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"Never, NEVER, Stop Rolling!"

11:03 AM GMT 19/08/2009

"Have faith in the process. Trust the producer. Listen to the songs. Never, NEVER, stop rolling! Don't answer the phone in the studio, it could be the company telling you to stop! Don't let anybody make you feel bad about what you're doing. You can burn out but that doesn't mean you can't get lit again. I've seen it happen."

- Jim Dickinson (1942 - 2009)

I JUST LEARNED THAT JIM DIED. I'm punched in the chest. Jim's presence here may be gone. And it was a big presence. But his music, his spirit? Well, hell, you know how this sentence ends. I'm sad. Deeply. But the memories that swirl tonight under the ceiling fan aren't sad at all.

Jim's health hadn't been good for some time. I reached out to his son Luther last week to see how Dad was doing. They were preparing for a benefit show for Jim and Luther sent me a text, "Dad woke up at midnight after sleeping all day, and started barking orders. Still producing!"

Dickinson: you might know him as the guy who produced Big Star's 3rd, or the guy pictured on the back of the Paris, Texas soundtrack rolling spools of duct tape across the keyboard of a Steinway grand piano (they open-tuned that piano, by the way: "It took days!"). Or playing with Dylan. Or maybe you know him as the man who played those three notes of tack piano on the Stone's Wild Horses. Jim was a magnet. The people that stopped by the sessions were unreal. Sputnik Monroe? Sure. And Ry Cooder coming by and sharing a chat with us. Casually picking up every one of the 15 guitars laying around and playing a half riff. Always searching.

He was a sensitive man. But full of mischief and fun. Corny as it sounds, he was a father to me. I was definitely a student. I always feel his presence. He left his mark.

Jim was also a dedicated man, dedicated to the art of record producing and to his family. He believed making records was a fight of Light vs. Dark - but who refused to work Saturdays so he could watch his Memphis Wrestling on TV. A tangle of contradictions, his gruff exterior never hid his huge heart.

As a producer, when he sensed my old band Green On Red lacked faith in ourselves, fearing it was all hollow, a scam, Jim said, "Never let anybody make you feel bad about what you're doing." He offered belief. And made you feel your work was important. It was clearly important to him. What a gift he gave us.

Makes sense that Jim once wanted to teach history. Every session, every van journey, was a history lesson with Jim. Often in the morning of a session - and Jim was old school: he was punctual - Jim would play music to inspire us. Might be scratchy vinyl of Kerouac recitations, or Mac Rice demos on 7" reels he'd cribbed from Stax (Tina The Go Go Queen was on there). Or Black Oak Arkansas sessions Jim produced back when Ardent was still 8-track. Back when Jim engineered. "Sure, I used to go out and do the hand claps with the band." It was all part of our extended education.

I made several records with Jim, including two-and-a-half Green On Red slabs, and the odd session Jim hired me for. With my band, we backed Jim on a live record. Jim had been a constant presence in my life. A mentor. A friend. Just the other day a Radio 6 DJ accused Jim Dickinson of producing my latest record. And I said, "Yeah well, it's like he's always in the room." Jim was always excited about new music. He loved The Cramps. He never got old.

"Yeah, you're right this Johnny Dowd record is DANGEROUS. Gives me faith it can still be done this late in the game, Chuck."

Some of my favourite Dickinson memories:

Green On Red picking Jim up at LAX back in 1986 or so, to take him to the studio. Jim mentioned he'd like some weed. No problem. We took a slight detour to Alvarado St. where you hold a ten dollar bill out the window and a kid runs off with it. Out of nowhere someone lowers a basket from a rooftop on a fishing pole with a bag of weed in it.

Jim later said to me, "Boy, you guys. I have to say I was really impressed."

How happy Jim was when Dylan started performing Across The Borderline in concert: "Bob Dylan singing MY words!"

On over-dubbing the solo on GOR's Morning Blue: "Come on Chuck, grow up, play something cohesive!"

Over-dubbing the backing vocals on GOR's Zombie For Love, Jim said, "Make it sound like one of the black extras for the cheap horror movies: "Eye's a S-s-s-s-ombie / Eye's a S-s-s-s-om-beee". With Dan Stuart singing, Dickinson playing drums without sticks but those paint-stirring things from the hardware store instead.

On showing me his version of Shake Your Money Maker, I asked, 'Is that on Elmore's version Jim?' "Hell no, that comes from the Fleetwood Mac version. It smokes over Elmore's."

