Adrian Shaw: Crazy Man, Muscle Man, Hawk Man, Frond Man?
(from Aural Innovations nr.11, July 2000)
Profile/Interview by Keith Henderson
A native Londoner, Adrian Shaw first picked up the guitar as a teenager in
the late 1960s, only switching to bass after some lineup changes left the group
he'd joined with two other guitarists and no bass player. That band was J P
Sunshine, whose lone recording session was only released in recent years by
fellow bandmember Rod Goodway (see discography). After that group fell apart,
another ex-member Andy Rickell (aka Android Funnel) asked him to come to Dorset
(in the southwest of England) where the Crazy World of Arthur Brown were
residing. Initially just running the lights, Adrian eventually was asked to fill
in on bass, to which he readily agreed. Next door, their mates High Tide
(the band that included Pete Pavli and Simon House) moved in. However, tensions
grew in the Brown household and he left his 'Crazy World' behind to pursue other
ventures. The remaining unit eventually coaxed Goodway to travel south from
Bristol, and they formed Rustic Hinge and the Provincial Swimmers.
Disputes about the direction of the band led to a quick separation and 'Rustic'
Rod brought Adrian back to Bristol where they concocted the first Magic
Muscle lineup. Behind Rod out front as lead vocalist/guitarist were Shaw on
bass, Huw Gower on lead guitar, Kenny Wheeler on drums, Pete Biles on congas,
and Thos Ensor handling the electronics.
Adrian was already friends with several Hawkwind members (apart from
House, who had yet to join), and so they landed the opening spot on the famed
1972 Space Ritual tour that produced the classic 2LP album of the same name.
Some recordings were made and survived to see a CD release in the 1990s as
'Laughs and Thrills.' Other memorable shows include the first ever Glastonbury
Fayre (1971) and gigs at London's Roundhouse with the likes of the Pink Fairies.
Around this time, Nik Turner and DikMik came by to see if he was interested in
joining them in Hawkwind, as Lemmy had been 'misbehaving.' Turning that down to
remain in Muscle, Adrian soon saw the band begin to grow weary of touring and
going broke, and so but for a brief recording session with Rod, Simon, and Andy
Rickell (posthumously released as part of 'The Pipe, the Roar, the Grid'), Magic
Muscle was no more.
For the next few years, Shaw jumped from one unstable gig to the next,
performing with the likes of Atomic Rooster, Steve Peregrine Took, Arthur
Brown (cutting a single that got dire reviews), and Canadian Richard Moore
(ex-Troggs) in the Reds, Whites, and Blues. A promising record deal for
his old friend Keith Christmas led to a pair of albums and some touring,
but again it didn't last long. Adrian tried his hand at fronting his own band
Zarabanda for a time, accepting all sorts of odd gigs in questionable
settings, until he suddenly heard from his old mate Simon House asking him to
join Hawkwind once again. Of course, this time he accepted and after a
very productive two years of writing/recording/touring, it all came to an end in
San Francisco in September, 1978 with Dave Brock figuring he'd had enough of the
whole thing (that didn't last!). House had already quit by then to join David
Bowie's band. Shaw soon learned his wife was pregnant, so save the one-off gig
with Nik Turner's Sphynx (including guest spots by Michael Moorcock and
Pete Pavli), he left the music business for the better part of a decade.
In 1988, Magic Muscle received an offer to reunite for an album and tour. The
next year, 'One Hundred Miles Below' was released both in the UK and US, and the
band opened for Hawkwind at their 20th anniversary at Brixton Academy. Huw Gower
by then had gone back to his home in New York, so Adrian's new friend Nick
Saloman (who at that point was already recording as a solo artist under the name
Bevis Frond) filled in on guitar. The group toured Europe billed as the
Magic Bevis Muscle Frond, and in years since, Nick and Adrian have been
virtual partners in everything from recording to touring to running Nick's
Woronzow record label, home to them all and mutual friends The Outskirts of
Infinity. Another brief Muscle reunion with Rod and Simon (Saloman and drummer
Steve Broughton guesting) produced the Gulp CD in 1991. Adrian began to record
solo material around 1990 (beginning with the 16-track cassette "Aerial Dance"),
and has completed three full albums to date for Woronzow, with more on the way.
