35 Burst results for "Eddie"

AP News Radio
Atlanta rookie Shuster allows only 1 hit as Braves edge Mariners 3-2 for series win
"The Atlanta Braves behind the stellar pitching of rookie Jared Shuster defeated Seattle three two and gained a series win over the Mariners. Schuster went 6 innings, yielded just one hit, a solo home run to Jared Kellen, walked only one and struck out 7. Braves manager Brian snicker. That's a grind going out there for 6 innings against a team like this and but that was awesome. Trapezo started homered for Atlanta mad Olsen and Eddie Rosario also drove in runs for the braves. George Kirby went 7 for the Mariners giving up 7 hits in the losing cause. Gary mckillop's Atlanta.

The Dan Bongino Show
GOP House Judiciary Pokes Fun at Rep. Linda Sanchez's 'Real' Twitter
"By the way touche to the House judiciary GOP account at judiciary GOP who found an account Linda Sanchez on Twitter with like two followers Linda sans three one three 9 9 And said wow I didn't realize the Sanchez was so magical because the account tweeted out Donald Trump is the greatest president of my lifetime Touche daddy O touche It's legit Yeah totally She says Linda Sanchez Jim What else do you need I mean Jim's like questioning It's not Linda Sam Come on Jim Get with the program I mean it says Linda Sanchez right there I mean no one else's named Linda Sanchez That's just her Like Marcus Allen I mean mark is no one in Marcus I mean Alan Albert last name Allen who has that last name It's like one of them out there I mean come on guy Marcus That was Eddie Murphy's name in boomerang Okay Remember earth they can't Okay I was like wow that she was rough

The Doug Collins Podcast
Frank Meyers Transports Us Back in Time With "I Got Mexico"
"Play it a little bit if I got Mexico for us? Okay. Let me grab my guitar. I think this is with Andy Raven. Number one, and it was a lot of oysters. This goes back to 84. And so for those of you in the audience, I was a senior in high school. Freshman in college, so let's put this together. So this was Eddie Raven's first number one record as an artist. Yep. I just got tired of that same old job count fighting that freeway Mark I bet you never thought I'd really go I never get as far as next a cold. But if even learn to speak the language down the beach drinking Coke and rum you would know me with the score them glow soaked sun in Mexico I meet and ride and I'm living good I'm doing everything I said I was I shouldn't have left a long time ago he's got you I got mixing oh my God, that's so good. Right, I mean amazing brother. Thank you. And this is why I do what I do is what I love having y'all alone is why I love doing this is because when you started playing you started singing out there, my mind went back to a hundred yards from where I'm sitting right now where my mom and I grew up and being at the same high school hearing that on the radio and my mind went back to all of those thoughts at that point. That is just so cool.

The Doug Collins Podcast
Frank Meyers Shares His Surprising Journey to Songwriting Success
"How is being an artist? And basically as you started, I think, probably more as an artist and I'm sure riding song as well. Do you think that influenced you in your writing style? Was it mainly you were writing more for yourself and other people liked it, talk to us a little bit, you know, for the first out there who likes to perform, but also has that little bit of riding that has that riding side in them as well. Well, as I told you, I didn't come to town as a writer. I came as a guitar player, but I had put some melodies to other people's lyrics when I come to town. And getting the job with Eddie, Eddie was such a great and is such a great songwriter. You know, I just wanted to show him a few of the songs that I had put melodies to. And he liked my melodies, and it kind of went from there. We ended up we ended up writing together. We went and we hoping to show for Tanya talker down in New Orleans. In October, I guess of 81 and she had a title that she wanted Eddie to write with her and it ended up being the three of us writing the song and it was called changes. And that became the title cut of her first aristo album when eris the first moved to town. And that happened around November, I guess. And during that time, the guy that produced her was David malloy, who produced that a rabbit, so I met David and he really loved the song changes, and he said, we're going to be cutting rabbit in a few months. If you got anything, bring it over. I said, great. I will. I didn't have anything at the time, but between, you know, within the next few months, I ended up writing you and I and I took that over there and what I've written as a duet initially

The Doug Collins Podcast
From Ohio to Country: How Frank Meyers Found His Southern Roots
"Us a little bit about yourself, though, growing up, Ohio, native. Talk a little bit about that, and then how you got into really country music, because you know, if you look at it, it's a lot of the old song from crystal news shows up. Didn't realize you had northern Ohio plays. Didn't think he's going to be a country guy. How do you get how did you get country out of Ohio? Well, you know, my family is from Kentucky, my dad was from Kentucky, my mother is from actually, she was born. And raised over in east Tennessee. And so they met to Dayton Ohio during the big boom, the industrial boom back in the day, and my dad was a champion fiddle player and guitar player and singer and he had a voice like Jim Reeves and my grandmother was a 5 string banjo player in the style of grandpa Jones. And so I grew up in a musical family. I mean, I heard music totally from when I popped out and I left home. So I started playing guitar about 9. My dad was of course a big country fan. Drove Jones, buck Owens, del Reeves, Jim Reeves, Eddie Arnold, you know, all of that. And my sister was a big Motown fan, so I heard a lot growing up. You know, I remember in first grade watching The Beatles on Ed Sullivan Show. Oh, there you go. So I grew up in the probably the best musical time you could ever grow up. As far as diversity and the stylists and things that we're in the music business back then, there were everybody was a stylist for the most part and there was no pro tools. There were no computers helping the singers out back then. You had to be able to sing and

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast
Joe Piscopo Unpacks the Disgraceful State of New York Politics
"Talked us about serious crimes in Manhattan in the last three years. When I came up like we were just talking about in New York in the late 70s before New York mayor Giuliani became married. It was UD east after double up to go across the Larry David and I would have to double up, for example, to go to get a sandwich at a place. You'd go in pez, right? You couldn't survive if you didn't. It was as simple as that in New York. We're right back and by the way, and you couldn't go from the comedy clubs in midtown to down to the village without taking a buddy with you. It was that dangerous. We're right back where we started. And now for this guy, and I speak on behalf of a Democrats independent libertarians, Republicans, all of us were appalled at what Alvin Bragg did because this is it in a nutshell. If you're a criminal and you stick a gun and someone's face and you don't pull the trigger, you stick a gun in a bodega owner, a hard worker bodega owner, and then if you don't and you get they catch you, that you know what? Bragg would get that charged out from a felony that to a misdemeanor, and that guy would be back on the street again. It's a cyclical problem in New York, New York can't get its mojo back because of Alvin Bragg. You know, even the mayor, like him or not, he's trying. Now, even governor hulk will now say it, we can't let these criminals back on the streets. Why? Because you're talking about it said, I'm talking about it every morning. You can't there's got to be consequences. It's why we have all these shootings. These guys are running rampant and brag and all these Soros funded DAs exactly what you said are bringing down and slowly crumbling all the great big cities. And I can't figure it out. So when he goes after Donald Trump, you know, everybody, Democrats, the far left woke socialists, even they said there's nothing there.

