A sound engineer's experience of working with Morrissey
posted by davidt on Thursday February 17 2005, @09:00AM

An anonymous person sends the link:

An Intelligent Bandleader's Approach to Monitors By Chris Kathman, ProSoundWeb

Excerpt:

Jerry Jeff’s audience actually flies down to Belize every summer and has a big old time with the man and his band for a few days. He has taken the Buffett-style parrot heads a whole step further. But for absolutely insane fans, you can’t beat Morrissey.



He is a real rock star, with a traditional two-guitars-bass-and-drums backup group. People go to his shows with religious devotion and stack flowers and messages on the edge of the stage like he is the Dalai Lama or something. Chris, what does this have to do with audio, you may be asking …

My perception of Morrissey, from being his monitor mixer for the first Coachella festival and a few warm-up shows two years ago, is that he is secure in his art form. He is not trying to establish a career. He is not worried, I don’t think, about the house payments. I doubt he needs to work another day in his life. I could be wrong, but I think he actually performs because he loves the connection that he has with his audience. I’ll say this, he certainly appears to.

Every night, he would walk past my desk to start the show with a smile on his face. Hey, guys? That’s a leader. No fear, no fury, just purpose and confidence and the stamina to deliver his unique vocals. So, a guy like that? I did what I know how to do - put up a stagewide vocal, as loud as each day’s system could produce - center wedges, sides, and some nights a pair of buttfills that I shoved up against the drum riser. I took out the frequencies that honk and the ones that stab.

And Morrissey went out and did his shows. One wired Beta 57a, and another 57a spare coiled up standing by. No grimacing. No hollering and gesturing for more. Sometimes at a soundcheck I would get nervous and ask him if everything was okay. He would just smile and nod, and that night his voice would actually gain strength. Soaring over the arrangements, it made a total fan of me, someone who had never heard any Smiths records, only some punk band in San Francisco sing “Morrisssey Rides A Cock Horse.”

Well, I’ll tell you what. When he steps on that stage, Morrissey is a real man. So is Jerry Jeff Walker and so is Jonathan Richman. They are there to play. And I can work with that.

 
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    A sound engineer's experience of working with Morrissey | Log in/Create an Account | Top | 24 comments | Search Discussion
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    The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way.
    I can't remember... (Score:1)
    ...who was the sound guy I met while the Moz performance in Mexico City, but the creww was all so fun. And the man himself is, in all his shyness, a truly rock star. It must be very fun to work with him.
    GabrielDeLuna -- Thursday February 17 2005, @09:16AM (#151512)
    (User #12409 Info)
      Nice Story (Score:1)
      Well done Chris.

      RE: "People go to his shows with religious devotion and stack flowers and messages on the edge of the stage like he is the Dalai Lama or something"

      Morrissey as the Dalai Lama??!!

      Freaking hilarious!
      Jim Rome -- Thursday February 17 2005, @09:50AM (#151520)
      (User #720 Info | http://www.jimrome.com/ )
      Rome's Smack-tionary coming soon....yeah, this time I mean it.
        buttfills? (Score:0)
        how many of you stopped and paused when reading that word in this article?
        Anonymous -- Thursday February 17 2005, @09:58AM (#151521)
        • Re:buttfills? by Anonymous (Score:0) Thursday February 17 2005, @01:33PM
            Re:buttfills? (Score:2, Funny)
            Where can one buy them?
            Keith Moon -- Thursday February 17 2005, @02:31PM (#151582)
            (User #12365 Info)
            [ Parent ]
            • Re:buttfills? by Morrissey Mad (Score:1) Monday February 21 2005, @08:15AM
            I like that . . . (Score:1)
            I think that it's refreshing to read something so very positive written by someone who has worked with Morrissey, and which acknowledges the mutual stamina and love that reciprocates between Him and the audience. Surely there is an element of this concept in all live performances; but there is nothing (and there never will be anything) that is akin to the exchange that exist between Morrissey and His audiences.
            Poppycocteau <celticcurls_4@hotmail.com> -- Thursday February 17 2005, @10:27AM (#151526)
            (User #9489 Info)
            We are ugly but we have the music
            that was very, well, nice for a change (Score:2, Interesting)
            I wish we had more news items like this to digest, it was really encouraging in a I dont know what kind of way...

            ps Is morrissey gay?
            giant -- Thursday February 17 2005, @10:56AM (#151536)
            (User #430 Info)
            I Like You
            Great story (Score:2, Insightful)
            This story is what makes moz-solo worthwhile. An insight into the world of Moz from a completely different viewpoint.

            I think I'd even find a report from the tour accountant interesting...... anyone?
            Auric Goldfinger -- Friday February 18 2005, @01:06AM (#151654)
            (User #3416 Info)
            Do my eyes deceive me, or is Senna's Lotus sounding rough?
            • Re:Great story by goinghome (Score:1) Friday February 18 2005, @01:54PM


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