Over the last few years, America has seen the Bevis touring band of Saloman,
Shaw, and either Andy Ward (ex-Camel) or Ric Gunther (Outskirts of Infinity) on
drums grace our shores on a regular basis, for which we are grateful.
Now let me go through a little album-by-album journey through Adrian's
career... well, at least the albums I actually have.
Chronologically-speaking, the two Magic Muscle retrospectives are the
earliest recordings of Adrian's work in my possession. 'Laughs and
Thrills,' the live archive of the Space Ritual tour, is compiled from three
different shows and includes multiple versions of four tracks, plus three
others. The recording quality is naturally a little bit rough but the music does
shine through. Like Hawkwind's other major touring partner Man of the day, many
of the songs are of the garage-y blues flavor. Though "Fellowship" and their
version of the Velvets' "Waiting For My Man" were both presented with that
'train kept a'rollin' feel (given Adrian's rumbling basslines), which would've
been a perfect lead-in to Lemmy's bass attack to come. 'The Pipe, the Roar,
the Grid' is a collection of recordings from those same early years, some of
demo-quality, some apparently live. Tunes like "Wood Carver Man" again have that
Spooky Tooth hard blues flavor (even sounds like a Spooky Tooth songtitle), but
then tracks like "You Better See" are the sort of psychedelic freak-out jam that
belongs at a free festival. "Schoolgirl Love" is the only common track between
the two archival releases, Goodway's gritty vocals quickly giving way to another
cool psych jam (titled "Feel It, Fear It") on this version.
The much-heralded 1977 'Quark, Strangeness, and Charm' album saw
Hawkwind hitting one of their compositional and stylistic peaks. Among most song
polls I've seen, "Spirit of the Age" always ranks very near the top, and the
original version is almost certainly the one these voters are
remembering...because since then, no Hawkwind lineup has yet recaptured that
same hypnotic bassline of Adrian's, coupled with Simon House's synthesizer
prowess, and of course Bob Calvert's inspired poetic imagery. This splendid
combination persists throughout the album, carrying classic after classic from
"Damnation Alley," to the title track, and then the ever popular "Hassan I
Sahba" (aka "Assassins of Allah"). It's the Zelazny-inspired tune that contains
perhaps my all-time Shaw highlight...the wandering underbelly bass of the
extended bridge section is too dreamy for words, Simon's violin solo
notwithstanding. And the seemingly forgotten "Fable of a Failed Race," again a
thing of beauty. This was the very first Hawkwind album I ever heard (and the
first space rock, save a couple of Pink Floyd tunes) and I was instantly hooked.
How could anyone not be?
Shaw's only other album with Hawkwind was 'PXR5,' a totally different
scenario because by the time of its release, he'd not only left the band but
quit music. And Hawkwind itself had gone from non-existence to rebirth as the
Sonic Assassins, then to the Hawklords, and then eventually to court to reclaim
the Hawkwind name. So in 1979, the hodgepodge of live and studio recordings were
collected up an handed over to Charisma and an album was born. Not quite the
same magic as 'Quark' given its incoherent nature, but most Hawkfans do
recognize this album for the timeless tunes it holds. "Robot" and "Death Trap"
were recently brought back into the Hawkwind live set for Ron Tree to experiment
with. "High Rise" is the tune where Shaw's fretless (?) sliding bass melody
comes to the forefront. Of course, on the original Virgin CD re-release (so
hopelessly out-of-print that another release seems imminent) they used the wrong
version! But those of us who were fans back in the vinyl days knows what it was
supposed to sound like.
