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David
Bowie’s already-acclaimed new album, ‘hours…’ has already
been lauded as his best work for years. Michael Stand
gets tech with mix engineer Mark Plati
“I wasn't surprised to get a call to finish this album,”
begins an ever confident Mark Plati. He co-produced, engineered
and programmed David Bowie’s drum ‘n’ bass- tinged Earthling
album, which led Mr. Bowie to call on his services when
he needed someone to record his musical meanderings for
a project that would eventually become an album called
‘hours…, one of Bowie’s most critically acclaimed works
for quite some time.
Erstwhile Bowie guitarist and co-writer Reeves Gabrels
was again on board, but initially an album was never planned.
“They started writing ‘hours…’ in Bermuda,” Plati remembers
of the early stages. “They wanted to keep it a home grown
thing, much smaller in scale than 'Earthling'. At that
point it was intended only as a soundtrack for a CD-ROM
game called Omikron, The Nomad Soul. They originally called
me to play bass, being a mate of theirs and all, and my
involvement grew from that. I think they had realized
they had an album there, and I ended up mixing and doing
some additional production, which was mainly a case of
adding live drums, tweaking a few arrangements, and compiling
everything that lived on different formats, whether they
be computer files or tape.”
“David is always one to take a left turn when you don’t
expect it,” Mark muses of the ostensible departure from
Bowie’s Earthling or even Outside, "so I
wasn't surprised when David told me what he wanted to
go for with this record. There’s a track called ‘Dreaming
My Life’ which we cut live all together and was pretty
loose, but feels like four guys playing. That sort of
sums it up."
Given Mark’s obvious skill in working equally well in
studios and live environments, were there any difficulties
involved with ‘hours…’? “In its way Earthling was
a very live record,” is Mark’s considered response. “Only
the band was manipulated to fit into the drum & bass rhythms.
With this record we didn’t need to do that as the songs
called for more of a live feel, with David and Reeves'
programming taking a back seat. ‘hours…’ was more of a
documenting than 'Earthling', but in my opinion
they're both live records.'
Despite the openly live, spontaneous feel on *‘hours…’*,
a fair amount of Pro Tools and other editing went in to
the whole project. “On Earthling I used Logic Audio from
the very beginning of the writing process,” Mark recalls.
“That entire record was written and tracked within the
computer and the arrangements were not sorted out until
the last minute. When I got on board with ‘hours…’ most
of the song structures were already there although some
tracks were still living in the computer and we finished
up those arrangements. Also, the computer was very useful
in flying parts around to see what could work where. For
example, the opening electric guitar part on 'Survive'
was actually from a completely different part of the song.
Lots of that sort of thing went on.”
“They used a lot of formats on the album, some analogue,
some digital,” Mark elaborates on the recording sensibilities
behind ‘hours’. “A lot of the original recordings were
on 24-track analogue, which I see as a big outboard unit
at this point,” he maintains, “and I had a bunch of lovely
old Neve 1073s, so I was always able to get warmth from
something.” Equally, there is some intriguing processing
going on throughout the album, which Mark is happy to
elaborate on; “David has had a ring modulator for years
and years, an old Electro-Harmonics unit from the 70's”,
he gives away. “I remember seeing it on the last tour,
the front-of house engineer Steve Guest would run some
things through it. He decided he was going to sing through
it this time and there you have it - it's all over 'Something
in the Air'. The only question for me was how much of
it to use; David wanted a lot, so we used a lot!”
And it wasn’t the only experimental element. ‘Seven’,
a track devoid of drums had strange beginnings. “‘Seven’
went through a lot of changes in terms of feel,” Mark
explains. "Originally the song had drums throughout. After
we mixed the album we went back to re-address ‘Seven’
because David was not quite happy with it. So we had a
session with Sterling Campbell on drums, Reeves on guitar
and myself on bass playing along to David’s vocal, trying
out all sorts of stuff. At one point we had it sounding
like The Who, it was crazy! At that point I think David
just got fed up and told Sterling not to play at all -
and we just sat there listening to it, and that was it.
It was perfect WITHOUT drums.”
It was evidently a world apart from the work carried out
by Mark on Earthling, and for him, that’s a distinct
advantage. “I like that ‘hours…’ compliments the last
two records as they were more about sonics and concept,
and this shows he can make a record that's strictly about
songs,” he maintains. "Plus, it would be boring for me
to make the same record over and over".
“To conclude, Mark sums up the ethos of ‘hours…’, and
Bowie himself perfectly: “You can try whatever you like
but he knows what he wants; if you can operate within
that framework you’re there.”
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