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This
is a transcript of an interview I did for David Buckley's
book on David Bowie, Strange Fascination, out on 9/23/99
from Virgin Books.
1. I'd like to have some general info about your other
production work before you worked with David.
I'm a producer, engineer, and musician based in New York
City, where I've lived since 1987. I got my start in New
York working for producer Arthur Baker at his studio,
Shakedown Sound. At that point I was a bassist but I wanted
to become a recording engineer and mixer, with the intention
of eventually becoming a producer. Musically, at the time
I was primarily into rock and folk music, and I assumed
my engineering/ production career would follow along a
similar path. After going to college in Indiana and doing
an internship in Dallas, Texas, I decided to go to New
York because I couldn't stand LA, and London seemed too
complicated from the immigration side of things. When
I arrived in New York my experience with dance music was
minimal. The only studio that would hire me as an assistant
was Arthur's - all the other ones wanted me to clean toilets
for six months before I'd get to look at the desk. Even
though I knew little about programming, sampling, or dance
music in general, I went for it. It was trial by fire.
I had to learn fast as Arthur would throw you right on
the session if you were a warm body and you had a clue.
In six months I was engineering, in nine months I was
mixing. At Shakedown I hooked up with the DJ Junior Vasquez,
and we were a team for a couple of years. We were a good
match- he was just beginning to produce, and I was sharpening
my methods of mixing, sampling, playing and programming.
We learned a lot from each other. In 1990 we went up to
Paisley Park and worked with Prince, and ended up doing
remixes for him for a few months after that. This was
the apex of the dance thing for me, and I started producing
on my own after that, in the UK and Europe. I wanted to
get back into rock but bring all that I had learned with
me, and make it a bit more interesting.
2. Why did David pick you to work on the album and
did you meet up with him to discuss ideas before recording?
A couple of factors were responsible. David came to work
at The Looking Glass Studios because he knew Philip Glass,
most recently from Philip's symphonic adaptation of 'Low'.
David had been working on '1.Outside' at the Hit Factory,
among other studios, and he wanted a change. David, Reeves
Gabrels, and Andy Spray from Isolar fell in love with
Philip's studio immediately - it has a nice big control
room, and a window with a view of the Manhattan Bridge.
They were going to bring in an engineer from the Hit Factory,
then decided that they should go with somebody who really
knew the room. I had been working at Looking Glass since
1991 - I did Deee-Lite there - and it had been my base
of operations for some time at that point. I was the natural
choice. After we met David realized he knew some of my
work, most recently Babylon Zoo's 'Spaceman'. (I also
worked on 'Fame '90' with Arthur Baker, which David found
out about much later.) The making of the album that would
become 'Earthling' grew out of David wanting to finish
up a song he had begun in Switzerland. This was 'Telling
Lies'. The first thing we did was add more parts to what
already existed- guitars courtesy of Reeves, Zach Alford
came in to do drums, I did some programming, and David
did more vocals and had some keyboard ideas. I then mixed
this version at Electric Lady. I also did my own remix
at the time, which would become known as the 'Feelgood'
mix when it was released on the Internet. After this,
he said he wanted to do an album with me involved after
they finished their summer '96 festival tour. I didn't
really believe him - you hear that sort of thing all the
time in this industry, and most promises don't materialize
in the end. I went to see them play in Germany during
that tour, while I was working in Berlin. This was the
first time I met Gail Ann Dorsey and Mike Garson. David
continued to go on about making a record. I wasn't sure
whether to believe him, but then when they got off the
road, two days later they showed up.
3. Were you a big Bowie fan before Earthling?
Who wasn't? I had spells of being into his music.
The first time I heard 'Space Oddity' was in 1973. I figured
it out on guitar a few years later, which really knocked
me out - I thought the chord progression was so cool.
'Fame' was a big one of course. The first album I had
a lot of exposure to was 'Station to Station'. They used
to play it a lot on WPLJ, a major FM album station at
that time ('76) in New York. 'Golden Years', 'TVC-15'
and 'Stay' were staples of that station's programming
- I guess this dates me, you'd never have that now! I
missed out on Low, then got into 'Heroes' and 'Lodger'
and of course 'Scary Monsters'. "Ashes to Ashes' was an
amazing song to me at the time. It still is. I got a little
off the boat after that, though certain songs - 'China
Girl', 'This is Not America', 'Under Pressure' - still
pulled me in. I didn't dismiss David, I was just into
other things.I was mostly into his music, not the style
thing. I sure wasn't one of the lightening-bolt kids -
I was way too geeky at that age to do anything like that!
