A REAL JOB
by Neil Peart
[ Modern Drummer - February 1987 ]
I don't know why it is that so many people think
that it must be a great thing to work for a rock band. Mind you, I don't
know why so many people think that it must be great to be in a rock band!
But there you go: Like the appliance salesman who inspired the "Money For
Nothing" song, people like to think that lots of other people have it easy
and only they have to work for it! As one who has held quite a variety
of "straight" jobs - from weeding potato fields to selling tractor parts
- let me enlighten any who feel that there are plenty of jobs more difficult
than being a serious musician. (Emphasis on serious.) I mean, how many
other jobs would people work at for ten years or so for less than nothing
- just to be doing it - and even then feel lucky to be able to make a living
at it? Not doctors or lawyers - maybe Indian chiefs.
If one believes
the people who claim to know about such things, a musician ranks about
third as the most stressful of jobs. I believe it could be true. If one
is serious, the pressure of creativity and the drive for technical excellence
- to be delivered on demand - is very great. That being the case, working
for a musician must rank close behind.
I would like to try to shed some light on what goes one behind the
bright lights that shine on a successful musician and on the nature of
the job Larry Allen, in particular. Larry looks after my own equipment,
with all that is involved in that simple job description.
Larry has been with me now for about eight years. He began as a friend
without any experience as a drum tech, but with a willingness to learn
and a personality sufficiently opposite to mine to permit us to work as
closely together as such a relationship demands. Here, then, is a picture
of the way that job and relationship function today, as viewed on Rush's
recent Power Windows tour.
As it did for all of us in the Rush organisation, the tour began for
Larry literally months before the first concert. While we in the band were
still in the studio putting the finishing touches to the album, Larry was
already busy arranging to have the drumkit refinished, checking on new
equipment in which Yours Truly had expressed an interest, and checking
over our inventory of spare heads, sticks, cymbals, and parts. Though we
dealt directly with Tama, Zildjian, and Pro-Mark, many of our special needs
were still filled by the Percussion Centre (Fort Wayne, Indiana), with
whom I've dealt for about ten years now. Even in the days when we were
pretty small- time, no matter what I needed, they came up with it - even
if they had to invent it themselves!
While in the studio, I had been reading about the new Simmons EPROM
unit, the SDS9 modules, and the new generation of pads, all of which I
wanted to try out. I called Larry at his home in San Antonio, and left
it to him to get all the information for me.
We had used a lot of special effects and sampled sounds on the album
that I wanted to be able to reproduce live, such as the African drums on
"Mystic Rhythms" and the "voice drums" on many of the other songs. The
EPROM unit looked like the perfect answer to that problem, with the ability
to make our own digital chips of any sound we needed. Larry arranged with
Doug Hill, the Simmons representative in Toronto, to acquire the necessary
hardware and to help us get it all going in conjunction with our existing
SDS5 and SDS7 systems.
The next undertaking was rehearsals for the video of "The Big Money."
There may not seem much point in rehearsing for a modern rock video, when
the performance is just "synced" to the record, but of course for a drummer,
there's no faking it; you're either playing or you're not. For myself -
I'm playing! So we rented a rehearsal hall for a few days, and Larry set
up the kit and my rehearsal sound system and headphones. It was here that
he learned that the new paint job hadn't set properly before shipping,
and had turned all "orange peel" instead of smooth and shiny. What a drag
- the one time of the year when you want it to look its absolute best from
close up. Too late to do anything about it now.
I spent the next few days playing along with the song again and again
to make sure that I could reproduce all of the fills and patterns exactly
in sync, with the proper feel and energy. Apart from preparing me for the
video, it was also good general practice.
After that, of course, Larry had to tear down the kit again, and set
it up early in the morning at the file studio, polishing up the hardware
and each of the cymbals. After a day as long and tedious as only a video
shoot can be, he got to pack them up again and send them back to Tama for
yet another refinish.
At this point, I took off for a real getaway: a bicycling trip through
north-eastern China. When I returned, I was all excited about some big
temple blocks and small Chinese cymbals I'd seen there. I asked Larry to
see if he could find anyone who dealt in obscure eastern instruments. I
try to keep things interesting for him!
