Keith Noel Emerson
(born 2 November 1944 in Todmorden, West Yorkshire) is a British keyboard player and composer. Formerly a member of the Keith Emerson Trio, John Brown's Bodies, The T-Bones, V.I.P.s, P.P. Arnold's backing band, and The Nice (which evolved from P.P.Arnold's band), he started Emerson, Lake & Palmer (ELP), one of the early supergroups, in 1970. Following the breakup of ELP, circa
1979, Emerson had modest success with Emerson, Lake & Powell in the 1980s. ELP reunited during the early 90s. Emerson also reunited The Nice in 2002 for a tour. He is currently on tour (as of Aug/Sept 2008) with The Keith Emerson Band and an album titled Keith Emerson Band Featuring Marc Bonilla
was released in Aug/Sept 2008.
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KEITH EMERSON TICKETS
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Biography
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Emerson grew up in the seaside resort of
Worthing,
West Sussex, England. As a child, he learned
western classical music, from which he derived a lot of inspiration to create his own style, combining classical music,
jazz, and
rock themes. Emerson became intrigued with the
Hammond organ after hearing jazz organist
Jack McDuff perform "Rock Candy" and it subsequently became his instrument of choice for performing in the late 60s. This blending of elements is illustrated in his participation in the 1969
Music From Free Creek
"supersession" project, where Emerson performs with drummer
Mitch Mitchell and bassist
Chuck Rainey covering, among other tracks, the
Eddie Harris instrumental "Freedom Jazz Dance".
In 1969, Emerson incorporated the
Moog modular synthesizer into his battery of keyboards. While other artists such as
The Beatles and
The Rolling Stones had used the Moog in studio recordings, Emerson was the first artist to tour with one.
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He is known for his technical skill and for his live antics, including using knives to wedge down specific keys of his
Hammond organ during solos, playing the organ upside down while having it lie over him and backwards while standing behind it. He also employed a special rig to rotate his piano end-over-end while he was playing it, and it worked because it was a synth in a piano's "body". Along with contemporaries
Richard Wright of
Pink Floyd,
Tony Banks of
Genesis, Billy Ritchie of
Clouds and
Rick Wakeman of
Yes, Emerson is widely regarded as one of the top keyboard players of the
progressive rock era.
[1] [2] [3] Allmusic refers to Emerson as "perhaps the greatest, most technically accomplished keyboardist in rock history".
[4]
Emerson has performed several notable rock arrangements of classical compositions, ranging from
J. S. Bach via
Modest Mussorgsky to 20th century composers such as
Béla Bartók,
Aaron Copland,
Leoš Janácek and
Alberto Ginastera. Occasionally Emerson has quoted from classical and jazz works without giving credit, particularly early in his career, from the late 1960s until 1972. The song "
Rondo" by The Nice is a
12/8 interpretation of "Blue Rondo à la Turk" by the
Dave Brubeck Quartet, originally in 9/8
time signature. The piece is introduced by an extensive quote from Bach's
Italian Concerto, third movement. In fact, considering the Bach and Emerson's own improvisations, the Brubeck contribution is merely the anchoring theme.
On ELP's
eponymous first album, Emerson's classical quotes went largely uncredited. "The Barbarian" is heavily influenced by
Allegro barbaro by Bartók, and "Knife Edge" is virtually a note-for-note restatement of "Sinfonietta" by Janácek. Note-for-note extracts were taken from pieces by Bartók, Janácek and Bach, mixed in with some original material, and credited completely to Emerson, Lake, Palmer and roadie
Richard Fraser. By 1971, with the releases
Pictures at an Exhibition
and
Trilogy
, Emerson began to fully credit classical composers,
Modest Mussorgsky for the piano piece which inspired the first album, and
Aaron Copland for "Hoedown" on the second. Emerson was adamant that he did not use
Maurice Ravel's orchestration of
Pictures at an Exhibition
in developing his own version.
In 2004 Emerson published his autobiography entitled
Pictures of an Exhibitionist
, which deals with his entire career, particularly focusing on his early days with
The Nice, and his nearly career-ending nerve-graft surgery in 1993.
Emerson has provided music for a number of films since 1980, including
Dario Argento's
Inferno
and
World of Horror
, the 1981 thriller
Nighthawks
and, more recently,
Godzilla: Final Wars
. He was also the composer for the short-lived 1994 animated television series
Iron Man
.
