Deodato talking about kool and the gang
KidProcrass
107 Posts
Been going through some RBMA sessions lately on my free time and this Eumir Deodato interview is pretty interesting other than being a little all other the place. One thing that kind of caught me off guard is around 50 min's into it he talks about his work with Kool and the Gang and he really makes them sound like amateurs which is odd to me because the first few albums are just so great. Anybody else thought this was a little odd especially that he's worked on some funky shit before ie super strut etc.
http://www.redbullmusicacademy.com/lectures/eumir-deodato--just-a-boy-from-rio
http://www.redbullmusicacademy.com/lectures/eumir-deodato--just-a-boy-from-rio
Comments
He did have a point with Kool & the Gang with cramming in multiple sections into the one song.
Take for instance Sea of Tranquility. Awesome song and it has that absolute killer section at the end which has no relation to the previous section.
They should made that into a completely separate song. That last section is so good it could have stood on its own as a separate song.
I saw Kool and The Gang a few months ago and even with the focus on late 70's 80 they were still really good and had every one up dancing.
I know these kind of guys pretty well, always bragging about how they lost money in this and that case and how everybody is trying to betray them and rip them off. Great writer & arranger, he's even entertaining when he's loosing his point while rambling on but I'm glad, I never had somebody like him as my boss.
On the other hand Deodato had probably worked on close to a hundred albums by the time he hooked up with Kool And The Gang. Maybe he hadn't toured as much, but he had way more experience making albums.
Yeah probably, but he sounds like he had to train a gang of Orang-Utans to play a straight beat, so it's hard to sympathize with him.
There's no shame in admitting that you don't know anything about Brazilian music, it's certainly less embarrassing than statements like this one.
Deodoato was probably the preeminent arranger of the Bossa Nova/Bossa Jazz scene and the go-to guy at the legendary Odeon house studio system in 60's Brazil
I'm sure dude's a jerk (I haven't watched the clip), and I love early/mid Kool And The Gang, but the idea that he wasn't a seasoned musician or that he only has one good song are serious head-scratchers.
Did he also make nice costumes for the Bossa Nova musicians to wear at the cabana?
Deodoodoo doesn't translate to me beyond the CTI break. Plus most of that pan-American tourist bullshit was mad soft.
Dude is talking about muthafuckin Kool & the Gang. I'd stab him with a rusty banana in person.
Yea, but being an arranger usually means you help someone organize their original ideas and then shit all over them like you were the genius. I admit he's a talented guy, but the LP's he arranged or played on for other artists are way ahead of anything he wrote and recorded himself. I've sold his solo records but kept the ones where he's a player or arranger and didn't even know it half the time.
Rick Rubin is amazing at helping artists get their ideas together, but he's not taking a dump on them like they suck and he's the real brains. He realizes they worked together for a reason.
The greatest arranger in all of Brazilian music
Can't shut down on Craig Hodges man. Let him live. Dude is no Deodato; Lupe Fiasco at worst..
In fact I would say it is common.
Not surprising. Stars often lack the knowledge and skill of the former. The former often lack the vision and talent of the later.
At the top of the heap of bad mouthers right now is Hal Blaine and the "wrecking crew'. They make me sick.
I love the donatodeodato record. Fairly common. I think HC might like it.
The music starts at the 1:00 mark.
Easily as sophisticated as anything Henry Mancini or Neil Hefti was doing.
And the lineup is unfuckwithable http://www.allmusic.com/album/os-catedr??ticos-ataque-mw0000538584/credits