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast
Why Was Frank Sinatra So Unique? Joe Piscopo Explains
"Ask you, I mean, we've got this image of what you do on Sundays and how you celebrate Frank Sinatra, the music of Frank Sinatra. I'm just going to stop for a second. Why was he so unique because he doesn't fit into the classic mold of the crooner. He wasn't the classic look, he wasn't the teeny barber heartthrob, his delivery emotionally. The voice was everything for me. You know him far better than anyone else because he's paid tribute to him at every week. Talk to us a little bit about Sinatra and why to this day across every spectrum age group demographic, he just still has that like Elvis. He just has that grip on us. That's right, exactly. You just described it because he wasn't a he didn't have the movie star looks. Think about it. He just had a, he was a guy. He was a guy's guy. When alpha males were okay to be alpha male. And he had swagger, and he owned it. And as I study him more and more on that Sundays with Sinatra's show, I could see and I go down and I could hear in his voice. He would take a song. And herein lies why people still find him. I think so appealing. He performed a play, took that three minutes of a song. And it became an epic a piece of theater. Yeah. And when you hear it, he every nuance of every lyric, he would caress it, and feel it in his heart and in his soul. And

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast
Joe Piscopo Describes His Amazing Journey to SNL
"Improv. I heard that the original cast was leaving Saturday Night Live. That's Gilda Radner. That's Chevy Chase. That's John Belushi. That's Billy Murray. My hero, Danny aykroyd. And they were looking for cast to replace the original Saturday live. And I wanted nothing to do about it. NBC did a go round of all the comedy clubs. They never picked anybody. I got a call from a friend who was writing on SNL on the new SNL. He got a writing job. He told gene dominion produced at the time. You got to see Joe Piscopo. He does impressions. I would do impressions. I was doing the Frank Sinatra president on stage. I would do Tom Snyder. Remember Tom Snyder said that day was great. And I would do all of that on the stick. So they brought me to NBC. I went up to the 17th floor. I did an in studio kind of audition for gene domain and she said, okay, you know what? We're going to put you on tape. We're going to put you on tape. Come in this date. So I bypassed a lot of auditions, but I went in, I got down to the last few hundred, and I went into what it was David Letterman studio in the 6 a, I believe it was at NBC. And I just riffed on camera. Now, I was so cocky back then. I was young number one, number two. Who wants to replace the original cast of Saturday Night Live? But I did the old man, this is Sinatra. I did all the impressions. They left. They liked it. They hired me as a utility guy. They needed somebody to do the impressions right there. They hired me. And so we went in. And if I could cut to, we did about ten shows on SNL. Gilbert Gottfried was in the cast. There was some great chemical. Billy, the gili, I came up with Gilead to comedy club. Then as we were casting the show about to mount the show on the air, I walked up to the 17th floor one day and someone said, I want you to meet a kid from Long Island comedy clubs. I was in New York City comedy clubs. We didn't know the Long Island comedy clubs at the time. I walked in and as a young kid sitting down and they said, Joe, I want you to meet Eddie Murphy. And I sat with this young kid who was 19 years old, 19 years old. And I immediately talked about connection, you were gracious enough to make the introduction. And the connect with Eddie, the laughing, we just joked around, what are we doing here? We just hit it off.

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast
Sebastian Welcomes the Iconic Joe Piscopo to the Show
"Brother from another mother, Joe Piscopo. Welcome to America first one on one. It's great to see you, doctor. Yeah, we did. It's amazing. We met. We first met the hallways of a.m. 9 70. I think we just kind of had to click. You're a fun guy. I mean, you know, there's so much crazy, serious news, but it's nice to see you on a great sense of humor, my friend. Right, I had to do that. That was just too irresistible, but you know, I'm a regular guest on your show. I don't usually have radio hosts for a radio host for our one on one deep dive, but there's so much that you can share with our millions of listeners across the nation. I think we had to do this. So first things first, let's find out a little bit about this man. I can tell you who doesn't know how to spell Jersey. He spells it with a Z so follow him on Twitter at JR ZY Jersey Joe Piscopo. His website is Joe Piscopo U.S., but you haven't always been a radio guy. So for those who are unfamiliar with your Hollywood years and then your comedic stardom on SNL, would you give us a kind of encapsulated life to date? How did you get to being on a.m. 9 70 in New York? And what did you do before that, Joe? You know, when I went to college, I went to a little school in Jacksonville, said I couldn't get in anywhere else. I was the worst student in the state of New Jersey, you know. So my father, God rest his soul, said, look, there's a school that will accept you as the Jacksonville Florida is a little school called Jones college and they had radio stations. They had four radio stations and right then I fell in love with radio. There was an a.m.. There was a 100,000 watt FM station where I did and this is when I was in college. I was the disc jockey 6 to midnight doing beautiful music. The last 15 minutes you've heard about the body and raindrops keep falling on my head. That was that was my hang on, hang on, you had a 6 hour shift, Joe. Oh man, I'll tell you what. They used to put us into 8 hour shifts. 7 hour shifts, you know? So yes, it was a 6 it was 6 to midnight at go to school all day and I'd hang right there in the studio and we had turntables that we had turntable. So I used to. I'm far too young. What is this turntable you speak of, mister Pope?

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast
Dr. G and Mr. Reagan Discuss Standout Scenes From "Beverly Hills Cop"
"Been to a cell that had a phone in it. Can I stay for a while 'cause I ordered some pizza? Somebody needed. I'm sorry, it's just like this seemingly throwaway line. But for me, that's comic genius, that he says, I've never seen a prison cell with a pizza. Can I stay here? Because with a telephone, can I stay here because I ordered pizza? I mean, that's the genius of Eddie Murphy. Yeah, and that really feels like it was an improvised moment. And especially when he's walking away from the cop and he says, it's all right, somebody eat it. You know? You can barely hear you got to have headphones on to get that. It's almost like it's almost like he throws the line away. But yeah, and this whole Sarah's thing. Oh my gosh. This guy. Talk to me about savage with his twist of lemon. So this guy becomes this character balki, I think his name is on a TV show here in America became a huge hit. I think I don't remember what it was called, but it was a big hit. But this guy's whatever it is, flamboyantly gay Beverly Hills guy. In the 1980s, it was such a spot on impression of the kind of guy that you would imagine would work at an art gallery in Beverly Hills. You didn't really know this guy in real life, but he did it so brilliantly you thought, okay, yes, definitely this is, this is that guy. Whoever that guy is in Beverly Hills, this is him. And he's like, he's like, how much is this? And he says, oh, it's a $130,000 or whatever. This piece of art. And he says, get out of here, and he goes, no, I will not get out of here. I am serious, you know? And I sold it yesterday. Yeah, they sold it yesterday. And the way he just presents that, I've never seen anybody do such a ridiculous character so authentically and so perfect. I mean, it's a perfect performance. And there's a lot of that in this film. And like you said, they couldn't do it today. Because this is a little bit of a send up of the homosexual of the 1980s. And you can't make fun of the gays now. You couldn't make fun of a trans character now, but in the 1980s you could.

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast
Sebastian and Chris Kohls Review the 1984 Film "Beverly Hills Cop"
"We are here to make movies great again. I'm Sebastian gorka, and we are joined as ever. By mister Reagan, Chris Cole. Beverly Hills cop. Oh jeez. Why did you pick this move? I love it. Why did you pick this movie? Well, let me just say, I think this may be my favorite movie that we've done so far. And it's not because it's necessarily the best movie that we've done so far. But the reason is because I think it's the movie that I've seen the least often since I was a kid. I think probably it's been the movie that the longest amount of time has passed since I've actually watched it. And I kind of forgot how good it was. You know that it's a legend sort of intellectually in your head, right? You know, there's this legendary film. But it doesn't have a sequel like Ghostbusters does recently. You know, it hasn't been in the news like Back to the Future has recently. A lot of these films are kind of still in the public consciousness for whatever reason, Beverly Hills cop seems to have faded into obscurity and I'm not really sure why, but it really is a masterpiece. It's fantastic. This movie, although you look at these opening scenes in Detroit, yeah, it's dated. You look at the vehicles that cop cars, the cruises, yeah, this is a movie from 1984. But nevertheless, my word. I have to agree with you. This is just such a fun film to watch. And of course, it's the first movie that had Eddie Murphy in a title role that really this is the one that propelled him to international stardom.