Emerson has released a number of solo albums and is currently working on another with regular collaborator
Marc Bonilla and producer
Keith Wechsler. The new album titled
Keith Emerson Band Featuring Marc Bonilla
was released in August/September 2008. He currently on tours with his own band in Russia and Baltic (Aug/Sept 2008) and in Japan (Oct 2008). The current tour band members are Marc Bonilla (G/Vo), Travis Davis (B), Tony Pia (Dr).
The upcoming Keith Emerson Band tour has been cancelled due Keith Emerson's hand injury. As a result, further plans for a reunion tour with Emerson, Lake, and Palmer have been cancelled as well.
On June 30, 2009 Emerson appeared as a guest during
Spinal Tap's 'One Night Only World Tour' at Wembley Arena, during the songs 'Short And Sweet' and 'Heavy Duty'. He concluded his guest spot by kicking over his weighty Hammond organ to the delight of the crowd.
Instrumentation and playing style
On stage Emerson started out on Hammond organ, with a grand piano toward the back of the stage. By the end of his time with The Nice, the standard arrangement was two Hammond organs, a
C-3 and an
L-100, placed facing each other with the C-3 to the left from the audience point of view. The L-100 took plenty of abuse during the stage act and was usually reinforced, to the point where it weighed so much that, on at least one occasion, Emerson became trapped beneath it and had to be rescued by a roadie. At any given time Emerson is said to have owned several L-100 models, in various stages of repair, to support his act. The C-3, in contrast, seems to have lasted for years.
Although the Hammond L-100 with its shorter manuals is considered a "poor man's" Hammond, Emerson not only played much of the early Nice music on his L-100, but also made good use of some of its unique features which his bigger Hammond C-3 does not provide. The L-100 has a self-starting motor, which - if turned off and on in short intervals - renders the whole organ into a wailing howl while the note generator, which is tied to a synchronous motor, tries to recover to pitch. The L-100 also features a spring-loaded reverb tank, which produces bomb-like noises if shaken. Both effects can be heard in abundance on "Rondo 69". On "Ars Longa Vita Brevis" Emerson even uses the reverb tank as a musical instrument, tapping the internal spring against the tank bottom in an effort to create a chromatic scale of "boings".
With ELP, Emerson added the Moog synthesiser behind the C-3 with the keyboard and
ribbon controller stacked on the top of the organ. The ribbon controller allowed Emerson to vary pitch, volume or timbre of the output from the Moog by moving his finger up and down the length of a touch-sensitive strip. It also could be used as a phallic symbol, which quickly became a feature of the act. When the Minimoog entered the act it was placed where needed, such as on top of the grand piano. The same location was also used for an electric
Clavinet keyboard, used almost exclusively for the encore piece
Nut Rocker.
During the Brain Salad Surgery tour of 1974 (one show of which was documented on the 3-LP set,
Welcome Back My Friends, to the Show That Never Ends
), Emerson's keyboard setup included the Hammond C-3 organ, run through multiple
Leslie speakers driven by HiWatt guitar amplifiers, the Moog 3C modular synthesiser (modified by addition of various modules and an
oscilloscope) with ribbon controller, a Steinway concert grand piano with a Moog Minimoog synthesiser on top of it (used for the steel drum part on Karn Evil 9, 2nd Impression), an upright acoustic-electric piano that was used for honky-tonk piano sounds, a Hohner Clavinet and another Moog Minimoog synthesiser. Emerson also used a prototype polyphonic synthesiser produced by Moog, which was the test bed for the Moog Polymoog polyphonic synthesiser. The original synthesiser setup as envisioned by Moog was called the Constellation, and consisted of 3 instruments - the polyphonic synthesiser, called the Apollo, a monophonic lead synthesizer called the Lyra, and a bass-pedal synthesiser, called the Taurus. Moog eventually produced the Moog Taurus bass pedal synthesiser as a separate instrument, as well as the Polymoog Synthesiser and Polymoog Keyboard. The Apollo polyphonic synthesiser is currently at a keyboard museum in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. Emerson still owns the Lyra synthesiser.
