little comedy… DT: …read the mail. BB: …send songs out to the sick and shutins … just trying to be well rounded. OTWS: Shure has enjoyed a wonderful longstanding relationship with the group. What has the support of Shure meant to the group over the years? Confidence. It’s nice to know that you can trust the stuff that you are using when you do this for a living. You have to do it every day. You want to know and feel good about what people get to hear. You want to feel like you are playing with the best possible equipment, the best possible instruments and doing the best possible job you can for the people you play to. Shure is a big part of that for us. BB: Especially with what we do, it’s all about the music and the way it sounds. Everything is acoustic and there’s so many dynamics in a stage show. It’s critical that we’re able to hear to the best of our ability and the nuances of everybody’s particular instruments. There are so many vintage instruments in this group and to be able to get that out to the audience is a huge part of what we do. JD: It’s about the stuff working every night and taking that out of the equation— worrying if your gear is going to work or not. You can pound nails with an SM57, put it up there and play through it and it’s going to work. Don’t do that at home though! DT: Confidence! OTWS: In ear personal monitors have come a long way over the years? How are Shure’s PSM® 900s working for you? DT: The PSM 900 has made a difference as far as the quality of what you get to hear back. We play with a lot of instruments that you don’t come across every day. There are a lot of vintage instruments on stage and to be able to hear them back in a way that they sound natural to you is HUGE. To be able to play to an audience of people, you want it to sound good to you, to inspire you to play well for others. BB: Regarding the equipment being reliable, I can’t remember the last time I had a drop DT: ALISON KRAUSS out from the wireless signal. You don’t even think about it anymore. You get up there, plug it in and it sounds great. Especially for a bass player, it’s so good to have it sound so clear the way they do. I have found over the years that wireless systems can give bass players fits as far as not being able to handle the signal or just extraneous noise but it’s just clear as a bell. JD: You’re actually playing during the show? BB: Well, when I remember to hit my mute pedal. AK: It’s like a freshly wiped counter surface. OTWS: Can you talk a bit about the importance of consistent, high-quality sound that the group achieves live and how Shure mics help you achieve this? JD: One of the things we do at the end of our show is we all get around one microphone—one KSM32. I don’t know how many people come up to all of us, individually at the end of a show and go, “Man, my favorite part is when you all got around that one microphone. That was the best sounding thing all night long.” Well I’m sure that our front of house engineer hears that kind of stuff and just pulls his hair out. He’s working so hard all night long with all the other microphones, especially the new ribbon [KSM313], that Ron’s playing banjo through, is just killer. Then we walk out in front of one large diaphragm mic at the end of the night and it’s just magic. DT: It’s nice to hear that much positive feedback that is all directly related to a microphone. BB: I think that’s an extra plus for how great that one microphone sounds. We do hear a lot of awesome comments —“The show sounds great.” “Best live show I’ve ever heard.” That’s a definite testament to the Shure products. Theirs On A Budget Lead Vocals Beta 58®A PG58 Backing Vocals Beta 58A PG58 Kick Beta 91A & Beta 52®A PG52 Snare SM57 PG57 Toms Beta 98AMP/C PG56 Hi-Hat KSM137 PG81 Overheads KSM32 PG27 Guitar Cabinet SM57 PG57 Fiddle KSM9 PG81 Banjo KSM313 PG57 Monitors PSM® 900 PSM 200 On Tour with Shure 15 82779_Shure_ OTWS13_V5.qxd 1/4/12 12:19 PM Page 16 coverstory 16 www.shure.com 82779_Shure_ OTWS13_V5.qxd 1/4/12 12:19 PM Page 17 It does not get more metal than Judas Priest. Fire, devil horns, leather, motorcycles, thrashing guitars, screaming vocals: Did we mention fire? Along with the likes of Motorhead and Black Sabbath, Judas Priest put metal on the musical map, and they did it with a style all their own. As Rob Halford and company venture out on a worldwide “farewell” tour, we sat down with the Metal God himself, who has promised to keep wailing away until his last metal breath, in spite of any farewell tour. ON TOUR WITH SHURE: I’m not complaining … that’s a long show! ROB HALFORD: It is a long show. The strange thing is that it doesn’t feel like two hours and twenty minutes. I don’t know why that is. A minute is a very long time. If you ever saw The Beatles, Yellow Submarine and they sing, “When I’m 64,” and the clock counts down 64 seconds, 64 seconds is a very long time. So you can imagine what two hours and twenty minutes should feel like. you get in front of the fans. Luckily for us, that first show in Tillbourg, in Holland all those months ago worked really well. I don’t think we have to do much refining on it; it went really smoothly, simply because after all these years we know what [we] need to do as far as a show. It’s a bit like a fireworks display on July 4th, you know? Everything is building up to that big, climactic “bombursting” at the end which we do, obviously when the bike rolls out and all of the other the connection with the fans you have consistently for a very long time; it all gets in to your blood. I think that’s why you get bands like Priest and many others that are still doing what they do with a passion: because they just love to make music and to be in front of the people who gave you the life, really. So yeah, it’s a “farewell tour” in the sense that we’re not going to do any more big world tours because they take almost two years to complete. I said in an interview But doesn’t it really pass quickly because the set list is such an extraordinary one; it’s moving constantly. There are a lot of dynamics and there’s so much information going on; it’s really entertaining. It’s one of those things where you’re like, “Wow, was that it? Was that two hours and twenty minutes? Man, I want to see it again,” you know? And some of these fans are coming out and doing that — they’re coming out and seeing us two or three times, which is a good thing. OTWS: How much refinement does your set list go through? Do you experiment a lot with... RH: You have to kind of kick the tires on it before you go out on the road. Like most bands, you go into full production. Because this is a big show, we have about a week of full production back in England. And then, you know, you kind of feel it as you rehearse ... but you never really know until things take place. It’s working really well and the songs feel fantastic every night. They just feel like they’re really clicking and working and connecting. OTWS: There’s a popular idea that this is the last Judas Priest tour. RH: Yeah ... That’s probably due to us using the word “farewell.” I wish there was another — we looked in the dictionary — [thinking] “Is there another word for farewell?” But I think it’s good; it sends a message that we’re pulling back a little bit. I can’t see us ever retiring. I’m one of these people where towards the end of the tour I’m going crazy—I just want to go home and I want to relax. And then two weeks later I’m like, “Give me something to do, give me something to do. Let me write a song, go to the studio, and get back on the road.” It definitely becomes part of your existence, that whole experience of living on the road, doing the shows, obviously, the