I was one of the ones who stayed home in their rooms learning
the songs. I used to play 'Rebel, Rebel' in adolescent
bands. Thank God no tapes of that exist! The costumes
and make up were okay, and the androgynous stuff was interesting,
too - I remember the 'Boys Keep Swinging' clip where he
was all those female characters, and 'Ashes to Ashes'
where he's the clown. There was something compelling about
it all, even though most of my male friends were grossed
out! Once we began the record, every once in a while when
I'd be programming I'd look over at David on the couch
- he'd be smoking and reading, as usual - and the sunlight
would catch him at just the right angle, and for a split
second it'd hit me - it's fuckin' Ziggy!
4. I understand that Earthling was recorded at Philip
Glass' studio. Why was this venue chosen and did the choice
of venue influence the album in any way?
See my previous answer for a lot of this (2). I think
Looking Glass, and Soho in New York City, had a lot to
do with the record. The staff of the studio was incredibly
accommodating yet quirky. Reeves and Gail soon began calling
Looking Glass the 'Clubhouse'. David and Reeves would
go out to art galleries while I would do some busy work,
look for sounds or fix something. It was incredibly comfortable
and loose, and the view of the outside world with day
turning into night seemed to add a lot as well. Friends
would pop in. David Lynch, Tony Oursler, Lou Reed, others.
My then-three year old daughter would come in and play
David's sax. Of course, he never knew about that.......
5. I have read that the whole album took a matter
of a few weeks to write and record. Did the speed of the
whole operation surprise you?
Yes. I had heard from Reeves about the making of
'1.Outside' - hours of jam sessions which were then edited
into songs and overdubbed further - and it seemed like
this was an option at first. We tried this the first time
the full band came in after a lot of the songs were already
begun, and it didn't seem to pan out - most of the song
ideas that David, Reeves or I had seemed like a better
starting point than fishing for a nugget through a couple
of hours of jamming. When the tour ended, David and Reeves
came in for two weeks before the rest of the band - Mike,
Gail, and Zach - showed up. We began putting song ideas
and arrangements into the computer, not to tape. I had
begun getting into hard disk based recording, and at that
time I was getting reasonably good at it, enough to track
vocals and guitars right to the hard drive. My equipment
at the time was pretty simple - a Jaz cartridge, 2 inputs
and 2 outputs, and not much else - but it proved to be
an ideal way of getting audio information into a format
where you could easily move it around at a whim. We would
come up with a verse and a chorus section, then David
would say 'let's hear a verse, a chorus, a verse, a double
chorus, a break,etc....' and I would be able to do all
that in about 30 seconds. If I were dubbing and splicing
tape, it might take a few hours to get it right! We were
all immediately sold on this, and this was how the songs
were created. When the band came in they added their parts
over what we had started - by this time we'd upgraded
to a larger system capable of handling what we needed
- and when it came time to do drums, this was the point
where we'd finally put all the tracks from the computer
onto tape. I anticipated that we'd be working on the album
for 6-9 months, then mix. I was pleasantly surprised.
6. Apart from 'Telling Lies' I understand that the
whole of the album was written in the studio. How did
the music and lyrics come together and what were the respective
roles of Reeves, Bowie, the band and you?
When I visited the band on the '96 festival tour,
David asked Reeves and I to get together ideas and tracks
for possible use in the record.When we met after the tour
we played all these ideas and chose bits and pieces to
start with. I'll get more into song-by-song specifics
later on. As we'd work on a track I'd see David jotting
things on Post-it notes or in his computer. Reeves and
I would concentrate on the music, though David would have
certain lines he would hear or certain sounds he'd want
to try. The framework of most of the songs was done this
way- once that was in place the band would overdub their
parts.
7. How does David compare to the other great vocalists
you have worked with and what sort of vocal sound were
you trying to get on the album?