The Muscle's first reunion output (released in both the US and UK
under the title 'One Hundred Miles Below') was from a live gig at Moles
Club in Bath, UK on 1 Aug., 1988, with a lineup including the formative trio of
Goodway, Gower, and Shaw, but with Twink filling in for Wheeler on the drum
stool, and honorary member Simon House coming by to offer his services. It took
quite awhile for this album to grow on me (not sure why), but of the six tunes
(newly written for this show), several are among the Muscle's best. "Waiting for
Midnight" is a down 'n' dirty funked-up rocker, Rustic Rod's mocking-style
vocals working out just brilliantly . That's followed with "The Road," which
more than anything else sounds like much of Side 1 of the 'Quark' album, Simon's
violin soloing playing off Gower's wah-pedal guitar, while Adrian's bassline
keeps things rolling along. The eight-minute title track is another outstanding
psych jam, built atop a fun, bouncy riff that allows everyone to have their own
go at one point or another. In some ways, this album may be as similar to 1977
Hawkwind as anything else I've heard, and so I'm guessing it's probably
overlooked by many Hawkfans. Or simply never seen!
The 'Gulp' album (1991) turned out quite nicely as well. Nick
Saloman's guitar leads are an easy fit to the rompin', stompin' brand of
psychedelia on tracks like "Hailer of Taxis" and "Umbrellamental." Simon House
(hard not to call him an official member by this time) again added his touches
on violin, and he really pulled out all the stops to create a host of
particularly otherworldly sounds. "Spaced and Displaced"...well, you know that's
going to be good! Adrian lays down a simple lazy bass track, the perfect canvas
for Simon and Nick to paint colorful soundscapes upon, and they all go to town.
The violin/guitar melodies of "Psymonic" might just be the prettiest moment of
Muscle Music, but that cheerful mood is quickly thwarted by Rod's scary and
intimidating vocals on "Leaders," the splash of fuzz guitar giving it extra
emphasis. And Adrian is given a more interesting task here and takes full
advantage, frequently ad-libbing his 'walkabout riff' wherever it chooses to go.
The Muscle's finest moments on record may have been captured on this reunion
effort, oddly enough. See if you can find yourself a copy.
Shaw's first full-length solo CD 'Tea for the Hydra' was released in
1996. Writing every song and playing most of the instruments (and providing all
of the vocals), 'Hydra' is a peculiar mix of the kind of psychedelic rock he's
been known for, and then a handful of more experimental numbers (e.g., "Son of
Sam" and "Iron Curtain") that are really out there. Some impressive guitar
soloing exists on this album, including individual shots by Saloman, (Outskirts
of Infinity's) Bari Watts, and son Aaron, though I was just as impressed with
Adrian's own go at it on tracks like "Teeth of the Hydra" and "Trillib." A
clean, light and cosmic touch he's got. Not all of it works for me but it's an
interesting album nonetheless, obviously made with the safety taken off.
'Displaced Person' has a similar overall feel and the same
trio of guest guitarists offering their services. "The Only One," a laid back
and spooky number, is perhaps my favorite of all his solo tunes and features a
particularly strong vocal performance from Adrian. "Ascension Day" is more
upbeat, and getting darn near something that a Radio DJ wouldn't be fired for
playing...very nice. And Adrian's guitar has gotten a bit edgier now, a touch of
fuzz here for good measure. Next, he turns around for perhaps the best taste of
space-bass blanga since his Hawkwind days on "Northern Lights." "Stalking Horse"
sees Adrian branching out with the acoustic guitar (even some flamenco stylings)
and a very impressive piano solo. Presumably his anthem for decades of touring,
he signs off with "One Last Drink for the Band." In the end, while 'Displaced
Person' suffers a bit from the exclusive use of drum machines (the other albums
each include a pair of tunes with a live drummer), I think his best songwriting
was done for this album.