other day—we’re not “spring chickens” any more, we’re a bit like “old buzzards” you know. I think this is sensible because what it does, it gives us more of a future, and I think it keeps us mentally in the right place. There’s nothing worse than begrudgingly going to work (if you can say that in the sense of what it means, not in a disrespectful light). But you’ve really got to want to get on that tour bus. You really have to want to lock the doors to the house and say, “Goodbye house, I’ll see you in a couple of years.” You really have to want to do that. It has to be real. It has to be honest. It has to be genuine. You can’t go out there and fake it. We’ve never done that in Priest and we never will. So we think that by just pulling back a little bit we can still keep all those right elements and ambitions intact. OTWS: Now, for you personally: You’re in Priest, you do Halford records; I personally am a fan of 2wo... On Tour with Shure 17 82779_Shure_ OTWS13_V5.qxd 1/4/12 12:19 PM Page 18 Oh, wow! Yeah, cool. is it time for a side project for you? RH: When time permits, because Priest is this all-consuming, metal beast that just takes up your life—as it should—and the plan that we have now is to … obviously keep touring until the end of this year, take a holiday break, and then we kick it off again sometime late January, early February over in … I think we’re going to Korea first and then Singapore. Japan again—it will be great to see our friends in Japan. There’s talk of us going back in to some of the parts of Europe it’s just right. So that’s what we’re planning to do. It will be ready when it’s ready, but fingers crossed, we’re going to try and get it out before the end of next year. All good things are worth waiting for, so they say. We’ll be letting everybody know. We’ll be giving everybody a heads-up at judaspriest.com when we know it’s about to be unleashed. And then, of course, then—maybe—some solo stuff. I mean, I’m like all of us: we’ve all got various interests outside of Judas Priest. It’s a case of when the “metal clock” is giving us the opportunity to go in there and do all these other things that we want to do. again as well. We still haven’t done all the places that we tried to do in Europe from the first leg, so presumably we’ll go back to Europe and more than likely we’ll come back to the States and do some other parts of America that we haven’t gotten to. Then we have to finish the record, of course! We’ve got this brand new Judas Priest record that’s being worked on that’s just looking to be a very, very solid, big statement—like we always try to do. [It’s] not like Nostradamus: this is very much a classic British metal, heavy, classic Priest album. We’ve got the bulk of the material written. Now we have Richie Faulkner with us—this extraordinary guitar player. We want to get him in the studio and see what he can lay down with us. It’s one of those things where... “When’s it coming out? When’s it coming out? We want it! We want it!” It’s like if you take the pie out of the oven a bit too early it’s not going to taste as good. You’ve got to wait a little bit until We received a very nice photo from you about a year ago... RH: Yeah. OTWS: ...saying ‘Shure is the Metal God!’ Thank you very much—that now lives in our archives at Shure. RH: Oh, OK! OTWS: You’ve been a Beta 58® user... RH: Oh, man—it’s an extraordinary microphone! When you’re a musician and you’re RH: OTWS: When 18 www.shure.com OTWS: JUDAS PRIEST going to go out to work you’ve got to feel confident about the equipment you’re going to use. And I’ve always felt confident. When I pick up that mic I know it’s going to do the job that it has to do. I’ve been blessed — or cursed — with extraordinary vocal chords that do very, very bizarre things for a vocalist—and that microphone can just handle ANYTHING. I just wail away in to it for two hours and twenty minutes. Just as a safety precaution, about half way through we swap over on to another [Beta] 58 just because I know I’m belting away in to it. I’d never conceive of that microphone getting tired of me, but just to be on the safe side it’s a bit like changing the strings on a guitar or the drum skins. I know the mic can take it but it’s just another bit of foresight. Having said that, they never let me down! I’ve never, ever had a Shure microphone that’s let me down. And that’s a great feeling. You go out feeling confident and you can just wail away and get across everything that you want to get across and everybody goes home happy. OTWS: Excellent. Well you’re one of very, very few people I can actually say this to face-to-face. As a fan of metal I wanted to say, thank you FOR metal. And I’m really excited to see my fourth Judas Priest show tonight. And on behalf of Shure we want to thank you for showing us how it’s done with our microphones. RH: Wow, that’s really cool and it’s nice that we’re talking almost on the day of 11-1111. I was glued to the TV watching all of the metal programs last night on various networks. So this is all kind of synchronized with that and definitely a big spot for Shure microphones in the heavy metal weekend we’re having. So thank you, Shure, and the Metal God will keep wailing in to those Shure microphones as long as I have a metal breath! Thank you! Theirs On A Budget Lead Vocals UR2/Beta 58®A* PGXD2/Beta 58A* Backing Vocals Beta 58A PG58 Kick Beta 91A PG52 Snare Top/Bottom Beta 57A PG57 Toms Beta 98AMP/C PG56 Hi-Hat KSM181 PG81 Overheads KSM44 PG27 Guitar Cabinet KSM313, KSM32 & KSM27 PG27 & PG57 Monitors PSM® 900 PSM 200 *wireless system 82779_Shure_ OTWS13_V5.qxd 1/4/12 12:19 PM Page 19 • • • • • Engineer Spotlight • • • • • RECESSION-PROOF ENGINEERING KEVIN McCARTHY & MARTIN WALKER [JUDAS PRIEST] ON TOUR WITH SHURE: You’re in a place where you’re “recession-proof,” so to speak. At what point do you feel you obtain that status? KEVIN “TATER” McCARTHY: Oh, wow. Good question. I think I learned a long time ago that if you worry about it you’re not going to get it, and if you don’t worry about it, you get it. I think that’s always got me through. And for some reason, knock on wood, I’ve been very, very fortunate in this business not to have to make any phone calls or send résumés. I’ve never even had a business card! So I’m very fortunate to be getting those calls when I need them. And at this point, twenty-five years into it now, I’ve got enough clients that want me back, fortunately, and when one’s off, one’s on and vice versa. It’s very nice. I like “recessionproof.” Very good! [Laughs.] MARTIN WALKER: I guess it’s having longevity with certain bands rather than having a high turnover—working for loads of bands for short periods at a time. You build up a relationship with a band and their management and it’s kind of just word of mouth, really. I always hunt for the next job three months before the current one finishes. I kind of guess I’ve just been lucky. I don’t know if there’s a set rule that says I’m lucky. OTWS: Now, when you were with Slash you got introduced to the KSM313. Is it something that was a little unusual, to see a ribbon mic in a live situation? KM: You [Shure] were nice enough to send me some for Slash when they first came out and you really wanted me to try it. We used it on Slash’s guitar and absolutely loved it. I mean it was absolutely fantastic. And then Martin came in for Pooch [Kenneth “Pooch” Van Druten -ed.] to finish up mixing Slash on his last tour, and Martin loved them. So I think the first call when we needed to check our inventory for mics was to make sure we got those to use on Judas Priest and we’re using them on Richie’s guitar and on Glenn’s guitar. MW: It was definitely