The Officer Tatum Show
Why Is It OK for Black People to Simp for the Democrats?
"I want to just wrap up what I was saying about the guy Eddie glowed, I think his name maybe, you know, the gentleman was on the show, you know, telling me, you already talked about black people, but see black people get on TV and talk like that. So why is it okay that black people have a profession at getting on TV in line about black people and simping for the Democrat party? But when I get on here and just tell the truth, people some people get upset. There is no way whatsoever on God's green earth. Should a man with a connected brain stem? Get on television and say Black Lives Matter is the most significant modern movement of our lifetime. You're talking about burning buildings, killing people, the cofounders buying mansions in white neighborhoods. They can't even at least steal the money to buy mansions in the hood somewhere. Or build stuff in the hood. Bill real estate and your real estate portfolio in the hood. Oh no, they can't do that. They got to steal the money from the black man and then go buy stuff in the white neighborhood and swear that they only about black lives. Now, I don't care what you buy your house there, but just don't be a hypocrite while you're doing it.

AP News Radio
Nketiah's late goal gives Arsenal 3-2 win over Man United
"Arsenal pulled out a three two win over Manchester United to maintain its 5 point lead over man city atop the Premier League table. Eddie in catches scored twice, including the winner in the 90th minute. That allowed the Gunners to avenge their only loss of the season, a three one setback to Manu back on September 4th and catch you came through after lisandro Martinez equalized for united in the 59th minute bukayo saka also provided a go ahead goal for arsenal in the second half. Marcus Rashford opened the scoring for united in the 17th minute. United is tied for third with Newcastle and 6 points ahead of Tottenham. I'm Dave ferry

AP News Radio
Crystal Palace frustrates Newcastle in 0-0 draw
"Newcastle ran its EPL unbeaten string to 15 games. But Eddie Howe's team had to settle for a scoreless draw with Crystal Palace. The result puts Newcastle level with Manchester United for third in the table, though united takes on arsenal on Sunday. Goalkeeper Nick Pope kept his 9th straight clean sheet in all competitions. Alexander Isaac and Fabian sure had the best chances to score for the magpies. Palace was coming off a one one draw with a united on Wednesday as it tries to crack the top ten. I'm Dave ferry.

AP News Radio
Arsenal stretches EPL lead with 4-2 win at Brighton
"Arsenal is stretched its Premier League lead to 7 points by defeating Brighton four two. Arsenal led three nil by the 47th minute thanks to goals by bacay Osaka, Martin odegaard and Eddie and kenja. Sokka scored just over a minute in. Gabrielle Martinelli sprinted half the pitch to score the clincher in the 71st minute. Brighton back up Evan Ferguson capped the scoring in the 77th minute with his first Premier League goal. The Gunners have won their last 5 league games. Brighton sits 8th on the table with 24 points. I'm Dave fairy.

AP News Radio
Kennedy Center Honors honor Clooney, U2
"You two and Gladys Knight are among the entertainers who will be featured on the Kennedy Center Honors special. I'm Archie's are a letter with a preview. That's Eddie Vedder performing in tribute to U2 at the Kennedy Center for the performing arts in Washington earlier this month. The annual gala was recorded for TV and airs Wednesday on CBS. Patti LaBelle tearfully sang the praises of her friend singer Gladys Knight, ballerinas performed in honor of composer Tania Leon, Sheryl Crow saying baby baby in tribute to singer Amy Grant, Matt Damon teased honoree George Clooney a lot. So did Julia Roberts before telling Clooney he deserves the honor. You are a Beacon truly leading all who know you to a happier, more fulfilling path.

AJ Benza: Fame is a Bitch
How AJ Stole a Few Better Days With His Dying Father
"At the very end of his life, he there was nothing to cure his ill. It was just no medicine to work. I literally stopped doctors from coming in to do these tests and shit. I was like, no, I'm fucking no. No, you're not fucking coming in and putting a lot of needle in his stomach. This is over. He's not your Guinea pig anymore. That's how I got. And I was big and strong back then. No doctor wanted to fuck with me. But at the very end, my father's brother, uncle Larry, who was a doctor. He knew what medicine he needed to maybe have some sort of remission. It was a medicine called cyclosporine, which is like so readily available now. I literally, you know, got it from my vet to take care of my dog's tear ducts a few years ago. It's like no problem. But back in 1984, it was very rare to have that. It wasn't allowed. But that would have been the medicine that helped him. My uncle Larry got a hold of it. From a doctor in Switzerland, and he would send it to me. And I would then take that medicine and inject it into a carvel milkshake that was made by my buddy John's and Eddie's sister at parl. Maybe this is like a fucking a movie. I've been caper. And I take the milkshake to him. And he drink it. And the cyclosporine was in there and remarkably he began to have a remission. And he got to leave the hospital and we went out and we got on the boat and we went to the beach and this great pictures of us but didn't last because there was so much damage done inside.

AP News Radio
Kennedy Center honors U2, George Clooney, Gladys Knight in star-studded event
"President Joe Biden paid tribute to 5 artists at The White House on Sunday as they were honored by the Kennedy Center in Washington. With the latest. Musicians U2, Amy Grant and Gladys Knight after George Clooney and composer Tania Leon are this year's Kennedy Center Honors. They got a White House reception and all star tributes from the likes of Garth Brooks, Julia Roberts and Eddie Vedder, Biden says he has all of night songs. We're gonna get on that midnight train because I think I speak for all Americans I say we'd rather live in your world than be without you and ours. The tributes will be broadcast on CBS on December 28th.

The Eddie Trunk Podcast
"eddie" Discussed on The Eddie Trunk Podcast
"I remember even the beginning W- everything last last spring. You know you in twenty twenty. I've talked to tour manager and he was trying to stay optimistic and thinking. Oh you know things should get back to normal by hopefully by third quarter something last year so he put all this time into trying to you. Know human human human our agent trying to establish tours and have plans and then as the weeks would go on. They'd start to realize. Oh man it's all that work for nothing So yeah and it's happened so many times now but kudos to them because they keep they keep on pushing gorge you know because they know that you've gotta be ready. You can't just say oh. Well let's just not do any but we won't put any sweat equity in any event and we'll just wait 'til it all passes. You can't do that either because you've got a Ready to strike when the window opens. And so i. I commend them for that. No yeah and that's all true miles but let's also be honest. They want their commission to they need. Not everybody's got to eat right. That's a really good point. There's all that and everything you said is one hundred percent true. But everybody's got you know. 'cause i got an agent to they all wanna eat. They wanna get out there. They didn't make you don't make money. They're not making money so exactly listen. It's always great to talk to you. Everybody goes see miles the solo shows. I missed you last solo tour. I'm not going to miss this one. I got you. I got you on my schedule. I'm going to try to make that show jersey but you've got A the tour kicks off again. Next tuesday in florida and runs through at least in the. Us it runs through the tober. Second you wrap up in baltimore and then hopefully fingers crossed. You'll get over to the uk as scheduled in december. Do you want to try to add more stuff in in the us. Do you hope to do that. I would love to and yeah absolutely I wanna play as much as i can. You know there's just i this plan so so i'm just like i said i'm staying. I'm staying optimistic all right but listen great. Great to talk to you and again everybody check out. The record is in march seriously. It is a great great record. I love it. And i'm looking forward to hearing some of it played live. Take care of man travel safe. Be well and all see in a few weeks banking man. I really appreciate your time. You take care of all right see you miles by by all right bye-bye well love miles. Great stuff from him. Hope to catch a date on his current tour which is just begun in the us. I strongly suggest going to see them. Great talent great singer great musician. Great person we'll come back and welcome. Zack wild who checks off those boxes as well. A guy known for a very very long time. Zach is our second interview. That's next on the eddie trunk podcast. Welcome back trunk here with you on this week's eddie trunk podcast zach wild guy that i've known for well even before he joined ozzy because he's a jersey guy and he used to play on the jersey club circuit with a band called is his real name is many no is jeff violent. And that's what he was known. As and then ozzie found him in the clubs. Jersey christendom zach wild and the rest is history. Zach talks about an upcoming tour. A new record any also talks about ozzy and a bunch more. So i think you're going to enjoy. He's always entertaining. Always fun to talk to even get a little football talking here. Both being new york giants fan so here he is zack. Wild interview number two. I'll are brother ed. What he doing raca. Did you get a chance to watch any of our giants yesterday. No i was I was in the city. And i was in the room by myself. Found my genitalia. So now i would just cruise around the city yesterday. We actually were at nine eleven. We went down to Down to the you know down to the memorial you know so we were there and then odds cruising around the city out here with philly. Getting ready do president of innate that yeah yeah what happened team out with down. What we're we're all in one. Yeah we're all in one and we lost in the look. They play again on thursdays spot. Another teams man. He just got a spot them. Because you know you feel sorry for everybody else the giant way. Hey let me tell you these. Use that you know. Let me tell you something else. That's pretty funny yesterday. I'm doing this this medal award show in middletown new jersey. And i'm outta table right. And i'm talking interviewing some people. Ross the boss was there. Mark weiss some people we know and they have to get rid of the table because they're about to turn the stage over and get ready for the show to start and they couldn't find anybody to strike the gear in the table and who appears out of nowhere and says i got this but jd. The goose was there yesterday. J. d. your bass player. He appeared out of nowhere. I got this is he. Good like that zach. Is he like in a pinch. Good to do anything. Yeah you know. He's good for knocking me out. You know what i mean. He enjoys that barely. But i just insulting me profusely but Yeah that's great goose was there actually. I forgot about that. I think good marked on. I just saw this thing. That mark was texting me. I guess you had the big walkable whole fame thing yesterday. Right to metal was part of it. Yeah mark was shown his photos and all that we had a good time there yesterday but yeah so listen man speaking of press. You've got a record coming. The records not till november. And you have a video and single out remember. Twenty twenty five november november. What twenty twenty-five push-back distilling make sure it's perfect but you put out. You put out a single and video set you free which i think. The song is great but the video is hysterical. Tell me about when you made that video. And the concept for justin. He's the stanley crew back of black label video directing and i said justin what i wanna capture. Here is my graduation prom in one thousand. Nine hundred eighty five at jackson memorial high school and i.

