 |
Domingo Ortiz Widespread Panic's Jamming DuoWith Till The Medicine
Takes,
Widespread Panic move way beyond their reputation as merely a
jam band. Not that they'll necessarily be jumping up the
Billboard
Top-40 charts any time soon. But the album does show a tighter grip on
songwriting and a wider palette of sounds
than the band has explored in
the past.
So, what makes Widespread Panic work? Drummer Todd Nance
thinks
for just a second before answering, "The main thing is that
nobody in the band sat around and tried to sound like somebody
else.
Our sound is derived from all forms of American music, but I don't
think the band sounds like any other band. I
think once you've heard
Widespread Panic a few times you know what you're listening to. And
even as different as
this record is, I think people will recognize it
as Widespread Panic."
So just how does Nance accomplish that behind
the kit?
Laughing, the drummer says, "Man, I have no clue. I just get in there,
cross my fingers, and hope for the
best."
To date Nance and percussionist Domingo "Sonny" Ortiz have
found a formula that works exactly for the best.
Both members joined
Panic in 1986 and quickly found a way to work together. Though their
live set and studio albums boast
intricate layers of drumkit and
percussion, neither say they talk much about who is going to do what.
According to Ortiz, "I
remember when we first started playing together.
We didn't spend a great length of time talking about, Well,
you're
going to take eight bars and I'm going to take eight bars and solo, and
then we're going to break it
down.... We just said to ourselves, Let's
play and see what happens."
What happened, Ortiz continues, is that
he and Nance became
one. "I want to color things and complement what Todd and the rest of
the boys are doing." As
Domingo explains it, that was exactly the
lesson he learned when he put away his drumkit and picked up his
percussion rig.
"There are three things you should do as a
percussionist, and that's listen, complement, and don't
overplay.
That's been my philosophy ever since I started playing percussion."
While Ortiz got his original
percussion inspiration from Tower
Of Power's Brent Byars, Nance cites Steve Ferrone. ("Man, he's a
groovin'
mo-fo in my book.") And where Ortiz studied with master
teachers, Nance learned how to play by feel in a marching band.
But
from those seemingly disparate backgrounds, the duo has come together
to create one of the tightest drum teams in
modern music.
David John
Farinella
Back
|
 |
|
 |