a good choice. It’s a great mic. You know, my doubts weren’t for the sound. My doubts were for the robustness of touring life. But we never had any problems with it, and same for the ones we’ve got out with Priest. They seem to last forever. Or they seem to suffer the consequences of being on tour. OTWS: Are they handling whatever you’re throwing at them in terms of sound pressure? MW: Absolutely, yeah. No issues at all. I mean, Priest are kind of loud on stage, but it’s not ridiculously loud. It’s maybe not as Kevin McCarthy Martin Walker “11” as people think it might be on stage for them. They handle it well, yeah. We mix them with some other KSMs as well; some 32s and 27s. So we have three large diaphragm mics there … or, two and a ribbon [rather]. But yeah, it works really well. It gives me great, big, fat guitar sound without having to work at it. OTWS: Is it easier to introduce artists these days to in-ears than in yesteryear? KM: I think when they first started everyone was scared of feedback in their ears. I remember that now, going back to when they first came out. Nowadays they’re much more willing to try it because I think they see everyone else doing it, or another band member in their band, [seeing] them coming off the stage having great nights; the same sound everywhere they go. I think that’s getting them to try it. With Ian Hill in Judas Priest, as we all know, Ian kind of stands in one spot on the stage and he’s never moved all these years; he’s always kind of been in that one spot. Well, talking to Ian, he’s always stood in that spot because that’s where he could hear his bass. That’s how he originally got in that spot, because Glenn’s guitar was so loud—he moved over and stood in that spot. Well, he’s on in-ears now and he loves it because it’s blocking out the sound of Glenn’s cabinets, which are next to him, and he’s getting a much better mix than he’s ever had before. OTWS: You’re using PSM® 900 on this tour… KM: Yes. OTWS: Do you find it a substantial leap in technology? KM: Oh, not even a leap in technology, just being able to use the functions a lot easier. The sync, the infrared sync—I just love that. It’s one of my favorites. It seems so easy and so simple. Maybe younger guys now think maybe, “Well you should do that,” but that didn’t happen before. You were using little screwdrivers to tweak stuff, like, “Hey, what was that letter and number?” Nowadays [a few button presses], you’re done. It’s great; absolutely fantastic. OTWS: What advice would you give to young engineers as they embark upon a career? MW: Show keenness. Show willingness to your local PA company. Go and help them out for nothing and go and offer to do every bit of work you can. And be a good guy. If you get a reputation as a good guy, you’ll keep getting asked back ... hopefully. KM: The best advice I can give is, “Protect your ears.” You need ’em for a long time. OTWS: Well, that’s a difficult thing for a lot of people to grasp in this business. KM: Yeah, it is. It is. Especially at the volume we run Judas Priest. It’s very loud, we do four, five, six shows a week, and we have a very long show—it’s two-anda-half hours—so ear fatigue comes in to play. And I do try to give myself a break throughout that set. And maybe these younger guys can learn how to maybe do that a little quieter and protect their ears a little longer. That’d be my advice right now because that’s what I’m trying to do. On Tour with Shure 19 82779_Shure_ OTWS13_V5.qxd 1/4/12 12:19 PM Page 20 Aside from their voice, an emcee only has one true instrument on stage and in the studio: a microphone. There’s a deeper connection and a relationship between an emcee and his mic of choice, similar to that of a guitar player and his Gibson or his Fender. The microphone as an instrument and a signature sound is taken a few steps further with the likes of Mos Def and Talib Kweli, known collectively as Black Star. Bringing a vintage mic with a cable certainly makes a statement on a hip-hop stage these days, but how about a red one with black foam? Maybe one done in white with red foam? It’s all a part of the show and the sound for these two influential emcees and this past fall, everything was in its right place for Black Star to once again show ’em how it’s done. H H ON TOUR WITH SHURE: You guys have had distinguished solo careers as well as many, many collaborations. When it comes to collaborations how do each of you go about deciding who you want to work with, when you want to work with them? TALIB KWELI: [Chuckling] We’re kind of different... MOS DEF: Yeah, yeah, yeah. TK: [Laughing] MD: I mean, it’s a different process for each of us. We all have people that we like and people that reach out to us. I think hip-hop is a 20 www.shure.com H H H group effort. Most art is, but I think hip-hop is unique. It’s similar to jazz where that spirit of collaboration is really encouraged, but it’s different for everybody—sometimes it just happens, sometimes you hear somebody and think, “Oh, it’d be cool if we could do something together.” OTWS: Regarding Black Star specifically then, what do you feel that you bring to each other when you perform together? TK: Well I think that Black Star is a real organic thing. We have a lot of similar goals, a lot of similar ideas on the importance and values 82779_Shure_ OTWS13_V5.qxd 1/4/12 12:19 PM Page 21 of art, and art’s place in the community, and a huge respect for each other’s talent, each other’s talent level. We come from the same place. It’s just the moon and the stars aligned for us to do this project. We both had solo projects and different ideas on our minds, even when we came together to make this project. But that’s kind of what made it even better, made it more organic, because there wasn’t this weight put on this thing. It was something that was truly the sum of its parts. MD: It’s a good situation—it’s enjoyable; there’s not a lot of pressure. It’s a unique situation to be in in a group. OTWS: You had mentioned an analogy to jazz musicians before. Do you guys find that you elevate each other when you perform together, similar to how different jazz musicians… MD: Yeah, sure. I mean, it’s certainly not bringing each other down. TK: [Laughs.] Yeah, somebody hit me up on Twitter the other day and said, “I’m about to see Byrd and ’Trane, a.k.a. Mos Def and Kweli.” MD: [Laughing] TK: For people to make that reference... MD: That’s pretty sweet. TK: ...it means that they really get what we tryin’ to do. MD: We feel good about it. It’s good to be able to have a career, a long career, doing what you enjoy doing and still feeling enthusiasm for it; finding new ways to do it. The microphones are definitely a big part of that too: I mean, for me, because I’m not only performing with them, but I also record with them. TK: I gotta say that Mos is a proponent and a champion of these microphones. And when he come to the studio he bring [them] to the studio. And he always encourage me [to do the same] for the sound in the studio, for the sound on stage, for the look on stage. It’s been a good arrangement and he’s led me down that path. MD: Chicago is actually the place where I discovered the Shure [Super] 55. I had the first metal one [55 Series II -ed.] and the resonance on that was like, whoa. It was unique. It was jarring for the audience a little bit because they were weren’t used to hearing an emcee on a microphone like this. I like the juxtaposition of something that was viewed as a vintage technology in a new context. And so I was like, “Well can we get some of those in different colors, or what?” I like the actual element that it lends to the performance. I like that it’s actually connected