David may have been the easiest vocalist I've ever
worked with. He was definitely 'old school' - just send
him out there and he'd have it done in a flash! There
were very few multiple takes - he'd sing all the way through,
unless he forgot a word or something, in which case I'd
back up a few seconds, drop in, and proceed. He had no
particular preferences for types of headphones, headphone
mixes, or microphones. I have an old Neumann tube mic
which I tracked all of David's vocals with, and it sounded
perfect for him. I didn't really go for a particular sound
while recording, I just wanted to capture everything I
could, which meant recording and saving everything from
the very beginning. Lucky for me, because the run-through
guide vocal for 'little Wonder' ended up being the only
one he ever sang on that track! Most vocals were first
take, which I'd never have happen in my career. While
doing the first arrangement of 'Dead Man Walking' we (or
rather, I!) lost David's vocal - it just disappeared from
the hard drive before I could back up the days' work.
I had the job of telling him...which turned out to be
no big deal, he just went out and did it again! Of course,
the next day we upgraded so that this would never happen
again.....
8. Did David come in with a musical plan for the album
and did you regard his affinity with dance music as opportunistic
or heartfelt? I have read in interviews that he wanted
to update the sort of music that Big Audio Dynamite were
making in the 1980s - to mix guitar-based rock with contemporary
dance grooves.
David's plan was to have melody-driven songs over tracks
which had guitar and groove, whether it be techno, jungle,
or whatever. I never heard the B.A.D. reference at the
time, but it does makes sense. I didn't find David to
be opportunistic - I believe he was genuinely excited
by dance music and the scene that goes with it, the way
it keeps changing and reinventing itself in such an organic
way, from bedroom to bedroom, club to club. He was truly
inspired, I think, and believed in what we were doing-
another reason for our brisk pace. There was very little
second guessing.
9. Although the album was well received by critics
and Bowie's hardcore fans (I thought it a terrific album),
it did not cross over into the mainstream market at all.
Was this ever an intention and where you surprised that
the album wasn't a bigger hit? Were you surprised at the
choice of singles?
I was surprised that it wasn't bigger than it was.
There was a lot of publicity before the record came out,
reviews, other related events like the Bridge School benefit
with Neil Young and the 50th Birthday concert and broadcast
-all of it good. It felt like a huge wave, the likes of
which I'd never experienced before or since. We did the
round of shows - Saturday Night Live, The Tonight Show,
Letterman (I say 'we' because I went along to help supervise
the mixing at those shows). In the end it couldn't get
on the radio or MTV to the extent that everyone had hoped.
Every review of the record I read was so positive.....
Of course, in this industry you never know. The choice
of singles seemed right to me.
10. Earthling was trailed in the media as Bowie's
drum 'n' bass album. Was it the intention to sell the
album this way, despite the fact that under half the tracks
have a drum 'n bass edge? What I'm getting at here is
that a lot of people I've spoken to were put off by this
sales strategy (thinking like me that most of drum 'n'bass
was substandard and dopey) and even David himself appears
bemused in interviews that the media thought of the album
as his jungle opus.
I never thought that it was a drum 'n' bass record, or
that David was attempting to become a jungle artist -
I heard him say several times that he had no intention
of becoming one, it wasn't the point. I'm not sure where
that whole thing began or if/when it became a sales strategy,
or just wishful thinking on the part of some interviewers/reviewers/etc.
People see what they want to see, you know. I'm not sure
how many people were put off in America- at that time
not many people had heard of jungle, especially outside
the cities..
11. Did David ever discuss the lyrics to any of the
songs with you? Personally, I think it's a great album
lyrically, rich in allusion ('Telling Lies' echoes 'The
Book of Revelation', for example)
Not really, no. I know that some of the songs came about
through his random process - getting the computer to spit
out random patterns of words, and building on that - but
usually I was doing other things while he was scribbling
away.
12. Did it ever strike you as incongruous that David
was using contemporary dance music which is essentially
star-less (the Prodigy aside, dance acts simply don't
have an act), when Bowie himself is the world's greatest
rock showman?
No it doesn't strike me as incongruous. To my knowledge
he was inspired by the music and sounds of those groups,
not their performance. He would supply the showman part!
13. Lyrically the album is quite introspective, sad,
yearning, spiritual even. Did this reflect the fact that
David was about to hit 50 and was feeling a little more
mortal than usual?
I don't know. My impression was that turning 50 didn't
seem to bother him too much. We were probably too busy
at that point to really deal with it - getting the album
done, and preparing for the Birthday Show.........
