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Jeff Porcaro A Tribute Ten years after his passing, the drumming and music community
still feels the loss of the studio giant.
I consider myself among the fortunate people whose life Jeff
Porcaro
touched - and there are a lot of us. If Jeff Porcaro was anything, he was
contagious. Being around him was like being
exposed to the sun at its
hottest, most warming and smiling degree. He was a ball of energy, a
funny man with a laugh that
still echoes happily in my ears, kind and
sincere. He could mess with you in a teasing, fun way, but he never
meant to hurt
you. He was passionate about music, friends, and life,
and was always ready with a compliment. We met as business
associates
and we became friends. I don't use that word lightly, and while he had
many friends, he didn't use the
word superficially either. I treasure
the memory of our friendship.
Few deaths have affected me in the way Jeff's
passing did on August 5,
1992. The sheer loss of his energy on this earth was (and still is)
devastating, and the tragedy for his
family and his beautiful
children--Nico, Miles, and Chris--was a pain that was hard to bear.
When someone old passes,
it's sad and painful for loved ones. But there
is comfort in knowing that it's the correct order of the world.
Jeff's
passing, at thirty-eight, was a tragedy. To this day, I find myself
asking Why? The absence of his musical talents
on today's offerings is
profound, but his legacy as a father, loved one, friend, and musician
is indelible.
Jeff
loved what he did. He resented anyone who put down the role of
studio musician, for he took it seriously with a reverence
that
remained throughout his career. He truly appreciated the gig and what
it took to create a song, was always a team
player, and never cut
corners. His work mattered to him, and the outcome was important. In
fact, he was so self-critical that
sometimes it came off as
self-effacing.
During the first interview I did with Jeff in 1982, he uttered the
ridiculous
comment, "My time sucks." At that same time, he told me,
"There's not one record that I've done that I can listen to
all the way
through without getting bugged at how I played."
Jeff told me, though, the Steely Dan tracks he did were
his personal
favorite performances. To him they represented the coolest music he
could be asked to play. In fact, at the
beginning of his career, he
actually quit a $1,500 a week gig with Sonny & Cher to work with
Steely Dan for $400 a week.
And it wasn't always easy.
During various interviews, Jeff talked about some of those tracks, such as
"Gaucho" (Steely Dan, Gaucho):
"It was Steve Khan on guitar, Anthony Jackson on bass, Rob Mounsey
on
keyboards, and Donald Fagen. The plan was to rehearse the tune in the
studio, because those guys are meticulous. You
rehearse from 2:00 to
6:00, take a dinner break, and at 7:00 you come back to the studio,
start the tape rolling, and start
doing takes. Well, this stuff is
rehearsed so heavily that some of the spontaneity is gone. They demand
perfect time, and
it's nerve-racking. Yet, I love it. That kind of
pressure with those guys is cool, because, from my point of view,
their
music is the most prestigious music that's ever existed.
"So we started doing 'Gaucho,'" Jeff
continued, "and they went through
every musician's part so it was perfect. All they were going to keep at
the end was
the drum track, but most of the other musicians didn't know
that. I knew it from experience. Their idea is to get everybody
else in
the band and put them through all the shit in the world to make sure
they play perfectly, just to get the perfect drum
track. And these guys
are sweating--beads of sweat rolling down their foreheads--shaking
while they're playing,
and they don't know that what they're playing is never going to be used.
"We went to 3:00 in the
morning, and I don't know how many takes we
did. Fagen walked out in the studio and it was something like,
'Guys,
does everybody know what this tune is supposed to sound like?' We're
all looking at each other,
going, 'Yeah!' He says, 'Good. You guys know
what it should sound like, I know what it's supposed to
sound like,
then that's all that matters. We're done.' And he splits. So we're all
sitting there in the studio
like, 'What?' We all got pissed and said,
'screw it, we're going to work on this track and get it!' So
just Gary
Katz (producer) was there, and we continued to do five or six more
takes. That's the kind of shit where most
people would have packed up
and split, but we just sat there feeling we had to get it--and we did."
Tune into MD
Radio in June and July for a special block of tracks that
Jeff performed on. Artists include: Alessi, Earth, Wind &
Fire,
Paul McCartney, and two from James Newton Howard.
Robyn Flans
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