The Eddie Trunk Podcast
"eddie" Discussed on The Eddie Trunk Podcast
"Have great memories of that. We we. I recorded that. In japan i remember clearly. They sent me a picture of the studio. Cool man i feeling. Wow there's gonna be great y over land la blah there. I want to check it out. Go walk the studio at it. And i thinking quake sounding room is so dead. It's not an amyloid chamber like. Oh christ got enough. I think you're a member ordering Bunches of climate put on against the war. Liven it up and then on the day we started to record. The multi-track machine broke and so now all become problem. Oh okay so we all get real gathered into this room and because you know how japanese so cool. They work in committee right. And that's like the studio manager the engineers and the everybody's who's twelve people in the room and all of a sudden one of the relatives from the band. I noticed type machine within an hour it come back with a truck and a tape machine and they and they all thing upstairs and we recorded but That's how i did. How much crazy to more. And then i'll let you go. You worked with triumph. Great canadian trio. You did a great record called thunder seven with them any recollections working with triumph your thoughts. Well i happen to know the guide. Creaky well Donovan winco frankly to see The the top layer Well now get talk right here in canada recommend. He's got he's that yeah rick. Genius guitar player Fantastic band and much with them and they had their own studio. That was the cool sick. I never met a band that actually had their own studio. It was It was genius. You know you could get in there and spend much time if you have to watch the clock. We've got great sound and lot of affectionate attitude. Which i really like you know. Everybody was on their game. How do we get the focus right how to get. Talk arts rice Debt the background. But i mean it's just detail or an food and scouted amazing very very powerful ban. huge here and in the state record said go record barrels. Nice and finally. What was it like record working with the band. Alcatraz the album disturbing the peace. Steve vai recording him very early in his career. What was that experience like. Very exciting Steve vines perfectionist genius. It's greg guy who different It took a while for me to get into the once again because the attention to digital doing these massive pill at the high speed we have developed special needs how to punch him now. I mean literally in the face on the type machine because another size punches when you're dropping in something like pro tools where you can do multiple tracks in just you know edison together. Yeah actually had a punch in my thirty second notes Thirty second beat notes know and try to get in. Wow that was a challenge. We recorded that a cherokee studios in los angeles and You know it's like the corrigan. La the am Manley's go down to go down to the bar man. i'm. I'm ragging on my california friends. And i shouldn't What know a particular time I think the ban was tremendous. I mean intense Fast furious. I mean there's a singing was great. Ho- cameras right. Yeah yeah no doubt. Well eddie i only have about a minute or two left. And then i know i got to let you go as well anything you want. I mean i could go on forever. There's so many records we didn't hit but just in closing. I know you've got a book coming. I know documentary coming. I know. I'm sure we'll be talking again when those things are ready to hit the market. Anything else that you want to share with the audience or mentioned to the audience about what you're doing now read the mistakes and is that going to be the title of your book. Yeah absolutely i agree with you. One of my biggest is bands. These days not truly playing liven all these effects and tracks whatever it makes me nuts i want warts and all and i appreciate that about my rock and roll and i appreciate you giving me so much time here today. I know the audience does as well being so generous with your time and the stories here we could. We could go on forever. But it's been a pleasure to know you all these decades. And i can't thank you enough for doing this eddie. Thank you eddie trunk rocket. Thank you my friend and we'll talk to. We'll talk to you soon. And i look forward to the projects you have coming in the future. Take care of yourself characters. I by by well. That was so much fun and there was so much more could have done. Maybe somewhere down the line..

The Eddie Trunk Podcast
"eddie" Discussed on The Eddie Trunk Podcast
"Of a leakage. We still have me. It was a fun out to do. I i really enjoyed working with greg. Greg god's greg -sition but i think there there's a reason why they may not have made it because of the visual when you look at the band or sort of you know with the long hair and the belongs a tapes and all of that. Yeah all the white so can all of that. I think maybe that was a bit pretentious. Possibly the music is cool. But i think maybe the the hollywood that sort of turned on them and then. I don't know what who knows what happens right. Let me let me ask you about the first fast way album in one thousand nine hundred eighty three fast eddie clarke jerry shirley dave king that record i mean obviously very zach when asked what an amazing record though that that first album is. What do you remember about that. Working on that one That is one of my favorite records so that was superb. What a great event societe never. Before they didn't have a hit. That broke out of cleveland. I believe say what you want. Say what you will an amazing band. I love half any. He was sent debut quaint. Little irish thing ever the hook non probably could he sing his ass The whole bag was the nominal and once again a band that had a direction they had found. Then you would have gone with it Amazing playing who. The hell knew where they were going to be a big record. But you know there's a lot of competition in those days. Forget well the other thing the way in fast way fast. Fast eddie clarke. The way was pete way from ufo who couldn't stay in the band and how to pull out of the whole thing but do you recall him ever recording anything. Did you ever record pete. Way for that record. Never he just missed the boat. As.

