[情報] Chad 在 DRUM! Magazine 的封面故事
Chad透露下支單曲是"Ethiopia" :)
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CHAD SMITH’S RED HOT RETURN
By Patrick Flanary
Photography by Neil Zlozower
Transcript
A glance at his watch on this Tuesday night reminds Chad Smith he should
already be at home in front of the Lakers playoff game – it’s well after
10:00, and Kobe’s on the court with a sprained ankle. Instead, Chad Smith
kicks back in front of an elaborate console. Hologram images of Lennon and
Hendrix stare from the far wall as he pulls out a CD marked “RHCP Approved
Main Mixes.” He’s seated to my right just down the hall from the master
class he gave earlier at The Collective School Of Music in the heart of
Manhattan’s Chelsea district. And he’s weighing which of the new,
never-before-heard Red Hot Chili Peppers songs to unleash on me first.
“Ah, this makes me nervous,” Chad Smith winces 30 seconds into the eruption
of one RHCP Song titled “Look Around.” New guitarist Josh Klinghoffer
sounds as if he’s stepped right into those big shoes vacated by his
predecessor, as rock music’s singular rhythm section hits the eardrum with
fresh ammunition. Its all too much for Smith. Grinning from ear to ear, he
leaps out of his chair and paces into the control room for a moment as the
studio walls absorb this virgin music, months from public release.
Chad Smith would later tell me that DRUM! Magazine gave him his first cover
story 20 years ago, and so it would be DRUM! Magazine that would get the
first listen to the first Red Hot Chili Peppers album in five years.
“I haven’t played it for anybody,” he says under his breath as he readies
the next cut, “except for my wife, who’ll be like, ‘What’s that? I like
that one!” Distortion bursts suddenly from the speakers, then a dark
Sabbath-like riff roars over Chad Smith’s militant kick drum. Singer Anthony
Kiedis sneers over the chaos: ‘The crimson tide is flowing through your
fingers as you sleep…”
These first bars might well be the most unsettling of any Red Hot Chili
Peppers record. Yet just as the discord reaches its peak, the song crashes
into balance. “Monarchy Of Roses” is jilted, upturned to reveal a rainbow
throbbing with the bounce of a discotheque that eventually leads back to
heavy metal. It’s pure, melodic gold. Then there’s “Ethiopia,” which
begins with Flea directing the band: “Rollin’ everybody.” he announces. “
It starts with bass.” As his funk begins to thump. Smith enters in 7/4, an
odd time signature groove he says was inspired by Pearl Jam’s Matt Cameron
and former Frank Zappa drummer Vinnie Colaiuta. Flea’s crafted piano chops
make for a welcome addition to “Even You, Brutus?,” and “Happiness Loves
Company,” and Chad Smith explores Afrobeat elements on “Did I Let You Know.
”
To listen to these veterans emerge from their longest ever time-off is to
hear them interrupt any speculation of their demise. With three-fourths of
the lineup intact for more than 20 years, they’ve still got something to say.
WANTED MAN
Burned out by two decades of an unforgiving album-tour-album cycle, the Red
Hot Chili Peppers agreed to cool it for at least a year in 2008. They walked
away from the stage, the studio, and each other. Then, in the middle of the
break, guitarist John Frusciante left to pursue solo
work full-time. Though the move extended the groups absence from the public
eye another year, his amicable exit allowed the Red Hot Chili Peppers time to
plant new seeds.
“I thought he might come around one day and go, ‘Yep!
I’m ready!” But he never did, and that’s fine,’ Smith says.
“He’s probably the best musician I’ve ever known and
played with. He’s just fantastic and I love him. But we
want to keep going.”
There would be no audition process to replace Frusciante, the band decided.
They’d known Josh Klinghoffer since 1997, and he played alongside Frusciante
during the final months of 2007′s Stadium Arcadium tour; he was the obvious
choice.
As it turns out, the guitarist had a secret connection to
the guy behind the kit that made his selection that much
sweeter. “My first musical instrument was drums when I
was nine years old or so,” Klinghoffer says. “I had the Chad
Smith instructional video as a kid. When I used to go on
tour with them opening up, I used to perch myself behind
John’s amps and hang out with Chris Warren. Chad’s drum tech, and just
watch Chad like a hawk.”
Klinghoffer will never forget the day he got the call. It
came July 20, 2009, while he watched a ballgame at Dodger
Stadium. Flea was on the line, asking him to join Red Hot
Chili Peppers. The request startled Klinghoffer, but Flea had
to know whether the band could survive losing Frusciante.
“Within a couple of minutes of playing together we sort
of knew that it was the right decision,” Klinghoffer says of
the band’s first session that October. “Pretty much from
day one until we finished our writing process we were
coming up with stuff that we loved.”
The band announced its reformed lineup to the world a
couple of months later. In February 2010, Klinghoffer and
Flea trawled to Ethiopia, where they spent six days making music with local
musicians. That adventure abroad, coupled with the bassist’s year of
studying musical theory, hits home on I’m With You, with hints of jazz,
classical, and
roots music never before heard on a Chili Peppers record.
