show article pt. 2

1
parents my parents' ages: Motown, The Beatles, The Stones, Fleetwood Mac. One funny thing I picked up on – never having put a record out before – was working on the one-sheet [promotional biographies for media and distributors] with the label and listing influences and that. The one-sheet for the first record definitely said 'reminiscent of T. Rex and some Bowie.' [I thought] people would listen to one song and decide I'm some huge T. Rex fan, when in reality I don't own a T. Rex record. Maybe it's a vocal thing. I heard T. Rex after I had been recording and doing stuff a certain way. It was like 'Holy shit. Whoa.' It's mainly the quiet, double-vocal and the tape-pitch stuff." Some of that survived transfer to Sunrise, on tracks that presaged his eventual move to Nashville in a manner he couldn't have pre- dicted. Both "Hit The Road" and "Old Turns" channel the dark sessions that produced Big Star's scarred Third/Sister Lovers. "Cryin' Like The Rain" dips the Marc Bolan effect underwater, and it reemerges as George Harrison disguising a broken heart. Despite the occasional loose shard – Neil Young's spirit breathes a fiery solo during "Lyin' In Bed" – the album wafts like a reverie and ends with a similar lack of closure, floating away. "I have a way," he explains, "and maybe on Moonstation it was more of an obvious approach, of each song being produced, like writing a song to have a very dis- tinct vibe, with the production going along with it. All of the songs for that record were recorded ana- log by myself, and it was experi- menting with pitching the tape way up and making my voice sound crazy with effects, and vary- ing the speed. With this record, kind of because of the situation I was in, I approached it naturally." Hence the decision to record live, though, keeping Sunrise from turning into a bar-band burner. Vandervelde worked against the grain of the typical debut/sopho- more dynamic. Artists usually craft their first albums over years of trial and error, coming forth with their best songs having honed them over myriad shows. Follow-ups get written and recorded in short order, which is why they might pale in comparison while hit- ting many of the same notes. Vandervelde had no conception of a debut album, so Sunrise synthesized on its own. "Yeah, I would agree," he says. "Most of the songs were written well before they were recorded. I was playing guitar and singing those songs all the time in my apartment for a year before recording. I knew which songs would be on the record before doing it. It's definitely a different approach from the first record, which was scratched together." The boy who works backwards . . . yes. It's a tad cerebral, but this could be a storybook yet. market has changed. Now I know if I could get a song that I really believe in, that I think 'Boy, this is the thing. This is going to hit it,' and get the airplay that I used to get, I guar- antee it would sell. Big time. But I can't get that." What Cropper has been able to do, how- ever, is bring his masterpieces to new audi- ences, letting each generation of newbies rediscover them in a way they can accept. The Blues Brothers is, of course, Exhibit A. The Blues Brothers produced three albums, two films – and a lot of flack for Cropper and bassist Donald "Duck" Dunn for backing "comedians who were making fun of pure, real, rhythm & blues." "Yeah, yeah," Cropper says. "Eat that one. One of the biggest movies ever made in Hollywood was The Blues Brothers and it got some of the worst reviews on the planet. Sometimes people miss the boat. They just don't get it. I think people didn't realize that John Belushi had been in bands. He was a drummer. He actually could sing in pitch. He actually could sing in time. Dan Aykroyd actually can play a harmonica and dance. I mean, it was a goofy dance because of the way he's built, but he could play. They weren't just clowning around. Yeah, it came out of a skit on 'Saturday Night Live,' which is meant to be funny, but it was entertaining. I go back to when we opened for Steve Martin at the [Universal] Amphitheater in [Los Angeles]. The first night, the audience was stone-faced, like, 'What is this?' Then all of sudden, it's mania. When we showed up the second night – I will never forget this – the audience was chanting, 'Blues Brothers! Blues Brothers! Blues Brothers!' None of us had experienced that with any artist, let alone ourselves. It was unbelievable. That's how well it went down. So there you go." For all their outsize fame, Aykroyd and Belushi are probably two of the more under- sized talents Cropper has ever worked with. Cavaliere is the latest, but before him the list includes John Mellencamp, Tower Of Power, Etta James, Ringo Starr, John Lennon, and Aretha Franklin. With all of them, whether producing or playing, he does the same thing: stays in the background and makes them sound good. It comes from a long-held phi- losophy that "The less you play, the more it meant." Given his résumé – and in spite of his instincts to be forthcoming – getting Cropper to list favorite musicians is little like bailing out the ocean with a bucket. Can't be done. With one exception: drummer Al Jackson, Jr. Even before Jackson's death in 1975, Cropper had referred to him as one of the greatest drummers of all time. "Nobody plays like Al Jackson," Cropper says. "There aren't hundreds and thousands of drummers in the world. There's millions of drummers and none of them can play like Al Jackson did. It's amazing. I played with some of the greatest and they are great. But they're not Al Jackson. There's only been one. There's only one Otis Redding. One James Brown. One Ray Charles. One Aretha Franklin. There's never any room for two." There's