to a ground wire as opposed to being a wireless. And I also like the fidelity on it; I think it’s really quality and also it’s great for preserving the voice and the [pats himself] abdominals—I don’t have to fight so much with the sound. OTWS: Well you guys definitely use them well. I mean, it’s kind of a common problem for us to have artists that grip the ball and change the pattern. TK: I’m still, every night, learning something different—a new way to use my voice or to rap in to the mic. That’s a fun part of the process for me. [Grabbing Kweli’s white-bodied Super 55] It looks different. It’s so cool, this white one. It’s nice! OTWS: Yeah, you guys have some very custom 55s... MD: Yeah, yeah! It’s sleek. OTWS: Does that become part of your stage and your ability to... MD: It’s been one of the most dynamic parts MD: BLACK STAR Lead Vocals of my career emceeing. Many artists have their instrument—whether it be piano or the drums or guitar—I think this is a way for an emcee to have an instrument; it’s personal. You go to most clubs and it’s a mic that someone else has used. This is just much more personal. OTWS: It’s refreshing to hear that. A lot of people don’t think of it like that—guitar players have Gibsons or Fenders or something like that. A lot of people don’t necessarily equate that to when you use your voice as an instrument. MD: Oh, it’s very personal. I read someplace—they were talking about the sacredness of the human voice—without sounding too esoteric, there’s definitely something to that. One of the highlights that happened with this microphone was when I did Letterman. I was a few minutes late for sound check. So I came in and they’re like, “OK, you got to get on the mic,” and I was like, “But I have my own mic,” and they were like, “No, no, no you can’t. You don’t know the room.” But then I whipped it out; I pulled it out of my bag; and they saw it and they were like, [eyes wide in a pregnant pause] “Alright! We’ll see if we can get a cable.” And then when it was all done—I did it with Black Keys and Jim Jones—and when the song was done, just unplugged it and walked away with my mic…. It was a really nice feeling. OTWS: Those guys like their vintage microphones as well. MD: Yeah. It’s been a lot of places with me—Brazil, all over the coasts—it’s nice. OTWS: So Black Star: Why 2011 now? Was there something you guys needed to revisit? MD: It’s because we can and the opportunity is here to do it. We’re at unique places in our careers where our careers are more independent than they’ve been before, even when we started, so we’re very much in control of what we do and how we do it at this point. Like Kweli said, the points have aligned to bring us to this space and time... and here we are. Good to be here, too. OTWS: Excellent. Any advice for aspiring, young emcees? MD: Get your own microphone. It’s sanitary. [Laughs.] Theirs On A Budget Super 55-Custom 55SH Series II On Tour with Shure 21 82779_Shure_ OTWS13_V5.qxd 1/4/12 12:19 PM Page 22 22 www.shure.com 82779_Shure_ OTWS13_V5.qxd 1/4/12 12:19 PM Page 23 We heard Roger Daltrey was in town, spending an off day in Chicago during his recent tour of Tommy. At the first hint of this news, we grabbed every camera and audio recording device we could find, jotted down some questions and made our way into the city where rock royalty was holding court. We’ve had the opportunity to spend moments with Roger in the past, but for some strange reason, no one ever got those moments captured on film or even on tape. Here’s a guy that put the SM58® on the map as a tool for any rock n’ roll stage, and up until now, all we’ve ever had was someone’s verbal memory of a story they once heard about Roger or The Who. Needless to say, we were more than prepared this time… ON TOUR WITH SHURE: You’re half way through the tour now? How’s everybody settling in? ROGER DALTREY: It’s phenomenal; I’m having the best time of my life on stage. I’m just enjoying it so much, [for] several reasons. For one, two years ago I had a serious throat problem and I found a genius surgeon who has managed to bring my voice back to being almost like it was 40 years ago. And number two, I’ve started working with the in-ear monitor system, which takes a lot of getting used to … but it’s a singer’s dream once you do. First time ever I’ve been able to hear myself, and not have to scream over the rest of the band! OTWS: How has using the personal in-ear monitors affected your approach to the performance? Do you go into it differently now? RD: No, I try and get the sound I have in my head to be the same sound as I always had on stage. It’s a particular sound, it’s neither here nor there, it’s somewhere in the middle, the right mix of both. Whatever it is! When you can’t hear yourself, you over sing and it’s a nightmare, because you always give it that little bit too much. But when you can hear yourself, it’s just like fine tuning all the time—wonderful! And the work we’re doing as well: We’re doing Tommy as a classical piece of music. We’re not trying to go on as this rock and roll circus act. We are respecting the music that was actually made on the record. Which I feel became overlooked due to the size and scale that Tommy eventually became. A film. A Broadway show. An ice show … I think? A ballet. And of course, that original record was so much more than what even The Who, in the early days, put on stage. We made it into kind of a visual circus and in some ways theatrically incredibly powerful but musically weaker. But now, doing it the way I do it, I suddenly realized what the beauty was of Tommy. It was that people came in with a very loose demo of a song and then that organically grew from the band, so Tommy really was The Who at its best. OTWS: Tommy was really a turning point for The Who. I understand that with all of the “When you can’t hear yourself, you over sing and it’s a nightmare, because you always give it that little bit too much. But when you can hear yourself, it’s just like fine tuning all the time — wonderful!” – R O G E R D A LT R E Y productions that happened in the later years, that it had been some time since you looked back and listened to the original record and John had not as well? RD: Well that’s one of the things that happened. For me, once the record was complete, I never listened to it again. I wasn’t interested. The art was making it. I suppose it’s like a painter, sooner or later you have to walk away from the canvass, and then you never want to see it again; you’ve done it. So for me, this has been a revelation. And, I’ve never been so happy on stage. I’m just lovin’ every minute of it. And again, mainly to the fact that I didn’t think I’d ever be doing it again! [Laughs.] OTWS: The idea to bring Tommy back was a command performance at The Royal Albert Hall, right? You thought you were going to do this once? RD: Well, yeah. I’d run a week of charity shows. I’m very heavily involved with a charity which works with teenagers with cancer; teenagers with cancer get a very raw deal. They get the most vigorous, the most rare, and of course, teenagers haven’t got the luxury of the Bambi effect, that children have. And I just feel very strongly that the music business we came out of was founded on the backs of teenagers, so this for me is a way of giving back. So I run these shows every year in England and I run seven nights of events at The Royal Albert Hall. This year I had six nights booked and all the top guys do it…. No one has ever let me down. But I couldn’t find, anywhere in the business, someone who was free on the Thursday night. I thought, “What the hell do I do, have a dark night on the Thursday?” [Laughs.] So I just dug