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| 1 This Beat Goes On 2 Switchin' To Glide 3 It's Okay 4 Go away 5 Partyitis 6 Run Shoes Running 7 Anti-Hero man 8 Love Store 9 Don't let Me Know 10 My Habit AND MORE |
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When Bob Ezrin walked into Nimbus 9 Studio in Yorkville,Toronto one day
he had no idea what we was walking into.He was taking some time off after the completion
of Pink Floyd's The Wall which had taken more than a year. By the way the name of the song that won that contest was "Turn My Face" which later evolved into "Don't Let Me Know" That radio contest did bring forth more than a couple of people who wanted to help the band and so WhistleKing kept writing while deciding what path to follow. At this point in time the band had started to grow away from the more complex songs in their repetoire and started thinking about something else; WRITING HITS. Its not that the boys of WhisleKing were trying to not write hits it was more a case of the bottom falling out of the kind of long involved arrangements they were into.The reason was simple enough and the reason was a thing called punk. The rise of the punk movement was no big threat to WhistleKing except that the band was trying to be good musicians whereas the whole philosophy behind punk was that rock and roll was about attitude more than ability.But as far as being able to rock out at high volume levels that was old hat for these guys. Then came the marketing ploy known as "New Wave". Somewhere, somehow the nastiness of punk had to be toned down and made accessable to the record buying public.This brought forth bands that had attitude and hits with a different sound than the disco,prog-rock and country-rock bands of the 70's which was what punk was against in the first place. So now we have people asking instead of that hard to remember WhistleKing,where are The Kings playing? And so in the spirit of the times the guys all got stage names and started working on what would become The Kings ARE HERE. The Kings were still doing lots of club shows and did about 50-50 covers and originals. Doing six nighters in one place was good for the band because they could rehearse during the day and play and write at night.The songs got shorter and The Kings got tighter.They had a high energy live show that did well in the clubs and they had lots of gigs.But... they wanted to make a record and they had an albums worth of new songs including two weird ones that they stuck together. Somehow they found enough money to start recording at Nimbus 9 studio in Toronto.The album was just about done when Bob Ezrin came visiting. He liked what was happening and agreed to mix those two songs that went together called This Beat Goes On/Switchin' to Glide. What he found out as he tore the tracks apart was that although the band was loaded with good ideas they didn't know anything about making records, real records.And he just happened to be the top producer in the world! So he said "look, you have what it takes but we gotta re-do this whole thing because your parts and tempos are all over the place. Let me see what I can do." And just like out of a story book he took the tapes to L.A. and Ken Buttice at Elektra Records loved the tunes and got out the contract. And that is how it started for The Kings. So what happened next was pretty much a dream come true for a young band,a major label deal in America,a top producer and a budget to do things right. Remember that Ezrin came in as The Kings were getting near the end
of recording that indie album, now they had to re-rehearse and re-record the whole thing!
It was a great learning experience for the band.A whole MONTH of rehearsal where every
song and part was broken down and revamped. Some songs were re-written. If you heard the
original version of This Beat Goes On you would be amazed. One of Ezrin's techniques was
to hear the song in a simple form and when he heard something he didn't like he'd yell
stop and it was fix it time. That is what happened with This Beat Goes On. It was a
simpler chord structure that was not as hooky with lyrics that were not as direct. David
Diamond understood what Ezrin was getting at regarding the chords and went and changed the
parts so that although more complicated musically, it sounded better and was way more
catchy. That is when Zero re-wrote the lyrics to the B-verse which is where all this
improvement was taking place so instead of the original "Lots of dusty mentals can be
blown at any time..." we now have "I have lots of friends that I can ding at any
time..." It's pretty obvious which is better and there was more than just that
example. Indeed, the whole thing was worked on with the same attitude, "what can we
do to make this better?" Dave and Max would get left in the rehearsal room for hours
"drilling",going over and over and over their rhythm section parts until they
were rock solid. Finally the recording began and this was done back at Nimbus 9 which was
in a lovely part of Toronto called Yorkville. This was great because during the breaks the
band could go out and look at all the pretty girls walking around. Some of these were
pulled in off the street for the "Party Scene" in the song Partyitis. Some mics
were placed in the office part of the studio and the band got some booze and had a party!
Ezrin didn't think it was loud enough so in order to get more response he streaked the
party! More than once! Six weeks later the songs were ready to mix and Ezrin went to his
favorite place for mixing which was Producers Workshop in Hollywood California. The
results speak for themselves and everyone was very excited about the future. In The Kings
minds This Beat and Switchin' were always supposed to be together as a segue. They were
not too happy when Elektra Records decided to release Switchin' on its own. It did get
some play but finally after pressure from the band the segue was released and it was only
then that radio really picked up on it. Key markets included Chicago and the mid-west,
Texas, California and all down the eastern seaboard. The Beat/Switchin' combo stayed on
the Billboard chart for twenty six weeks as it broke in different markets. AND MORE.... |
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