one Steve Cropper. "But who cares about that? There's a lot of guys who play better than I can. I think I have a gift of being able to support and pull the best out of people and that's what I like doin'. So." So. That gift includes interviewers, too. Reprising the role of Johnny Cash in the Chicago production, Lance Guest recalls super fans in Washington returning up to five times, which caught The Last Starfighter actor by surprise. "I do small theater in L.A. That never happens!" he exclaims, but admits the "good time music" coupled with the story brings folks back. Playing guitar since age 9, the role of Cash seemed destined to be Guest's. He participat- ed in early table readings of the show before the decision to have the actors take up instru- ments was even made. "Johnny Cash is the first guy I grew up singing with 'cause . . . the first record album I ever owned was Johnny Cash At San Quentin. So I pretty much mem- orized all the songs and all the patter in between, so I had a sense of how he talked from a fairly early age, like prior to my voice changing," Guest recalls. "So when it came time to do it . . . I could sing like that pretty much as a part of my vocal development as a person." Signing up for another stint as Cash was a no-brainer. "For me, it's a challenge and a joy. It's a joy to go up there and be Johnny Cash and sing those songs," Guest admits. "Who doesn't want to do that? I feel like we certain- ly get to play rock stars for 90 minutes. It's just something about playing that music that's very necessary." But Guest quickly points out the show is not a collection of impersonations – it's a fluid retelling of a night that, in Mead's point-of- view, brought the "Mt. Rushmore of rock 'n' roll" under one roof. Citing artistic license, Million Dollar Quartet turns "Brown-Eyed Handsome Man" into a full-blown number when the Chuck Berry tune only made a brief appearance and includes Lewis' "Great Balls Of Fire." "If you listen to the tapes of the original recording, it's just a bunch of guys messing around. They sang all those things that they felt like singing. It's not like they all sang their hits," Guest says. "We've sort of contrived it so . . . they sing their hits." "They didn't do 'Great Balls Of Fire,'" Mead adds. "That song hadn't even been recorded yet, but we put it in the show because if Jerry Lee's there, you've got to have 'Great Balls Of Fire.'" Running 90 minutes without an intermis- sion, Mead calls Million Dollar Quartet an "onslaught" of instant gratification. "People are really gonna like this play because it's got a lot of heart and soul and tons of music and it's exciting and it's like a little piece of histo- ry that maybe you've heard about or maybe you haven't heard about," Mead says breath- lessly. Cossette hopes to use the Chicago run as a spring board to raise the show's profile on an international level. "We'd like to have a com- pany in London. We'd like to have a . . . com- pany maybe in Toronto," Cossette fantasizes. "We're thinking big and who knows? Sam Phillips thought big. So can we." '90s. There's been a general shift away from '50s and '60s music; you're seeing mid- to late- '60s, '70s and early '80s – people who grew up in that period are getting a nostalgia thing and going back and collecting the vinyl they might have missed the first time through; music that kind of was a forerunner to cur- rent music starts to do better. People look for metal and punk, look for older electronic music." Govi says his own daughter sur- prised him with what goes on in her college residence hall (and it didn't involve a case of airplane glue). "She said turntables are all over her dorms and kids are buy- ing used vinyl. Not CDs – REO Speedwagon, The Beatles." As such, a new booth will pop up in November sporting nothing but turntables and such acces- sories. "We're gonna be pushing needles," he jokes, saying they'll fit right alongside record supplies, posters, programs, sheet music, autographed photos, DVDs, and those pesky CDs. Of course, families of four wear- ing Colgate smiles and pushing shopping carts full of records aren't the norm yet. The core busi- ness comes from a dedicated cadre of collectors still searching for the elusive gaps in their anthologies. Price is convinced some of his hardest targets will have to come upon him by accident, so thorough has his four decades of crate-dig- ging proven. But Govi remembers a particu- lar collectors-only surprise. "You know Jerry Butler?" he asks, refer- ring to the former Impressions member who became The Iceman. "His first big hit, 'For Your Precious Love,' was on a label called Abner. But the first pressing was on Vee-Jay, limited to 500 copies. Finding that first press is almost impossible. A couple years ago at a show in Indiana, this man approached us and wanted to know who our high-dollar buyers were. I pointed him out to one and he had a mint copy of 'For Your Precious Love' on Vee- Jay. He wanted $5,000 for it – he saw that price in a guide. It was eventually bargained for $3,500, but there you go: He just showed up, knew it was worth money, and we had the right guy to make a deal with." It's the magic of vinyl that CDs will never attain. "My parents bought records, my brothers bought records," Govi says. "It's in our blood. I treasure all my Beatles records; I have first pressings on every one." Then why keep this up when satisfaction has been had? "I do run around a lot," he laughs. "It's a labor of love." Appearing: 9/14 at Best Western Hillside (4400 Frontage Rd.) in Hillside. Vandervelde Continued from page 31 Cropper Continued from page 28 Quartet Continued from page 32 Record Shows Continued from page 60 Jay Koh illinoisentertainer.com september 2008 64

