Tommy Stinson的訪談~
as title....
According to ChineseDemocracy.com, the April 2009 issue of Bass Player
magazine features an extensive interview with GUNS N' ROSES bassist Tommy
Stinson in which he discusses the songwriting and recording process for
"Chinese Democracy", among other topics.
Bass Player: How did you get the gig with GUNS N' ROSES?
Stinson: My friend Josh Freese was playing drums with the band. I ran into
him in a Hollywood rehearsal hall, and he mentioned that Duff [McKagan] had
quit, then he asked if I knew any bass players. We just kind or laughed about
it, because it sounded like a funny thing for me to go audition for GUNS N'
ROSES. GUNS N' ROSES were never my thing when the band first came out — they
just weren't my style. I thought at least it would be fun to play with Josh.
But I learned five or six songs for the audition. We basically just jammed,
and it was pretty fun. They seriously needed a bass player, so they asked if
I'd do it.
Bass Player: Why do you think you were the right guy for this gig?
Stinson: The only thing I could grasp at is that I have the kind of punk-rock
attack that Duff did. He wasn't really a metal guy — he had punk roots. On
the other hand. he's got sensibilities that are different from mine. I
couldn't place exactly what they are — they're unique to each one of us.
Bass Player: Do you and Duff know each other?
Stinson: I met him a few years back, and he seemed like a really sweet guy.
He didn't seem to have any issues with me — I don't think he wanted the gig
anymore.
Bass Player: Describe the writing process for "Chinese Democracy".
Stinson: I came in around '98 when the band was still writing the record. It
was Paul Tobias and Robin Finck on guitar, Dizzy Reed and Chris Pitman on
keys, Josh on drums and me. Everybody was just slowly starting to bring in
ideas. We were set up at Rumbo Recorders, a big studio out in the middle of
nowhere. A funny thing — Captain & Tennille own it. The whole thing looks
like a boat. Anyway, we all just started hammering ideas out. Essentially it
was eight guys collaborating. To be thrown into that kind of environment —
eight guys from very different walks of life — was very crazy, I'd never
worked in that way, but it was cool. There were guys who'd never ever made a
record putting out their ideas. At first, those of us who'd actually made
records thought their ideas sucked, but there were also some good ones.
Bass Player: How did you work out your ideas in a civil way?
Stinson: We each had to give reasons for liking or disliking something — you
couldn't just be bull-headed. We had to function as a democracy or we'd end
up hating each other. Collaborating was good for that. I think every one of
us learned a lot from it.
Bass Player: "Street of Dreams" stands out for having a lot of cool, counter
melodic bass work.
Stinson: That's definitely one of the places where I tried to play
melodically. Axl (Rose) had the majority of that song written, and I brought
in the bridge bass line and progression.
Bass Player: It has a few licks that seem to reference Duff's playing. Was
that intentional?
Stinson: When I started hammering out those GUNS N' ROSES songs, I started to
really dig into what Duff was doing — I really liked the stuff he played.
I'd be lying if I said his playing didn't seep into my subconscious — like
the way he uses grace notes. And I wouldn't be afraid to say I stole some of
his stuff.
Bass Player: Josh Freese left GUNS N' ROSES in 2000, and was replaced by
Brain Mantia. What did that mean for the tracks you recorded with Josh?
Stinson: I had to redo them. I probably ended up completely re-recording each
part five or six times over the years. It was tough. What really happened was
the record company stood back and left Axl to his own devices. Axl had all
these ideas, and he needed somebody to help interpret what he wanted. He had
to basically produce himself, and that's not what he went into this wanting
to do. There are a lot of reasons the album took so long to make, but I think
the record company really dropped the ball on this one.
Bass Player: What do you see as the root cause for that?
Stinson: I think everything changed when Geffen merged with Interscope. When
that happened, Axl was told that [A&R executive] Jimmy Iovine would play more
of a role in making the album happen. What Jimmy did instead was throw other
people into the mix who weren't very capable.
Bass Player: What happened when producer Roy Thomas Baker was brought in?
Stinson: He wanted to re-record everything, because he felt he could get
better tones. In my opinion, he wasted many years and many millions of
dollars trying to get us better sounds that we could have addressed in the
mixing stage. I'm not a proponent of his style of producing. I think Iovine
put Roy Thomas Baker in the producer seat because he didn't think the raw
sounds were good enough. Then Roy came in and would try every Marshall guitar
amp in a five-state area to find just the right guitar tone. And he wanted to
do that for every single part on the album.
網址:
http://www.roadrunnerrecords.com/blabbermouth.net/news.aspx?mode=Article&
newsitemID=116555
縮網:
http://0rz.tw/v09JG
Bass Player雜誌對Guns N' Roses現任Bass手Tommy Stinson的訪談。
全文在Bass Player雜誌的2009年4月號。
訪問中問到Tommy Stinson對Chinese Democracy的看法和錄製的過程。
他是1998年加入Guns N' Roses的,透過了Josh Freese。
2005年他加入了Soul Asylum,目前玩兩團。
他提到了Guns N' Roses的音樂不是他以前玩的風格。
或許多少也告訴了我們為什麼以他被稱為Bass天才的人,在GN'R中的彈奏沒啥存在感。
同時也被問到了和Duff McKagan的事。
非常有意思的一個訪談。
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Because tomorrow, the sun will rise.
Who knows what the tide could bring?
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