The first day together, the band penned “Brendan’s
Death Song” to memorialize the late Brendan Mullen, the
Los Angeles club promoter who booked the band’s first gig
in 1983. They spent the next 11 months writing, compiling
a trove of potential material that by August was whittled
down and ready for preproduction at Beach Boys guitarist
Al Jardine’s ranch, in Big Sur, California. There they were
joined by long time producer Rick Rubin, who remained at
the helm through the final tracking sessions in L.A. from
September to February.
“When Chad is playing, you never have to worry or think twice if the drums
will do their job,” says Rubin. “Chad is
the solid-rock foundation on which the Chili Peppers are
built. He brings mighty power and great vibes, so much so I
have asked him to play on many other recordings.”
Over the years Rubin has invited Smith to track with the late Johnny Cash,
the Dixie Chicks, and Kid Rock, among others. Producer and engineer Ryan
Hewitt, who most recently worked with one of Smith’s other bands.
Bombastic Meatbats, says “he can listen to a song, or even
a description of a song by an artist he’s playing with, and
nail the arrangement within two takes.” And Smith has played with plenty of
performers — his body of work between Peppers projects reads like a laundry
list, a dream resume boasting gigs with some of his heroes, and others with
musicians half his age.
While on vacation in April, Smith recorded an album with Outernational, a
young band discovered by Rage Against The Machine’s Tom Morello. Its
members, most of whom were children when Smith joined the Chili Peppers in
1988, piled into their van and drove from New York City to his house in
Malibu. They inherited some of Smith’s endurance and expertise from the
three-day session, and he in turn drew inspiration and energy from their
youth. Smith has since performed with them at the Roxy Theatre in West
Hollywood.
“I think it’s so rare to find rock drummers in the last 25
years who just come with that level of force, fierceness, velocity, power,
and enthusiasm who aren’t stiff as a brick,”
says Outernational singer Miles Solay. “And not only is he
the opposite of that, but he’s the best.”
Though he’ll celebrate his 50th birthday in October, Smith
never shook that youthful enthusiasm that got him into
the craft at age seven. So it’s only fitting he share how he’s
evolved as a musician with a roomful of those pushing for
a similar future.
For most of the students squeezed into these ten rows
of metal chairs, this is the closest they’ll ever get to a rock star.
Tonight, a few hours before our listening session at The Collective, Smith
sits on an amp and offers them a
message of love straight from the heart.
“I would suggest playing with other people.” he offers.
“I’ve been married to the Chili Peppers for 21 years, right?
And then I have these other things that I do when I’m not
doing that, and those are like my mistresses. And then
when I go back and play with the Peppers,” he continues.
“I have new positions for them.”
A 12-year-old boy giggling from the middle row interrupts the informal
lecture. Resembling a young Anthony Kiedis, the boy is the youngest here by
several years among this group of mostly college students.
What are you laughing about?” Smith shakes his head
with a smile. That’s not funny.” “It’s okay.” another student pipes up.
“He watches South Park.”
No musical experience matches meeting and playing with those of different
personalities, styles, and instruments. Smith explains, and he’s about to
prove it.
“Come on up.” he calls out to a petite high-school girl
with a bass guitar across her lap. Then a guitarist in his
late twenties volunteers, and heads to the front to join the
impromptu lineup. “We’re gonna improvise,” Smith tells
them as he sits behind the Pearl kit.
“I can’t stress this enough,” he says before they begin.
“These things on the side of your head — your ears —
these are the most important thing. Listening to what is
going on in any musical situation is good for everyone.
Drummers especially.”
Once they pick a key, a jam is born between Smith and
the two students, five minutes of raw funk that sounds
Composed, even rehearsed — but it’s hatching in front of
the class, note by note.
For Estrella Arias, who just turned 18, playing bass
with Smith tonight taught her an invaluable lesson. “His
energy is so great.” she says, “and he reminded me that the
most important thing is to enjoy it. There wouldn’t be any
point otherwise.”
Smith should be enjoying his last few weeks of free time
before he heads back to Los Angeles to rehearse those new
songs with Red Hot Chili Peppers. But he appears at home
here in this modest room on the buildings seventh floor, instructing these
students to stick with their instruments.
“You’re lucky to find what you’re passionate about at
an early age* he tells them after the jam, “The only way I
made it was going to music class.”
CLASS CLASH
There was a time when the city also known as Motown birthed a brand of music
worlds apart from The Temptations and The Four Tops. By the earLY ’70s, guys
like Alice Cooper and Bob Seger’s Silver Bullet Band were dominating Metro
Detroit with mullets and, in some cases, makeup.
The long hair would come later for Chad Gavlord Smith, who was born in 1961
in St. Paul. Minnesota, and later moved with his family to Michigan. His
first kit was nothing more than a collection of discarded Baskin-Robbins
containers his dad recovered from the trash. But the set proved to satisfy
and encourage the boy’s outlet. When he was 11, Smith and older brother Brad
formed their first hand, Rockin’ Conspiracy, and covered led Zeppelin and
The Doors at school dances.