Tommy out. I thought, “Well, let’s give it a try,” and I was shocked at how well it was received. I’d never done a solo show, so I didn’t even know whether I would put a bum in a seat! There might have been a few bums, but The Albert Hall is quite a tough sell. It seats 6000 people and it’s a prestigious place that is quite an expensive ticket, ’cause it’s for charity and I thought, “Well … even for a penny, even for a pound … go for it.” And it sold out really quickly. It was incred- On Tour with Shure 23 82779_Shure_ OTWS13_V5.qxd 1/4/12 12:19 PM Page 24 ibly well received and I had a bloody good time doing it. So it was all by accident. Once I made the decision to do it, I don’t know, it seemed to have all come together—there seems to be a bigger hand on it. OTWS: What about the “use it or lose it” philosophy? RD: Well use it or lose it is basically, for me, what every singer should wake up in the morning and think about, because voices aren’t like guitar strings. You can’t change your vocal chords. If you use them all the time, they will stay flexible and as long as you and it’s not for certain that we will, but if we do, we’ve got to get the volume on stage down, otherwise we’ll have a deaf guitarist on our hand, and he’s a composer... that would be criminal! So, I don’t want to go there, this can have a really big input into our future, if there is one. But as far as the past goes, rock and roll was about dealing with what you have to deal with at the time. And we did it, and in some ways, showed people how to live to the full. And now maybe we have to show them how to go out with a bang, you know? [Laughs.] microphone,” you know at those events, they are just coming there for the booze. [Laughs.] You know what it’s like! And I thought the only way to really show them how good that mic was, I literally picked it up and threw it, smashed it into the floor. Your guy who was there at the time, his jaw hit the ground! [Laughs.] Then I just picked it up and said [into the mic], “This is one of the reasons why these are the best bloody mics,” ’cause it worked perfectly. I threw it as hard as I could into the ground, and it came up with one side completely “And I thought the only way to really show them how good that mic was, I literally picked it up and threw it, smashed it into the floor. Your guy who was there at the time, his jaw hit the ground! [ Laughs. ] Then I just picked it up and said [ into the mic ], ‘This is one of the reasons why these are the best bloody mics,’ ’cause it worked perfectly.” – R O G E R D A LT R E Y use them properly, they will stay flexible and you will be able to keep singing. But I’m becoming an old man now… and we’re athletes! We don’t realize it, but vocally we are athletes. And they need to be exercised. We can’t take the luxury of years off. So that’s what that tour was all about…. I can’t sit on my ass for two years at this age I’d have no voice at all. It would just deteriorate and disappear. So there we go. That’s what that tour was about. OTWS: We talked about ear monitors and having to work through it and get comfortable with them, at this point now, looking back at your long career and so many gigs, so many performances, so many loud performances: How would things have been different if you had been able to use that technology in your earlier years? Would it have affected the vibe of The Who? RD: Ah … that’s a silly question! [Laughs.] No, we dealt with what we had to deal with, that’s what you have to do. But now we’re dealing with different issues, now we’re dealing with people wearing two hearing aids. So, somehow if The Who ever do go back out, 24 www.shure.com It’s amazing! Speaking about things that maybe haven’t changed in your world, in terms of equipment over the years, it seems like the Shure SM58® has been sort of your standard. That’s one thing that hasn’t moved, maybe you can tell us a little bit about your relationship with that mic? RD: Oh, I think you gave me the first one at The Marquee in London, when did it come out? I can’t remember. I know you presented me with one of the first ones you ever produced. OTWS: Well, The Who’s first endorsement contract I believe, that we have on record, is 1968. RD: That’s right. Well, I remember when you gave me the first SM57 and after that was the SM58, is that right? We had a ceremony at The Marquee Club in London and I thought, “You know, they are not going to believe anything I tell them about a bloody OTWS: ROGER DALTREY flat, but worked perfectly. You couldn’t get a better ad than that! But the only thing I would say though, it’s only the last six or seven years that I’ve really understood it. So many people don’t know how to use the bloody thing. Because for years I sang with my hand right at the back of the cup and it cuts the sound of your voice out. Nobody ever said to me if you hold it like that, you’re going to cut half the sound of your voice out. Have you ever said it to any of your singers? I don’t know … because it’s about time you did [Laughs.] They need to know that if you hold it at the back of the cup, where the ball is, that it destroys the sound of the voice. It cuts all the bass resonance out. Halfway down the stem guys /girls: You know! If rock singers can learn how to hold it correctly, they will find that the volume and resonance in their voice is so much better. It’s all just habit! His On A Budget Lead Vocals SM58® PG58 Monitors PSM® 900 PSM 200 82779_Shure_ OTWS13_V5.qxd 1/4/12 12:20 PM Page 25 On Tour with Shure 25 82779_Shure_ OTWS13_V5.qxd 1/4/12 12:20 PM Page 26 Hello Seahorse! is the epitome of a Gen Y band. Three young kids meet online and form a band, record demos in their home studio and get popular online. Seems like your modern-day rock ’n’ roll story. However, a lot of things happen during the life of a band. Members come and go and decisions are made that can break you, or wake the beast. We sat down with Hello Seahorse! at Shure last November while they were in Chicago to discuss where they got their name, their life before and after their Latin GRAMMY nomination, their love for technology and their advice to the next generation of bands. 26 www.shure.com ON TOUR WITH SHURE: I read somewhere that you guys met through MySpace. Is that true? How did that come about and how did you guys come up with the name “Hello Seahorse!”? LO BLONDO: Yes, we met a few years back, almost six years ago. Burgos [Oro de Neta] and I are from Mexico City and we met on the Internet. I think it’s the way people are relating nowadays; a lot more than in the past at least. We met online and he [points to Oro de Neta] had a series of demos and he asked me to put lyrics and melodies to the songs. A friend of ours named Julio was playing with us so we were a trio back then. In reality there isn’t really a romantic story about the name. One day we were talking amongst ourselves and we decided that the name fit with what we were doing musically at the moment which was doing songs in English and in Spanish and also more dream-pop electronica. A lot of things happen in the life of a band. OTWS: In 2009 you guys released your second studio album named Bestia, which catapulted your career and brought you many awards and accolades, including a Latin GRAMMY nomination for Best Alternative Song. We know what life is like after that album, but what was life like for Hello Seahorse! before Bestia? What changed that awakened that beast? LO BLONDO: Well, previous to that album I think we were still trying to find the sound that we wanted to project and what we really wanted to transmit as individuals, as a band and as musicians. To make that album, for starters it’s an album