Adrian's latest (bar the newest one he's working on) is the 11-track 'Head
Cleaner,' perhaps less challenging than previous efforts but yet offering a
couple of big winners. The bookend tracks are among my favorites, both featuring
the excellent violin playing of old friend Simon House. During the bridge
sections, the violin, synths, and guitar on the opener "Symbiosis" are all
intertwined to the point it's hard to distinguish one from the other...the
result is a very colorful cosmic trip. The finale "You and Me" is a gentle,
folksy number with Simon's violin melody drifting across the sky like a bird in
flight. "Mobius Trip" (sic) is another of Adrian's most psychedelic tunes, once
more having his own go on the guitar (freaky gliss!), giving the 'three amigos'
a break for a change. "Drowning" is another interesting tune...a cool bluesy
opening with virtuous guitar work by young Aaron; though soon, it thickens up
into a slow, heavy riff that gives credence to the song's title. Then the older
Shaw pulls out one of his most interesting bass riffs for "Things I Learnt," a
song telling about his start in music back in 1968. Over the 32 years hence,
Shaw has obviously learned a few more things and I gather he's still got a few
ideas left in the tank for a couple more albums.
Despite not appearing on much of the recorded output of the Bevis Frond (oh,
by the way...the correct pronunciation of Bevis is with a short 'e'), Adrian has
still had to build a great deal of Nick's songs into his repertoire for all the
touring they've done lately. And he apparently showed up in the studio the day
that my favorite Bevis tune of all time was being recorded, as Adrian is
credited with providing vocals on "Right On (Hippie Dream)" from the
'Sprawl' album. Perhaps the best way to catch Adrian in full flight with
the Frond is on the recent 'Live at the Great American Music Hall' album
on both Woronzow (UK) and Flydaddy (US). The dual guitar/bass riff of "Maybe" is
one of my favorites, and the live performance here brings out so much life to
tracks like this, compared to the early lo-fi recordings that Nick did in the
late 80s. Adrian gets his own riff to carry "Stoned Train Driver" (through to
the chorus at least), allowing Nick to throw out the random lick here and there
between verses. Over the remainder of the live set, the Frond trades off between
the gritty rockers (like "Well Out Of It") and Nick's more emotive ballads
(e.g., "Stain on the Sun"), eventually signing off with Love's "Signed DC."
After meeting on one of the Frond's American tours, Country Joe McDonald (of
…and the Fish) asked Nick and Adrian to see if they'd like to put together a
backing band for some shows CJ was planning in England. (They said "Yes.") One
of those shows (also featuring Aaron Shaw on keys/guitar) was recorded and
released as 'Eat Flowers and Kiss Babies' on Woronzow in 1999. Ten tracks
covering Country Joe's first three albums from the 60s are done here in a very
spirited way. Being a tad too young to have lived through the Woodstock era,
only the "I Feel Like I'm Fixin' to Die Rag" (you know, "One, two, three...what
are we fighting for?") was something I recognized. "Not So Sweet Martha
Lorraine" is the one tune I really liked a lot - a groovy little romp that
brings out the Steppenwolf fan in me (my first favorite band). The James Brown
shtick of "Rock 'n' Soul Music" is also a bit of fun. I'm not sure why "Bass
Strings" is named such...Adrian does his usual spot-on performance here, but the
song itself is a slow blues number without such a memorable bassline. (Perhaps
it's about bass fishing?) Aaron's eerie organ and Country Joe's expressive
high-vibrato voice are really the things that takes center stage on this one. I
would guess that I would prefer this live set to the original recordings, so I
suppose the idea of bringing 30-year old tunes back to present to a new
generation is working. A quick note to add: The Frond and Country Joe will be
meeting up again for a performance at the 4th Terrastock, planned for November
3-5, 2000 in Seattle.
Well, with all that out of the way now, let's allow Adrian to speak for
himself finally! He was kind enough to answer my needling questions without
hesitation, and tell us what's he's up to.
AI: You recently came across the pond with Frond to play a show at the
South-by-Southwest Festival in Texas. How did that go?
AS: Well, unfortunately our show at SXSW could have been better. It
was a little disorganised, not so much for us but the Lucky Bishops who are on
our label. They found that the hired Hammond organ which is an integral part of
their sound didn't work. We went on to play CBGB's in NY with them, the
Alchemysts and Tom Rapp and that was a great show.