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Page 1: show article pt. 2

parents my parents' ages: Motown, TheBeatles, The Stones, Fleetwood Mac. Onefunny thing I picked up on – never havingput a record out before – was working on theone-sheet [promotional biographies formedia and distributors] with the label andlisting influences and that. The one-sheet forthe first record definitely said 'reminiscent ofT. Rex and some Bowie.' [I thought] peoplewould listen to one song and decide I'm somehuge T. Rex fan, when in reality I don't own aT. Rex record. Maybe it's a vocal thing. I heardT. Rex after I had been recording and doingstuff a certain way. It was like 'Holy shit.Whoa.' It's mainly the quiet, double-vocaland the tape-pitch stuff."

Some of that survived transfer to Sunrise,on tracks that presaged his eventual move toNashville in a manner he couldn't have pre-dicted. Both "Hit The Road" and "Old Turns"channel the dark sessions that produced BigStar's scarred Third/Sister Lovers."Cryin' Like The Rain" dips theMarc Bolan effect underwater, andit reemerges as George Harrisondisguising a broken heart. Despitethe occasional loose shard – NeilYoung's spirit breathes a fiery soloduring "Lyin' In Bed" – the albumwafts like a reverie and ends with asimilar lack of closure, floatingaway.

"I have a way," he explains,"and maybe on Moonstation it wasmore of an obvious approach, ofeach song being produced, likewriting a song to have a very dis-tinct vibe, with the productiongoing along with it. All of the songsfor that record were recorded ana-log by myself, and it was experi-menting with pitching the tapeway up and making my voicesound crazy with effects, and vary-ing the speed. With this record,kind of because of the situation Iwas in, I approached it naturally."

Hence the decision to recordlive, though, keeping Sunrise from turninginto a bar-band burner. Vandervelde workedagainst the grain of the typical debut/sopho-more dynamic. Artists usually craft their firstalbums over years of trial and error, comingforth with their best songs having honedthem over myriad shows. Follow-ups getwritten and recorded in short order, which iswhy they might pale in comparison while hit-ting many of the same notes. Vanderveldehad no conception of a debut album, soSunrise synthesized on its own.

"Yeah, I would agree," he says. "Most ofthe songs were written well before they wererecorded. I was playing guitar and singingthose songs all the time in my apartment fora year before recording. I knew which songswould be on the record before doing it. It'sdefinitely a different approach from the firstrecord, which was scratched together."

