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 SNAKECHARMER new album

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Date d'inscription : 20/05/2012
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MessageSujet: SNAKECHARMER new album   SNAKECHARMER new album Icon_minitimeDim 10 Mar - 20:21

SNAKECHARMER - Legendary WHITESNAKE Members Talk New Project




By Martin Popoff


MICKY MOODY, Neil Murray and BERNIE MARSDEN have been through the
critical ringer with their WHITESNAKE-shadowing concerns SNAKES and
COMPANY OF SNAKES,
but all of that is about to be shed like a crinkly
reptile skin with the release of Snakecharmer by SNAKECHARMER.


Shed as well is Bernie Marsden, who isn't around for the fetching,
rich, blues-regal yet uptempo and stadium-rocked record. Instead, second
guitarist to the legendary Micky Moody (JUICY LUCY, SNAFU, Whitesnake)
is WISHBONE ASH's Laurie Wisefield, who is joined by Murray, HEARTLAND
vocalist Chris Ousey and keyboardist Adam Wakeman for what is possibly
going to be the finest classic rock album of the year, given that BLACK
COUNTRY COMMUNION
seems decommissioned.


"Well it wasn’t preconceived," begins Moody, asked about the
instantly likeable Frontiers-issued record. "We didn’t sit down and say,
right, me and Neil are from Whitesnake, and Laurie’s from Wishbone Ash,
so it’s got to sound like a cross between Whitesnake and Wishbone Ash.
We just went away and we came up with some musical ideas, which we gave
to Chris, the singer, because none of us write lyrics, so obviously, you
know, everything went to him. So we sent things to him, and he came up
with the top lines, and that’s what you hear. We wrote 12 songs,
including the bonus track, and that’s what’s on the album. But to be
quite honest, myself and Neil were in the early Whitesnake, so part of
that sound is genetically drilled inside of us somewhere--it's sitting
there--so it’s always going to have that kind of sound at some point. We
were aware of the early Whitesnake situation, but this band was never
put together to be any sort of competition to Whitesnake whatsoever. So
what you have really, is a bunch of songs which came together pretty
quickly. We went in the studio, we didn’t hang about, we went in there
and we did it, and the only problem was getting everybody together at
the same time, because people do different things, what have you. Adam
was away some of the time with Ozzy or Sabbath, so a lot of the times,
he wasn’t actually there, except for putting backing tracks down. But in
general, we had a feel for the kind of music we wanted to do, we just
went in and did it."


"I think anything with slide guitar on there’s definitely me,"
offers Moody, asked to articulate the guitar riches that have befallen
this band. "And of course, I play straight guitar as well. Laurie is a
virtuoso of electric guitar. I mean, he’s played with so many people,
TINA TURNER, JOE COCKER, ROGER CHAPMAN, so he’s fantastic at doing the
classic rock kind of stuff. I think that myself and Neil, we're more of
the blues influence. And quite often, if you look at who’s written the
songs--easiest way to do it, really, is whoever wrote it--Laurie wrote a
song with Chris, for instance. It’s more than likely that he’ll be
doing the solo, where some of the songs do have both of us on it as
well. But my style will tend to lean more towards blues rock, and Laurie
tends to be more the melodic side. He wasn’t quite as bluesy as the
stuff I was involved in, so that kind of separated it a bit."


SNAKECHARMER new album P17d6lo1jit8q1smrkfjdk819894


"That’s all of us, really, and we had a good engineer," affirms
Moody, asked who should get the credit for the album sounding so warm
and yet hi-fidelity. "We worked together, there was no problems, nobody
was being precious. We all put the ideas we had in. Some of us were
around a bit more than others. Sometimes people were away, so they
weren’t around over time, but in general, we all put a lot effort to it,
and we’re all very experienced in the studio. We’ve all done a lot of
recording in the past, so we kind of know what we want before we go in.
We know what equipment to use, we know about arrangements, that kind of
thing. So it was no big deal for us. In fact, we wanted to bring in a
producer at some point, simply to stop (laughs) the huge amount of
e-mails that were going back and forward all the time discussing ideas.
It just became too much in the end, the amount of e-mail. But there
again, it’s much easier to get a producer in to do the job, and then at
the end of it, say, 'Right, guys, what’s your point of view? What do you
want more of?' So we did think about getting a producer, but to be
quite honest, we were on a limited budget with this album. There were a
couple guys we were interested in working with us, but they simply
wanted too much. And we’re not in a position to offer that at the
moment. So in some ways, it was a case of necessity being the mother of
invention. We just said, 'We’ll produce it ourselves then.'"


