John/Madison Square Garden,Nov1974 |
In June 1974, John
Lennon’s life was in disarray. Not only was he battling a deportation
order by the US government on the grounds of a 1968 UK drug bust, and
embroiled in litigation over the legal dissolution of the Beatles, but
publisher Morris Levy was alleging copyright infringement of the Chuck
Berry song ‘You Can’t Catch Me’ on the Beatles’ ‘Come Together’. In his
personal life, meanwhile, he was separated from wife Yoko Ono — who had,
bizarrely, orchestrated his affair with her personal assistant, May
Pang — and making tabloid headlines due to booze-and-drugs-fuelled
excesses with fellow revellers Keith Moon, Harry Nilsson and Ringo
Starr, which had disrupted sessions for a Phil Spector-produced album
of rock & roll oldies. Lennon was in the midst of what he’d later
describe as his 15-month ‘Lost Weekend’. Nevertheless, he was also about
to turn things around.
The previous December,
following three months of star-studded craziness at A&M and, after
they’d been kicked out of there, the Record Plant (West) — characterised
by Spector once showing up in a surgeon’s uniform and, on another
occasion, firing a gun into the control room ceiling — the maniacal
producer had disappeared with the master tapes, which eventually had to
be retrieved at a cost of $90,000 to Capitol Records. Having renewed
his friendship with Paul McCartney and forged stronger ties with his
estranged son, Julian, Lennon decided to get his career back on track by
placing the Rock ‘n’ Roll project on hold so that he could record a
new album of original material.
Eventually
titled Walls & Bridges, this transported John Lennon to the top of
the US charts, courtesy of songs that variously documented how he missed
Ono (‘Bless You’, ‘What You Got’, ‘Going Down On Love’), his love for
Pang (‘Surprise, Surprise (Sweet Bird of Paradox)’), his emnity towards
former Beatles manager Allen Klein (‘Steel & Glass’), and his
ongoing struggles with insecurity and depression (‘Nobody Loves You
(When You’re Down and Out)’, ‘Scared’). What’s more, it also provided
him with a pair of hits in the form of ‘#9 Dream’ and ‘Whatever Gets
You Thru The Night’, the latter featuring a harmony vocal and piano
contribution by Elton John that helped secure John Lennon his only
chart-topping solo single during his lifetime.
Recorded
at New York’s Record Plant (East) in June and July of 1974, Walls &
Bridges dispensed with the many luminaries recruited by Phil Spector
for the Rock ‘n’ Roll sessions and instead utilised a core group of
Lennon-enlisted session players. A rhythm section comprising drummer Jim
Keltner and bass player Klaus Voormann was joined by guitarists Jesse
Ed Davis and Eddie Mottau, keyboard player Nicky Hopkins, saxophonist
Bobby Keys and percussionist Arthur Jenkins. The final piece of the
puzzle was Ken Ascher who, as well as playing electric piano, Clavinet
and Mellotron on Walls & Bridges, arranged and conducted the string
and brass musicians from what Lennon listed in the liner notes as New
York’s “Philharmonic Orchestrange”.
It was a
stellar line-up, led by John Winston Ono Lennon’s own contributions as a
vocalist, guitarist, pianist and percussionist — each role attributed
to an assortment of self-penned pseudonyms. Behind the console were
engineers Roy ‘I only like singles’ Cicala and Shelly ‘I can’t take
the pressure’ Yakus, not to mention studio assistant Jim ‘What it is’
Iovine.
Cicala,John & Harry Nilsson,1974 |
“He became like a brother and a friend to me,” says
Cicala, who served as an engineer on all of Lennon’s albums from
Imagine (1971)to Double Fantasy just before his death in 1980. Cicala
also produced and engineered many of the world’s biggest stars during
two decades of running the Record Plant in New York, including Jimi
Hendrix, Aretha Franklin, Madonna, Elton John, Sting, Frank Sinatra,
Dire Straits, David Bowie,Harry Nilsson,Miles Davis,Queen, Aerosmith,Bon Jovi,Liza Minnelli,Roberta Flack,the Who,Frank Zappa,Lou Reed,Prince, Santana,Charlie Mingus.It’s a list that has garnered him
10 platinum discs over the course of a career that commenced back in
the early ’60s.
Born and raised in New Haven,
Connecticut, Roy Joel Cicala initially helped install the church organs
that his father designed, before marrying singer-songwriter Lori Burton
and running his own small demo studio. Then, having landed a job as an
assistant maintenance man under the guidance of Tom Hidley at the
four-track A&R Recording facility of Phil Ramone — whom Cicala
watched, on his very first session in 1963, record Stan Getz and Astrud
Gilberto’s ‘The Girl From Ipanema’. There, he “learned how to make
phasing machines out of tape machines, keeping old-fashioned tape
machines within half a second from reel to reel”. Soon, Cicala began
engineering there himself and, in late 1965 and early 1966, sat behind
the board alongside producer Tom Dowd for the classic, eponymous debut
album by soul-rock outfit the Young Rascals.
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