The boy who works backwards . . . yes. It'sa tad cerebral, but this could be a storybookyet.

market has changed. Now I know if I couldget a song that I really believe in, that I think'Boy, this is the thing. This is going to hit it,'and get the airplay that I used to get, I guar-antee it would sell. Big time. But I can't getthat."

What Cropper has been able to do, how-ever, is bring his masterpieces to new audi-ences, letting each generation of newbiesrediscover them in a way they can accept. TheBlues Brothers is, of course, Exhibit A. The

Blues Brothers produced three albums, twofilms – and a lot of flack for Cropper andbassist Donald "Duck" Dunn for backing"comedians who were making fun of pure,real, rhythm & blues."

"Yeah, yeah," Cropper says. "Eat that one.One of the biggest movies ever made inHollywood was The Blues Brothers and it gotsome of the worst reviews on the planet.Sometimes people miss the boat. They justdon't get it. I think people didn't realize thatJohn Belushi had been in bands. He was adrummer. He actually could sing in pitch. Heactually could sing in time. Dan Aykroydactually can play a harmonica and dance. Imean, it was a goofy dance because of theway he's built, but he could play. Theyweren't just clowning around. Yeah, it cameout of a skit on 'Saturday Night Live,' whichis meant to be funny, but it was entertaining.I go back to when we opened for Steve Martinat the [Universal] Amphitheater in [LosAngeles]. The first night, the audience wasstone-faced, like, 'What is this?' Then all ofsudden, it's mania. When we showed up the

second night – I will never forget this – theaudience was chanting, 'Blues Brothers! BluesBrothers! Blues Brothers!' None of us hadexperienced that with any artist, let aloneourselves. It was unbelievable. That's howwell it went down. So there you go."

For all their outsize fame, Aykroyd andBelushi are probably two of the more under-sized talents Cropper has ever worked with.Cavaliere is the latest, but before him the listincludes John Mellencamp, Tower Of Power,Etta James, Ringo Starr, John Lennon, andAretha Franklin. With all of them, whetherproducing or playing, he does the same thing:stays in the background and makes themsound good. It comes from a long-held phi-losophy that "The less you play, the more itmeant."

Given his résumé – and in spite of hisinstincts to be forthcoming – getting Cropperto list favorite musicians is little like bailingout the ocean with a bucket. Can't be done.

With one exception: drummer Al Jackson,Jr. Even before Jackson's death in 1975,Cropper had referred to him as one of thegreatest drummers of all time. "Nobody playslike Al Jackson," Cropper says. "There aren'thundreds and thousands of drummers in theworld. There's millions of drummers andnone of them can play like Al Jackson did. It'samazing. I played with some of the greatestand they are great. But they're not Al Jackson.There's only been one. There's only one OtisRedding. One James Brown. One RayCharles. One Aretha Franklin. There's neverany room for two."

There's one Steve Cropper."But who cares about that? There's a lot of

guys who play better than I can. I think I have

a gift of being able to support and pull thebest out of people and that's what I like doin'.So."

So. That gift includes interviewers, too.

Reprising the role of Johnny Cash in theChicago production, Lance Guest recallssuper fans in Washington returning up to fivetimes, which caught The Last Starfighter actorby surprise. "I do small theater in L.A. Thatnever happens!" he exclaims, but admits the"good time music" coupled with the storybrings folks back.

Playing guitar since age 9, the role of Cashseemed destined to be Guest's. He participat-ed in early table readings of the show beforethe decision to have the actors take up instru-ments was even made. "Johnny Cash is thefirst guy I grew up singing with 'cause . . . thefirst record album I ever owned was JohnnyCash At San Quentin. So I pretty much mem-

orized all the songs and all the patter inbetween, so I had a sense of how he talkedfrom a fairly early age, like prior to my voicechanging," Guest recalls. "So when it cametime to do it . . . I could sing like that prettymuch as a part of my vocal development as aperson."