AI: Andy Ward is back playing in the band again I see...how's he
doing? I heard that he had undergone some rough times.
AS: Andy has severe health problems.
He has had several breakdowns including suicide attempts. At the moment he's fine and we just used
him on the new Frond album and for some German gigs. He's always walking a
tightrope though. One thing we do know is that he can't take long tours anymore,
they just do his (and consequently our) heads in. We are lucky enough to have
another superb drummer available called Joe Propatire who's played with the
Silver Apples and Will Oldham. The drawback to Joe is he lives in Providence,
RI. Which makes London gigs a little problematical.
AI: On that same note, I see that Simeon is again working with your
old touring mates, the Alchemysts. I guess he's recovering well from his auto
accident?
AS: Amazingly enough Simeon's made virtually a full recovery. He's one
tough guy. We hope to follow up the Simeon and the Alchemysts album with a new
Silver Apples release in the not too distant future.
AI: Bevis Frond has been touring pretty heavily over the past few
years, a big change from Nick's earlier days when he was all alone holed up in
the studio. What's changed in his attitude?
AS: Well, what happened was that Nick's experience of gigging had been
pretty dire in his formative years. If you're familiar with the UK gigging
scene, it can be pretty rough if you haven't got a name. For years Nick was in
bands doing pub gigs where at best no one was interested and at worst the
audiences were hostile. As a result he thought that playing live just wasn't
worth the hassle. When I met Nick, about 11 years ago this was most definitely
the case. Then I got offered a slot for my old band, Magic Muscle, at the
Hawkwind 20th (I think) anniversary show at the Brixton Academy. Now Muscle
hadn't played together for a year or two at that point and our original
guitarist, Huw Gower, had relocated to New York. I asked Nick if his friend Bari
Watts might be up for doing the gig with Muscle knowing that Nick himself didn't
play live. To my surprise he offered his services. To cut a long story short,
the gig went very well indeed and Nick, for the first time in his life,
experienced playing at a big venue to a highly appreciative audience. As a
result of this he realised that gigging could actually be fun. The lineup of
that gig went on to do the first Frond tour.
AI: Although the Frond seems more-or-less a full band, why does Nick
still do most of the writing/recording himself? Any plans to change that
approach?
AS: The latest Frond album has both Andy and myself on it throughout.
Nick likes playing drums and bass so does so on a lot of his albums. The way the
Frond works is that Nick calls the shots on the recording side of things but he
and I run the touring band as a partnership.
AI: Let's go back to the beginning...presumably, you were present at a
lot of the early Hawkwind gigs in and around London at places like the
Roundhouse, often supporting them with Magic Muscle. Any good stories about what
that whole scene was like?
AS: I have a lot of memories of the old days, not all of them
printable unfortunately! Muscle were on the Space Ritual tour when Hawkwind were
at their peak, popularity-wise. I'd known them from the very early days before I
left London and ended up in Bristol. They shared offices with friends of mine, a
band called High Tide who lived in Abbey Road, just round the corner from where
I was living. The problem with being in Hawkwind's support band was that we
always arrived at a gig before them and as a consequence always got jumped by
the local police who thought we were them. I remember very clearly our
percussionist being throttled by one custodian of the law who was attempting
(unsuccessfully) to stop him swallowing his stash! We would never go on stage
without our customary 1/4 tab of acid and humungous hash pipe. After one
particular bust when our drummer had been arrested and taken to the local police
station I remember that on his return I had to get the police out of our
dressing room by saying we needed a little time to meditate before the show. The
suckers fell for it and I then retrieved our pipe from the toilet cistern,
filled it, smoked it and then, pushing past the bemused constables, staggered
spluttering onto the stage. It was a matter of principle.
AI: With Muscle, you got on the free festival circuit and were coveted
by the biker crowd. Did that have any influence on the direction of the music,
i.e., more towards the raunchy blues-rock and not-so-much towards the
psychedelic side of things? I say this, because in retrospect upon hearing the
four MM releases to date, the newer reunion albums actually seem to embrace more
of the 70s-style psychedelic jamming than the original (posthumously-released)
recordings.
