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Tag: Gentle Giant

  • Houston Concert Watch 9/10: Nine Inch Nails, Insane Clown Posse and More

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    After reading my colleague Bob Ruggiero’s review of the new book Giant Steps: My Improbable Journey from Stage Lights to Executive Heights, which traces the career of Derek Shulman, who went from fronting the prog rock band Gentle Giant to working as a record company executive, I got to thinking about others who have made similar career renavigations.

    While it is true that spending time in the trenches of the music biz as an artist does give a person a rare and valuable perspective regarding the business, the fact is that most musicians do not possess the skills to both perform music and negotiate a recording contract. Nor could most record company honchos confidently sit in with professional musicians. As a rule, you can either do one or the other. Kind of a left brain / right brain thing.

    There are, of course, other exceptions. One individual who comes to mind is Warren Entner. He was a member of the Grass Roots who played guitar and keyboards, additionally contributing memorable vocal parts, e.g. the bridge in “Midnight Confessions” (“There’s a little gold ring you wear on your hand…”). After the Grass Roots dried up, Entner became a manager, guiding the careers of acts like Quiet Riot, Faith No More and Rage Against the Machine.

    Trumpeter Herb Alpert maintained parallel careers as a recording artist (leader of the Tijuana Brass) and as co-owner (with Jerry Moss) of A&M Records, which was home to Peter Frampton, George Benson, the Carpenters, Soundgarden and numerous others.

    Most bands without representation have a person in the group who deals with club owners, concert promoters and the like. If that individual in your band always ensures that everyone is paid what was promised and sometimes negotiates some sort of lagniappe as well, then bask in your good fortune. That person may well have “manager” written all over him.

    Ticket Alert
    H-town rapper and hamburger magnate Bun B will present a one-off show at the House of Blues on Saturday, October 18, in celebration of the 20th anniversary of his debut solo release Trill. The show is billed as “Trill Unplugged,” meaning that the album with be “reimagined,” with special guests, live instruments and stories detailing the making of the album. A few seats remain, with plenty of tickets available on the resale market.

    It is perhaps fitting that Atlanta rapper Playboi Carti’s current tour is operating under the banner of “Antagonist.”  Carti has certainly gotten on the wrong side of many folks.  The tour was scheduled for 2023, but fates evidently conspired against it. A prime cause for the delay may have been various legal issues that Carti has been forced to deal with over the past few years. In any case, all systems seem to be “go” for Carti’s performance at Toyota Center on Thursday, November 20. Presales are in progress now, and the general sale is set for Friday.

    Austin musician Ty Myers is only 18, but he has been at it for a while, writing his first songs when he was in grade school, encouraged by his singer-songwriter father. Myers released his first album, The Select, earlier this year, achieving significant chart success. While marketed as a country artist, Myers slides in some R&B and blues influences to keep things interesting. Catch him at the 713 Music Hall on Saturday, February 7.

    Alter Bridge was formed in the early noughts when former members of Creed – guitarist Mark Tremonti, bassist Brian Marshall and drummer Scott Phillips – joined with vocalist / guitarist Myles Kennedy. The band will release a new album early in 2026 and tour behind it next spring, stopping at the Bayou Music Center on Tuesday, April 28.

    Concerts This Week
    There are few bands with a better name than Marty Stuart and His Fabulous Superlatives. Not only does the group have a great name, its ranks include some major players, most notably Stuart, who developed his guitar chops backing Johnny Cash during the early ‘80s. Stuart and the Superlatives will perform tonight at the Centrum (part of the Cypress Creek Christian Community Center, though the concert is presented by Main Street Crossing), spotlighting tunes from their most recent all-instrumental album Space Junk.
    Nine Inch Nails is the name of the band, but in point of fact, the “band” is founder Trent Reznor, collaborator Atticus Ross, and whomever else they feel is necessary to fill out the sound for recordings and concerts. Sort of like a really intense Steely Dan. Though Reznor has been busy with film and television soundtracks over the past several years (The Social Network, The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, Watchmen, Tron: Ares), it appears that he hasn’t forgotten his industrial / rock and roll roots. Reports from the current “Peel It Back” tour indicate that fans can expect plenty of signature NIN material like “Closer” and “Hurt.” Catch Reznor and company on Friday at Toyota Center.
    What’s better than a Carolyn Wonderland show at the Continental Club on a Saturday night? This weekend’s concert should be a good one, as Wonderland will do doubt be featuring a number of songs from her most recent (and most outstanding) album Truth Is in her set. Frequent Wonderland collaborator Shelley King and her trio will open.
    The hip-hop duo Insane Clown Posse has been pissing people off for over 30 years with a combination of rap, creepy clowns, questionable lyrics, professional wrestling and a propensity to engage in physical confrontations both onstage and at Waffle Houses. Not only that, the ICP faithful known as Juggalos were, at one time, viewed as a dangerous “gang” by the FBI. This all being the case, it’s bound to get wild on Sunday at the White Oak Music Hall. As the band and its fans like to say, “WOOP WOOP!”

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    Tom Richards

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  • Derek Shulman: A Gentle Giant Onstage, Fierce Shark in the Boardroom

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    Those with careers in the music biz usually stand on one side of a dividing line. You’re either on the artistic side or you’re on the business side. Rare is the individual whose experience finds he or she crossing that well-delineated marker.