Occasionally Emerson used a
pipe organ, when available. In particular, at the
Newcastle City Hall he used the
Harrison & Harrison pipe organ for the introductory section of
Pictures at an Exhibition
. The organ is located at the rear above the stage, at the top of a series of steps where choirs can stand. The end of the introductory passage is followed by a drum roll, covering the time while Emerson descended the steps. While all went well for the recording used to produce the album, the debut tour performance at the same venue ground to a halt as the power failed, just as Emerson arrived at the Hammond organ to open the next part of the piece. After a lengthy delay the performance continued with only the Hammond L-100 functioning.
Emerson also used the organ at the
Royal Festival Hall for "The Three Fates" from the
eponymous debut album by the group. He also used another pipe organ for "The Only Way (Hymn)" from the sophomore
Tarkus
album. It is not known if he used it in a live context outside of the aforementioned
Pictures
.
Amplifiers and speakers behind Emerson became more elaborate, including a Leslie unit. There was also a board attached to the front of the stack, intended as a target for his knife throwing. During the Brain Salad Surgery tour, at the end of the show, a sequencer in the Moog Modular synthesiser was set running at an increasing rate, with the Moog Synthesiser pivoting to face the audience while a large pair of silver bat wings was deployed at the back of the synthesiser.
As the technology of electronic keyboard instruments became more sophisticated, Emerson was quick to adopt new instruments, such as the
Yamaha GX1 polyphonic synthesiser, one of which can be seen on the video promoting
Fanfare for the Common Man. Emerson was reported to have spent $50,000 to buy the Yamaha GX-1 synthesiser at the time of the
Works[disambiguation needed] album. Emerson later bought a 2nd GX-1 from
John Paul Jones of
Led Zeppelin, to use to repair his GX-1, which was damaged by a tractor crash into Emerson's home studio. At the time that Emerson left England in the early 1990s to move to
Santa Monica, California, he sold the majority of his keyboard equipment, though not the modular Moog. The original Yamaha GX-1 was bought by
Hans Zimmer of movie soundtrack fame, while the John Paul Jones GX-1 was bought by a collector in Italy. Other more elaborate innovations have been previously described in this article.
In 1978 Emerson became the official endorser of the world's first fully polyphonic synthesisers, namely the
Korg PS-3300 and PS-3100. He started recording with them around this time too and the Korg PS-3300 was heavily used on the ELP album
Love Beach
. Only 50 units were produced of this mega-monster of a synthesiser and it has achieved cult status today partly thanks to Emerson's endorsement. He carried on using it into the 80s, for example the Korg PS-3300 also dominates the 1981 film soundtrack for
Nighthawks
which starred Sylvester Stallone.
Even on the grand piano, Emerson refused to limit his technique to hitting the keys. He would sometimes reach into the interior and hit, pluck or strum the strings with his hand. The introduction to "Take a Pebble" includes chords and arpeggios played by pressing down on keys, to raise the dampers from the strings, and playing the strings inside the piano as one might play the
autoharp. In the live performance of "Hang on to a Dream" with the Nice, recorded for the post-breakup album
Elegy
, he performed a
cadenza
of sorts hitting the piano strings with a small hammer, followed by a lengthy wind-down returning to the song in which he alternated keyboard arpeggios with blows directly on the bass strings. The standard finale to the song has him reaching into the piano with fingers spread on both hands to pluck the final chord, presumably depressing the sustain pedal at the same time to lift all the string dampers. This can be clearly seen on a performance filmed for the television show
Beat Club.
He currently plays with his own group, the Keith Emerson Band featuring Marc Bonilla. Their newest self-titled album was released in Japan in August 2008, and Europe in September 2008.
Discography
Solo
- Inferno
soundtrack (1980)
- Nighthawks
soundtrack (1981)
- Honky (1985)
- Best Revenge
soundtrack (1986)
- Murderock
soundtrack (1986)
- The Emerson Collection (1986)
- Harmageddon/China Free Fall (1987)
- The Christmas Album (1988)
- Changing States (a/k/a Cream of Emerson Soup)(1995)
- Emerson Plays Emerson (2002)
- La Chiesa
soundtrack (2002)
- At the Movies (2005)
- Hammer it Out (anthology) (2005)
- Off the Shelf (2006)
- Keith Emerson Band (2008)
- Godzilla: Final Wars
soundtrack (2004)
As part of a group
and 3 (1980s band)#Discography}}.