AS: Unfortunately the recorded output of the original band really
doesn't reflect what we were like musically. For a long time we didn't even have
any songs, we'd just adjust our brains chemically and go and improvise for an
hour or so. Being adopted by the Angels was a mixed blessing. They were good
guys, for the most part and definitely better to have them on your side than
against you. We certainly didn't change our musical approach as a result of
their patronage. We did get banned however from a lot of venues as a result of
the Angels presence.
AI: I guess there were probably some rough and tumble times on the
road with MM as well. On the live recordings, Rod mentions an incident with the
police while introducing the tune 'Bridewell.' What's the story there?
AS: To be honest I can't really remember. Bridewell was the main
police station in Bristol.
AI: Muscle has reunited several times over the last few decades. Do
you think Rod will phone you up again to give it another shot?
AS: Somehow I doubt it. Rod's not at all well. He's on the list for a
liver transplant and as a result really isn't up to touring. We did get back on
stage together again at last years Terrastock 3 festival. The 29 minute result
of this will be part of the upcoming Acid Jam 2 album which is the next Woronzow
release.
AI: Hawkwind has been attempting (with little success) to put together
a big 30-year reunion show (which may have to wait until 35 it seems). Have you
been asked about joining in, and do you plan to do so when the time comes?
AS: I haven't been asked yet. If I am (assuming it ever happens) I'd
do it if it didn't clash with my Frond commitments.
AI: I guess you joined the Hawks during a somewhat turbulent phase,
with members coming and going in rapid succession. However, despite the abrupt
turnover following Astounding Sounds, something magical must have happened in
the studio, as the Quark album turned out to be such a classic. What are your
recollections of that time in the studio?
AS: That actually was a very happy and creative time for the Hawks.
Paul Rudolph and Alan Powell had been trying to take the band in a different
direction from the one the rest of the band had wanted to go in. As a result
they left and I was asked to step in. I have to agree about "Quark", I think
it's probably the band's best album and I promise I'm not just saying that
because I'm on it. Bob Calvert was at his peak at that time and produced some
superb lyrics. It's a shame that the "Quark" lineup didn't last longer as I
think it could have achieved an awful lot more.
AI: Then, of course, after what was reportedly a great high point in
Europe, the band came to America to embark on that fateful tour with the abrupt
end happening in San Francisco. What I've read is that Bob Calvert was quite
over the edge and generally bringing the band down into his own personal misery.
Is that the way you remember that time?
AS: This was a strange time. I read in a book on Hawkwind that Bob's
behavior was so extreme that it nearly gave me a nervous breakdown. Well, Bob's
behavior was certainly erratic but it didn't bother me very much. In fact I had
a great time on that tour. It was my first tour of the States and I was taking
full advantage of it in every department. If anyone was on the verge of a
breakdown it was Dave Brock who apparently sold his guitar after the last gig
(in San Francisco) with the intention of giving up playing! Not that I was even
aware of that, I was too busy enjoying myself. Bob was difficult to deal with at
times. He suffered from manic depression and had periods where he couldn't sleep
for days on end. I remember him waking me at about 5.00 AM in Holland, black
froth around his mouth, as he had an idea for a song he had to share with
someone. It's not as if it was drugs that did him in, he was the one band member
who didn't use them.
AI: In your online bio, it mentions that while you were in the Red,
White, and Blues band with Roy Dyke on drums (who married Stacia, the infamous
Hawkwind stage performer), you worked on the soundtrack for a 'blue movie.' Just
curious...did Stacia appear in this movie by any chance?
AS: No, she didn't. An old friend of mine phoned me up some years ago
to mention he'd been watching this particular masterwork and was surprised to
see me with a credit for the music at the end of it. Fame at last.
AI: Your son Aaron has played guitar on some of your solo material.
Does he play in any other bands on his own?