    But that was the case for Derek Shulman, who went from being the lead singer/guitarist for the well-regarded UK Prog Rock outfit Gentle Giant in the ‘70s to a record company executive beginning in the ‘80s who signed and/or developed acts like Bon Jovi, Dream Theater, Slipknot, and Nickelback. He also played a key role in revitalizing the careers of AC/DC and Bad Company.

    Shulman tells his wide-ranging—and often opinionated—story of life and music in Giant Steps: My Improbable Journey from Stage Lights to Executive Heights (304 pp., $24.95, Jawbone Press).

    The book starts with Shulman as a music-obsessed teen who was laughed at by his classmates and teacher for stating he wanted to have a career as a pop star. He would soon form the psychedelic rock band Simon Dupree & the Big Sound with a lineup that included his two brothers, Ray and later Phil.
    They had minor UK hits with “Kites,” “For Whom the Bell Tolls,” “I See the Light” and “Reservations.” But there was no “Simon Dupree.” The band took their name from a real-life former mayor of their native Portsmouth.

    In 1969, they found themselves utterly gobsmacked to be recording in Abbey Road Studios in the very same studio which the Beatles were recording their album of the same name.

    Cheekily, they would play and record with several of the instruments that the Fabs had left sitting around (and definitely without their knowledge). But when John Lennon and Yoko Ono caught them jumping up and down on the bed that had been brought into the studio for Ono while she was recovering from injuries in a car crash, Shulman notes the peace-and-love duo were not amused:

    John Lennon: “Jesus Christ! What kind of bullshit is this?”
    Yoko Ono: “Get the fuck off the bed!”
    Simon Dupree & the Big Sound would at one point have to draft a keyboard player to fill in on part of a tour when their regular member was not available. He was an excitable and affable bloke with a wide-ranging and encyclopedic knowledge of music named Reg Dwight.

    Shulman notes that he and his bandmates had a great laugh when Dwight told them he would be soon changing his name to better chase his pop and rock star dreams. They said it would never work and was just plain strange. But Dwight—who began calling himself Elton John—did OK for himself.

    Ironically, it was John who encouraged the band to listen to a wider range of musical influences from Spirit and Frank Zappa to Miles Davis. They did and were so moved that they decided to put a stake in the heart of Simon Dupree & the Big Sound and, with some lineup rejiggering, emerge as a new band with a new direction and name: Gentle Giant.

    Their first three albums (Gentle Giant, Acquiring the Taste, Three Friends) found a dedicated but relatively modest audience of admirers. They would open for bands like Black Sabbath and Jethro Tull, but never quite make it to the next level despite a series of deep and challenging records.
    Ozzy Osbourne, David Bowie, Marc Bolan, and others make cameo appearances here. Shulman does not mince words about what arrogant pricks he thought tourmates the Beach Boys and Eagles were. How the early Clash couldn’t play for shit. And Styx and Kansas were “ripping off their songs” while minting money in record sales and touring.

    And he notes that—unlike a lot of others—he eschewed alcohol and drugs. But by far the most offbeat fact revealed in Giant Steps is that Gentle Giant was a favorite band of—believe it or not—actor Sherman Hemsley. That’s right, TV’s George Jefferson himself! The gushing actor even brought the band a bag of magic mushrooms backstage.

    Gentle Giant disbanded in 1980 and two years later, Shulman landed a gig as an executive at PolyGram, first as a radio promo man, then moving into A&R. “Playing for the other side” he says.

    click to enlarge

    Derek Shulman & Jon Bon Jovi, 1996.

    Derek Shulman Collection

    And while his experience at GG’s manager helped him, there was a lot to learn. It is a bit naïve when Shulman writes “I realized that the music business wasn’t about music. It was about business. To a lot of these people, the records weren’t works of art, they were product.”

    Shulman heard a catchy song on New York rock radio called “Runaway.” It was recorded by a charismatic, confident 18-year-old kid who laid down the track in his cousin’s record studio—that is, when he wasn’t sweeping the floors. He didn’t even have a band. The kid’s name was Jon Bongiovi, and soon he did, and with his new moniker: Bon Jovi.

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    Derek Shulman today.

    Derek Shulman Collection

    The same Bon Jovi would, hilariously, attend the bris of the Jewish Shulman’s newborn son. Not knowing what the religious ceremony was for, and definitely not knowing it involved a knife and the baby’s penis. “Jon’s faced turned white…and it looked like he was going to throw up, faint, or both,” Shulman writes.

    The book includes plenty of anecdotes about other acts Shulman worked with: Cinderella, Kingdom Come, Men Without Hats, and others.

    Houston is mentioned once in the book when Shulman (now at ATCO) sent a scout to the city to size up a potential signee band called Tangier. But the coming of Hurricane Hugo meant the flight was diverted to Dallas.

    So instead, Shulman sent the scout to check out another group he thought was good. They didn’t have a gig but were playing a teenage girl’s birthday party at a Mexican restaurant. The scout was blown away and told Shulman he should sign them. The band? Pantera. And he did.

    Even Houston rapper Travis Scott pops up as Shulman notes that his track “HYAENA” opens with a 30 second sample of Gentle Giant’s “Proclamation.” Other rappers have also sampled their music, and Questlove and Killer Mike are huge Gentle Giant fans.

    Now 78 years old, Derek Shulman definitely left his mark in the music biz. And even if you’re not familiar with the music of Gentle Giant, you’ll certainly want to seek it out after reading this.

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    Bob Ruggiero

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