The Eddie Trunk Podcast
"eddie" Discussed on The Eddie Trunk Podcast
"End of the session told family but Because i think we'll be in connection with the but even wonder he was so creative video. And you know we just wanted to push the envelope and having anton On drums just are you kidding. That guys genius you know. And it's fills were remarkable and it. That was an inspirational and ace. Just oh completely over. The top really came to the party with brilliant pots suggestions for sound for over dogs and then of course when he did that that sparked my brain to say wow would you. Then maybe we can put the guitar and this reverve and then the amp outside and oh we got up to some wild tricks. Recording are in the big mansion in connecticut and that was another thing that reminded me of you know recordings bethlen at jarvis. Was that kind of the mobile. Is this massive mansion. Put the drums on the staircase. Yeah that was. That was a lot of fun. What one more thing here. A kiss as related and then we'll do one more break and then i'll i'll just take a quick few minutes from you because i wanna hit you with just some random titles from some other wreckage you've done again. We can't do it all but i do. Wanna ask you just for some quick stuff on a few other things. But the last thing on ace so you and i. I met and connected when i was working at a label called mega force and i was of course. A huge kiss fan. Ace at that point was considered to be very much damaged goods very much reliability very much a risk to get involved with and you were the guy that contacted us and worse was working with ace to try to bring him back around one thousand nine hundred eighty six and i remember a lunch that we had together at that time and ultimately we ended up signing him. And doing that i record. Why did you believe in. Ace like you did eddie especially at that time. When so many other people had written him off. Why did you feel. He was still a viable artists. That could be that could turn it and were you surprised at that. I record that you made with him. And how strong was now. I wasn't surprised because i believe in always always deleted his ability You know he's had his shoes. We we know what they are But at point. I think he was determined to make a change and he was focused. And that was my There was a trigger for me to say all right. he's focused. He really wants to do the. You can taste now. He needs to get back out there and really make a damn fine record and the choice of musicians you know. That was the other thing. They all loved him back them and felt like this was a true band. Yeah and it really was on that i record. Yeah john regan. Who brought a lot to the table. Anton fig playing drums richie. Scarlet was there but was replaced for the record by todd. Howarth at the time but it was really a fantastic band and it really was a. I think we're all very proud of that record. And how well. It didn't how it really established him to to to this point to the career that he still has exactly now and it's still a great sounding record as well it still is and obviously you had a all to do with that so it's great memories. It's hard to believe it's been since we had that lunch and all of that happened but it is a fantastic record so obviously the big stuff. Here we've hit hendrix stove zeppelin stuff kissed off but the resume is so expensive. I want to jump around to different things that That we mentioned eddie. You talk about legendary. Live records i. I was not aware that you were involved in. Frampton comes alive. You did that as an engineer. I did yeah. And what about the live aspect of that. There's been it was that truly alive record through and through peers but let. Let's think about the of france from and his genius plant singer songwriter. All of that absolutely on the highest possible level and i was very fortunate. I work with peter on a couple of early albums earlier albums just before you know you hit it big Weapons electric lady founders. Great drama foreign junk syomina's was part of the live album unfortunate with us anymore but that was favored drummer. I'm you know. I think it's still contributed tremendously to and you. You can't folk any member of that band. It was almost.

The Eddie Trunk Podcast
"eddie" Discussed on The Eddie Trunk Podcast
"Know this song. And he was really looking forward to he was such a trooper in the studio fantastic. He wants to bottles and he looked he was not a great thing. Boy 'cause he delivered with passion you know. They didn't have all the technical attributes of gene or poor. No but it was made it had character toured around the fans loved it. You know when he would come out and space to put a smile on your face because he was having fun with it was quite. he's brilliant springer. He noticed that became pretty. Damn good singer as you know he did. We did this photo album but On that one this was this was something he was looking forward to. He wanted to show the guys and the rest of the world. Now i can. I can say like if i get our carly and making kiss alive to versus alive one differences in the band at that point where you still in the same position in terms of capturing them live where it was still going into the studio and having to do a lot of overdubbed punches for the same reasons now no no anywhere near you know few bits and pieces here and there they were they were pretty damn solid at that point and the other thing about lie alive to is the fourth side of the record is studio material there is endless debate and discussion eddie and you can set this record straight once and for all all the drums on the studio tracks alive to peter chris i swear to thing i can remember There was a point where i think they were thinking about bringing somebody else in bars. God i can't remember that far back blur 'cause there's a track on that record others track on the studio side of of that album called larger than life. That has a very bonham behind the beach drum drum bit. And there's a lot of people that have speculated at that point was we know anton fig came into the picture doing studio work not long after that with kiss was anton around even at that time perhaps yeah he works. I mean he was a friend he was definitely referring minor. Excellent african And we were good friends. I you know it's so long ago it was talk about it. I would have really big through my my records quote unquote who on earth with fleming. That he may have i. I can't swear to it though because also that was really the first time and this has been confirmed. Obviously that the late bob culet came in and outside of on a rocket ride which was acis song on that. Bob played lead guitar on three tracks. Do you remember the circumstances surrounding that. I know he did play on a couple of tracks which run very officer. You're right about that. I just don't remember all back and now you know you. You know what i could do if you get me the tape boxes. We can see who play guitar because they may even say that are out very much. Yeah right now. It's been confirmed in the ban. Themselves have confirmed that. I'm three of the tracks. It's bob playing lead guitar. That's that's well known. It's always that drum bit that people had always wondered if there was a tracker to or a moment or two where for whatever reason. Peter didn't play which ended up happening on subsequent records that you were not a part of so we don't know when exactly that started. I want to also ask you about the seventy eight solo records. Now the record that ace made in seventy eight when the ban all made four solo records is considered to this day. An absolute classic. It's a fantastic record. No one could have seen that coming from ace at that point especially given he had only just on his first ever lead vocals. Here's this brilliant record when they all make four studio records in his is the only one that's a hip he also was. He also was the one that got you to produce. The record did did peter or paul or gene also approach you about doing their solo records at that time when they all made records. Nope not at all so ace was the guy for that. It was the guy that reached out to you. I love art. School do guitar. Roy said that he Fantastic it's great. Blues plays a great rock popular and he gets it he. He understands what what he has to do. Within the limitations of his voice. Which i think really became quite a character You know plot of his music was the sound of his voice is attitude was cool. I mean and the stories are legion about how he got into sing on the floor of plaza sound. You know i. It was completely horizontal. Then gradually you were standing up. And by the.

The Eddie Trunk Podcast
"eddie" Discussed on The Eddie Trunk Podcast
"Reduce fixing of course every other bloody band in the world. Six of course. So that's what we have to do. And i think what turned out was it just showed that they were able to go in and fix what was not Gone maybe under percents on the live show. Why imagine you're you're you're you're onstage right. Pleading rockets scouting. That's right and spencer. You've got bombs you rights. You got smoke there in sixteen bloody hills and then leaping around like mad fools and you expect to be any time and into the technology wasn't there to keep it altogether so who cares. I don't care. The band of the kid and i was a huge success. It sounded grazing me end. You know. I had to do a lot of work on that. And then they come back and say well i want we wanna remix another five great. Let's fix it this gophers and it was It was a fantastic greco that just launch them because they had laid the groundwork for those plus three albums they went on road until the hell out of it and they had a very small manager coin and they statuary to the south in the south western parts of america command. A fan base was one of the early bands. I really figured out if we don't have a fan base from nothing and it guaranteed the sale of the live album. Well needless to say the live album kiss alive year. I record producing with them not only saved the band and made the ban but it saved the label as well. It was a make or break proposition. We all know that story. You know the recent kiss documentary and and you know. This has been debated forever and over the decades. The band is even admitted. Obviously that there's not a lot of kiss alive. That's actually live eugene's reference date in the kiss documentary. You made a comment saying something like there's people that have different recollections of how much of that record is actually live. we've heard stories. The only thing truly live on it. Where peters drums for for once. Can you set the record straight on it eddie. What is live. How much of kiss alive is live. It would be very very tough for me to do to give you a cat. Without sitting in the studio analyzing the takes figuring out punches were but i do know for a fact that we fix a lot of guitars Fair amount of base. Bits here and there quite a few punches. That a lot of vocal bits that will miss Gets remarkably consistent absolutely true and these folks were remarkably consistent. But i bring back the points that look at the show. You you try do that. Anybody i anybody kit and jump up and.