made in Mexico City. It was composed there. So it has all that weight that is Mexico City. It transmits what it makes you feel to be a habitant of a city of that type. [It’s] like being from Chicago; they’re very heavy cities where many crazy things happen and one has to decide if you’re responding well or if you’re responding incorrectly depending on what’s around 82779_Shure_ OTWS13_V5.qxd 1/4/12 12:20 PM Page 27 you. And as far as the lyrics, well it’s a personal search, an individual search, especially since discovering that at the end of it all, we have many personalities and that’s what we wanted to project with this album. OTWS: A year after Bestia you guys came out with your latest album named Lejos. No Tan Lejos. What inspired the new album so soon after Bestia? LO BLONDO: Well for starters, the addition of Joe to the band. New insecurities… JOE: Yes. Well it was rooted in that we were playing out a lot and traveling. That brought out many emotions and a need to transmit and release. Something was growing inside at the time and we decided to leave the city to start composing in a different manner as before which grew from jamming and playing together so much. So what we were looking to do was to do things differently and more spontaneously over everything. It’s what the music decided so that’s why it came out so fast and so well for being such little time. We wanted to maintain that original spark in the music which we were feeling and to leave it as is and let it grow on its own. LO BLONDO: Yes, and at the end we discovered that in this moment as a band, Spanish, the Spanish language is what we want to use to express ourselves. I think that as a band we have figured out how to come together and have that empathy for each other and that wisdom to know what the other needs to be able to project what they have inside. OTWS: Did you guys do anything different in the studio to record this album compared to the previous ones? LO BLONDO: Yes, we tried to open up and try new dynamics. For example, we recorded a song named “Velo De Novia” where we all recorded it together at the same time. Instead of recording the tracks separately, we wanted to do one take that would preserve the freshness of the feelings we had at that moment. That was one of the things we weren’t used to doing, since we were used to recording the tracks separately where Bonno would start recording the drums first, after him maybe Joe would go in to record the bass, you know piece by piece. With that song we wanted to let loose with our producers. For Lejos. No Tan Lejos we worked with two producers. One is Money Mark and the other is Yamil Rezc and both of them have very different ways of working. Mark is more adventurous, more improvised and playful. Yamil is more, how should we say… BONNZ: More deep. More technical. More of implementing layers of sound, more production, more detailed in the way of layering sound and finding specific sounds. Mark is more about whatever comes out and however they come out. LO BLONDO: It’s a lot of fun to play in such different environments. To make an album and to record a few songs in an environment like Mark’s … basically we went to work in his home studio and he has a big quantity of incredible mics of all types and he is open to playing with what you have at that moment. I remember once we went to the store and bought the cheapest mic we could find, just an old mic, and he opened it up and ripped its diaphragm. He would record LO BLONDO: BONNZ: “WHEN I DON’T USE IN-EARS I HEAR THE DRUMS SO LOUD AND I CAN’T HEAR THE DETAILS OUTSIDE. SO IN MY CASE, I CAN HEAR EVERY DETAIL AND I FEEL I CAN DO A LOT MORE.” —BONNZ things with it in order to play around a little and to escape from what we know is “right” [holding up fingers in quotes]. And on the other side, Yamil has all his techniques and that’s what makes each of them the producers they are. OTWS: You recently switched to Shure mics and in-ear personal monitors. How has that affected your performances? BONNZ: Simply the fact that we have our own in-ear monitors and our monitor rack has made everything so much simpler for HELLO SEAHORSE! us. Sound checks are so much faster, and we feel very comfortable with what we have. Before, it was like who knows what we are going to get? Who knows what the venues are going to provide? Who knows what inears we’re going to get? So to know that everything will sound exactly how you left it after your last show always gives you much more piece of mind and obviously more mobility which makes me very comfortable. Also, we have our mics, which make it easy for our engineers and techs when setting up our stage. OTWS: Was it hard to switch from floor wedges to in-ear monitors? BONNZ: It was gradual. In my case for example I always used big headphones for the click track, and I sort of had to move them partially off so I can hear what was going on outside. So, in my case it was great to switch to in-ears because I could hear everything perfectly. I was telling them recently after the last show that I was hearing the drums as if I was in the studio. You can play how you want because you can hear yourself and you know people can hear you as well. When I don’t use in-ears I hear the drums so loud and I can’t hear the details outside. So in my case, I can hear every detail and I feel I can do a lot more. LO BLONDO: Yes it was a gradual process for me as well because you don’t get used to them overnight. I think that the advantage for a singer is that you can hear the details in your voice which, for me, is so important. That’s where perfection lives for me. So when I am not using in-ears, I don’t have those details and it costs me more work to define my sound. I believe it is crucial to be able to identify and recognize your sound. I believe in-ears have helped me with that, to understand and recognize my sound so I can play with it and hear where it is going. I believe it’s basically security. Theirs On A Budget Lead Vocals UR2/Beta 58®A* PGXD2/Beta 58A* Backing Vocals SM58® PG58 Kick Beta 91A PG52 Snare Top/Bottom SM57 PG57 Toms Beta 56®A PG56 Hi-Hat SM81 PG81 Overheads SM81 PG81 Guitar Cabinet SM57 PG57 Keyboard Cabinet SM57 PG57 Monitors PSM® 900 PSM 200 *wireless system On Tour with Shure 27 82779_Shure_ OTWS13_V5.qxd 1/4/12 12:20 PM Page 28 Lured by delicious Mexican cuisine, the southern gentlemen of Mastodon took producer Mike Elizondo’s request to work with the band very seriously. Again, tacos were involved and may have been enough, but Elizondo really is a true fan and wanted to take on a Mastodon record for some time. It turned out to be just the thing for the band’s latest release, The Hunter. We’d like to think that the Shure mics used to capture every idea, jam session and rough cut in the band’s rehearsal space played a bit part as well. ON TOUR WITH SHURE: Forgive me if this has been a question beat to death—I’m not sure if it has been or not … working with [producer] Mike Elizondo: How did that happen to begin with? TROY SANDERS: Tacos, man! BILL KELLIHER: He bought us lunch! BRANN DAILOR: Tacos, yeah. BK: We were like, “Man ... this is the first guy to ever buy us lunch. He wants to work with us.” BD: He came down to meet us in Atlanta and he had been actively searching us out. He wanted to do a Mastodon record since Blood Mountain. So if anybody wants to buy a plane ticket and go through all that trouble to come down and meet us then we’re going to meet ’em and see what the deal is. We were kind of puzzled as well. You know, seeing the different people he had worked with—to take him at face value was ... that’s the wrong thing to do. Being Dr. Dre’s 28 www.shure.com right-hand