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Page 23 text:
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Silver Sands.' R ick Bowen : Silver Sands: R ick Bowen: I invited them down to Ft. Lauderdale and in about four days, we went into the studio and started recording their first album. Then your mind was made up that first day in Orlando? Yeah, it pretty much was. It was a good match. We went in and recorded an album and we released it, and we put them on about sixty major concerts last year. They played with everybody from Alice Cooper to Rod Stewart. As a response to that, the album was overwhelmingly successful for a first album. lt was nearly one hundred thousand units. Who creates the music that goes on your albums? The groups come up with the basic idea of the song. They'll Say, Alright, this is the song that we have, here are the lyrics to it, this is the way we want to play it with these chords, and this kind of structure. Et cetera. We might lay it down on tape, and listen to it and I might say, OK, I like the basic things about it, or I might decide to throw it out altogether. Or, We're going to use those lyrics, but we're going to build a different song around it. Or l might add an intro onto it or put a guitar ride in the middle that didn't happen to be there when they originally gave me what they thought the basic song Silver San ds: Rick Bowen: was going to be. It's a collaboration of ideas, but basically we rearrange the songs the way that we think they should be. Now, the first album lBang'sl is geared toward a definite Black Sabbath sort of sound. We tried to get into that type of music. They're hard driving, strong lyrical type songs that don't really take you on a musical trip. But it wasn't that way just because we let it be that way. When the album was recorded, that's what a lot of kids were really into. Kids were going out, dropping speed, sitting back, and listening to the same C, F, and G chords thirty-six times. That's really what they wanted. Now, the second album is a lot different from that. The group's got a lot of musical talent, it is versatile, and all this comes through on the second album. We had more time to do this album lentitled Mother Bow to the Kingul and we decided we wanted to do a better musical album because we wanted to broaden the base of appeal this group has. So, there are acoustic guitars in it, there are even strings in it, it's arranged and the songs take you off slowly to a peak and then let you down. I mean, they are musically constructed correctly. The first album was not that way. But it wasn't that way just because we let it be that way. It was that way because we were trying to create a specific item. Who has the control over these decisionsg how much say does the group have in your creation? The group doesn't just sit down and I say, Here's a set of chants. OK, this is what I want you guys to play. They basically create the music. We rearrange it, we sweeten it, we do everything to change the mood of it. We can add singers, violins, mellotrons, moogs to sweeten it, but still the basic gut of the song has to be what the musician lays down when he comes
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Page 22 text:
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Silver Sands: Rick Bowen: Silver Sands: Flick Bowen: I-'Ili Like wha t? Number one, the group itself has got to just plain and simply have a lot of guts. I mean, they've got to live, eat, breathe, and sleep their music twenty-four hours a day. Theylve got to be willing to eat peanut butter and ketchup sandwiches for the next three years and take a chance. They've got to believe first of all in themselves and their music has to be the most important thing in their lives. They have to forsake their families, their personal wants, needs, and desires. They have to forsake all of that for music. Period. If they're not willing to do that, they're not going to make it in the business, because the competition is too tough to do it any other way. How did you get started with your two Capitol groups, Skylark and Bang? Skylark was already signed to the record company, they already had an album produced. The album was about a month away from release when we took over management of the group. lt's an outstanding group musically and itls an outstanding group performance-wise, but the group has a lot of chemistry problems within itself because there are a lot of great artists in the group. And when you put a lot of great artists in one band, you've got a lot of problems. I don't think an apology has to be made for itg thatls just sort of a fact of life with artists. Bang is a whole different trip exhibited that gutsiness and did an almost overwhelming way initially met them. When we Bang on, they didn t have a r deal or anything. I was doing a Stewart and Faces, Deep Purple Matthews Southern Comfort co at the Orlando Sports Stadium to the building very early in morning and I no sooner walked the office than these three kids walking into the office and Look, we re Bang. We Philadelphia. We drove all the down here and we want to pla this concert you re prom tonight I said, Well, you know, I have of people who would like to pla our concerts, but its impossible realize that. We already have groups on the show and they thi fool with you guys, you know split They said, Listen, man, we d fifteen hundred miles and we down here and we re just the band around and we want to pla that concert. Now, the least you do is let us audition for you out h You re already here They said, Alright, come out in minutes I went out into the arena and they a great big concert sound system had all their own equipment, a trailor that they carried all their in. They were all set up, ready to I heard them playg they played kind of music I like, raunchy gutty, hard rock stuff. They see to me to have a lot of potential was there to be developed wanted to make it more than other group of musicians that I laid my eyes on. I mean, they nothing for granted. They want make it in the worst way I I ,I I Il I I re I l I ll II N Il I -l sold out. I really don't have tim ll - I l ll . I ll so, I said, ok, i'li listen to I I ll ll ll l l. 'I
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Page 24 text:
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Silver Sands: Rick Bowen: out of the amplifier through the microphone and onto the tape. The way I do my records, whoever produces them, if I produce them or if I hire a producer to come in and produce a record, he has one hundred percent authority to do anything that he wants to do with the record. He doesn't have to answer to anybody. When he gives me a tape, I can either accept it or reject it, but I have to reject the whole product or accept the whole product. If I have a guy produce an album for me, he brings me a finished product. I don't say, On cut three I want some of this. A producer has got to have that sort of freedom. Hels like an artist doing a picture. If you tell him that you only like half of his picture but you didnlt like the other half and change it, it wouldnlt really work out too hot. ls this why a lot of groups form their own companies? Sure. Thatls why a lot of groups produce themselves. They don't like the stringency that a producer gives to them. l'm a strict producer when I go in to produce an album. I know exactly what l'm after and I won't settle for anything less. I won't settle for schlocky playing or I won't settle for I can't play it that way, l've got to play it my way, sort of thing. If you can't play it my way, l'll find somebody who can play it my way. Silver Sands: Rick Bowen: Silver San ds: Rick Bowen: Silver Sands: Rick Bowen: 4 il After you record the album, 5' happens? f There's just an incredible amoun: work, once we leave Criteria with' album and take it out to Califor Between then and the time it hits stands is the most critical period the album because you have to through mastering processes I believe me, you can take a tapel to a recording company and, if itls' mastered properly, it's not goin sound anything at all like what' came out of the studio with. I . . I What is the mastering? I Whenever they take the tvvo-track I that you give the record company they in turn make a master discf which the actual Iaquers are which actually press out the stam 1, In that mastering process the f sounds are equalized. The songs ca speeded up or slowed down to mi l micro infinities. You can speed I song two revolutions or speed u song enough to change it to a hi key or slow it down to a lower I The songs can be speeded up key. For instance, if a song is reco to the key of G without changin enought to be noticable. We may to speed them up or slow them d a little bit if their voices sound a Il i out of tune. We may want to ton up just to the verge of where we i it should be How much of that has been do The only things that were changed the Bang albums from the orig masters that came out of the recor studio were some equalization cha on cuts we thought we might use top forty singles. Those were equall a little bit louder. In other words might have gone five decibals in so to make them five db s louder on record than the other one was so Ii lf IE enough to change them to a hi ' in the key of E, you can speed i l ll
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