14. Does the fact that the album utilised the dance
sound of the day (and recombined them) date the album
unnecessarily?
I listened to it yesterday for the first time in over
a year - it still sounds amazing, fresh. I don't feel
like it will date itself embarrassingly, like a lot of
the records from the '80's with big hair and big snare
drums, and not much else. The songs are there, and the
production is pretty tasteful. Sure, there will be '90's
references, but I think that's a good thing.
15. I'd like to talk to you in detail about the creation
of each of the tracks on the album and how they were put
together musically. How much of the music was band created
and how much was Bowie's? Does David employ certain distinctive
chord sequences or phrases? Even though Bowie is attempting
a mix of dance and rock there's something irreducibly
'Bowiesque' about the sound and I was wondering if you
could trace this to the deployment of any trademark chord
changes.
Track by track, you asked for it! You can use what you
want of course, but I didn't write all of this strictly
with the intention of it being published. It's a good
thing for me to write down all these things to keep as
a record of, well, making a record.
Little Wonder : Reeves and I began work on this track
one day when David was otherwise occupied. Armed with
some new drum loops and a tape of Reeves making guitars
noises, we set to it. Reeves had been getting really into
the VG-8 and coming up with all sorts of wacky sounds.
I had to go home the previous night to babysit, so Reeves
spent the evening with my assistant, Dante DeSole, laying
down all sorts of sonic treats. This tape they made was
extremely valuable- from it we also drew sounds that inspired
the development of Battle for Britain, Law, and Seven
Years in Tibet. The next day we presented David with what
we'd done - basically a rhythm track with a sprinkling
of noises and synth parts. First, David came up with a
sequence of the samples Reeves had created - the sounds
that make up the intro of the song. Then David sat down
with an electric guitar - we had him and Reeves set up
with miniature Fernandez electric guitars, which we were
recording constantly - and came up with the chord sequence.
He said it was like a '50's chord sequence (I believe
he called it 'street corner singing', though I recognized
it as a doo-wop progression) with a twist - the last chord
was a half step higher than usual. Perhaps this is what
makes it 'Bowie-esque', this little quirk. Usually, each
song had at least one or two. Then the 'so far away' section
came straight after that and a basic arrangement was created
in the computer. A flurry of Post-it notes later that
day, and we had the framework of the lyrics, a guide vocal,
and a title. The second verse was written a few weeks
later.At this stage the idea for Little Wonder was that
it'd be a 9 minute jungle-electronic epic- much longer
than on the album, but essentially the same idea. At that
point I never would have thought we could have cut it
into a four minute single. The middle was to be filled
with all sorts of effects, atmospheres, breaks, etc. This
took quite a while to finish. Some ideas (the train after
the 2nd verse for instance) made it into the body of the
song.When the band showed up, they added their parts -
Gail put down the bass, Zach the drums, Mike a harpsichord
pad. These gave a much more rock shape to the track and
for the first time it was apparent, to me at least, it
could be a single.
Looking for Satellites : This was the second track we
worked on, and it sprung out of an idea I had created
over the summer. I had wanted to try something in 3 -
I hadn't heard much electronic stuff in 3 so I set out
to make one. This was one of the first attempts to consciously
make something out of 'junk' - a theme throughout the
record, of taking any sound and making something musical
out of it. I used samples from lots of records I'd done
before and reshaped them, twisted them, made them into
new sounds through manipulation and combination with other
sounds. When I played it to David and Reeves it was the
foundation - the rhythm, some chord information, and a
few musical lines. David and Reeves immediately scrapped
the chords and built a new progression based around a
diminished chord. This became the verse, and we returned
to Dmajor - the original key of the track, as so many
of the samples were tuned to it - for the chorus. Again,
it was a case of David and Reeves jamming against the
track to come up with chord sequences. This was also the
first time where they became aware that I was recording
everything in the computer. Reeves' solo came about by
experimenting - as they usually do - and they were doodling,
deciding on approaches to take. David thought that Reeves
should try to play the entire solo on one string - it
would shape his playing and note choices accordingly.