Two weeks before
official band rehearsals began, Larry and I started to iron out our new
technology while rehearsing the old and new songs (giving me a chance to
build up my calluses). We had Doug Hill over to help us make all the new
chips we needed and found that we wouldn't be able to replace my old SDS5
sounds with the SDS7 modules. We had to find a way to switch between the
two, as well as a way to trigger a number of different effects from the
one pad that I could conveniently reach from the front kit. Larry created
the new "Sidney" mini-pad, a miniature trigger that we could mount between
my front toms. We also began work on a switching box to save Larry all
the manual repatching between pads and modules. The ideas were coming together;
it was just a question of closing the gap between theory and practice!
Every day I would come in and play through each of the songs a few
times, playing along with the tapes. Since each of those performances represents
me at my strongest and best, remembering and keeping up with them is good
practice indeed. When I finished, I would leave Larry with a list of things
to sort out for the next day: things to pick up, things to fix, and things
to improve upon. He modified some bicycle racing helmets to hold my headphones
in place for the two songs in which I used them; this was a big improvement
on the baseball caps we had been using previously (perhaps even better
than Keith Moon's method of taping them to his head [!]), plus I got to
feel like Greg Lemond winning the Tour de France when I wore them!
When the third week came and we began rehearsing as a band, the fun
really began. Larry had to prepare a list of cues for each song: Simmons
settings, pad repatches, Clap Trap settings, EPROM settings, and which
keyboards and sequencers I needed to hear in my monitors. (When I am expected
to play in sync with these things, they become necessities rather than
luxuries and have to appear at the right times.) We prepared a list of
"emergency" alternatives if any of the Simmons programs failed to appear,
and Larry began the elaborate process of choreographing his moves through
the two-hour set - when the riser rotated for the back kit, when I needed
the headphones or mallets for the glockenspiel or crotales - as well as
recording all the above setting changes and monitor cues. For all that
he made a little set of cue cards for each song, with all of the information
and diagrams on them. (His making a mistake can be just as disastrous to
the performance as my own not-infrequent mistakes!)
During the last week of rehearsals, we moved out again to film another
video, this time for "Mystic Rhythms." Once again, it was an endless day
of "hurry up and wait," made challenging for Larry only by being called
upon to perform some tricks with the rotating riser, spinning and stopping
it on cue - but from behind a curtain where he couldn't even see if it
was stopping in the right spot or not. Fun stuff. Then it was up to Larry
to tear the kit down again and pack it up late in the night, only to set
it all up again early the next morning for the band to start rehearsing.
The tour began
in Portland, Maine, and we set up there three days before the show, for
full-scale rehearsals and last-minute refinements. For Larry, the headaches
were large and numerous. The splitter box between the Simmons brains was
not working properly, the SDS5 sounds weren't coming up properly, the Clap
Trap was picking up radio frequencies and producing frightening noises,
the drum boards on which he sets up the kit had somehow warped like crazy,
one of the cases containing our Simmons pads had been left behind and he
had to scramble to find some other ones (at 8 o'clock on a Sunday night,
of course!), and the monitor feeds from the keyboards were not coming through
properly. Oh. Perfect. But it was all in a day's work - or three days'
work.
But now - it's showtime! The houselights go down. The crowd shouts
a deafening welcome as the "Three Stooges" intro tape starts and the curtain
goes up. Pull back the bass drum "door" and light a path down the ramp.
Here they come. Get him settled in behind the kit. Then, behind the monitor
board, triple-check the levels, get ready to bring up the sequencer for
the chorus of "The Spirit Of Radio," and keep a constant eye up there for
any problems or that "look" over his shoulder. Take a deep breath and concentrate
- no mistakes tonight. Let's start the tour with a perfect one. It's tough
when how good a job you do depends on so many other people and things:
how the electronics behave, what kind of night he has, how the acoustics
are, will the feeds come through from the sequencers and the projector?
Did you overlook just one of those thousand-and-one little things he'll
give you the "look" for? Take another deep breath.
The first few songs give you a chance to concentrate on the monitors,
before things get crazy when we get to the new songs. For "The Big Money,"
you need the EPROM ready with the "jingling coins" sample, the SDS7 patched
to the right module for the "voice drum" sample, the Clap Trap on the right
setting, and the monitors ready for the sequencer. And he'll be wanting
the towel and a drink about now...
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This page last updated 11/05/2003