I LOVE AMERICA. THE LAST WARNER BROTHERS 45!
Moderators: Devon, Gorehound, Si, SickThings, Shoesalesman
Re: I LOVE AMERICA. THE LAST WARNER BROTHERS 45!
about Prakash John
problably not the interview Si was referring to, but nevertheless with some interesting remarks concerning Alice.
How Dick Wagner could sing all the parts if Alice couldn't make it, etc..
eg : Wagner's writing was the cornerstone of Alice's success with Welcome to My Nightmare. What a beautiful song, "Only Women Bleed." What a fantastic song. I know he had to share the writing credits with Bob Ezrin and Alice, but that's business.
http://www.troianomusic.com/prakash.html
problably not the interview Si was referring to, but nevertheless with some interesting remarks concerning Alice.
How Dick Wagner could sing all the parts if Alice couldn't make it, etc..
eg : Wagner's writing was the cornerstone of Alice's success with Welcome to My Nightmare. What a beautiful song, "Only Women Bleed." What a fantastic song. I know he had to share the writing credits with Bob Ezrin and Alice, but that's business.
http://www.troianomusic.com/prakash.html
you really wouldn't understand..
Re: I LOVE AMERICA. THE LAST WARNER BROTHERS 45!
I have the 12 inch single and also saw a copy at a recent record fayre for a tenner. What an album. That solo in pass the gun... Is sublime. Personally I think dyslexia is the only weak track but its all about taste and preference.
Re: I LOVE AMERICA. THE LAST WARNER BROTHERS 45!
Regarding Prakash John’s bass part and his lack of memory of It there’s always the possibility that they simply used a fairlight sample of some of his previously recorded playing rather than the bed track being an outtake from an earlier Lp.mr.barlow wrote: ↑Tue Jun 11, 2019 1:21 amThe one question I wish Wagner spoke about in the book or that incredible podcast episode was the inclusion of Prakash John on "Fresh Blood". I believe Prakash is Canadian and lives in Toronto (or it's suburbs) but somewhere I think Prakash stated that he doesn't remember playing at those sessions.
I could understand this is he were uncredited, but the album jacket goes out of it's way to make sure to credit him on that
Someone on here (If I remember right) stated that "Fresh Blood" could have been a leftover track from "Goes To Hell" and they kept Prakash's bass parts and just reworked the rest of the song. They did need filler which also accounts for the unnecessary length of the song.
- Daggers & Contracts
- Dada God
- Posts: 2838
- Joined: Mon Feb 04, 2013 5:47 pm
- Location: 340 Sanitarium
Re: I LOVE AMERICA. THE LAST WARNER BROTHERS 45!
As long as PJ gets a check - he doesn't have to remember, just cash it! At least they thought of him enough to give him credit!Babysquid wrote: ↑Sun Jun 16, 2019 9:38 amRegarding Prakash John’s bass part and his lack of memory of It there’s always the possibility that they simply used a fairlight sample of some of his previously recorded playing rather than the bed track being an outtake from an earlier Lp.mr.barlow wrote: ↑Tue Jun 11, 2019 1:21 amThe one question I wish Wagner spoke about in the book or that incredible podcast episode was the inclusion of Prakash John on "Fresh Blood". I believe Prakash is Canadian and lives in Toronto (or it's suburbs) but somewhere I think Prakash stated that he doesn't remember playing at those sessions.
I could understand this is he were uncredited, but the album jacket goes out of it's way to make sure to credit him on that
Someone on here (If I remember right) stated that "Fresh Blood" could have been a leftover track from "Goes To Hell" and they kept Prakash's bass parts and just reworked the rest of the song. They did need filler which also accounts for the unnecessary length of the song.
I've Got The Answers To All Of Your Questions...
Re: I LOVE AMERICA. THE LAST WARNER BROTHERS 45!
I heard he got $1.25 from sales of Da Da.
Re: I LOVE AMERICA. THE LAST WARNER BROTHERS 45!
I hate to have to correct you on this but your figure is wrong.
The total they ALL got for the sales of DaDa was $1.25.
Seen it as Prakash only played on one song I think his take was $0.02USD.
