Elvis’ Former Studio?

FORUM Forums Lucinda Williams Lucinda Shows Elvis’ Former Studio?

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  • #30328
    stoger
    Participant

    Five songs? Bob Harris? Ghost of the King? Nice Ryman report, Lafayette, but didn’t the Nashville fun continue?

    #44298
    Lafayette
    Participant

    Why, yes, yes, the joy did continue. AMAZING. I’m waiting for my partner in crime to report, she took notes…

    #44299
    West Words
    Participant

    It was an awesome night, and Robert Plant was another fan in the audience. 🙂

    9/10/10

    Bob Harris, BBC, interview with Lucinda Williams at RCA Studio A, Nashville, TN

    Jed Hilly, Executive Director, Americana Music Association, opened the night explaining that RCA Studio A was originally built for Chet Atkins, and that legends Loretta Lynn and Dolly Parton had also recorded there.

    Both participants in the night’s event are living legends:

    Bob Harris, who has been with the BBC for 40 years, having hosted Sounds of the 70’s and The Old Grey Whistle Test.

    Lucinda Williams, three-time Grammy Award winner.

    Lucinda and Bob spent time together today and recorded a BBC segment that will go out in the New Year when the new record is released.

    Lucinda talked about her new album “Blessed”, which was recorded in Hollywood at the historic Capitol Studios, Studio B. Elvis had recorded there, there was a microphone in a box with the name “Frank” written on it where Frank Sinatra? kept his microphone.

    Lucinda initially went in to do a one-off thing for the True Blood soundtrack, fell in love with the room and decided to cut the entire new album there. She said that her husband, Tom, is a big fan of Don Was. They ran into Don at a Neil Young tribute concert where he was playing in the house band. “Don was doing Americana before it was called Americana.” “ The older I get, the more prolific I get. When I went in to do ‘West’, we actually had enough songs for two albums and wanted to release a double”.

    BH: commented that LW is an observational writer

    LW – always jotting down ideas. With “Little Honey”, Lucinda had just gotten engaged and was asked what it would do to her music. She found that hard to answer, because it was so inane. Lu finds it easier to write when she has a sense of well-being and then she can just go into “the vault”. “Look at the world around us, there’s always something going on. Everybody’s got the blues. Being any kind of artist is about how you perceive things, and then make it universal so everyone can relate.”

    Lucinda’s father is poet Miller Williams, so she grew up with a built-in writing course, like an apprenticeship.

    BH: Uses the term ‘rinsing’ to describe the refining of the writing process

    LW: Her dad, Miller Williams uses the term “The Economics of Writing”. Lucinda’s style of writing is simple, and she lets the music help with the interpretation. She had tried writing poetry, and that’s a whole different animal. Once Miller wrote a poem and sent it to her, as an idea for a song. (shakes her head ‘no’)

    Lucinda indicated that her style is Country, Folk, Blues, and straight-ahead Rock.

    BH: asked about LW’s record collection?

    LW – Dad listened to Country Blues – Mississippi John Hurt, Bessie Smith, Memphis Minnie, Ray Charles – Country music album, Tammy Wynette, Loretta Lynn. Then in the 60’s I veered off – the Doors, Cream, Jefferson Airplane, Neil Young, Dylan, Donovan, the whole folk thing. Then I discovered Delta Blues Robert Johnson.

    From age 12 1/2 , that’s all I was interested in – listening to records.

    I was always told that my stuff fell in the cracks between country and rock; I fell through the cracks. It all comes down to marketing, and there was no Americana then. If Neil Young had tried to get a record deal when I was, he wouldn’t have been signed either.

    BH: Thinks of “Car Wheels On A Gravel Road” as the first Americana record.

    LW: The Rough Trade album was really the first Americana, but it was before its time. Rough Trade was thought of as a punk label, but they were the only ones who would sign me, and also signed Victoria Williams, the Pixies, and the Smiths. Until them, I couldn’t get a record deal – Rounder Records and Sugar Hill wouldn’t sign me.

    (Dylan’s) “Time Out of Mind” came out before “Essence”. It was a new direction for Dylan, the simplicity. The Nashville newspaper slammed it, ‘these are silly, insidious lyrics. He’d written better lyrics than this.” The Stones album that year got slammed, too.

