Around the time my good buddy, Richie "LaBamba" Rosenberg asked me to produce and engineer "Grapefruit Moon, the Songs of Tom Waits," I had been listening to "Sinatra's Swingin' Sessions," which was recorded some time around 1960. I was fascinated by that album. I remember thinking,"How can this sound so good when the technology was so limited compared to what we have today?" The album cover features a photo taken at the session, and you can clearly see the way Nelson Riddle's orchestra was positioned in the studio, and even the types and positioning of mics. When you listen, you hear every instrument in the stereo field exactly as you see them in the photograph. And the overall sonic quality is so natural and open. It's recording 101: proper positioning of the proper mic for the job, a clean, simple signal path, and letting the musicians balance themselves and, well . . . PLAY!
In the pop music idiom, the producer usually plays a strong role in shaping the sound of a record. In fact, the recording studio has become another musical instrument, where the producer can shape, and reshape a sound, sometimes to the extent that it bears little or no resemblance to the original performance. In my opinion, jazz should be approached differently. When you have great songs, great orchestrations by a talented arranger like LaBamba, a soulful and adventurous singer like Southside Johnny, and great musicians, the producer's job should be to encourage the musicians to forget the studio technology that they've become accustomed to depending on - my job was to use my skills to capture the music that the arranger and the musicians were producing.
The 12 songs on "Grapefruit Moon - the songs of Tom Waits" were recorded over 4 sessions. The first two sessions were at Jon BonJovi's Carriage House, a wonderful studio - and Jon was a gracious host, (thank you). The other 2 sessions were at the legendary Avatar studio C in NYC. Each of the sessions was preceded by 2 or 3 rehearsals. Our basic unit was a 'traditional' 17-piece jazz big band, i.e. 4 trumpets, 4 trombones, 5 woodwinds, piano, bass, guitar, and drums. Woodwinds most often were configured as 2 alto saxes, 2 tenor saxes, and baritone sax. But the sax players often doubled on clarinet, bass clarinet, flute, alto flute, and soprano, per LaBamba's arrangement. Every effort was made to position the players and Johnny in the studio as they would be heard in the final mix, and to record the performances live.
There were struggles in getting the musicians and the arranger, who grew up with modern recording techniques, to embrace this old school approach. The 'simpler' way was, in many respects, harder for all of us. But in the end, everyone associated with the project agrees that the recordings and the performances are something special, both sonically and musically. I hope you will agree, too!
Dan Gralick
Producer
personnel: Southside Johnny (vocal, harmonica), Tom Waits (guest vocalist), LaBamba (orchestrations, conductor), Frank Elmo (alto, soprano, flute), Baron Raymonde (alto, flute), Erik Lawrence (alto, flute), Jack Bashkow (alto, flute, bass clarinet), Jerry Vivino (tenor, flute, alto flute, clarinet), Sam Bortka (tenor, flute, clarinet), Timmy Cappello (tenor, soprano), Eddie Manion (baritone sax, flute, clarinet), Brian Pastor (trombone), Nathan Mayland (trombone), Matt Bilyk (bass trombone), Jeff Bush (trombone), Ben Williams (trombone), Clarence Banks (trombone), Art Baron (trombone), Jonathan Shubert (bass trombone), Aaron Johnson (bass trombone), Marcus Rojas (tuba), Howard Johnson (tuba), Mark Pender (trumpet), Chris Anderson (trumpet), Mike Spengler (trumpet), John Barry (trumpet), Stu Satalof (trumpet), Scott Healy (piano, harpsichord), Michael Mancini (piano), Glenn Alexander (guitars, mandolin, dobro), Mike Merritt (bass), Shawn Pelton (drums, percussion), Ray Marchica (drums), Jeff Kazee (hammond B3), John Ballesteros (percussion), Sue Hadjapoulos (bongos), Sean Grissom (cello), Charlie Giordano (accordions), Bobby Bandiera (additional guitar).