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Mickey Hart (September 2005 Issue) Producing Kodo's Mondo Head Kodo's Mondo Head
was an intense labor of love for
producer Mickey Hart, who recorded
over thirty hours of music from morning 'til night for a project he
describes as "a
marvelous hybrid filled with beautiful grooves and
wonderful vocalizations. I wanted it to be deep, heavy grooves from
the
heartbeat of the earth," says Hart, who says it is among his finest
work. Hart has known the Japanese musicians
who make up Kodo since
the mid-'70s, having seen them perform and having had various members
of the group sit in
with The Grateful Dead. "When they asked me to do
something with them," Mickey says, "I thought that I didn't want
to
make another taiko record, because they didn't need me for that. So
this is the dream--to combine all the Planet
Drum powers with ecstatic
vocals and taiko drumming and present it in surround-sound.
"These guys came out of the
taiko box and ate this project up," Hart
says. "Taiko is a very strict classical form in which the musicians
really don't
jam. But this record came out of the jam, out of their
subconscious, not their heads. This was not written down or
composed
like a taiko record. They really wanted to break loose. And any time
they'd pick up a pencil and paper,
I'd take it away from them and say,
"Next record, not this one." They'd laugh and say, "Okay,
Mickey-san.""
Hart recorded the basic tracks at his own studio, with some solo
overdubs done in Tokyo. "Then we
rotated different kinds of
instruments," he says, "whether they were from Indonesia, Japan, or
South America. But taiko drums
were at the core. Each day I had a guest
artist come in to play, like Zakir Hussain, Airto, or Giovanni Hidalgo.
As for my style
of recording, it's about playing, not thinking. So I
recorded everything that moved. Then after the musicians left, I
edited
the parts.
"It was a great experience," Mickey concludes. "It was like drum camp
when they were all at my
house. Everybody slept, ate, and played
together."
Robyn Flans
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