Speaking from his home in Long Island, guitarist Dave ‘Snake’ Sabo is clearly very happy with Skid Row’s new album, The Gang’s All Here. “Yes, I am,” he confirms. “We had to change our perspective, and our execution, in putting this record together, but it was a wonderful experience even when it was tough – even when we were, I don’t want to say doubting ourselves, but maybe hitting a bump in the road.
“The experience of working with producer Nick Raskulinecz, though, was one of the highlights of my musical career, both personally and with the band,” he continues. “We’re talking about a guy who’s not only an amazingly well-rounded, talented musician and songwriter, but I think one of his greatest qualities is that he’s able to extract the very best out of the people that work with him because he challenges you in such a way that you want to meet – and exceed – those challenges to make him happy. He never set anything that wasn’t, in his mind, within our reach and so because he believed it, we believed it. And the key to that is that you’ve got to leave a large part of your ego at the door when you walk in the studio. You can’t sit there with this inner voice telling you that whatever you say is greater than what anybody else says. We knew that we had to do things very differently than we had in the past. And the first step was accepting that everything that we write isn’t 100 per cent perfect and putting our trust in a person that we’d never worked with before but who has an incredible reputation and a discography that speaks for itself.”
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Esta historia es de la edición Christmas 2022 de Record Collector.
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Paperback Blighters - The books every record collector should read.
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David Bowie is one of the most venerated musicians ever. But even he had his bad periods. For many, 1984 remains the nadir of his Phil Collins” phase; an artistic/sartonial/tonsorial disaster area. But was it really that awful? Forty years on, Matt Phillips explores Bowie's so-called annus horribilis.
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