All of the attempts were recorded and we made one coherent,
fantastic solo out of a few different choices - we took
little pieces, moved sections around a bit. We began to
see what was possible with hard disk recording. A whirlwind
of cigarettes and Post-It notes in the back of the room,
and most of the vocal was done that day (a second verse
was added in a few weeks). Of course, I didn't realize
they were finished vocals....I figured they were only
amazing guide vocals, to be replaced by the 'real' vocal
later, as is usually the case. When the band came in,
this was the first track they played to. Gail's bass really
made the track sing. It was also my first attempt to compile
Zach's drums in the computer and straighten out the timing
problems.
Battle for Britain (The Letter): Another track which sprang
from an idea that I'd come up with over the summer, my
attempt to do a jazz-tinged jungle track. The only real
jungle thing I'd done was the Feelgood mix of 'Telling
Lies', which I found to be great fun. There weren't any
boundaries, and I didn't have any particular reverence
for the form or anything. Again, David scrapped the chords,
and the electric guitars came out to figure out new ones.
I found the chord progression to be real catchy but unique,
and I felt like this could be our first real 'Bowie' song.
I think at this point I felt the focus of the record come
together, it was the first time I heard mention of david's
intent for the record to be melody driven - there would
be actual songs over intense atmospheres, but the atmosphere
wouldn't dominate. I got excited.
Again, a repeat if the day before - we were cranking these
out one per day. Reeves would be coming up with guitar
parts and sounds, I'd be at the computer recording him
or working on the arrangement, and David would be on the
couch listening to the track over and over, writing the
lyric. At days' end he'd do a vocal.The arrangement of
this track took an interesting turn. In the middle David
wanted t have a piano solo - he imagined Mike Garson playing
Stravinsky over mad beats. Also, I had been experimenting
with chopping things up in the computer and throwing them
about - I'd read about the Beatles during Sgt. Pepper,
chopping up bits of tapes for 'Being for the Benefit of
Mr. Kite', and reassembling them in a random fashion.
My attempt to do this became the break after the piano.
Once again, when the band came in they added their parts.
Gails' bass once again provided supple support to the
programming, and Mike's piano worked out perfectly. The
drums were another matter. When I recorded Zach on 'Telling
Lies' earlier in the year, David wanted to make a loop
of his drums- Zach played a few bars, and I sampled it
and sped it up to a typical jungle tempo of 160 BPM. It
then took on the frenetic, double time feel of jungle.
He then played his live drums over this in half time,
so that you had both sets of rhythms going at the same
time. The trick would be that he had to play exactly in
time or it would sound like a train wreck. We didn't have
a lot of time during 'Telling Lies' - he did a few takes
and we bounced them together on tape. It was pretty solid,
and I just ducked the loop a bit when Zach was a little
out of time. Zach is a good drummer, but I really couldn't
expect anybody to keep in time with 160 BPM.When it came
time to do 'Battle for Britain' (only called 'The Letter'
at this time) we decided to go one better - the drums
and programming had to be seamless. The drums were loaded
in the computer and manipulated each and every beat to
match the programming. It took days. The results speak
for themselves.
Seven Years in Tibet : This came about from a track Reeves
had written on the summer '96 tour. I believe it was called
'Brussels'. Again, it was a case of taking preconceived
idea, and finding new chords. This one took on an amazing
shape, in the end. The usual routine - use some of Reeves'
samples from the sample tape (David would have them on
the keyboard, and he'd chose a few to use) break out the
guitars and come up with chords, then a lyric at day's
end. This track seemed promising but it wasn't favorite
until the band came in. They made it take on a new life,
especially Mike Garson's Farfisa organ solo, inspired
by Reeves. Reeves never gave up on this track, he was
really the one who saw this one through, he had a real
vision for it. This re-inspired David, who came up with
ideas such as running his voice through a ring modulator
in the choruses.
Dead Man Walking : The first attempt to write a song in
the studio without a pre-existing idea. David wanted it
to be techno influenced, in particular by the band Underworld.
We came up with a basic rhythm program, and immediately
David turned to the guitar and the 'Superman' chords came
out, as well as the story about Jimmy Page. Another 'Bowie'
song was coming, I could tell. Our routine as usual -
Reeves searched for some guitar sounds for the verse,
I came up with the Moog synth part at the beginning, and
David wrote a lyric, my favorite of the record.This was
the track where I lost his guide vocal while backing up
the drive (we decided then and there to upgrade), and
after telling him, he sang it over the next time we addressed
the track. David actually sang this again during the mix,
the only track he sang over.When the band came in, instead
of focusing the track like the other songs, they made
it even more blurry. Too many elements on tape! It was
a bit hard to listen to for a while. As Reeves had done
for 'Seven Years', I really took it upon myself to work
this track to some conclusion. It took five days to sort
it out during the mix, but it became a real epic. I begins
completely programmed, and by the time it's finished,
it's completely live.