Signing up for another stint as Cash was ano-brainer. "For me, it's a challenge and a joy.It's a joy to go up there and be Johnny Cashand sing those songs," Guest admits. "Whodoesn't want to do that? I feel like we certain-ly get to play rock stars for 90 minutes. It'sjust something about playing that musicthat's very necessary."

But Guest quickly points out the show isnot a collection of impersonations – it's a fluidretelling of a night that, in Mead's point-of-view, brought the "Mt. Rushmore of rock 'n'roll" under one roof. Citing artistic license,Million Dollar Quartet turns "Brown-EyedHandsome Man" into a full-blown numberwhen the Chuck Berry tune only made a briefappearance and includes Lewis' "Great BallsOf Fire."

"If you listen to the tapes of the originalrecording, it's just a bunch of guys messingaround. They sang all those things that theyfelt like singing. It's not like they all sang theirhits," Guest says. "We've sort of contrived itso . . . they sing their hits."

"They didn't do 'Great Balls Of Fire,'"Mead adds. "That song hadn't even beenrecorded yet, but we put it in the showbecause if Jerry Lee's there, you've got to have'Great Balls Of Fire.'"

Running 90 minutes without an intermis-sion, Mead calls Million Dollar Quartet an"onslaught" of instant gratification. "People

are really gonna like this play because it's gota lot of heart and soul and tons of music andit's exciting and it's like a little piece of histo-ry that maybe you've heard about or maybeyou haven't heard about," Mead says breath-lessly.

Cossette hopes to use the Chicago run as aspring board to raise the show's profile on aninternational level. "We'd like to have a com-pany in London. We'd like to have a . . . com-pany maybe in Toronto," Cossette fantasizes."We're thinking big and who knows? SamPhillips thought big. So can we."

'90s. There's been a general shift away from'50s and '60s music; you're seeing mid- to late-'60s, '70s and early '80s – people who grew upin that period are getting a nostalgia thingand going back and collecting the vinyl theymight have missed the first time through;music that kind of was a forerunner to cur-

rent music starts to do better.People look for metal and punk,look for older electronic music."

Govi says his own daughter sur-prised him with what goes on inher college residence hall (and itdidn't involve a case of airplaneglue). "She said turntables are allover her dorms and kids are buy-ing used vinyl. Not CDs – REOSpeedwagon, The Beatles."

As such, a new booth will popup in November sporting nothingbut turntables and such acces-sories. "We're gonna be pushingneedles," he jokes, saying they'll fitright alongside record supplies,posters, programs, sheet music,autographed photos, DVDs, andthose pesky CDs.

Of course, families of four wear-ing Colgate smiles and pushingshopping carts full of recordsaren't the norm yet. The core busi-ness comes from a dedicated cadreof collectors still searching for theelusive gaps in their anthologies.

Price is convinced some of his hardest targetswill have to come upon him by accident, sothorough has his four decades of crate-dig-ging proven. But Govi remembers a particu-lar collectors-only surprise.

"You know Jerry Butler?" he asks, refer-ring to the former Impressions member whobecame The Iceman. "His first big hit, 'ForYour Precious Love,' was on a label calledAbner. But the first pressing was on Vee-Jay,limited to 500 copies. Finding that first pressis almost impossible. A couple years ago at ashow in Indiana, this man approached us andwanted to know who our high-dollar buyerswere. I pointed him out to one and he had amint copy of 'For Your Precious Love' on Vee-Jay. He wanted $5,000 for it – he saw thatprice in a guide. It was eventually bargainedfor $3,500, but there you go: He just showedup, knew it was worth money, and we hadthe right guy to make a deal with."

It's the magic of vinyl that CDs will neverattain.

"My parents bought records, my brothersbought records," Govi says. "It's in our blood.I treasure all my Beatles records; I have firstpressings on every one."

Then why keep this up when satisfactionhas been had?

"I do run around a lot," he laughs. "It's alabor of love."

Appearing: 9/14 at Best Western Hillside(4400 Frontage Rd.) in Hillside.

VanderveldeContinued from page 31

CropperContinued from page 28

QuartetContinued from page 32

Record ShowsContinued from page 60

Jay

Koh

illinoisentertainer.com september 200864