AS: No, if only! Without playing the proud father, Aaron has a huge
talent but doesn't show any sign of doing anything with it. He augmented the
Frond for our Country Joe McDonald shows playing keyboards and guitar and did a
great job. Unfortunately he's busy with his work (as an Internet web designer),
playing football, clubbing and hanging out with his friends and girlfriend and
it doesn't leave a lot of time for playing guitar. A definite set of wrong
priorities at work, I'd say. He does talk about getting a band together....we'll
see.
AI: Is he considering a career in music or does he have other
ambitions?
AS: I know that if he got offered a good gig tomorrow he take it. He
would definitely rather be a musician than anything else.
AI: So who's idea was it to create Woronzow Records, and are you
looking to expand the catalog of artists, or are you just maintaining the label
for Frond & Friends, so to speak.
AS: Nick started Woronzow as an outlet for his own talents and then
subsequently started putting like minded musicians albums out. He asked me to
get involved a few years ago and now we run it together, We are always looking
to expand our roster. At the moment, apart from the Frond we have the Green
Pajamas, Tom Rapp, Country Joe, Simeon, the Alchemysts, the Lucky Bishops, Magic
Muscle and a great new Australian band called Vic Conrad and the First Third
amongst others.
AI: What does the name Woronzow mean, anyway?
AS: It's the name of a road near to where Nick grew up close to Abbey
Road.
AI: I see mention of 'Acid Jam 2' in the upcoming Woronzow catalog.
I'm afraid I missed Acid Jam 1. What exactly are these recordings?
AS: Acid Jam 1 was basically the original Outskirts of Infinity lineup
of Bari watts, guitar, Ric Gunther, drums and Nick on bass and guitar. They just
went into a studio and jammed. The new album has a huge lineup doing a mixture
of jams and songs. We have the following musicians on it: The Frond, Alchemysts,
Lucky Bishops, Magic Muscle, Pete Pavli, Tony Hill, and Debbie Saloman, Nick's
16 year old daughter who has a wonderful voice.
AI: I've been listening to a lot of your recordings lately, and you
seem to have a recognizable bass-playing style no matter what sort of music it
is. It's hard to describe, but to my ears you seem to like to 'walk' the notes
up and down through the staff with an even tempo....do you know what I mean? And
that works really well on the longer tunes where the 'lead' instruments really
stretch out. Am I off-base here, or is there a real 'method to your madness'
there that I'm hearing?
AS: I couldn't really describe my bass playing. I could tell you who
I've been influenced by in my early years and that would be Jack Bruce, Phil
Lesh and Jack Cassidy. Not for a moment am I implying I'm as good as they are
though. I just do whatever feels right at any given time. I very much enjoy both
the jamming discipline and the more studied sympathetic approach you have to
adopt in the studio.
AI: So what's in your immediate future? Do you plan to keep touring
with Frond, and making solo albums along the way, or are you thinking about
forming/joining a band full-time?
AS: I think I'll carry on touring with the Frond for as long as
there's a demand although both Nick and I are getting a little road-weary. I
definitely won't join another band full time, I've seen too many hotel and
dressing rooms. I'm just in the early stages of getting another album together
which will probably be ready around the turn of the year. My last solo album,
"Head Cleaner" will be out on Rubric Records in the States in a couple of
months.
AI: Finally, what kind of music do you listen to these days? There
seem to be quite a few newer bands returning to psychedelic rock, in many forms
both modern and retro. Any of these groups catch your ear? Have you done (or are
considering) any production work for the younger generation?
AS: There's quite a lot of music around at the moment which I like. I
think Cotton Mather are excellent, and without beating a Woronzow drum here, the
Lucky Bishops are the best young band I've seen in 25 years. What's more they're
even better live than on record. I like Eminem quite a lot too, pretty musical
for a rap artist and I like his complete irreverence.
