Suzanne Vega summer Tour Dates

Suzanne Vega |  Tour

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Line 6 Artist Gerry Leonard Helps Make Rock History on David Bowie’s The Next Day

Line 6 Artist Gerry Leonard Helps Make Rock History on David Bowie’s The Next Day

For the legions of Bowie fans earth wide, The Next Day proved to be a record worth waiting for. After nearly a decade of radio silence following the 2003-2004 Reality tour, Bowie shocked the music world when—on his 66th birthday—he announced plans to release his 24th studio album. Created with help from Line 6-powered guitarist Gerry Leonard, producer Tony Visconti and other longtime collaborators, The Next Day is already being hailed as one of Bowie’s finest works—and perhaps the greatest comeback record in rock history. But, as Leonard found out, the road to a landmark album can take some surprising twists and turns.

“Schtum!”
After several years passed without mention of a new album, many of Bowie’s close friends and band mates assumed that the legendary rock star was enjoying a well-deserved retirement. So for Gerry Leonard, the invitation to record demos came as a complete surprise. “I received an email from Bowie with the subject line ‘schtum!,’” recalls Leonard. “It seemed he was hatching a top secret plan. He asked if I was available—and you can imagine what my answer was!”

Bowie’s vision for the album was clear from day one—however the songs didn’t take shape until Leonard, Visconti and other musicians joined Bowie in New York for a series of hush-hush sessions. “David has a very strong sense of what makes a good rock song, so the foundations and basic outlines are set,” relates Leonard. “There’s a directness and visceral energy to his initial broad strokes. He starts with something really strong and then takes it into the stratosphere.”

In the Studio with Bowie
For the initial sessions, Bowie’s rough demos served as a launching point for the band. “He likes to work fast so the pressure is on,” says Leonard. “You just trust your instincts and allow the inspiration to come forward. It’s almost a form of subconscious reaction. And that’s where the most surprising and beautiful stuff lies.”

The Next Day is a guitar-heavy record, with Leonard’s riffs providing the foundation for many of the thirteen tracks. “David really loves the guitar,” says Leonard. “He’s the only singer who’s ever asked me to turn the amp up.” During the sessions, Bowie encouraged improvisation, allowing his band to develop their own parts. For Leonard, this led to some excellent results, such as the hard-driving opening riff on “The Stars Are Out Tonight.”

“Most of the licks came to me right away the first time we played the songs,” explains Leonard. “When we did overdubs I was able to sculpt the licks more around David’s lyrics.”

On tracking days, the band followed an efficient schedule, arriving at 11am to review charts, dial in sounds and figure out the ch-ch-changes. After capturing a few practice takes, they’d review the results and make any adjustments suggested by Bowie and producer Tony Visconti. Three more takes to finish the song, and everyone was done by 5pm. “Almost all of The Next Day was recorded live,” explains Leonard. “You get such great chemistry that way.”

The quick pace of the sessions didn’t allow much time for overdubs. “We never belabored the parts,” says Leonard. “If it went down quickly, fine—otherwise we moved on.” To embellish the tracks, Leonard returned later for separate overdub sessions. The solos and sonic layers he added contribute significantly to the rich, textured feel of tracks like “Where Are We Now?,” “Heat,” and other songs.

For production of The Next Day, Leonard relied heavily upon his Line 6 stompboxes. “The DL4 is one of my desert island pedals,” states Leonard. “There are a bunch of loops on the album that I recorded with the DL4. I also used the M9 pedal board for synth guitar sounds and programmable tremolo patches. It was great to dial in the tempo and play choppy guitar textures in time and on the fly.”

Boss of Me
As The Next Day began to take shape, Leonard had the privilege of writing several tracks with Bowie, including “Boss of Me.” Leonard explains: “David wanted to work on a few songs so one morning I started playing this riff. The amps were cranked up and I could feel his energy. I threw down a beat in Reason and David jumped in with melody and lyrics. Right away he came up with the line ‘how a small town girl like you, could be the boss of me,’ and that became the song. We wrapped it up and he left with a rough mix in his back pocket.”

It took over two years for The Next Day to be produced, with several significant lapses between sessions. “At times I worried that Bowie was shelving the project,” shares Leonard. “When the line went dead for a few months I figured ‘oh well, he’s not digging the stuff. He’s going to bag it and go record a banjo record in Botswana.’”

