Painting By Candlelight
(Lee Abraham is a freelance
writer/photographer currently on assignment in Ocean Beach, California.
Specializing in music journalism, Lee is a frequent contributor to
Relix magazine and the Las Vegas Weekly, as well as being a featured
monthly columnist for Jambands.com and the quarterly newsletter of the
Las Vegas Songwriters Association. His work has also been featured in
High Times, Signal To Noise, CityLife, Mountain Xpress, and other music
publications. Lee was nominated for 'Writer of the Year,' at the recent
1st Annual Jammy Awards, sponsored by Jambands.com, and is currently
working on his first book, "Music For the Mind, Relix Magazine and a
Quarter Century of Rock and Roll Journalism.")
While he works on a new studio
album, Pink Floyd founder Roger Waters is lighting a corner of the dark
side, one candle at a time
To say that Roger Waters’
creative fire ‘burns brightly’ is a gross understatement. ‘Radiates
brilliantly’ may be closer to the mark. Face it - Waters is a unique
and ground breaking artist who altered the consciousness of an entire
generation. It’s just that simple. From being a founding member of Pink
Floyd and driving force behind arguably the most influential rock album
of all time, "Dark Side of the Moon," to the grand architect of "The
Wall's" massive stage production, Waters has always been an innovator.
Not to mention wildly successful. Forget about selling millions of
records - his music has changed peoples’ perceptions of reality.
"There’s a feeling that I’ve
learned to recognize that says: ‘Go to the piano. Take with you a piece
of paper. Sit down...’, you know, and I do and then something comes
out," says Waters. "But once that something comes out, it’s very rare
that it’s complete." Enter the recording studio. That’s the laboratory
where inspiration meets magic, transforming Waters into the mad
scientist of sound. He turns dials and knobs like an audio Leonardo Da
Vinci to reflect the scope of his vision - it’s vast.
"The analogy I keep coming back
to is that it’s like a painter painting a picture. However many people
you’ve got stretching the canvas, or even filling in bits of the
canvas, you know, a lot of great painters had teams of people helping
them, blocking bits out. In a way it’s not a good analogy because it’s
not like that, because obviously the musicians that I work with are
highly skilled and are painters in their own right. They’re just not
doing the design of the painting, I guess."
Waters has designs on releasing a
new studio recording sometime next year. That’s good news. His
worldwide legions of fans have been waiting for a new album since 92’s
critically acclaimed, "Amused To Death." "I took the band from last
summer’s tour to the Bahamas for a month in February," explains Waters.
"We just set up our equipment in the studio there and played the songs,
worked on them, learned them, worked out parts and things, and allowed
them to develop as songs played by a band."
Although the record is a
long way from being finished, it’s taking shape conceptually. "I had
thought that probably the album would be based around the idea that the
only new song that we’re going to be doing on the road this time, a
song called ‘Each Small Candle,’ says Waters. "The chorus is that each
small candle lights a corner of the dark. The idea is that we each have
a flickering flame within us that we each individually light a corner
of the dark... and in some sense, we each have that responsibility. And
that we’re all important because we have that potential."
"The question is whether change
is important or desirable, or not," continues Waters. "And if it is,
who’s going to affect that change, we can’t rely on our government to
affect it. We can only rely on ourselves. Essentially, you can’t really
change anyone but yourself anyway, the idea of personal responsibility
in terms of change is maybe what the whole thing’s about." And in
Waters eyes, the Internet makes it easier than ever to affect change.
Example - the upcoming album. Call it a case of art imitating life
that’s imitating art. "I’m inviting people to answer some questions
that I occasionally post on our website
(http://www.columbiarecords.com)," says Waters. "Part of my reason for
doing that is to draw raw material for this work out of people out
there on the net."
Waters is also working on an
opera. That’s right, an opera. No, not a -rock- opera. A -real- opera.
"It’s a French libretto," explains Waters. "They asked me to set it to
music, which I did. Then I went to Sony with it and they said it was
wonderful, please write an English version." And of course, he did that
too. The opera will be released in French and English.
Although
Waters’ music has always had a theatrical element, getting involved in
a French opera is something new. "It’s an acquired taste," he says. "I
don’t have a very broad taste in opera, I have to say. I like the ones
with great tunes in them."
The truth is that Waters just
loves "great tunes." Regardless of style. Or which century they were
written in. "The new Randy Newman album is stunning," says Waters.
"But, I’m deeply unhappy because I gather there’s a new John Prine
record out, which I haven’t heard. I think he’s one of the great
geniuses of songwriting in the 20th century. He’s a big hero of mine
and I can’t wait to have a listen to the new record."
Hopefully Waters can snag a copy
on the road because that’s where he’s going to be for the next few
months. Dubbed the ‘In The Flesh Tour 2000,’ Waters and company are zig
zagging their way across the country playing a wide variety of Pink
Floyd tunes as well as material from his solo projects. His band is
outstanding. Longtime collaborators and guitarists extraordinaire, Andy
Fairweather-Low ("Pros and Cons of Hitchhiking" tour in ‘84) and Snowy
White (1980 "The Wall" tour) are both on board. Not that the rest of
the group are slackers. Far from it. Drummer Graham Broad from Procal
Harum is Waters’ rhythm section partner. Texas guitar slinger Doyle
Bramhall II (Stevie Rae Vaughn), keyboard players Jon Carin (The Who,
Brian Ferry) and Andy Wallace (David Bowie, Whitney Houston), as well
as vocalists Katie Kissoon (Eric Clapton, Van Morrisson) and Susanna
Melvoin (Prince), round out the band.
The current tour is actually the
2nd leg of "In the Flesh." The first go round took a Winter break
giving Waters an opportunity to tinker with the show. "I’ve done quite
a bit of work in between the two tours on the visual aspect of it," he
says. "I’ve dropped a couple of numbers, put a couple of different
numbers in and just changed a few things." Pink Floyd shows have always
been renowned for their mind bending multimedia presentations. Not just
colored lights, but huge flying pigs and crashing airplanes, to name a
couple of their most notorious props. As always, Waters innovative
stage production continues on this tour. "We project lots of images
onto a big screen behind the stage, but we have no lighting truss over
the stage. It’s got kind of an open look to it. I’ve always loathed
lights going on and off, you know? I find that really distracting. I
like lighting that’s much more like theater lighting."
And after all the years,
monumental tours and monster albums, Waters is as excited as ever about
the future. These days though, he’s not only exploring new outlets for
his own creativity, he's sparking as many little candles of inspiration
as possible. "The canvas is still there for anybody to paint whatever
picture they like. I’m sure that there are works out there waiting to
be written and people may respond to in a similar way that they
responded to The Wall or Dark Side of the Moon."
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