man—I mean, Dr. Dre’s no dummy, obviously. Mike’s a very musical guy. He went to college to learn to play upright bass in an orchestra and likes all kinds of music just like we like all kinds of music and had a clear and concise understanding of what we wanted to do and what we wanted to accomplish on this record. He kind of let us do our thing, but in the same respects... BK: …guided us a little. BD: …guided us a little bit. We sort of need that. Once you’re working on something for six to eight months it’s nice to have someone with some fresh perspective and ears and similar taste to come in and say, “Hey, you’re heading in the right direction. Hey, this stuff is really great.” He liked all the stuff that we felt strongly about so it was really easy. He got everything sounding really awesome. We’re big boys. We don’t need too much guidance. But it’s nice to have a little bit. It’s nice to kind of keep us in check. At some point for us 82779_Shure_ OTWS13_V5.qxd 1/4/12 12:20 PM Page 29 it’s imperative to take the paint and the paint brushes away—otherwise we just keep coloring and coloring and coloring until everything turns brown. TS: Yeah. We could doodle forever. He was very receptive to all of our musical ideas. We would present him with some of our heavier stuff and he was like, “Wow, really like this, that.” Then we’d present him some of the slower, spacier stuff and he was like, “Wow, this is really good.” Some of the more psychedelic parts that we had going on, he was like, “Wow, that’s really cool—this direction” and [so on]. So everything we were doing in the practice space he really embraced to a certain degree, and was able to help us keep going further down every little road we had already started going down. That was very refreshing. We didn’t want somebody to say, “You know, that’s just too heavy. We shouldn’t have that. That’s too soft.” We already knew what we were creating and what we were building and he really kind of took that, with all four of us, and took it one step further. BD: Yeah. If we had come across someone that didn’t like what we were doing and wanted to change everything we would just move on and go with someone else. We know what we want and we know what we want things to sound like. If someone comes in and says, “Oh no, this is all wrong.” Well, you’re all wrong, so see you later. OTWS: Well, [despite] his résumé, I’m certainly not going to argue with the results. TS: But it started with the tacos. It really did. BD: That’s the way most good things start. OTWS: This album is less conceptual than the others that you’ve done. Was it something where you just found yourselves with material around, like “Deathbound” [a song from the Crack The Skye-era]? My understanding was that was kind of a left-over from that time… BK: Yeah, pretty much. BD: It’s something that didn’t really fit with the whole sound of Crack The Skye. “Deathbound” was a song we really dug, but we just didn’t know what to do with it. It was out of place. BK: The black sheep of Crack The Skye songs. OTWS: When we spoke last, you guys mentioned that you had gone from traveling to make albums to staying in Atlanta. Was that another important thing to do this time around? [All three nod in agreement.] BK: Yeah. We’re not home enough as it is, touring around the world and all. All of us are getting older and having kids and families and wives and things to do at home that are important. Even when we went to Washington state to do a record in Seattle we still weren’t that focused. It was just like, “Hey, let’s start the party here,” you know what I mean? For us, being home … I’m a lot more focused at home, that’s for sure. BD: Same here. BK: I can sleep in my own bed and come down to Earth with my family and reality. BD: Yeah. We did the drum tracks out in LA. We were gone for about a week. I wanted to do my drums in a certain room in Sound City out there in L.A. where a lot of really iconic albums had been crafted. The drum room is this sort of magical drum room that, I guess, doesn’t exist anymore. We were the last ones to do drum tracks there. BK: Another aspect of the whole recording process for us was we built a studio inside of our rehearsal space. Any time we had any riffs that popped in our heads, instead of fumbling around to try and remember it or trying to get something out to record it we pretty much have all of our mics set up on everything at the same time and can remotely MASTODON just hit record, “Hey, play that. Cool. Let’s move on.” We just kept doing that and… BD: …then go throw vocals on over it. BK: Before we knew it we had more riffs and songs than we knew what to do with. It was like, “Wow, cool.” OTWS: Did you find Shure products to be useful in the home studio? BD: Yes. BK: Oh, absolutely. TS: Oh, hell yeah. BK: SM7s and SM57s, SM58®s, Beta 57s … all that stuff is being used. What other kind of mics were we using there, Brann, on your kit? BD: [Wide-eyed and grinning] Tom mics? TS: Kick drum mics too. There was the kick drum mic.[All three laughing] TS: Like Bill said, it was super-helpful because for the first time ever we were able to lay down ideas on the spot in our rehearsal space, and then six, eight weeks, twelve weeks: Whatever it was later, we had these… It wasn’t just a bunch of crazy riffs recorded on a tiny, little Dictaphone that we were trying to remember and go back and play; we had a proper [recording]. It took us eleven years into our career to figure that out, but… BK: With the help of Shure… TS: Absolutely… BK: Without you guys… TS: You really did help Bill build our rehearsal up to where we could be so much more productive and more efficient. BK: Just by miking everything up. Instead of … with technology these days, with ProTools, even a dummy like me can push record and work it. Instead of moving all of our stuff to someone else’s studio, let’s just put the money into our own studio and be comfortable. Anytime we want, anytime of day we can go down there. Everything’s miked up; the drum kit’s miked; bass; vocal— everything is ready to go. Any small ideas we have we just hit record. Or we’ll just jam and record it and then later on pick little pieces out and it made the whole process of writing and pre-production so much easier. Theirs On A Budget Vocals KSM9, Beta 57A & Beta 56®A SM86, PG57 & PG56 Kick Beta 91A & Beta 52®A PG52 Snare Top/Bottom Beta 57A/SM57 PG57 Toms Beta 98AMP/C PG56 Hi-Hat KSM109 PG81 Overheads KSM32 PG27 Guitar Cabinet SM57 PG57 On Tour with Shure 29 82779_Shure_ OTWS13_V5.qxd 1/4/12 12:20 PM Page 30 Sometimes things are better left unsaid. But sometimes you have to be direct to get your point across. After 16 years, Molotov is no stranger to controversy. They are not afraid to be the voice of the people even if they are not always understood. We sat down with Randy Ebright and Paca Ayala of Molotov to discuss their latest tour across Europe, consistency, and how creative differences reunited them. You recently came back from Europe where you played 40 or so shows for your “Don’t You Know We’re Loco?” tour. Does the name have anything to do with Cypress Hill or is it because of the amount of dates on the tour? RANDY EBRIGHT: It’s more because of Zoolander. PACA AYALA: I don’t even know why… OTWS: So how did it go? RE: Very good! There were 46 shows in 20 cities across Europe; very concentrated in Germany, Austria and Switzerland. We also opened new territories like Slovakia, Belgium and England. We also did Spain. I don’t know, many places … Czech Republic. It went well, we played anywhere from halls to festivals with many people. There was a very good response from the public. OTWS: And now you’re on tour in the