The Next Chapter
The Next Day was released to critical acclaim and chart-topping commercial success—so what’s next for Bowie, Leonard and the rest of the band? Rumors have been swirling about a possible tour, though Bowie himself has remained silent on the issue. Should a tour materialize, Leonard is ready to hit the road: “My racks are packed—just waiting for the call!” he says.

Until then, Leonard looks forward to spending some time with his new Line 6 Dream Rig. “It’s an incredible setup,” he states. “James Tyler Variax has the potential to become a new breed of instrument, given the possibility for alternate tunings and cool processing where even the knobs on the guitar can become controllers.”

“I’ve also been really digging into the POD HD500 lately,” continues Leonard. “My goal is to make it my fly rig or round town rig. The idea of having one box programmed and tailored to the specific demands of a particular show is really interesting to me. So far, I’ve done a rock show in Zurich with Aimee Mann producer Paul Bryan, an ambient outdoor show in New York with Laurie Anderson and Steve Buscemi, and an indie club gig with Nina Nastasia—all with the HD500 at the center. Very different each time, and POD was solid and really versatile.”

Visit gerryleonardspookyghost.com to hear about upcoming performances, projects and more.

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Suzanne Vega, Club Helsinki Hudson, 6.22.13

Suzanne Vega at Club Helsinki Hudson 6.22.13 (by Seth Rogovoy)
Singer-songwriter suzanne vega
rocks it more like Lou Reed than Joni Mitchell

Club Helsinki Hudson
Saturday, June 22, 2013

Review by Seth Rogovoy

(HUDSON, N.Y.) – Suzanne Vega too often gets tagged with the Joni Mitchell brush, as do almost all post-Joni female, guitar-playing, poetic singer-songwriters. It’s unfair to them all but especially so to Vega, who only bears superficial similarities to Mitchell, and who over the course of her 30-year-career has certainly established her own voice and approach.

That being said, there is another relevant comparison to a forebear that can be made, one that doesn’t take away any of Vega’s originality, but that helps to contextualize her work and might even enhance a listener’s appreciation of what it is she does, especially in light of live performances like the one at Club Helsinki Hudson on Saturday night.

Vega is more the child of Lou Reed than of Joni Mitchell. Like Reed, who began his career laboring in a post-Brill Building-era song factory, Vega is as much a pop craftsman as she is a post-folkie. Like Reed, her songs – words and melodies – are heavily rhythm- and riff-based. Like Reed, she is a taut observer of urban street life – a street poet, really. Like Reed, she makes the most of her limited vocal instrument, having learned how to master it by punching out the notes and syllables with a minimum of sustain or melisma, turning those limitations into their own sort of art form.

And as she showed at Helsinki, like Reed, she knows that the accompaniment of a skilled electric guitarist can provide enough ballast to turn what is otherwise ostensibly a solo performance into a full-fledged rock and pop show, which is what the audience was treated to on Saturday night.

Vega was at her most engaging in the intimate setting at Helsinki, sharing anecdotes and observations that illuminated her compositions, or even poked fun at herself. She also offered a generous selection of her “greatest hits” such as they are, kicking off the show with “Marlene on the Wall,” “When Heroes Go Down,” “Small Blue Thing” and “Caramel,” as strong a four-song run as just about any singer-songwriter alive could offer, making at least one listener wonder why more people haven’t chosen to cover Vega’s compositions that connect the dots between Cole Porter, Burt Bacharach and the aforementioned Lou Reed.

She displayed her versatility with quieter lyrical numbers like “Gypsy” – written, she told us, after a summer romance at a nearby Adirondack summer camp – and harder-rocking material, including “Blood Makes Noise,” a song about “fear and anxiety” through which accompanist Jerry Leonard spread Sonic Youth-style guitar noise, painting Vega’s theme in colors of guitar distortion.

Vega premiered several new songs that suggested he hasn’t lost a step in the writing department; upon first hearing, “The Fool’s Complaint,” “I Never Wear White,” “Don’t Uncork What You Can’t Contain” and a number that she claimed was inspired by the Hudson River School of painters rank with Vega’s best material.

Other favorites she offered were “Frank and Ava,” her recounting of the tempestuous love affair between Frank Sinatra and Ava Gardner, given a punk-rock treatment; “Left of Center,” also landing her squarely in New York City street-poet-rocker territory; “The Soldier and the Queen” and “The Man Who Played God,” another song inspired by an artist (in this case, Pablo Picasso).