    “I was always very eclectic.”

    My regular band now is my rhythm section – Butch Norton – drums; Dave Sutton – base. Doug was ready for change, and is working with Marianne Faithfull.

    Greg Leisz played on the album. He was so choked up there to accept the award (Americana Lifetime Achievement Award for Instrumentalist), he’s one of the most humble people I’ve ever known. He wasn’t feeling well, he’s had a low-grade fever for 3 months and they don’t know what it is. He doesn’t complain.

    When we were recording “Blessed”, he had a dental procedure and I said don’t worry about coming in, but he came in anyway, with the bloody cotton in his cheek. He never complains.

    When you have the right people, it’s chemistry. Matthew Sweet. Elvis Costello is on four tracks – just guitar – that was Tom’s idea. Elvis was in town anyway working on his own album with T Bone Burnett. He pumped it up as only an English guitar player can do, like Keith Richards.

    BH : asked if they did analog reel to reel?

    LW: We always do analog. The entire country is running low on analog tape. It has that warm sound we all love when we listen to old records.

    I like to be separated in a vocal booth. I can see the guys but I want to be able to hear myself. With ‘World Without Tears’, we were all in the same room, including the engineer, and I didn’t like it. I’m more relaxed and don’t make as many mistakes when I’m in a vocal booth, because I know I can fix the mistakes then.

    We do a minimum of overdubs; you shoot to get as much live as possible.

    BH: Asked about sequencing?

    LW: Tom is really good at it. Don put one together.

    BH: Do you have a shape in your head? I call it the wave shape.

    LW: Don (Was) has made great records that have sold – Rolling Stones. We’d like to sell records. I was talking with Luke Lewis about the gatekeepers, and getting the radio stations to play our music. I moved to Nashville in the early 90’s because Mary Chapin Carpenter recorded that song (“Passionate Kisses”), but nobody would cut my stuff. The audience is there, but it’s the gatekeepers. It’s a matter of breaking those walls down.

    BH: At South By Southwest, you told the young artists don’t compromise, saying “I’ve never met anyone who’s achieved great success who’s made compromises”.

    LW: “I’m so stubborn, I don’t know any other way to do it. I’ve probably been more stubborn than I should have been, out of sheer fear. Fear of being over-produced. It’s just because I’m stubborn and a pain in the CENSORED.”

    “I’ve been asked to give Faith Hill a couple songs; she wants something edgy. If you want something edgy, I’m your girl! I want a big fat hit.”

    Then Lucinda performed a few songs –

    1) “Don’t Know How You’re Livin’” – wrote this about my younger brother / prodigal son, same as “Are You All Right?”
    2) “Blessed” – it’s close enough for folk music – that’s what Townes Van Zandt always used to say.
    3) “Kiss Like Your Kiss”
    4) “Hard Time Killing Floor Blues” – a Delta Blues song by Skip James, in honor of the hard, hard times we’re living in now. Skip wrote this during the Depression, and it still rings very true today.
    5) “Somebody Somewhere” – just recorded song for the new Loretta Lynn tribute album

    #44300
    tonyg
    Keymaster

    Awesome post. Thx. 😀

    #44301
    tntracy
    Participant

    @tonyg wrote:

    Awesome post. Thx. 😀

    Indeed!

    Tom

    #44302
    Lafayette
    Participant

    It was an awesome night, indeed.

    In regards to Robert Plant being there, it was a small room, and I don’t remember seeing him there, but I wasn’t actually looking for him. We did see him, with a few gents, on the perimeter of the parking lot before we entered the studio, and that was the last I saw of him. However, at the Over The Rhine show I attended the following night, in Cincinnati, they mentioned that Robert Plant was in or near their dressing room at their showcase at the Mercy Lounge, which was about the same time Lu was in her interview. So, I’m not sure if he blew off the Lu interview or was there before OTR went on stage, or if I even misunderstood Karin of OTR.

    I’m happy to see Lucinda is performing solo acoustic shows in Arkansas. I hope this interview with Bob Harris was a catalyst and perhaps an inspiration. I love full band shows, but I also love to see an artist solo acoustic, raw, or at minimum, with another player to add some texture. Solo shows the strength of an artist’s lyrics, IMHO. Lucinda was shining at RCA studio A.