The Eddie Trunk Podcast
"eddie" Discussed on The Eddie Trunk Podcast
"Senate headed. You wanna do ban kiss you know. We got him on the label. They weren't do a live album. Cindy neil call you back. 'cause on my desk was a tape from a band called boston. And i called out The the boys from boston. Yeah they. Tom found not the way it is. It's bloody marvellous. I and it was. It was genius Whether it i think he may agree recorded but it was incredible. I said i can't add this record you you. You're good coach. Do it when i called neil back and say all right. Let's do this. And people were asking why i cherish any lend. Let me ask you at this point so working with kiss super early on before the first record and then working with kiss for their first live album which we all know. The story was very make or break proposition for them. But you had just come off working with world class musicians with zeppelin who she were still working with of course in hendricks and all this stuff. There's so much made of kiss as players. Whether they were good players are not good players especially at that time. Did you find it a challenge to work with them. Did what what did you find. Were your what was your last night with them. Musicians well separated for a second because the the work. I did with them thereafter. I that's when you can start to analyze musicians versus whatever you wanna call. The live album was a triumph. Now were they completely and totally operate in an inside no not really.

The Eddie Trunk Podcast
"eddie" Discussed on The Eddie Trunk Podcast
"Reverberates. So we'll have to put up some close mike and the kappler room marks and we're race and it sounded bloody mile and wh and what about recording jimmy. Page's guitars were when it came to that. Obviously jimmy is producing these records. But you're the engineer. In that instance then at that point i would imagine you are not only engineering and recording. What he's doing. But you're also kind of at that point. Correct me if i'm wrong. You'd have to kind of go into a sort of defacto producer mode right because he's actually at that bar playing. So can you talk a little bit about how that worked. Yeah i think you're correct In the sense that it would rely to get. He knew what he was looking for up to meet a market correction and find the right place for it. at starbucks fortunate. I mean this bloody greg mansion so there were many rooms or you can put an amgen and the sound would change depending on Decay time the the actual spot of the room. I couple of times we actually Wannabe them at the bottom of a fireplace. Quaking up the chimney with mike it into a different angles. Mike just to get a different sound It's experimentation so the point of back sounds bloody mauger's crime and use that any. Are you amazed that. Just in closing out on zeppelin. And i wanna talk to you about kiss here in a second but are you amazed that this music that you were a part of creating whether it's hendrix whether it's upland whether it's some of the other stuff we've talked about but specifically when it comes to hendrix zeppelin that that it is as relevant now and stands the test of time now in in you know under the umbrella of classic rock but it's as important now. It seems to so many people with so many young people discovering this. It's on the radio still constantly on classic rock radio. Are you amazed at this stuff. Did you have any inkling fifty years plus ago when you're working on it that it would occupy this space in history. Did you have any idea what you were doing. Was this special at the time. And a part of something this landmark absolutely nar. Nobody you know you. You're there for the moment is asked to make the band happy and give them back found. You can possibly give them you know through the tracking the over and then the mixing where you're mixing alexa. Play video wherever they would be mixing You've come up with a final product because out in the market and you know separate we gotta sell a couple of many records of coast guard more than that and hearing it on the radio in the day and then you think oh you know Very nicely and then of course tragedy answer the ban breaks up off the bonds of keeps coming and we goes back to the earlier conversation. It's classic why didn't they go up because this rates wrong with fantastic's corruption lyrics bengals performances by each individual in that fan. And you know when we say ban means four guys or girls or whatever four elephants. I don't care as long as they trumpets again. A bunch if they're playing together and then making music together and it's a high standard and it has an emotional wallop when the four of them unify together. And that sound comes at you is so pure and it has so much Groups you you know in your mind in hard and then that feeling about rhythmic feeling. I just wise you coins because it's just when you had got got it just it's primitive buddies control. It is controlled primitivism. Yeah i get what. you're saying. Final thing on zeppelin. Do you have a favorite step one records. I love the moment. Yeah it would be tough to pick a favorite one. But i know you said a lot of people. Point to two is one of the ones in terms of an engineering perspective that you get a lot of questions about. Yeah i mean cd. I mean they all they're all transparency kelvin's whether i do somebody else's they're amazing Aren't being associated with the ban. Like zeppelin is it's an honor. Well we're going to talk with eddie in the next segment here about a band that my audience is going to be all ears about that is also one of the legendary bands of all time. That eddie had a huge huge role in and you recently saw him talking about that in the recent kiss documentary. But we're going to get into some talk about the the records. Eddie kramer made with kiss and get some stories from that in the next segment so stay with us. Be right back with more in my interview with eddie kramer after this. Let's get back to more. With eddie kramer on the eddie trunk. Podcast continuing this great conversation with producer. Eddie kramer about some of the legendary he worked with. I wanna do a section now on kiss an artist that so many of my my audience loves as well and really the conduit of how i i met eddie back around. Nineteen eighty six. When i was working with as freely and he did ace's i post kiss solo album. But we'll get to that in a second i. Let's begin with a question. I always wondered about eddie when it came to your history with kiss. We all know you did the initial demos for the band which led to them getting a record deal and making their first record. But you didn't begin working with the band as a producer on the record stuff until the the live album kiss alive. So how was it that you ended up doing the demos which yielded them. The record deal but didn't do any of the first three studio records. What were the circumstances there. Did they just not ask you or were you unavailable. Well allie will came.

The Eddie Trunk Podcast
"eddie" Discussed on The Eddie Trunk Podcast
"Did robert did. Did he do vocals. Did he do a lot of passes on lead vocals or did you. Did he get a lot of stuff in one take i. He had been known to do. Vocal one sake The from punching generally speaking get cup two or three while and some of those days. Yeah i mean we only on eight track so we only have long maybe to attract the set for for boko He mentioned here racist. Might and what about recording john. Bonham's trump's i mean dry so much is made rightfully so of the drum sound on the zeppelin records. What was it. Were you actually making those drums recording them. And can you take us through that process and what that was like recording him. Well you couldn't go confer run recording barnum because quite frankly stick him anywhere and put you know couple of fifty seven and you'd get a bomb sound because he has some damn hard and he just knew exactly how to get a tone out of his. You was remarkable. It was probably. I would say yeah. That's grammar i've ever recorded And seal is incredible. Just ridiculous and he and page would work together in rehearsals and get the phil crazy enough. So that page where the particular fill on particular three in what was once part of guarded. He was loved and he you know he scratches ahead when the time turned around and stuff like that but once he figured it out it was. Watch out literally. You could buy him anywhere. I mean the great pleasure of working with small studio and then make jagger's house Stalker where we did How holly cookie and he had a whole room to himself. Big glass conservatory rounded windows. That kind of thing. So was quite.

