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Stewart Copeland on Spirits In The Material World
Posted:
08 Feb 2011 20:16
by thedaner
This link came from Sébastien Ollivier over at LiSting. A video of Stewart talking about the reggae influenced make up of Spirits In The Material World.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p00dwkthEnjoy!
Re: Stewart Copeland on Spirits In The Material World
Posted:
08 Feb 2011 20:25
by moonstone
"Left hand, go and have a cup of tea"
I like that.
Re: Stewart Copeland on Spirits In The Material World
Posted:
08 Feb 2011 22:06
by cillae
Re: Stewart Copeland on Spirits In The Material World
Posted:
09 Feb 2011 00:04
by smax
nice, i'm looking forward to this prog.
re; the second clip, i'm not sure where i put the "ghost demos" with regard to what stew says about most songs having not been heard before the day of recording and their conception etc worked out there and then.... seems to me that gordo had pretty complete versions of invisible sun and spirits to play the band if those 'demos' are anything to go by...
Re: Stewart Copeland on Spirits In The Material World
Posted:
09 Feb 2011 00:41
by English-lion
And this is way I love The Police raw talent!!!!!!!!
Re: Stewart Copeland on Spirits In The Material World
Posted:
09 Feb 2011 01:19
by IndyGirl
Thanks for posting the links. It was interesting to hear how the songs were recorded so soon after writing the music.
Re: Stewart Copeland on Spirits In The Material World
Posted:
09 Feb 2011 21:06
by Horacio
Another English Language Lesson.
This time leaded by Composer (SC).
Re: Stewart Copeland on Spirits In The Material World
Posted:
09 Feb 2011 22:48
by smudge
'Left hand go have a cup of tea.' Marvelous!
I remember trying to dance in a 4/4 stylee to that song, and failing. It took a few listens to work out that there were several grooves, and then to assign appropriate limbs to each one. (Tea in the left hand would have been dangerous.) That song and much of the previous album were a fantastic rhythmic education.
Re: Stewart Copeland on Spirits In The Material World
Posted:
10 Feb 2011 04:39
by Kim
Less is more!
Re: Stewart Copeland on Spirits In The Material World
Posted:
11 Feb 2011 03:29
by Divemistress of the Dark
A quote from our man on similarity between music from the Mideast and reggae...
200%: In the documentary “Does Everyone Stare” about The Police you say your style comes from Lebanon. Can you tell a little more about that?
Stewart Copeland: Yes, the Baladi rhythm. It’s not like reggae, it comes from a completely different cultural source and in the roots there are no overlaps with the beginning of American music. Baladi and reggae, though, have two aspects in common. They share the use of ‘negative’ space, which is when the rhythm is constructed in a certain way – in that there is a gap in the construction which the drummer can fill with his own interpretation. The other aspect they share is that they emphasize the third beat in the bar – to which they gravitate – not emphasizing the second or fourth beat.
http://200-percent-blog.blogspot.com/20 ... eland.html
Re: Stewart Copeland on Spirits In The Material World
Posted:
12 Feb 2011 06:04
by visions
Thanks for sharing guys
I love the way Stewart expresses himself and as always lots of hand movement
Italy must be rubbing off on him
Re: Stewart Copeland on Spirits In The Material World
Posted:
13 Feb 2011 00:33
by smax
the programme was on and was good... all 90 mins of it. mmmmmmmm
http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b0 ... Britannia/and this was on before it; The Specials on Rock Goes To College
http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b0 ... _Specials/check out the threads and the beats...Live reggae concert from 1973, featuring the Cimarons, Winston Groovy, Dennis Alcapone, the Marvels, Nicky Thomas and the Pioneers:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b0 ... _Festival/
Re: Stewart Copeland on Spirits In The Material World
Posted:
13 Feb 2011 06:11
by Divemistress of the Dark
YOW. Thank you, sir. That all looks quite superlative...
Re: Stewart Copeland on Spirits In The Material World
Posted:
20 Feb 2011 04:02
by luddite lady
Gong darn it! I can watch the promos, but the actual program is "not available in (my) area." BBC4 is such a tease. And what's the point of having the Queen on all my money if I can't even watch some quality British programming?