    She had trouble tuning her guitar on one song, seemed somewhat embarrassed with it, but had the audience giggling when she relayed that (not verbatim) Townes played out of tune so she supposed it was okay.

    When she started in on “Hard Time Killing Floor Blues” I grabbed Sandy’s arm and squeezed it (with glee) to contain myself. Unbelievable hearing her play that. If she asks for requests on Sunday & Monday, it’s a must!

    After she performed HTKFB I was giving her the “I’m not worthy” wave. She did not see me, however, Bob Harris did, and he flashed a large smile.

    I’m grateful I was able to hear a few new songs from the new record, in this type of setting.

    We were sitting next to an editor of an online magazine, DishMag. She was taking notes, I suppose for a piece close to when this interview airs. She did tell us to check the magazine out, there were some Americana links.

    Here is the main link:

    http://dishmag.com/

    I clicked the Music & Film link

    http://dishmag.com/issue110/music-film/

    There is a story and photos from last years’ Americana Awards by Raeanne Rubenstein, the woman sitting next to us. Very nice woman.

    http://dishmag.com/issue110/music-film/12402/why-we-love-americana/

    #44303
    stoger
    Participant

    Nice supplementary account, Lafayette–and it’s good to see you bonding with West Words and with Bob Harris also. Solo acoustic indeed. I bet Delta goes direct from northern Kentucky to northwest Arkansas Regional airport, I’m just sayin’.

    #44304
    TOverby
    Participant

    Let’s see where should I start… Yes Robert Plant was at the Bob Harris interview/acoustic performance and I was told he was very into it and stayed for the whole thing. In addition the night before he showed up and stood right next to me right before Lu went on -when she started Born To Be Loved he and Rosanne Cash and myself stepped inside the curtain-suddenly I realized he really wanted to see Lu. That became more obvious when she finished – after Rosanne went over to Lu and gave her a big hug and told her how amazing, deep and sexy BTBL was (her words), Robert stepped over and very politely introduced himself and Lu had one of the complete OMG moments–a real highlight.

    The truth is that the Bob Harris thing didn’t have anything to do with the acoustic show(s) in Fayettevile. It was an idea I threw out one night to Lu right before we left for Nashville -and while she didn’t remember having that conversation when I brought it up again in Nashville she was open to it so I called her agent and asked him to look into it to see if there was any chance. He got back to me and said we could the 20th or 21st and then later said the 19th was an option also. We discussed it on the flight from Nashville to Fayetteville and we didn’t actually confirm it until we got to Lu’s mom+dad’s house on Mon night. Her agent was a little nervous that we had enough time to sell the tickets being so last minute so we were thrilled when it sold out in 24 hours and Weds morning they had a waiting list for a possible second show so we said “let’s do it”-and here we are -the city is really excited about these shows because everyone here considers her the hometown girl. Should be real special shows and it looks like we may be able to film some of it, which I really hope works out. Anyway -that’s the story.

    #44305
    Lafayette
    Participant

    Thank you for the inside info, TO!

    Stoger, you’re playing devil’s advocate, you know. As much as I would love to hit the airways or the highways to Arkansas, it’s just not in the cards this go round. It’s the trailer, you know. It’s all about the trailer. 😆

    #44306
    stoger
    Participant

    Thanks for going with the 19th for the first Fayetteville show, Tom, because it’s just enough still the weekend that I can make it, though not Monday. Lafayette, there are condos and ranch villas in Arkansas too of course, and if you start driving now, you can pick up West Words and tn Tracy at the regional airport in plenty of time: ha har 😀

    #44307
    LWjetta
    Participant

    This link to “Concert Blast” was just posted on LU’s FB page by Mike Arnold
    http://www.concertblast.com/2010/09/americana-music-festival-2010-nashville-tn-part-1-of-2-podcast-181/
    Listen to Part 1 of the podcast.
    Mike Arold and others were invited to RCA Studio A to enjoy Lu’s BBC interview and music. They especially thanked TOverby for the invitation.
    Commentary on Lucinda starts around the 4 minute mark.
    lwj

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