I asked Micky if there was a Whitesnake record Snakecharmer evokes
in terms of vibe and spirit, Moody having been on the two Coverdale solo
albums and then all of the first seven Whitesnake albums (depending on
how you count and which you count!).


"Well, my favourite Whitesnake record was probably Ready An’
Willing--well it is Ready An’ Willing," says Micky. "That album just has
something that I felt a bit more than the others. I think the
follow-up, Come An’ Get It’, is probably a better production, a bit more
commercial sounding, but Ready An’ Willing just has something in it.
The core of most of my music is a lot of blues, and that Ready An’
Willing album just had that bluesy rocky soul about it, which I love.
You know, it’s the album I wanted to do with Whitesnake. If we have to
compare albums, I would say that one."


I had to agree (especially--shameless plug--having penned a 99 cent
eBook about the making of the record - see zunior.com!), adding that it
seemed like the first Whitesnake album where the band got authoritative
about their rock, eschewing much of the waywardness of the previous
material...


"Well, see, David did two solo albums, prior to Whitesnake," begins
Micky, by way of cogent explanation, "which I was involved in. I go back
a long way with David. We come from the same town; I come from the same
town as David and PAUL RODGERS, the North, Middlesbrough, in the
northeast of England. And I knew David in the late ‘60s, and then when I
went off to London, moved down south, as you do, as you did. But he was
in local bands, and about 1974, I heard that he’d joined DEEP
PURPLE
--he passed an audition and I was very pleased for him. He was
working in a boutique and singing like semi-professionally, so I was
very pleased about that, and before he went to live in the states, just
after that, with Deep Purple, he called up his old mates from the
Northeast, of the late ‘60s, including musicians and some guys who had
moved to London to become roadies or truck drivers or whatever, and we
had a party to send him off to the states."


SNAKECHARMER new album P17d6ltc51apfimnaq51k3u13pp4


"And I never heard from him for about 18 months after that,"
continues Moody. "He called me up and asked me if I’d like to be
involved in some solo projects he was going to do. And from there, on
those two albums, he wanted to get away, really, from the heavy rock
thing, the Purple thing. But David is very versatile singer and had
loads of ideas for ballads and soul stuff and funk. He could sing all of
that. He used to do cabaret and stuff when he was very young. He could
sing all kinds of things. So I think he’d written a lot of different
things that he wanted to get off his chest and get down onto disc, and I
helped him do that. And then after that, he wanted to put Whitesnake
together, but we still didn’t want to go down that Deep Purple road,
because, as a guitar player, I never came from that heavy thing. I came
from the ALLMAN BROTHERS and LITTLE FEAT, RY COODER, and I loved all
that stuff. And I always wanted to work with another guitar player, with
the twin guitar thing, because I loved the Allmans and Skynyrd—and THIN
LIZZY
. Those are the kinds of bands I just like, the sound of two
guitars."


"So Bernie came in the band," says Micky, speaking of Bernie
Marsden, his mate in Whitesnake for all of those years. "I’d known
Bernie for a number of years anyway, and he used to play with PAICE
ASHTON LORD
, so he was part of that Deep Purple family tree. So we went
into that first album, Trouble, not really knowing what we were going to
play (laughs). We could only rely on the guys in the band and what we
were listening to, and Neil listened to a lot of jazz/funk, I think
probably more than the rest of us, and he played more of that stuff.
Coverdale was into that stuff as well, and I listened to some of it, and
I didn’t really… we just went with what we had. Obviously David had a
lot of ideas for songs, and we worked around that, and that’s why the
first two albums are a little bit diverse. There’s all kinds of stuff on
there. And that’s really just the kind of stuff we were listening to.
So it was probably Ready An’ Willing, where we actually found our
sound."


And most definitely that spirit and sound is here with Snakecharmer.
But with Wisefield as foil instead of Marsden, there's a fresh level of
creativity to be explored.


"Two guitars have always appealed to me," agrees Moody. "I just like
the two guitars. Providing that the guys were on the same wavelength,
you know. With Bernie Marsden, I worked with him for a long time, not
just in Whitesnake, but other bands, Snakes, Company Of Snakes, M3, and
it’s early days for me and Laurie. I knew Laurie before, but we haven’t
worked together. Actually, we haven’t done any gigs, so there’s a lot
more to come from myself and Laurie. With this album we just went in and
took a very professional approach. We didn’t stretch out. We haven’t
had a chance to stretch out, really. But also with myself and Neil being
in the band, people do expect to hear something that sounds something
like some of the early Whitesnake stuff. There’s no way we’re going to
go try something else. We wouldn’t anyway, and we kept that in mind.
Part of our roots were in the early band, and we were there. We helped
create the sound, so that sound is in us, and that’s going to come up
anyway--and it’s the sound of two guitars."
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