Anthony J. Resta: A Retrospective with a Progressive Producer
SUNDAY, JUNE 24, 2012
By Marshall Terrill
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Part II
Q: You worked with Duran Duran from 1994 to 1998 and collaborated on approximately 30 songs. I remember in the '80s at the height of their career they were labeled by critics as a “manufactured group” that became famous as a result of their high-profile MTV videos, not their music. Can you refute this?
AR: Absolutely! They are super talented and creative thinkers that are constantly reinventing themselves by pushing the boundaries of fashion and music and what people perceive “Duran Duran” to be.
Q: I hear they are proper English gents. Can you tell me what they were like on a personal level?
AR: They were always very kind, gracious and appreciative of the work I did with them. They were really open to experimentation, that’s really the ideal artist to work with.
Q: The first album you worked with them was ThankYou, a collection of cover songs from a diverse group of artists ranging from Bob Dylan to Grandmaster Flash. How was the material selected?
AR: They picked the songs from artists they all admired. I played no part in choosing the material as I was not around for that portion of the project.
Q: Doing cover songs is always a tricky proposition for artists in that they have to stay true to the artist and yet put their own stamp on it…what was your thought process in trying to pull it off?
AR: I think that the sounds and parts they chose just naturally and seamlessly became Duran Duran. I was consciously leaning towards adding a subtle triphop/Sgt. Pepper-era Beatleness to the overall tone. it just all seemed to fit together right. The artist’s they covered LOVED the interpretations (especially Lou Reed). Critics just couldn’t get their heads around the whole concept.
Q: Lou Reed’s “Perfect Day” was the single, but “White Lines” by Grandmaster Flash was the standout. Sounds like that was a fun track to record?
AR: It was fun marrying my beats and synths/percussion to a live track without Pro Tools. We had to sample things and move them around, use tons of delays for smpte timecode offsets one bar at a time. It was not a visual process in those days. It was all just listening with our ears. I think that the visual aspect of audio editing a la “lining things up on a grid” in many cases is robbing today’s music of the soul that made music in the ‘60s and ‘70s, which was so powerful/sexy/emotional and vibey.
Q: Duran Duran’s drummer Roger Taylor, who retired from the band in 1986, surprised everyone his appearance on “Watching the Detectives” and “Perfect Day.” What did he add to the group’s chemistry?
AR: There were so many different drummers on that record – Terry Bozzio, Steve Ferrone, Tony Thompson, Abe Laboriel Jr., and myself. I think it all worked wonderfully together even though in theory it should have felt erratic in the rhythm department stylistically. I didn’t work on that track and didn’t get to meet Roger however.
Q: Thank You was recorded all around the world in places such as New York, France, Minnesota, London, Boston, while the band was on a 16-month world tour. Was that challenging for you and how did that have an effect on the end result?
AR: Bob and I sort of reinvented quite a bit of that record in post-production and mixing during phases in London at Metropolis, Sound Techniques in Boston, Bopnique Musique in Chelmsford, Massachusetts. We re-amped bass, cut new drums, moved vocals around, and added layers of rhythm and atmosphere. We were not around for the original tracking sessions in France and elsewhere.
Q: Thank You received a lot of negative criticism by the press despite the fact the album sold well. Looking back more than 15 years later, how do you view the album?
AR: I think it was a bold artistic statement and still sounds super cool. As I said before, the artists that were covered really liked the versions of the songs. That sort of wipes out any of the bad press it received. It was a winner. I heard “White Lines” pounding out of a club in Sydney, Australia, once, and it gave me chills to look in and the entire place dancing to it so many years later
Q: Medazzaland was Duran Duran’s follow up to Thank You, and again, saw your involvement. Right before you started recording, John Taylor left the band. Did that have an effect on the sessions?
AR: Actually JT is on some of the tracks on the record and we hung out in Boston, too. We are playing together on “Michael” for instance.
Q: TV Mania, which was really you, keyboardist Nick Rhodes and Warren Cuccurullo, is the listed producer of Medazzaland. This was a first for the band given that almost all of their albums listed Duran Duran as the producer. How did you feel about this given that almost a decade before you were spinning Duran Duran records in a disco?
AR: Are you kidding? I was on Cloud Nine and pinching myself. I’m also thrilled that TV Mania is FINALLY going to be released with remixes bonus tracks. I can’t wait to finally hang it on the wall.
Q: “Electric Barbarella” was touted as the first song ever available for digital purchase/download on the Internet. However, it seemed this move annoyed many American retailers as they saw it as a way to squeeze them out of the picture and did little to promote the album. Did you know at the time this could possibly be the beginning of the end for physical product and bricks and mortar record stores?
AR: It wasn’t really even in the back of my mind then. So I guess the answer is no. I had just got my first email address and it seemed super futuristic.
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