Telling Lies : We did this in spring, before the tour.
David had a demo of it from Switzerland, and he wanted
to finish it. It was a quickie, done in a couple of days,
most of the time devoted to the live drums (I've already
explained how the drums were done......) We mixed it,
then I did a remix called the Feelgood Mix, and A Guy
Called Gerald did a real underground jungle thing with
it. These three tracks were the ones released as the internet
single. Then, during the record David decided to touch
it up a bit - he changed the lyric slightly, Reeves added
some guitar synth lines, Gail did a more melodic bass,
Mike some keys, and I added in a few sounds from the remix
I did. The major change was in the structure, where after
the second chorus we cleared the track out, leaving Mike's
synth pad and a piano part from the remix. Then the song
built itself up again. David was insistent on 'Telling
Lies' - it was never one of my favorites, until we completed
it for the
The Last Thing You Should Do : This was meant to be a
B-Side. After mastering the album it was decided we'd
need some additional material for B-Sides. Reeves and
I did the entire track in a day - drums, guitars, bass,
programming, etc. David heard it, added a synth part in
the middle (the descending piano part in the break) then
did a lyric and vocal in something like 20 minutes. We
did a quick mix right then and there, and figured, voila,
our first B-Side, and a great one at that. The next day
the plan changed - this would be on the album, replacing
a remake of 'Baby Universal' and a beautiful acoustic
version of 'I Can't Read' (which eventually wound up on
the BBC Radio acoustic special, The Birthday Show, and
on the soundtrack to The Ice Storm). I had to admit I
missed 'I Can't Read' being on the record - I disagreed
strongly with David at the time - but his argument was
that 'Last Thing' fit in better conceptually. I think
time has shown him to be correct.
I'm Afraid of Americans : This was reconstructed from
an earlier version of the song done during the 1.Outside
period for a soundtrack I think (don't ask me which one).
There we a couple of 48-track masters for it, and we pulled
things off of several different reels to make this new
composite. It was quite a clean up job, not the most enjoyable
as we were trying to salvage something. Of course, it
did come together..!! David added some new lyrics, Mike
some electric piano, Reeves an amazing assortment of fuzz
boxes to create a wall of noise (he wanted to use all
the ones in his collection) and Gail and Zach their bits.
Law (Earthlings on Fire) : The first track we started
working on after the end of the summer '96 tour, which
was based on one of Reeves hotel-room ideas called 'Bits'.
It changed direction a few times, until it assumed more
the shape of a sound collage. It's also the only track
with a real guitar amp - the rest of the record is VG-8
and pedals. Gail, Zach and Mike don't play on it as all.
David sang into an empty water cooler bottle, among other
things, and we played around a lot with an Eventide 910
Harmonizer, an old electronic pitch shifter which David
probably used in the '70's.
16. How much did Bowie deliberately borrow from his
back catalogue?
I know, for example that 'Dead Man Walking' uses the same
chords as 'The Supermen' (chords 'given' to David in the
1960s by Jimmy Page), whilst the synth line on 'The Last
Thing You Should Do' comes from 'The Laughing Gnome',
via 'Speed Of Life' and 'Beat Of Your Drum.' Bowie appears
to be in a state of on-going dialogue with his past. 'Dead
Man Walking' was a good example of this, as well as the
updated 'Fame', 'V2 Schneider', and 'Stay' from the Earthling
tour. But, as far as 'The Last Thing', I'm unaware of
any conscious borrowing in this track. It didn't strike
me that we were avoiding his catalogue, to be sure. I
had expected that working with David would mean no revisiting
the oldies, a cue I got from the Sound and Vision tour,
which was supposed to be the last time a lot of old tunes
would see the light of day. From my perspective he seems
rather comfortable with his past.
17. Is he as funny as he appears in interviews!? Any
pithy or amusing anecdotes about the recording of the
album?
