A blog, suggested by my wife Bernadette (my Drew Believer), about my two decades in and around the Boston Music Scene. She's heard my million-or-so true stories a thousand times, and I can't believe she's still entertained by them. It'll be fun to recall the people, places and tales, both comedic and tragic, of these last twenty-something years.

Sunday, September 9, 2007

'Bet you never knew I worked with...

This may be a good recurring category; a surprising artist that I did a session with that people don't know I worked with. The reason might be that it was a demo, a live date, or that I simply wasn't credited.

So, did you know I recorded Patty Griffin?



Yep! Twice, in fact.

The first time was in about '93 or '94. She had a major record deal with A&M (I think) and had been struggling with the production of the debut LP. A well-known pop, funk and R&B producer was tapped to do the record, and apparently he was going for a fully-blown and polished sound that was not at all what roots-loving Patty wanted. So she called up Newbury Sound to do a live 'n' dirty demo of what the record SHOULD sound like. That was the kind of thing that was up my alley, so naturally I was tapped to engineer.

The band that walked in the door that day were all Boston Hall-of-Famers: Adam Steinberg on guitar, Jim Mouradian on FenderBass, and Billy Conway behind the kit. I mic'd everything up and before long we were rolling tape. Patty was in a glass booth with my favorite old Neumann U87 in front of her, and the band rolled takes totally live. Incredible. One thing I remember fondly was on one of the playbacks in the control room (on the big Urei mains), Conway complimented the drum sound. He said, "Now THAT sounds like my drums! Why don't other engineers get that sound? That's exactly what I'm looking for!" That made me tingle with pride because as a member of Treat Her Right, he had had plenty of session experience with a couple of major producers. The only overdubs we did were some guitar things with Adam. Like he'd play electric on the live take and then overdub an acoustic.

And Patty was amazing. She sang flawlessly and with a lot of soul. It only took a golden touch of reverb at the console and her track was good to go. She reminded me of Aretha, Janice, Bonnie Raitt and Emmylou Harris all rolled in to one.

The only glitch was a political one. The studio had run out of DAT tapes to mix to. It was Sunday and the DAT store was closed. So I offered up a tape that I had with me which had some other crap on it. Her manager, a woman who was extremely in control of everything and not in a happy way, did not like this idea. But since there was little other option, that's what we did. She made me sign something that I would erase my copy and this was not for release and blah blah blah. So the next day I made a copy for Patty and the manager and that was that.

Did I erase the original that I had made?

Well guess what I found the other day? Hehehe...wink wink!

Sounds incredible.

The second time I worked with Patty was when I was producing tracks for Laurie Geltman's "No Power Steerng" CD. The sessions were in '95 or so, at old Euphoria Studios in Revere, which by that time was really showing its age. But we did some great songs in there, and Patty came in to to do backups on the song "Elbow" as I recall. Again, Patty was a one-take wonder.

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