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Keith Harris Pocket Comes FirstAny musician's first
tour is a special memory - usually several months on the road with
friends playing in front
of a few interested fans. A lucky performer
might head overseas for a run of shows. And that must have been what
drummer
Keith Harris thought was going to happen when he got the call
from Black Eyed Peas musical director Printz Board, asking if he
wanted
to come along as BEP toured to support Elephunk.
If only he knew?.
In 2003, when The
Black Eyed Peas released Elephunk,
it was difficult to predict that the collective of four MCs (Will.I.Am,
Apl de Ap,
Taboo, and Fergie) and band (guitarist George Pajon Jr. and
multi-instrumentalists Tim Izo and Printz Board) was sitting on such
a
powder keg of success. Yet on the strength of such breakout hit songs
as "Where's The Love?," "Hey Mama," and
"Let's Get It Started," the
band became one of the most in-demand acts of 2004.
Over an
eighteen-month
period, The Black Eyed Peas played close to five hundred
shows, including appearances at the 2004 Grammy Awards, the
2004
Democratic National Convention, Saturday Night Live,
Pepsi Smash, and the 2005 Superbowl, not to mention the
many
globetrotting treks that took them across the States and to Australia
and Europe. That's quite a first
tour.
"We did some three hundred-odd shows last year," Keith Harris says,
right before the band is about to play
another one-off show in Los
Angeles. "Sometimes we'd do three shows a day - and for like seven days
straight. We were
flying from coast to coast. It was really, really
tough, and it was my first tour. I figured if I made it through that, I
could make it
through anything."
Harris had better get ready to live up to those words. Monkey Business,
the
band's fourth album, is due to be released shortly. "I think this
new record, from the songs that we've recorded so far,
is more of a
coming-out for the band, and it shows our maturity as a whole," Harris
insists. "It features all of us playing on it,
and I think it has a
really good vibe. Elephunk fans are going to enjoy it, and I think it's probably going to do even
better than that album did."
Harris, a New York City resident, was first introduced to Printz Board
when the
musical director was in New York playing a show with Star 69,
an act he was producing. In fact, Star 69 was in need of a
drummer for
a one-off gig. "We had rehearsals at SIR and then did the show at [NYC
club] B.B. King's," Harris recalls.
"Everything went well and Printz
said we should keep in contact. And then, a couple of weeks later, he
called me about the
Black Eyed Peas gig."
Perhaps Harris should have picked up a clue of what was in store for
him upon joining BEP,
since the first show he played with them was in
front of 20,000 people at the Coachella Music Festival. "Their manager
sent
me their albums Behind The Front and Bridging The Gap [Elephunk
had yet to be released] on a Tuesday -
I didn't even have a chance to sit
down at the set to practice any of it'they flew me out on a Thursday,
we rehearsed
two days, and the show was on a Saturday. I had to learn
thirteen songs in two days. So I wrote out my little hip-hop charts,
my
little cheat sheets, and I had them right next to me on the floor,
because, of course, no one in hip-hop has a music
stand."
Harris survived being thrown to the lions thanks in part to how he got
his start behind the kit - playing drums
in his church's band. "I come
from a Gospel background," he explains. "Having to learn songs fast is
part of the everyday
life of a church musician doing Gospel music. A
lot of times we would do concerts where there was no sheet music and
we
had thirteen songs in different styles. So just being able to absorb
music quickly and keep it locked in is how I've
learned to approach
music."
In fact, Harris carried the church metaphor into explaining how he
relates to the
four-MC attack of BEP. "The guys in front are kind of
like choir directors," he explains. "In the church, the choir director
is the
person who directs the choir and the band and keeps everybody on
cue. You have to watch all of his movements and sometimes
you
accentuate those movements, to bring out certain feels in the music. I
apply that same concept to BEP music, because
it's a live band setting
where you always have to listen to what's going on in front of you.
"A lot of
times I'm watching them, listening to the lyrics, and trying
to Mickey Mouse certain rhythms as well as lock down the
groove with
the band," Keith continues. "All of those things have to be meshed
together to do this gig, and that's why I
love it, because it's always
spontaneous. We've been playing the same set, give or take, for a year
and a half, but
every time we play the set it's different. It always
has a new energy, because it all depends on how the guys up
front
spread their energy to the crowd and to us."
David John Farinella
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