Yes, he's amazingly funny and charming. That record was
an absolute pleasure to make. The studio staff bent over
backwards because he truly appreciated them and he was
genuine. David would go from explaining his views on modern
art and sharing books with the works of Damien Hirst and
Joel Peter Whitken, to enjoying us throwing muffins out
the studio window onto the tops of taxicabs. My twisted
sense of humor fit in perfectly with him and Reeves from
day one. David would make fun of me in my biker shorts;
I'd tell him and Reeves to piss off and go find an art
opening when they were bothering me. David, Reeves, Andy
Spray, and myself went to Ireland for pre-production for
the Earthling tour. Four guys alone, no women - it pretty
much turned into what sort of silliness you'd expect.
One day I received some CD's of a record I'd worked on
with Arthur Baker - I believe it was a Babylon Zoo single.
After working with Arthur for ten years he still couldn't
spell my last name right, and sure enough my credit was
wrong. I got really angry and flipped out, throwing the
CD down the hallway. I then look at David, who is mockingly
following my example and has a handful of my personal
CD's that he's ready to throw them out the window. He
then says, as if I've caught him with his hand in the
cookie jar, 'I thought that was what we were supposed
to be doing'. I was never let off the hook about my name
after that.
18. When did David come up with the title for the
album?
It was some time around the Roseland show in New York
- Sept 14th, 1996. I recall it had come up during that
previous week, though I don't remember the exact day.
At that show he asked the audience if the album should
be called 'Earthling' or 'Earthlings'. The audience chose
the former.The art for the album came together over the
course of recording the album. Every new idea or concept
would be put up on the wall. By the end of tracking the
walls of the studio were filled with the artwork that
would become the album.
19. The Earthling album appears to have killed off
the planned three-album collaboration with Eno. And Bowie
appears unsure of how to follow it up,given that it's
two years now since the recording of the album. Do you
think David could take the sort of innovative dance/rock
fusion on Earthling anywhere else?
I don't know. That record really makes a statement, in
my opinion, and I don't know where you could go with it
next, or if you'd want to go somewhere with it. Where's
the next level? Then again I'm not inside his head, so
I don't know how he feels about it...... I think one great
thing about David is that he knows when to quit, and reinvent.
You can see that throughout his career, I'm sure.
20. Do you have plans to work again? In the immediate
future, not to my knowledge. But you never know!
21. By the way, I forgot to ask you about the 50th
Birthday show which you mixed. Any thoughts on this project!?
Or on any live mixes you did from the 1997 tour?
We began working on the Birthday Show right after
the album was mixed. We created several new arrangements
of songs. This was an amazing thing to work on for me
technically as I hadn't done much work with video. Some
things were incredible - everyone involved know that this
was something special. All the musical guests were so
glad to be there, the feeling backstage was genuinely
warm. At the party afterward, David seemed very, very
happy, which was a nice thing to see. On a more personal
note, I did the backing arrangement for the solo version
of 'Space Oddity', which meant a lot to me. Some things
were downright pathetic, like keeping on schedule with
the video people, who'd move the goalposts every other
day while I was mixing, and not supply us with up-to-date
edits, and really had zero interest in the audio quality
of the project - they'd just assume use the rough mixes
from the night of the show (and indeed one of the broadcasts
did, by mistake - they couldn't hear the difference).
Tim Pope was great, but at times the rest of the video
team treated us like an unnecessary pain in the ass, which
is not that unusual in those situations, so I'm told.
Before the Birthday Concert we recorded several acoustic
versions of older songs for a BBC special. This was an
amazing session. We did most of the songs in a day, just
David, Reeves, and Gail together live. I added some strings
and keys after the fact. David did 6 lead vocal tracks
in 2 hours.By the time I did the mixes for what was intended
be the Earthling Live CD, I had mixed most of the songs
before, several times. Some tracks were nearly always
stellar - Seven Years in Tibet, Battle for Britain, Little
Wonder, Last Thing You Should Do. These were guaranteed
never to disappoint, and were usually pretty easy to mix.
Satellites, I'm Afraid of Americans and Telling Lies were
more typical in that there would be on-nights and off-nights.
Some tracks, like Law and the album version of Dead Man
Walking, were never played live (though they did perform
a version of Moby's remix of Dead Man Walking).
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