Vega concluded her main set with her greatest hit, “Luka,” and a version of “Tom’s Diner” inspired as much by DNA’s famous hip-hop remix version as by her original, with Leonard perfecting the vibe and with Vega busting some terrific dance moves.

She took an audience request for “(I’ll Never Be) Your Maggie May,” a song that she was clearly unprepared to tackle. But she confessed that right up front, and a fan was right there at the moment she blanked on a lyric, and Vega caught it and ran with it, putting the perfect cap on a terrific show.

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Friendly Ghost What’s next for Bowie guitarist, Gerry Leonard?

Friendly Ghost What’s next for Bowie guitarist, Gerry Leonard? 
by Richard Byrne Reilly

Recording the album with Bowie was an exacting exercise even for the most competent musicians. “Bowie,” Leonard says, “knows when you’re bullshitting.”

Guitarist Gerry Leonard was in the back of a livery cab driven by his friend Carlos, a one-armed Dominican, when his cell rang from a blocked number. 

It was 2003, and Leonard was on his way to a gig in Manhattan. Looking at the blocked call, the guitarist had a hunch to pick it up. 

He’s glad he did. 

“It was David. He said, ‘do you want to be musical director?’ I couldn’t believe it.”

“So I said, ‘can I think about it?’”

“He said, ‘yes.’ And I went home and I think started meditating,” says Leonard, a convert to Buddhism. 

David. Better known as Bowie. The one who has sold an estimated 140 million albums in a career spanning nearly half a century. A global music visionary who many had, quite literally, given up for dead.

It’s 10 years since that phone call, and Leonard is riding high. Bowie’s new record, his first in a decade, The Next Day, released March 8, has climbed the charts to number one and is being hailed as one of the greatest comebacks in the history of rock and roll.

And it’s Leonard’s sonically atmospheric guitar work that has helped define the record that is being hailed as Bowie’s best since 1980’s Scary Monsters (and Super Creeps).

“We’re all very happy with the album,” Leonard told Wine & Dine Magazine recently near his house in upstate New York, where he lives with his wife and seven year-old daughter in a converted railroad depot.

The last few weeks have been a whirlwind for the Dublin-born guitarist. The music trades have been calling with interview requests. So have his friends, many of them famous musicians and producers, all to offer their congratulations on a record that more than any other in the recent Bowie canon harkens back to his best-guitar driven rock songs in nearly two decades. 

Not bad for an Irish musician who arrived in New York in 1994 with big dreams, a few guitars and little money.

Leonard, a slim man with a quick wit whose mop of silver hair resembles one of Andy Warhol’s platinum silver wigs, also played keyboards and contributed vocals on the new record. 

Leonard began working with Bowie on The Next Day two years ago, when he invited the English singer to write songs at his home studio outside New Paltz, New York. 

Leonard says he lured Bowie by telling him he had a killer espresso machine. 

“He pulled up to the house in, I think it was, a Ford rental car. He had a map in his hand. I had repainted the mailbox in big letters after the numbers had fallen off because I didn’t want him to get lost. We worked on three songs in my Pro-Tools studio and he even read a story to my daughter,” Leonard says. 

The Next Day was recorded in total secrecy at New York’s Magic Shop studio, a non-descript warren of rooms in the SoHo neighborhood. The musicians on the record, in addition to producer Tony Visconti, took a vow of secrecy. It worked. Nothing was leaked to the press. 

Under the radar, Bowie and his team sketched out demos sporadically over a nearly three-year period. Bowie would take the demos and disappear for months, then resurface with new lyrics and ideas. He would call Leonard, or lead guitarist Earl Slick or bassist Gail Ann Dorsey, and have them down to the studio to play their parts. 

Twenty-eight songs were recorded during the sessions. Fourteen ended up on The Next Day, along with bonus tracks. 

The album’s first single, Where Are We Now, was released on January 8, Bowie’s 66th birthday. It quickly became one of the fastest selling songs on iTunes. 

Bowie’s reflective on the album’s second single, The Stars (Are Out Tonight), as he croons about fame and the corrosive effect it has on sunglass-wearing movie stars.

Leonard and Bowie co-wrote Boss of Me, a droning, fast-tempo rocker with driving power chords. In it, Bowie sings about his preoccupation, perhaps obsession, of being dominated by a girl of limited means. 

