by abstamaria » 30 May 2014, 15:54
Very true, John.
In his interview on the Final Tour DVD, Hank said he was always conscious of the fact that, while he's played "Apache" thousands of times, the fan in the audience would be hearing it for the first time live. So he has to ensure that he plays it as best he can and, while he didn't say so expressly, in the manner the fan expects.
I had an interesting conversation with our bass guitarist Anna over lunch on the topic of style and sound, what we are discussing in this thread now. Anna has a BS in Psychology (graduating cum laude) and also is an MD specializing in Developmental Pediatrics (very handy for bands whose average developmental age is fixed in the teens). She understood immediately and said that if an artist played a hit piece differently the correlation with the audience that fell in love with the piece would be lost. The relationship between what the fan fell in love with and what is being played on stage would not be there.
I remember an old interview with the Everly Brothers, who recounted that in a tour in the early 1960s they decided to change the arrangement of their favorite songs. They were almost booed off stage. "We learned very quickly after that," they said. There are several old groups visiting here, Chad & Jermy, ABBA, the Cascades ... They always lament "we want to sing new songs, but know the audience want the old ones the old way."
I am generalizing of course. I would love to hear Streisand play with her songs. The unique thing about the Shadows perhaps is that, for the large majority of their fans, they are fixed in time, like Bruges isolated from the sea. When their fans listen to them, they want to hear "that sound." And that is why that term was coined. You don't hear Ventures fans talk about "that sound." In contrast, this and the many forums we populate are dedicated to its pursuit.
Anna reminded me of a statement Simon Cowell made, regarding contestants trying to sing a great song made famous by a superb singer. He said you better not try to sing it in a way somewhat similar to the great hit; you will always pale in comparison. If you want to sing it, you have to sing it in a completely different way so that the audience will dissociate it from the hit and appreciate it for what it is. For all we think of Cowell, that makes sense. That is why Hank's new album - so different from the Shadows - is exciting to me. I will be listening to Hank not Hank of the Shadows.
I suppose also that we are all different, as pointed out correctly earlier. My interest, not being around when talent was being handed out, has been simply to try to sound as much as Hank did between 1960 and 1963. And to convince folks to watch me and my band try to do that. I know I won't succeed with a Telecaster!
Interesting conversation, this.
Best regards,
Andy