ArtEfficient Intelligenz

Flower Power - Produced by Paul Kendall and Colin Thurston


Listen Later

Left to right: Colin Thurston, Paul 'PK' Kendall, ..and a brilliant Australian studio assistant whose name I think was Neil / Neal. But I've been wrong before.
Roundhouse Studios, London Bridge, mid 1996.
Paul McCartney's studios back then, "yaknow".
Picture by Gage S.
This track was *very much* finalized by Paul Kendall's lone production.
He made my self-sampled, programmed drums, sound real, for starters, which is something we sometimes intensely pursued, for budget reasons.
Another song -recycled from an old synth track- mostly reworked from Gage's bassline riff, then rearranged / structured by Gage, G, and myself, drastically & overnight re-orchestrating all its sequenced stuff.
I'd never seen a song transmogrify more than this, right before my eyes.
PIctured far right, my moog prodigy, and the 3.5" data diskettes box for my [exdemo] Ensoniq EPS sampler, next & atop - that sampler sounded awesome when it worked properly, the strings on Winter and most hammond / farfisa / digital sounds originally came from it, but being exdemo -and built by Ensoniq- it always had surprises in store and was itself sometimes resampled onto the S50.
Under both of those, the Emulator 4K which then was our studio novelty, but quickly got incorporated taking care of a lot of backdrop stuff as I slowly learned the machine operandus.
Pictured far left, the display monitor for my [also bought on sale, in 1988, as 'old tech'] Roland S50, 12bit sampler. Best actual sounding sampler I probably ever had. Roland had done some clever algorithmic 'gap filling' computations on their AD/DA convertors, to compensate for the 12bit / 30Khz resolution, and the result was a truly umpthy + granular-sounding-like sampler, which handled like a multitimbral Fairlight III once I connected it to a small tv monitor with video input, pictured far left, but also had the crunchy gritty sound of the Emulator II / SP1200 12bit systems. So it became my trusty and potent sounding workhorse.
In the era of the all-in-one touchscreen coloured buttonpad digital controller, this may seem ancient, but it was the early days of the workstation. And 12bit still sounds better.
In them days, even drum machines with velocity sensitive pads were still a novelty.
The Prodigy's Liam had the W30, the model that directly replaced the S50, and he felt the same way towards his, also for the longest time - as far as I know he still uses his.
Cause a 16bit Fairlight III sounded horribly unmusical compared to a 12bit S50 - and I didn't know this at the time and I wanted one. Lol.
'The reason Fellini's movies work, when the seawaves are represented with cardboard, is cause in art the cardboard version often works better, as symbolic representation' - Jean Michel Jarre.
The reason Winter's percussive sequence came out the way it did was the S50, first time I seriously sat down with it and plugged the individual outs + midi only Cubase, with an entire winter night in front of me, learning to like its digital filters and how to use resampling to 'self-oscillate' digital filters, assigning massive gated reverbs on the 4 outputs assigned to the few tamboura library samples it brought, mapping, truncation -such an important word in sampling tech then-, pitching them in extreme, as already '12bit cardboard replicas'.
Colin also had the later top model, the S770, and often lent it to George Michael - who spent rather a lot longer alone, in the studio, semi-engineering his own records, during the days of 2" tape, than he ever did 'being decadent'.
Colin would always also talk me into Kurzweil samplers, so had he succeeded, we'd have been more techy than Kraftwerk and YMO together lol.
I did get a Kurzweil K2600X years later - brilliant, and interesting 'sampling synthesis', but not for me.
Evan : drum programming, keyboards, sequencers, claps
Gage : bass, arrangements - as always, claps
G : guitars, backing vocals, arrangements, claps
Xav : vocals, backing vocals, claps
...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

ArtEfficient IntelligenzBy ArtEfficient Intelligenz