An Adrian Shaw Highlight Reel (makes a nice compilation tape/CD-R):
Magic Muscle: Hello-ship (aka Fellowship) You Better See The
Road One Hundred Miles Below Spaced and Displaced Leaders
Hawkwind: Spirit of the Age Damnation Alley Hassan I Sahba
Robot (Live) High Rise
Bevis Frond: Right On (Hippie Dream) Stoned Train Driver
Maybe (Live) Well Out Of It (Live)
Adrian Shaw: Teeth of the Hydra Red and Grey The Only One
Northern Lights Symbiosis
ADRIAN SHAW - A Selected LP/CD Discography(CD unless otherwise
noted)
J P Sunshine 1. J P Sunshine (LP): (1968/1996 Uncle Glitch UK UG
001)
Magic Muscle (archives) 1. The Pipe, the Roar, the Grid (Comp.):
(1970-72/1988 5 Hours Back UK Tock 009) (material also available on 'Living
Weeds from Ancient Seeds' cassette) 2. Live 1972 - Laughs & Thrills:
(1972/1991 SPM-WWR GR CD-0021)
Magic Muscle (reunion) 3. One Hundred Miles Below: (1989 One Big
Gtr UK OBG 9005) (1989 Skyclad US TRIP 48CD) 4. Gulp: (1991 Woronzow UK
WOO 17CD)
Reds, Whites & Blues 1. Sensations (Soundtrack) (LP): (1973
Falcon Records UK)
Arthur Brown 1. Gypsies / Dance (single): (1974 Gull Records UK
Gull 4)
Keith Christmas 1. Brighter Day (LP) (AS appears on My Girl):
(1974 Manticore UK MA6-503S1) 2. Pigmy (LP): (1977 The Waiting Grounds UK
Nova-LC3311)
Hawkwind 1. Quark, Strangeness, and Charm: (1977/1989 Virgin UK
CDSCD 4008) (1977/1995 Griffin US GCDHA 162) 2. PXR5: (1979/1989 Virgin
UK CDSCD 4016) 3. Best of Hawkwind, Friends and Relations 'a': (1988
Flicknife UK Sharp 1724) 4. Best of Hawkwind, Friends and Relations 'b':
(1993 Anagram UK CDMGRAM 61) 1995 Griffin US GCD 535) (3. and 4. each
include versions of 'Robot' and 'Spirit of the Age' w/ AS) (also Weird Tapes
102, 103, 105 - imminent CD release on Voiceprint) (also appears on several
recordings with R. Calvert and M. Moorcock)
Bevis Frond 1. New River Head: (1991 Woronzow UK WOO 16CD) (AS
appears on Miskatonic Variations II and Solar Marmalade) 2. Sprawl: (1994
Woronzow UK WOO 22CD) (AS appears on Right On (Hippie Dream)) 3.
Superseeder: (1995 Woronzow UK WOO 26CD) (AS appears on six tracks) 4.
Live at the Great American Music Hall, SF: (1999 Woronzow UK WOO 39CD) (1999
Flydaddy US FLY-038) (plus other cassettes and ltd. releases)
Adrian Shaw 1. Aerial Dance (16-track cassette): (1990 Cyborg UK
Cyborg 1) 2. Tea for the Hydra: (1996 Woronzow UK WOO 27CD) 3. Displaced
Person: (1997 Woronzow UK WOO 29CD) 4. Head Cleaner: (1999 Woronzow UK WOO
32CD) (2000 Rubric US) (plus other singles and ltd. releases)
Bari Watts 1. Soulcatcher: (1997 Darkskies UK DS003CD)
Country Joe McDonald & Bevis Frond 1. Eat Flowers and Kiss
Babies: (1999 Woronzow UK WOO 33CD)
Tom Rapp 1. A Journal of the Plague Year: (1999 Woronzow UK WOO
35CD)
Mick Farren & the Deviants 1. The Deviant Have Left The
Planet: (1999 Captain Trip JP CDDEVIADISP)
Acid Jam 1. Acid Jam 2: (2000 Woronzow UK WOO 41 CD) 2000
Rubric US RUB 13)
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