U.S.? RE: This is the last show of 27 dates in the U.S. So this is the last show for now, then we continue with some things in Latin America. And then we rest and take off again in March. OTWS: You guys have a very creative way with words. Your lyrics use a very popular slang from Mexico called “Albur” that uses a lot of double meaning words and phrases and you sometimes even sing in Spanglish. Were you worried that a lot would get lost in translation while performing throughout Europe? PA: Usually what happens is that the translation or the interpreON TOUR WITH SHURE: 30 www.shure.com tation of what we say doesn’t exactly stick because we rely on only one way of translating. But the interesting thing about that is exactly that, and the music speaks for itself in places where a different language is spoken. They may know the significance of the song or the ideological tendencies of the band but the music holds more weight especially when they don’t understand the lyrics. RE: Yes, something funny happens in Europe since it’s made up of many small countries where you can drive 100 kilometers and find a completely different culture where a different language is spoken. I think because of their geography they are more used to being bombarded with things outside of their culture. So it doesn’t matter if you’re singing in French, English, Spanish or Portuguese in Germany or Switzerland. Maybe they don’t understand our message 100% but they understand our energy perfectly when we sing. OTWS: Speaking of lyrics, many of your lyrics are considered controversial. Do you feel that people who say that are missing the true message behind your words? RE: They don’t even understand what controversial means. OTWS: Is it something that is done intentionally to bring more attention to issues people like to ignore or slide under the carpet? 82779_Shure_ OTWS13_V5.qxd 1/4/12 12:20 PM Page 31 Really we just like to talk about things as they are. Sometimes you just have to say things however they come out and reflect on them the same way. You can’t talk about a social problem by softening the issue with words that don’t describe how complicated things are and exactly what people are going through in their lives. So we say things and in many cases people try to censor us, but I feel our actions, and playing out as much as we do, help break down that censorship scheme as well as any misunderstandings so we can continue to say what we need to say live and without censorship. OTWS: Molotov formed more than 16 years ago, many things change in 16 years, how has Molotov changed? And what hasn’t changed for you guys? PA: Well I believe that the band continues to have that essence in which we have that need to play, the need to compose and the need to go up on stage and play live even if there is no one there or the technical conditions aren’t right. Even after all these years, things fail. Especially when you’re opening new territories, and you have no idea what kind of stage you’ll end up playing on. We have never lost our energy. We do end up translating and transforming how we did things in the past. After 16 years even our songs start sounding different. We have played them so many times and for some reason they are interpreted in a different manner. But I don’t believe that we have lost that spark of having fun on stage. So, we will be much older and tired, but our energy to play live will always be the same. OTWS: You guys share the stage with Shure microphones. How long have you been using them and why are they your mics of choice? RE: I believe since always, right? [Asking Paco] PA: Since we started doing demos; from the first time that we could afford to go buy a microphone in downtown Mexico City where they sell instruments and all types of audio equipment. We bought a Shure SM58® and a 57. I believe in a way, it’s like a natural tool for us. It’s like hearing a bass, a guitar, or the drums which are a harder instrument to obtain. You save until you can get it, and once you have it you use it so much that it becomes part of your sound. RE: Yes, since our first shows in the most funky holes in D.F. [Mexico City] or worse. Even there, you can find a [SM]57 on the snare, a [Beta] 52® on the kick, and 58s all over. That’s how it’s been since we started PA: and even when we went into our first pro studio in Los Angeles, back when studios were still around. Even there, where they cared about every last sonic detail, you could also find a 57. So when you would see the confidence that people would put on those mics, it inspired confidence in you to use them. So it’s important to invest in your sound and take your microphones with you to each show. OTWS: You also use the PSM® 900 in-ear personal monitors. What do you like about being in-ear versus floor monitors? RE: It’s exactly what my partner said. We are always opening new territories and you don’t know what situation you will find yourself in with production at festivals where you don’t have your sound engineer. So it’s crucial to be able to rely on your inear monitors so that you don’t have to deal with floor wedges that you don’t know where they came from or what kind of shape they are in. So it’s crucial; something that never changes. PA: I think that in the case of using in-ears, it’s completely different because it’s something that goes directly in the ear. You know how it’s going to react and what performance to expect in places where you don’t know what kind of gear will be provided. You monitor up and you know that the engineer will quickly fix any problems and what the capacity is of the equipment. He knows that we work well with this equipment, so it’s playing in your own house where everything is at arm’s length and the instruments sound perfect. OTWS: You guys split up for a while after you last studio album, Etemamiente, which was released in 2007. Then you guys worked on some solo EPs and asked your fans to vote on whose solo work was the best. What really happened? Is everything OK now? RE: Yes… PA: Really, we had just finished touring in the U.S. and we thought about doing, let’s MOLOTOV say, an additional format, which was creating some EPs. Each of us on our own, totally isolated from one another without knowing what was happening, how the other was doing, or how the recording was going. Really the plan was that at the end we were going to join the material to make Etemamiente. So the word was out, but what many people didn’t know was that breaking up was a prank in order for us to work creatively, each on their own and reuniting. Many people thought that we had a fight between us, but that never existed. RE: And it wasn’t even true. They had to call me to track drums for them. OTWS: I understand that you are about to release a new album… RE: Yes, we are going to play this show, then we are going to break up, and then we are going to reunite for breakfast tomorrow morning, and jump on a plane. Then we are going to do a tour through Latin America since we still have a commitment to the south. And then we are going to break up again for Thanksgiving and Christmas. Then we plan to release a DVD that was filmed in Russia at the end of January. PA: That’s right. RE: And we are working on new material for a new, unedited album scheduled for the fall of 2012 right before the end of the world. Theirs On A Budget Lead Vocals SM58® PG58 Backing Vocals SM58 PG58 Kick Beta 52®A PG52 Snare SM57 PG57 Toms Beta 56®A PG56 Hi-Hat SM81 PG81 Overheads KSM32 PG27 Guitar Cabinet SM57 PG57 Monitors PSM® 900 & PSM 600 PSM 200 On Tour with Shure 31 82779_Shure_ OTWS13_V5.qxd 1/4/12 12:17 PM Page ii
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