It was in the suburb of Bloomfield Hills, Michigan where Smith played with a
couple of bands (one was called Pair Of Dice, the other Northstar) in high
school. Brad’s to the left of the hi-hat. “Chad hits harder than most
drummers, and that can he
tricky for an engineer.” he points out. Having worked alongside engineer Jim
Scott on Californication and By The Way, Fidelman prepared for more hard
hitting during the I’m With You sessions — he rented every Tama Bell Brass
in town to make for easy rotation between snares when Smith exhausted the
heads.
“It’s very magical what he does,” says percussionist Mauro Refosco, who
worked on the new album and has recorded with David Byrne and Atoms For
Peace, Flea’s project with Thom Yorke. “Every little nuance he did was what
the music
was screaming for.”
As we near the end of our time, Smith sings along with Kiedis’s vocal, head
back, his eyelids clenched. This slightly shuffled band lineup has captured a
sound that would never have existed if not for Frusciante’s departure — and
some time away from each other.
“I’m sloppy, and I play too loud sometimes.” Smith admits to a Collective
student who asks about his shortcomings. “And I couldn’t play
straight-ahead jazz to save my life.”
Though most drummers would disagree with all of the above, all three of those
so-called imperfections seem to
work within the dynamic of Bombastic Meatbats: the sloppiness sounds
sophisticated; the loud playing just makes good sense; and what the hell is
straight-ahead jazz, anyway?
Tonight, on this rainy Easter Sunday in New York City, Smith stretches his 6′
3〃 frame and grabs a smoke between sets with the Meatbats, one of his
ventures since the Chili Peppers hiatus. During Smith’s downtime these last
several years, he also formed classic-rock group Chickenfoot with guitarist
Joe Satriani and Van Halen’s Sammy Hagar and Michael Anthony. Smith made two
albums with each band, and between those tours cut a children’s record with
his son’s music teacher and entertainer, Dick Van Dyke.
Four or five butts litter the tile floor outside the jazz club’s kitchen,
where two swivel chairs in the hallway double as a humble backstage
atmosphere for a guy whose chief band fills 50,000-seat stadiums.
“This is the longest we’ve ever been not touring.” Smith says of the Chili
Peppers. “As soon as August comes around,” he grins from beneath the brim
of an orange Yankees cap, “back to my day job.”
It’s showtime again, and Smith heads back to the stage
with keyboardist Ed Roth, guitarist Jeff Kollman, and bassist Kevin Chown.
Dressed in a Keith Richards T-shirt and black pants, Smith ducks his head to
avoid hitting the stage lights.
He’ll insist he’s not the leader of this band, but he’s the
only one armed with a microphone tonight.
“What are you having over there?* he asks one of the
50-or-so spectators. “A quesa-dillah? Back in the day when
I used to drink, I would’ve come over there and eaten that.”
Smith follows up with a crack about the Easter Bunny
and the resurrection before leading the Meatbats into
numbers with names like “Oops, I Spilled My Beer” and “Greasy Louise.”
They formed as a bit of a happy accident while backing
Glenn Hughes of Deep Purple, who was late to a session one day. While they
waited, they jammed. Nothing rehearsed, nothing written — just four
different guys improvising and making jazz-funk rock purely for the love of
doing it. It just happened. They became a band. Sometimes seeing other people
pulls that out of you.
Though his loyalty lies with his partners in the Peppers, Chad Smith’s heart
beats hardest when he’s making music, whether it’s with them or a band that
forms on the spot. He’s come full circle by breaking outside the box —
making new bandmates, playing those small clubs again, even volunteering
time to students in hopes of inspiring
them to try the same.
“I suspect he is secretly a monster virtuoso, but coupled
with a sophisticated, well-honed sense of what is appropriate.” says Cliff
Martinez, who drummed with the Chili
Peppers from 1983 to ’86. “Everything he does is in service
of the music. That’s what great drummers do.”
Life happened when the Chili Peppers walked away: Kiedis became a dad. Flea
went back to school. Smith decided to see other people. Along the way he’s
provided unsung musicians the chance to be heard. And each of those
endeavours has given so much back to the drummer who ref used to shave his
head at an audition for a bunch of California punks.
Time for Chad Smith to bid farewell to the mistresses
for a while — and break out some of those new positions
he’s been working on.
Odds and Evens
Groove analysis by Brad Schlueter
CHAD SMITH IS WELL KNOWN AS THE drummer driving the Red Hot Chili Peppers’
bus. Flea certainly adds a lot of funk to the grooves but without Smith’s
foundation, that’d be icing without the cake. The band’s much-anticipated
new release features a new guitarist, who did help with the songwriting, but
diehard RHCP fans need not worry — this is unmistakably Chilis.
“Ethiopia”
This is one of the singles from the new disc and it’s a catchy funk ditty
with a verse in 7/8. Smith plays a tasty odd-time groove with ghost notes,
drags, and strong snare accents on J and the & of 6. The time signature
changes to 4/4 leading into the chorus so all the crashes fall on the & of 4.
For this section Smith uses open hi hats on the &’s to lift the groove
and keep everything funky.
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