The strongest track on the album is I’d Rather be High, a song driven by catchy guitar licks, a weaving bass line and Bowie’s discernible falsetto. The lyrics grapple with a veteran conflicted about killing an enemy he can identify with. 

Recording the album with Bowie was an exacting exercise even for the most competent musicians. “Bowie,” Leonard says, “knows when you’re bullshitting.” 

“When you’re with him you gotta bring something to the table when he starts singing. When he goes to work it comes together very fast. David brings the beginning and the end, and you bring the middle.”

Bowie is not doing interviews for the album. So there are few ways -publicly at least- to accurately gauge what ‘The Thin White Duke’ thinks of the new record, whose artwork features a re-worked cover of Bowie’s ubiquitous 1977 album Heroes.

Bowie respectfully declined an interview request from Wine & Dine. 

“I think he’s happy it’s been so well received. He really doesn’t need to talk about it to the media; he’s re-writing the book and doing it his own way,” says Leonard

Platinum selling singer Suzanne Vega has worked with Leonard since 2001, and says that the guitarist quickly made a name for himself on the New York music scene in the 1990s. His textured guitar chops and effects wizardry has lured the likes of, not only Vega, but Laurie Anderson, Roger Waters, Rufus Wainwright and Duncan Sheik.

For Vega, Leonard has been a lifesaver. Just two days before September 11, 2001, Vega took a nasty fall on her bicycle, busting her arm. She couldn’t play guitar. She had a record coming out in two weeks and a tour booked. She was, as she describes, “frantic.”

“I was desperate to figure out how to do this. I knew Gerry knew my songs, and could play my guitar parts just like I could,” Vega says. 

“So I got him for the line-up, he’s that versatile.” 

Leonard played on Vega’s next album Beauty and Crime.

“He did the record with me and I wanted him for the tour but he turned me down because he was with Rufus Wainwright,” Vega laughs. “I was like, ‘oh, OK, fair enough.”

Leonard’s friends call him ‘Ghost’. Or ‘Irish’. And it was clear meeting with Gerry over a two-day period recently how these attributes – a formidable sense of humor and an effortless ability to get along others – have helped him navigate the cutthroat world of the New York music scene. 

Just ask composer and artist Laurie Anderson. 

“It’s kind of a cliché, but its true that the Irish people have certain musical skills, and Gerry has a lot of those skills as well,” says Anderson who recruited Leonard to play on her 1995 album Bright Red. 

In fact, it was Anderson who took Leonard under her wing when he arrived in New York. Anderson mentored and introduced Leonard to the right people and then utilized what she calls his undeniable talent in the studio. 

“The way he uses processing and combines it with these amazing chops, plus his skills at pushing buttons, he has a very unusual musical capability.” 

Leonard first crossed paths with Bowie in 2001 at the now-shuttered Looking Glass Studio in SoHo where both musicians were working on different projects. 

Not long after that meeting, Leonard was playing in a psychedelic guitar arrangement with his band Spooky Ghost at a tiny club in the lower east side of Manhattan and who, but Bowie was sitting in a shabby lounge chair near center stage. 

“The place had 50 seats. I got word that David was coming down to the show. And it was great. He was heckling me from the audience which helped break the ice,” Leonard says. 

Then, one day after a “walk in the woods” Leonard returned home to a surprise. “There was a light on the answering machine and I pushed ‘play.’ It was Bowie. He said ‘Hey, its David. You wanna play on a track?’” 

Leonard ended up playing guitar on five songs on Bowie’s 2002 Heathen album and then embarked on a short tour, playing 38 gigs in Europe and the States. 

Bowie called Leonard back to the studio to play on his follow-up record, Reality. The album was well received by critics. The band, with Leonard and Earl Slick on guitar, embarked on a world tour.

But, the tour was cut short. In July 2004, Bowie suffered a mild heart attack backstage at the Hurricane Festival in Scheesel, Germany. 

“That was very scary,” Leonard says of the incident. 

Bowie has not performed live since. And he’s not likely to either. Next Day producer Tony Visconti, who has worked with the singer since the late 1960’s, said recently that Bowie has no interest in hitting the road. 

Leonard would like to tour with Bowie, but he isn’t pushing it.

“As a guitarist, I’m really very proud to have worked on this record. It’s a total validation of what I do, and its good for the soul,” says the Ghost. “It’s like ‘maybe you’re doing something right.”

 

by Richard Byrne Reilly
http://magazine.wineluxury.com/sf/profiler/2013/5/6/friendly-ghost

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