The Eddie Trunk Podcast
"eddie" Discussed on The Eddie Trunk Podcast
"The the out of a solo. That's not the final master is so genius you go. We could put out eight different versions of this. And they're all relevant they're fabulous. I mean he would come into the studio after. We're done all day all night session. You know Bunch of guitar work probably shows how we've got it man that's right came in the races. You know thinking. I think i can do that. One so better okay. Jimmy put up and we say. Make sure you you know what that previous from yesterday. Founding open space he punched me in and you go oh holy shit beat it because he just he just knew that. So the last thing on hendricks. And then i wanna move onto to zeppelin. I want to ask you eddie. Did hendrix know what he was doing was so unbelievably innovative and groundbreaking and that it was set a benchmark and that it would that here we are in twenty twenty one still talking about it or was he the kind of guy that just was like. Hey it's what i do. You know people making a big fuss. I don't necessarily get or do you think. He knew that he was changing the game question. I'm trying to think about what his response might have been. I think he was very shy. I i know And i think he might have been you know a lot of i play music. I love it. I'm trying to make the world aware of my philosophy. Which is you know peace love and all the rest of that because he was peaceful matt even had been in the army I think he'd just about that Congress up being influenced by some sounds which of course you hear and span of chips and stuff like that machine gun. But he was the he'll employees anti war. I think he wanted to be remembered for making great music. That people enjoyed. I don't know if he really saw that far ahead into the future. I think he just wants to be accepted as a man who could Give people pleasure and the the share that emotional connection with them. Yeah it's it's remarkable again. We could obviously do full shows on on hendrix alone but again in the interest of time in the expansive resume. What i wanna do is spend a little time on hendrix. want to spend some time now on zeppelin. Then we're going to spend some time on kiss and then in the final segment. I wanna just go quick hit on some other things throughout your resume that i always wanted to ask you about clearly. There's a ton of other huge records and moments but again in the interest of time we'll jump around a little bit but when we get to zeppelin eddie. Tell me about zeppelin and working with them. And how that came about and was that connected to the fact that you were engineering for hendrix I'm not sure if it was connected directly to that. Now i i think. Relationship with jimmy page and jump jones Predate a lot of this. I was working at against well. No sixty seven. And they were many sessions that trump jumps came into the olympic calling is based on little bay sam And with a big job under is wrong. And.

The Eddie Trunk Podcast
"eddie" Discussed on The Eddie Trunk Podcast
"You go in sometimes with a little bit of trepidation and then as you open up the phrases and push the patient with guitars and the drums. I'm back in time. And it's so rewarding and it's so gratifying to take some of jimmy's music and re tweak it's to bring off the fullness because we have technology today that just allows me to transform some of the earliest stuff that hasn't been released and and really give us a full treatment so that it sounds full and contemporary that. That's been my job. And i love it. Are you still in as much. Aw now when you open up a tape and go in and restore some things a remix. Some things hearing what he did as you were when you first met him and originally worked on the material does it still kind of puts you in a place. Where like i because the thing about hendrix's still it's still pretty much the benchmark even for most guitar players today in a lot of ways. So so do you still feel that way. Do you still feel like that. That sense of all when you hear it and hear things maybe. Are you picking out things. That maybe i don't even notice at the time when you were recording him. Oh yeah i mean you know many years ago and all of a sudden here track guitar part. in fact i'm just thinking now about this new release somebody top parts on there that i know i couldn't even remember what he was doing. Because you know just goes by so fast and these are not. The mass took maybe one before the master. And there's a couple of loose than he plays are incredible playing and even.

The Eddie Trunk Podcast
"eddie" Discussed on The Eddie Trunk Podcast
"Spraying. I'd be intricacy of lines He always made sure he wanted his voice buried in the track. That's for sure. I don't think many people know about that really He hated his. He thought he had the worst. I can voice in the world and he never wanted high high but there was always the back in the initial Albums are certainly on on. i experienced. I'm all the early albums you know. Like i man and you were talk to chaz chaz guy and then chatswood graduate up inches the at keeping up so here i am. I'm sitting in the middle between chas on my right and jimmy on my that to me. Whispering chevron pushing. I'd find a compromise between the The the two worlds there I don't have a great tranquil I thought it was expressive and light And that's what i think fans you should look at the other thing. I think fans tendency to overlook his looks incredible incredibly descriptive He took you on a lovely journey from minneapolis. Malachy you know and the the lyrics were of another world. I think he was on a different actual claim when he played as well. Yeah you know again Just in the interest of time we're gonna move forward from hendrix. But i do wanna ask you this hendrix. Is the artist that you are probably not probably i would say most aligned with now in the last twenty or thirty years the reissue projects whether they be video audio both you are intensely involved in that you've been very much involved with keeping his legacy alive working on these reissues. How's that whole experience. Been for you to really be for the most part the custodian of keeping hendrix's music out there now as the way i see it all right thank you. That's very kind of. I do feel awesome responsibility to be involved with keeping hendrix's music alive and there are three people involved myself janey hendrix. Joe mcdermott. we. I jokingly refresher power treatment You know because we have taken tremendous amount of time and effort to ensure that. Jimmy's music is treated with respect For the fans Talk people who wanted to hear how he created his music There's attack there's a new album out just before christmas i leave and it's about My experience no pun intended With jimmy an in studio And how that relationship developed. It's you you're gonna get a big kick albus so that's an awesome responsibility when you dive into these vintage types. That are you know. Fifty kim gordon fifty years old. You gotta be very careful Unfortunately trying to amazing stories that these tapes can. Toby played without a problem because they made with specific formula. That seem to deteriorate course. Everything's been digitized but it's Working with a henrik's.

The Eddie Trunk Podcast
"eddie" Discussed on The Eddie Trunk Podcast
"And it was a lovely lady by the name of on menzies and she called me up and she says i love country choice. Hey in japan with the big hair and you do all that witch so wanting to do him and that's literally how i got record hendrix. I remember meeting in for the first time when he walked into the studio on a very cold late january day and yet funky connor rank huddled up in the corner. All the gifts thoughts ride the drums. Everything was set up and running around like a mad fool logging. And mike's and get getting everything set up. Once it was you stood up. Walked over to the m which plugged in. And i'm about. I don't know maybe six eight t away and hit a corner and i think my brain froze for a brief mama. I'd never heard anything quite like him on the radio booth read the stuff in the and the like just standing got 'em hearing that sound completely blew my mind eddie. What were the as somebody that worked so closely with hendrix. And i mean we could obviously do this whole show on on hendricks and just in the interest of time. I'm going to be jumping around quite a bit here. But somebody that obviously knew him intimately worked with him worked on his records. What what don't we know as fans that you know like what's the one thing that you wish more people talked about or knew about jimi hendrix. That may be hasn't been covered in hasn't been expressed as greatly as you feel feel it should be. I mean for me as a fan. I always felt his singing was a bit overlooked. I love his voice. Obviously when you play guitar like that so much attention is gonna go to the guitar. Rightfully so but i loved his voice as well but as a guy that knew that worked with them. What do you think like what what can you tell us about hendrix. That maybe we don't know enough about what i think you you brought a very interesting point So many obvious like jimmy who superstars in in regards to the way they played the instrument. And jimmy. certainly your attention. Because you know he was one of a kind a. and i don't think we'll see the likes of us again for who i hope we do. But he was very unique in the sense back. The voice expressed ideas and shapes and sounds very much. Like it's top line. I mean. I think it's one. Listen to him and he was a song stylus. He wasn't a great thing. it was a song. Stylish and the way he utilized his range was absolutely genius because it precisely with what rhythm section was doing around he.