It's possible that at the sessions he was given free pizza and beer which would not be counted in his payout.
- Daggers & Contracts
- Dada God
- Posts: 2838
- Joined: Mon Feb 04, 2013 5:47 pm
- Location: 340 Sanitarium
Re: I LOVE AMERICA. THE LAST WARNER BROTHERS 45!
I would guess that means that P.J. "did have 2 pennies to rub together"!mr.barlow wrote: ↑Mon Jun 17, 2019 3:22 pmI hate to have to correct you on this but your figure is wrong.
The total they ALL got for the sales of DaDa was $1.25.
Seen it as Prakash only played on one song I think his take was $0.02USD.
It's possible that at the sessions he was given free pizza and beer which would not be counted in his payout.
I've Got The Answers To All Of Your Questions...
Re: I LOVE AMERICA. THE LAST WARNER BROTHERS 45!
well---after Canadian taxes he was likely left with 1/4 of 1 cent.
Re: I LOVE AMERICA. THE LAST WARNER BROTHERS 45!
About "Dada""Pass the Gun Around"...
To mr.barlow
>I think it is the most important track on the album as it establishes the theme and helps the listener make sense
>of what's to follow.
Yes.I think "Dada" is also nice black joke. Main character's son has girls name, in his nightmare he confuse he has a daughter -nowadays LGBT- but they are "a boy"...
I think Sonny did Russian roulette in "Pass the Gun Around", and "there's a stranger in his bed"(dead body)...
"he wishes he was dead", but forsaken by luck.
On Official Youtube, somebody commented,
"Mick Marrs copied this solo on Home Sweet Home. Theres no way he wasn't aware of Alice's work. The phrasing and delay are just too similar. This album was just released when they were writing Theatre of Pain"
I've not heard "Home Sweet Home" until now, but his comment is right.
It's pleasure to see "Home Sweet Home guitar cover" on Youtube.
Dick Wagner lives!
To mr.barlow
>I think it is the most important track on the album as it establishes the theme and helps the listener make sense
>of what's to follow.
Yes.I think "Dada" is also nice black joke. Main character's son has girls name, in his nightmare he confuse he has a daughter -nowadays LGBT- but they are "a boy"...
I think Sonny did Russian roulette in "Pass the Gun Around", and "there's a stranger in his bed"(dead body)...
"he wishes he was dead", but forsaken by luck.
On Official Youtube, somebody commented,
"Mick Marrs copied this solo on Home Sweet Home. Theres no way he wasn't aware of Alice's work. The phrasing and delay are just too similar. This album was just released when they were writing Theatre of Pain"
I've not heard "Home Sweet Home" until now, but his comment is right.
It's pleasure to see "Home Sweet Home guitar cover" on Youtube.
Dick Wagner lives!
Re: I LOVE AMERICA. THE LAST WARNER BROTHERS 45!
I always read it as "the stranger in his bed" was himself as he didn't know who he was anymore. It fits with the identity crisis theme.
Re: I LOVE AMERICA. THE LAST WARNER BROTHERS 45!
The "gun" he was referring to was a bottle of vodka. Wagner states as such in his comments on the song. "Give everyone a shot" was a play on words.
- Shoesalesman
- Little Mermaid
- Posts: 15234
- Joined: Sat Dec 22, 2007 4:39 pm
- Location: Edmonton, Alberta
- Contact:
Re: I LOVE AMERICA. THE LAST WARNER BROTHERS 45!
I saw Prakash perform near Toronto in 2007. Had an opportunity to talk with him at the end of the night, mostly about Alice stuff and his contributions. Had the Dada album with me, so he perused the cover and sleeve, basically saying he remembers the album but nothing significant about playing on it. He said good things about Alice, Dick Wagner and Bob Ezrin, from years prior to Dada, but reserved his ultimate praise for Pentti Glan.mr.barlow wrote: ↑Tue Jun 11, 2019 1:21 amI believe Prakash is Canadian and lives in Toronto (or it's suburbs) but somewhere I think Prakash stated that he doesn't remember playing at those sessions.
I could understand this is he were uncredited, but the album jacket goes out of it's way to make sure to credit him on that song.
If I may put forward a slice of personal colostomy...