The biggest honour (but I was mighty honoured when he covered my songs) was that I was his first one in - calling me as soon as he got back from the Time Out Of Mind sessions. Sharing Dylan stories; Dylan needling Lanois: "Maybe if I took some more advice on how to sing I'd have a career by now." On the passing of Sam Phillips: "They say God created all men equal. Still, I think God created Sam with just a little extra." On tuning: "Tuning is a decadent European habit bordering on the homosexual." Said with no malice, just his grin. And again on tuning, but years later: "This auto tune is great. I'd run the drums through it if I could."

On producing The Replacements: "Did you know Paul Westerberg wears make up?"

In the studio producing - David Hood and Roger Hawkins were the rhythm section - listening to those guys reminiscing about the Stones at Muscle Shoals. Hood: "Who was that chick with the camera that hung around?" And Hood again: "Jagger wore the same clothes five days in a row. Until Wexler showed up and Jagger came out of the hotel elevator wearing that white suit."

Jim giving me a white label copy of Big Star's Sister Lovers. There weren't really cassettes back then. Ardent pressed up white label LP demos to try and get a deal for the cracked masterpiece that wasn't to come out until years later. They even sprang for a tailored suit and accessories and sent Jim out to LA to play it for some A&R people out there. Jim showed up one day to a session wearing a colorful scarf and I asked where he got it. "That's about all I have to show from Sister Lovers." On the acetate he gave me he wrote in his inimitably crude style with a felt pen: "Big Star Sister Lovers - produced by Jim Dickinson. Eng. John Fry. NOT 4 SALE."

Rehearsing with Jim for a couple of gigs that later turned into the Thousand Footprints In The Sand live record, I asked, "Is that a major or a minor chord you're playing there?" Jim looked down, studied his fingers at the keyboard and said, after a pause, "I don't know, I just kind of float it."

Once, when Dan Stuart and I made the trek to Hernando for dinner at the Dickinson house, Jim said, "I was hoping you might be willing to go down in the basement and fuck with my kids." And so we did. Went down there and fired up the Marshals and jammed with Luther and Cody on some thrash metal. When we resurfaced, Jim was really pleased. Just beaming. Jim and Mary did something right, because they raised two boys who are a couple of the kindest and most gentle men you'll ever meet.

That was a long time ago. The dot where Memphis is on the map became a tunnel and a journey and a life's work. And now the new heroes are the businessmen. It's a mixed up shook up world. Indeed.

"Don't answer the telephone in the studio, it could be the company telling you to stop..."

God bless Mr. Jim Dickinson. God blessed us with him.

Chuck Prophet, Baja California, Mexico, August 2009
www.chuckprophet.com

Posted by Ross_Bennett at 11:03 AM GMT 19/08/2009


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  • Wow. Incredibly well-written -- this fond remembrance of a giant of modern music. Proust for pop rockers. Many thanks to Mr. Prophet.

    Posted by Anonymous at 4:42 AM GMT 03/10/2009 Report Abuse

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  • When we got out of the van in Memphis it must have been 125 degrees and it was the week before "Death Week", ten year anniversary to be exact. It's the week that the people from all over the world come to Memphis to celebrate/mourn/cannibalize Elvis. Dickinson said it always seemed appropriate that they celebrated Elvis' death date and not his birthday. A couple of months earlier Jim had flown to NYC to meet Clive Davis and talk about producing The Right Profile's record. He showed up wearing a burgundy satin jacket and looking more like a professional wrestling manager than a semi-legendary southern redneck artist. I knew that coming to NYC to be interrogated by Arista Record's suits was only slightly less painful than a root canal for Jim but he did for us. He got the nod to at least commence with some pre-production experimenting with us. He always thought it was because Clive thought he was Jim Dickson that had produced Byrds records!

    We moved back to NC where we belonged and we loaded up the van and we drove to Memphis. We landed first at Sam Phillips studio. It was the time capsule of a room that Sam had bought when he sold Elvis to RCA. Wooly Bully was made there and The Cramps "Gravest Hits" too. Roland Janes was our engineer and besides being Jerry Lee's guitar player he was a big chunk of sanity in the middle of it all. Once when we broke the strap on a kick drum pedal, Roland came out and surveyed the situation. In the "big city" the studio secretary would have called the drum doctor to come out and do surgery but Roland undid his belt, pulled it out of the belt loops around his sizable girth, produced a pocket knife and cut a 8" piece of leather off of his belt and fixed the pedal on the spot. Right on! All kinds of older fellows would wander through the studio all day. One skinny handsome fellow picked up my Telecaster one day and picked on it a little bit. After he left I found out that he was Paul Burlison of the Rock and Roll Trio, and depending on who you ask, the inventor of guitar distortion!

