You heard I'm sure that Ronnie Spector passed away last week. Today's BBC Radio 4 flagship current affairs programme "Broadcasting House" managed to fit a Ronnie Spector tribute in between the dismal Boris and Novak sagas. The emphasis was actually on the thunderous bass drum intro to Be My Baby delivered by Hal Blaine (who was also the drummer on Bridge Over Troubled Water and Wouldn't It Be Nice - amongst many others listed here) - under the direction of Phil Spector.
Spector
would also put the drum sound up front to great effect right from the
start on Instant Karma. Ronnie Spector's single for Apple "Try Some, Buy
Some" - one of George's songs of mystic revelation that was left off
All Things Must Pass - was a flop, however, something she
bitterly regretted doing for her increasingly erratic husband. It was
planned by him to be a trailer for a come-back album on Apple that never
happened. George subsequently re-used the backing track with his own
vocals replacing Ronnie's, for inclusion on his less impressive follow
up to ATMP. Living in the Material World.
Be
My Baby probably has the most famous bass drum opening of any pop song
and tingled the spine again when it unexpectedly blasted out of the
radio this morning - and superbly matched with Ronnie Spector's voice
too. She looks fabulous in the classic TV show clip shown
on the TV news obituaries. Brian Wilson said it was the greatest record
ever produced which is a fitting accolade and memorial for her, for
Phil Spector at that time in his prime as a genius producer, and for Hal
Blaine who passed away in 2019.
Mark Carvell
A P.S. from Gary Hunt, a drummer in his own right:
Yes
Mark, yet another sad passing…. Just on technical point, the drum intro
consists of three bass drum beats (single and two double notes)
followed by a highly reverberated snare hit. The snare is the sound that
really draws your attention to the bass drum rhythm… In those days only
one or two mics were used for recording the drum kit and so any
processing would be applied across the kit.
Hal
Blaine really was the original ’session drummer’, most of his miking
techniques were copied by nearly every ‘name’ drummer thereafter and
some are still used today… The Spector massive reverb sound was not the
first time it was used on drums however, Joe Meek was probably the first
to use the idea… in fact Meek had much more technical expertise than
Spector, in fact he invented a lot of it… There are unsubstantiated
tales of Spector coming to London and being accused by Meek of stealing
his production ideas!
No comments:
Post a Comment