The Eddie Trunk Podcast
"eddie" Discussed on The Eddie Trunk Podcast
"This week for the interview. This is something you are going to love. Because i love talking of behind the scenes people in the music industry and this is one of the biggest guys with the most history. You could possibly talk to in that world. It is producer. Eddie kramer eddie. Kramer's resume is so vast. I wouldn't know where to begin as far as this. Podcast there are three pivotal bands. That eddie kramer is known for those bands include led zeppelin jimi hendrix. And kiss. so the interview. You're about to hear will feature a good helping three segments on each of those bands and then a fourth segment covering other groups. That eddie worked with everyone from loudness to anthrax to you name it again even in the ninety minutes that i had with eddie kramer for this interview. We didn't even get into everything because it's just so much but i think you're going to really love what we did cover. And there's some great stories great insights from one of the legends in the world of music production. And he's a guy that i've known for a really long time back when i was working for mega force back in the eighties. Eddie kramer was the guy who brought us as freely we ended up signing to his first solo deal in eddie produced that first solo record freely is comet which we didn't really get to talk about all that much in the interview. Just because there's so much other stuff to get to. But i was on any for the longest time to try to get time with him to do this. This kind of career retrospective and he was very generous with his time. Although again with his resume. There's tons obviously. We didn't have time for. But i think you're really gonna love this and i can't wait for you guys to check it out if you've not heard it on sirius. Xm and i'm pleased to be able to bring everybody on a worldwide free platform. Like this podcast so be sure to subscribe so you don't miss anything. The new episodes hit every thursday. You can also find me on cameo if you're interested in a personalized video. Summer's almost over. We got a lot of great stuff coming up a lot of appearances. A lot of events. Keep an eye on my social media especially twitter and instagram. Why keep you updated on everything going on. This is a pretty long interview this week. So let's get right to here is eddie kramer enjoys. It is a great pleasure and honor and thrilled to have with us here on this special edition of trunk nation. Man that i've had the pleasure of knowing for many many many decades and he is still one of the icons in the world of producing and engineering rock music. His resume speaks for itself. joining us. today is the one. And only eddie kramer eddie. Thank you so much have long wanted to do this with you. And i appreciate you taking the time. It is my pleasure to speak with you any man. Let me ask you this. Let's i like when i interviewed producers. I like to start here and that is where it all started for you. You grew up in south africa. Tell me how the music bug bit you and how it led to you and your first engineering work and producing work. Not only did it. Bite me it's threw me across the room. In fact i tell the story when i'm doing my elections to the audio or anybody. Who wants to who could stand listening to me. But we're not with the back. I guess in three years old something like that growing up. You know in south africa wipe the british system for literacy is two hundred and twenty volts and apparently according to my parents and i do remember pasta. I stuck feel living meal into the electric socket and it threw me across the room and my dad. My dad picked me up and knock me. What the hell did you for. I haven't seen the second. You're literally shocked into rock and roll. Yeah and let me see wasn't fair about shock me or something like that. Yes on a record you produced on love gun. Ace's first lead vocal shock me rats right. Yeah so that's kind of old situation would happen like six years later something. Well we're w we're yeah. We're definitely gonna kiss stuff but tell me about how you learned your craft eddy working initially coming into engineering. Are you experienced and access bold as love and working with hendrix. Initially as an engineer. Where how does how does a kid from from south africa go to doing that well. It's a bit obey story. I mean it's to be in the new documentary film that we're about to make a call from the other side of the glass shameless self promotion but there you go He's do during the era where one has to say what. What is doing I've been writing the book on and off for many years. I'm going to draw to a close this year so that we can get on with making the bloody movie story in a nutshell is having grown up in south africa. A very musical Family my dad was Amateur violinist and we had string quartets every friday and Was always fun and games with music. i think i had stab at playing violin cello but i gravitate towards the piano at a very early age and spending classical music so i left high school which was about nineteen and during the last years of my education in south africa. I was at the south african college of music. Hot time But the rupp set in when i was a teenager around about fourteen years old. I just got a jazz and then from there. Parents iraq ro listening to. It's on a shortwave radio. Of.

The Eddie Trunk Podcast
"eddie" Discussed on The Eddie Trunk Podcast
"I tell you each and every week the interviews that come your way here on the eddie trunk podcast. All originate live on my sirius. Xm radio show which is called trunk nation. Which is heard monday through. Friday live on channel one. Oh six volume from two to four. Pm eastern time with nightly replays ten to midnight eastern audio-video full shows interviews more. Anytime you want on the sirius. Xm app if you're in the us and canada and you're not listening to trunk nation and subscribing to sirius xm. You're getting a heine tiny fraction of what. I do on a daily basis on the radio here on the podcast. Also have six show on sirius. Xm on mondays five pm eastern live on hair nation channel thirty nine and a syndicated terrestrial radio show of course this podcast making eight broadcasts week. Thank you for connecting with whatever ones of those that you do social media at eddie trunk twitter and instagram fan page. On facebook upcoming appearances they are starting to roll in october. Is going to be a nutty month for october seventh. It starts in houston. Texas warehouse live hosting sebastian bach. October ninth also at warehouse live hosting jackal in houston and then october. Fifteen sixteen and seventeen pigeon forge tennessee monsters on the mountain. And then you've got the eighties in the sand event happening in cancun mexico which is sold out just added october thirty one halloween woodstock georgia hosting a listening party for resist and bite which is abandoned features former tesla guitarist tommy skill and that should be a lot of fun at mad life studios all info links more on my social media and eddie trunk dot com.

Fresh Air
"eddie" Discussed on Fresh Air
"And that's what eddie gallagher shows up and there's video that shows him saying to the iraqi officer in charge. Is this guy isis. And then he says. I got him and he immediately starts pulling up a medical bag and providing medical care which was odd because although he had been trained and worked as a medic earlier in his career wasn't his job on this tune in fact they had medics who were there and actually working on the the young man. So what did he gallagher do. What did they see him do. The putin was really confused. Because eddie had never opened a medical bag that they had seen during the whole deployment. He didn't particularly relish that part of the job and yet here he was working on a captive and so they were confused about why he was doing it. And what he planned to do with this captive afterwards where they going to treat him and then you take custody of him and take him to a us jail where they going to turn him over to the iraqis. None of the seals in the platoon. It ever gone through a scenario where they knew what to do with this so they watched eddie start to perform emergency medicine on this. This young this young captive he put an emergency airway into the capital by cutting a hole essentially in the front of his throat and inserting a tube. And at that point one of the actual medics notice that eddie messed up the procedure and he instinctively knelt down and helped and so eventually there were two other medics and one other seal all helping to provide medical treatment to this guy even though they had no idea what they were going to do with him once they were done and then there's the moment where eddie does the thing that shocks everyone. What happened once. They had captive all stabilized and would have transported him to a hospital if that had been the what witnesses say. There are three who saw this. They say that he wordlessly pulled out a custom hunting knife that always had on the back of his belt and stabbed the prisoner multiple times in the base of the neck and then without really saying much more got up and walked away. The prisoner bled profusely and died. What happened then. After the prisoner died they were still at this compound for several hours waiting for for other operations to end so that they could leave. And during that time. Eddie gallagher and the lieutenant in charge of the platoon guiding jake portier gathered up as many guys as they could find and took a group. Photo with eddie gallagher and the dead body and in those photos eddie has his hunting knife in one hand and is gripping the hair of the corpse in the other and has sort of determined look with his whole platoon or or many of them ranged all around him. Yes a pretty weird. Seen a lot of the alpha platoon members weren't exactly happy about this right but but they did it anyway. There some that refuse to get in the photos. There's some that just quietly disappeared when they realized what was going on because they wanted no part of it..

The Eddie Trunk Podcast
"eddie" Discussed on The Eddie Trunk Podcast
"A day or two that gig and this englishman called the liverpool set. Only one of them was released from england. One another one from scotland one was from lafayette. And i don't know you know in a couple of from candidates but anyway they came in they were having. It's around you know regional heads and their bass player had been deported back to canada and they were looking for baseball and so turns out that i ended up in that band and jaakko pistorious came in everybody's mind he ended up in the cc rights. And so i took off with this band ripple set and we were signed to columbia. We did recordings columbia. Had regional hits all over the place. And i you know turns out we were paul shafer's favorite because he he lived in In way up on the lake head of lake superior no bands went there. But we did. He would go anywhere. We had this manager mocking us and they were just. You know like we would do a one nighter in sudbury ontario. And then you know like the night after that we will be in milwaukee you know if there was a gig so You know we've bounced all over the us and canada this band and recorded as well so after that band i came back to new york played briefly in a band called the swamp seeds and we are to have we run epic. We added hit and when that ran. It's course i ran into eddie Just left the soul survivors sixty nine and he said to me it. Have you heard spend leads up the album. It just come out. And i said yeah.