Partial list of pieces based on other composers' works
Note that lack of credit does not imply plagiarism. It is certain that, where required, royalties were paid to composers or their estates. Permission to use pieces was sometimes denied by the composer's family or estate, as for instance with
Gustav Holst's
Mars, the Bringer of War
.
Aaron Copland was said to be somewhat puzzled by Emerson's take on Fanfare For the Common Man, but approved its use.
Alberto Ginastera, on the other hand, was thrilled by Emerson's electronic realization and declared that he wished he could have done it in that fashion himself.
With The Nice
- "America, 2nd Amendment", from ''West Side Storys "America", by Leonard Bernstein, credited, quoting Antonín Dvorák's symphony No. 9,
From the New World'', uncredited.
- "Rondo", derived from Dave Brubeck's "Blue Rondo à la Turk", uncredited, quoting Bach, Italian Concerto
third movement, uncredited.
- "Diary of an Empty Day", from Symphonie Espagnole
by Édouard Lalo, credited.
- "Azrael Revisited", quoting Sergei Rachmaninoff's Prelude in C-sharp minor
, credited, and Lennie Tristano's Turkish Mambo
, uncredited.
- "Ars Longa Vita Brevis" - Bach, the third Brandenburg Concerto, Allegro, credited.
- "Intermezzo from the Karelia Suite" - Sibelius, credited.
- "Pathetique", Symphony No. 6 by Tchaikovsky, credited.
- "Hang on to a Dream", from "How Can We Hang On To A Dream?" by Tim Hardin, credited, quoting (during a live recording) "Summertime", from Porgy and Bess
by George Gershwin, uncredited.
- "She Belongs to Me", by Bob Dylan, credited, quoting Bach, uncredited, and fragments of the theme from The Magnificent Seven
, by Elmer Bernstein, uncredited.
- "Country Pie", by Bob Dylan, credited, lyrics partly set to Bach, the sixth Brandenburg Concerto, credited.
With ELP
- "The Barbarian", based on Allegro barbaro, Sz. 49, BB 63 by Béla Bartók, uncredited on USA release (credited on the British Manticore re-pressing of the original LP, on the back cover of the LP jacket).
- "Knife Edge", based on Sinfonietta
by Leoš Janácek, uncredited on USA release (credited on the British Manticore re-pressing of the original LP, on the back cover of the LP jacket); middle section based on French Suites
by J.S. Bach, uncredited.
- Pictures at an Exhibition
, by Modest Mussorgsky, credited.
- "Blues Variations" from Pictures at an Exhibition (album)
also contains an uncredited quote of the 'head' of Bill Evans' minor blues piece "Interplay" Interplay (Bill Evans album)
, during Keith Emerson's Hammond Organ solo
- "Hoedown", from Rodeo
by Aaron Copland, credited, quoting "Shortenin' Bread", Traditional.
- "Jerusalem", by C. Hubert H. Parry, credited.
- "Toccata", from a piano concerto by Alberto Ginastera, endorsed by the composer, credited.
- "Fanfare for the Common Man", by Aaron Copland, credited.
- Carmina Burana
, by Carl Orff, quoted in an extended solo in live recordings from Poland.
- With Emerson, Lake & Powell, the main theme to "Touch & Go" is identical to the English folk song "Lovely Joan", better known as the counterpoint tune in Ralph Vaughan Williams Fantasia on Greensleeves
Not credited. [5]
- "Romeo & Juliet" from Romeo and Juliet suite by Sergei Prokofiev, credited.
See also
- List of Hammond organ players
Trivia
- The surreal comedy series Big Train
featured Keith Emerson, played by Kevin Eldon, as a Roman slave, fighting his enemies with progressive rock.
- He was given his trademark knife by Lemmy who was a roadie for The Nice in his earlier days.
- His favourite current-generation progressive rock band is Dream Theater.
- He opened the Led Zeppelin reunion/Ahmet Ertegun Tribute concert at the O2 Arena in London on 10 Dec 2007 along with Chris Squire and Alan White (Yes) and Simon Kirke (Bad Company/Free). The supergroup played the new arrangement of "The Fanfare for the Common Man".
References
- VH1.com: Keith Emerson: Biography
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- Vaughan Williams: Greensleeves/Tallis Fantasia. The New Queen's Hall Orchestra/Wordsworth. Argo 440 116-2 (1994)