    Jim was always building us up and comforting us in the studio but pushing and challenging us at the same time. He believed in us but believed we could be better.
    With Arista records behind this record he even broke one of his own rules about picking up the phone in the studio. It was of course a lawyer from NYC telling Jim how our record should sound. He told me that it took him three trips to the record store to realize that I-N-X-S was "in excess", the Aussie band, one of the examples of how we should sound, according to the record company mouth pieces. He argued with Clive over fiddling with my songs too much. He told Clive that they were modern morality tales and should not be tampered with. We had always kind of hated our name (The Right Profile) and I dubbed us The Blue Lights and Dickinson took up for us and all of our tape boxes at Ardent were labeled "The Blue Lights".

    Besides being a beautiful piano player and producer/conjurer Jim was known for his storytelling. Plenty of Joe Walsh, Alex Chilton. Ry Cooder,
    Rolling Stones and Freddie Fender stories filled the hours waiting for music to happen. The best story for my money was about the Frat Rock band from around memphis that seemed to be kind of an Otis Day and the Knights kind of outfit. They would come out and do the regular party rock schtick until the crowd would start to chant "Bring out the Bullet, Bring out the Bullet"!!
    From offstage they would carry on a tiny man with no arms or legs and set him on a stool in front of a mic and he would proceed to burn the place down with his soul stylings like a shrunken head version of Wilson Pickett.

    JIm did not have much patience for some of our influences, from Bruce Springsteen to Johnny Thunders or even Kate Bush. He hated what Neil Young's Heart of Gold beat had done to make folks stop wanting to dance to rock and roll. He did say "now let's see your Johnny Thunders do that!" and if you wanna see a real "knee walker", come back next week when Joe Walsh is gonna be here! Jon Wurster, Tim Fleming and myself were casually playing Springsteen's "Racing In the Streets" one day. Jim got on the piano and began playing with the kind of soul that Roy Bittan only dreamed about. He stopped in mid song, and yelled ,"that's a goddamned Springsteen song isn't it?" He said "I can see liking Bruce if you'd never heard rock and roll". A year or so later Bruce started covering Jim's song Across the Borderline in concert and I imagine he softened his stance on Bruce a bit. Maybe not.

    Being the insecure and self conscious sensitive songwriter that I was Jim was always trying to get me out of my head and make me stop thinking. He was right and I've been trying to do that ever since. He wanted me to come home with him and have his 12 year old son Luther produce some of my songs, thinking that that would loosen me up. He heard me singing some verses to Dylan's "Hurricane" in the headphones one day and quickly tried to get me to sing my songs with the same kind of detachment. Maybe his greatest and most cryptic instructions for vocals was to think of how Montgomery Clift spoke on the telephone. He thought Monty's acting was incredible when he was pretending to be on the phone with someone and creating his own reactions to the conversation on the other end.

    At the end of our 3rd time in Memphis we had recorded some songs that probably could have been on a record. It would have been a bad record. It was probably one of the worst times in history for a scraggly southern rock band to try and make a rock and roll record. Computers and machines were just starting to dominate the way records were made and Dickinson was trying to embrace the new ways. He was a little caught between two worlds. He was trying to please the company men or at least fool them enough to let us finish a record and he really wanted to help us make a big rock and roll record. Not big in a commercial sense but big on ideas. We were young and too green to know how to stand up to the record company and we ended up with neither the great southern redneck masterpiece we wanted or the slick product that Arista wanted.

    JIm loved rock and roll and had very strong opinions about what the term meant. It was all about soul and the space betweens the sounds and the distance between the band member's hearts. One morning Jim brought in a multi-colored brocade vest that he had bought the first time he stepped out of a car on the Sunset Strip in 1967. He also handed me a double LP "sold only on TV" of Roy Orbison's greatest hits. It had the ugliest cover painting of Roy imaginable but it had the most beautiful music ever.
    He knew I loved Roy and would love the cover painting as well. Our band was a tiny blip on Jim's life of music but he cast a long shadow over us. I will never outrun it.
    Thanks Mudboy.

    Posted by jeffrey dean foster at 10:36 PM GMT 10/10/2009 Report Abuse

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