| Keith Emerson |
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|
| Background information |
| Born |
November 02, 1944 (1944-11-02) (age 62)
Todmorden,
England |
| Origin |
England |
| Genre(s) |
Progressive
rock |
| Occupation(s) |
Musician |
| Instrument(s) |
Piano
Organ
Synthesizers
Keyboards |
| Years active |
1968–present |
Associated
acts |
The Nice
Emerson, Lake and Palmer |
| Website |
KeithEmerson.com |
Keith Noel Emerson (born 2 November
1944 in Todmorden, Yorkshire)
is a British keyboard
player and composer. Formerly a member of 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 and 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 currently tours (through 2007)
with The Keith Emerson Band.
|
Contents
- 1 Biography
- 2 Instrumentation
and playing style
- 3 Partial
list of pieces based on other composers' works
- 3.1 With
The Nice
- 3.2 With
ELP
- 4 See
also
- 5 Trivia
- 6 References
- 7 External
links
|
Biography
 |
This section may contain original research or unverified
claims.
Please help Wikipedia
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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. 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.
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's "playing" it
(purely theatrical, since acoustic pianos cannot function when turned
upside down in this manner). 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..
All Music Guide refers to Emerson as "perhaps the greatest, most
technically accomplished keyboardist in rock history."
Central to much of Keith Emerson's music are rock arrangements
of classical compositions, ranging from (lots of) J.
S. Bach via Modest Mussorgsky to 20th century
composers like Béla Bartók, Aaron
Copland, Leoš Janáček and Alberto
Ginastera. Occasionally Emerson has "borrowed" certain 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 4/4 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 "Sifonietta"
by Janáček. Note-for-note extracts were taken from pieces by Bartók,
Janáček 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 critically acclaimed 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.
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.
With ELP Emerson added the Moog synthesizer 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,
tone 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.
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 recording of the debut album by the group. It is
not known if he also used it in a live context.
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.
As the technology of electronic keyboard instruments became
more sophisticated, Emerson was quick to adopt new instruments such as
polyphonic synthesizers, one of which can be seen on the video
promoting Fanfare for the Common
Man. Other more elaborate innovations have been previously described in
this article.
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.
Despite his training, Emerson's finger technique was highly
idiosyncratic.
He tended to curl up his ring finger and little finger while playing,
which a true classical musician would never do.
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.
With The Nice
- America, 2nd Amendment, from West
Side Story's America, by Leonard
Bernstein, credited, quoting Antonín Dvořák'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 Edouard
Lalo, credited.
- Azrael Revisited, quoting Sergei
Rachmaninoff's Prelude in C-sharp minor, credited.
- 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.
- Knife Edge, based on Sinfonietta
by Leoš
Janáček, uncredited; middle section based on French
Suites by J.S. Bach, uncredited.
- Pictures at an Exhibition,
by Modest Mussorgsky, credited.
- 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.
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 Prog Rock.
He was given his trademark knife by Lemmy
who was a roadie for The Nice in his earlier days.
References
-
VH1.com: Keith Emerson: Biography.
Retrieved on 2007-07-10.
-
(1977) "". Contemporary
Keyboard 3 (10): 22-30, 32, 36, 38, 52.
Retrieved on 2007-07-10.
-
(1980) "". Contemporary
Keyboard 6 (9): 16-23. Retrieved on 2007-07-10.
-
Error on call to Template:cite web: Parameters url
and title must be specified.
- Forrester, George, Martyn Hanson and Frank Askew. Emerson,
Lake & Palmer, The Show That Never Ends, A Musical Biography.
(2001) Helter Skelter Publishing ISBN
1-900924-17-X.
External links
| v • d • e Emerson,
Lake & Palmer |
| Keith
Emerson | Greg
Lake | Carl Palmer |
| Former members: Cozy
Powell | Robert Berry |
| Discography |
| Studio albums: Emerson, Lake
& Palmer | Tarkus
| Trilogy
| Brain Salad Surgery
| Works Volume I
| Works Volume II
| Love
Beach | Black Moon
| In the Hot Seat |
| Live albums: Pictures at an
Exhibition | Welcome
Back My Friends to the Show That Never Ends | In Concert
(also known as Works Live) | Live
at the Royal Albert Hall | King
Biscuit Flower Hour: Greatest Hits Live | Live
in Poland | Live
at the Isle of Wight Festival 1970 | Then
& Now | The
Original Bootleg Series From Manticore Vaults Vol. 1
| The
Original Bootleg Series From Manticore Vaults Vol. 2
| The
Original Bootleg Series From Manticore Vaults Vol. 3
| |
| Compilations albums: The Best of
Emerson, Lake and Palmer | The Atlantic
Years | The Ultimate Collection
| The Essential
Emerson, Lake & Palmer |
| Box Set: The Return of the
Manticore |
| Related
articles |
| Emerson, Lake & Powell
| 3 | The
Nice | King
Crimson | Atomic
Rooster |
| Persondata |
| NAME |
Emerson, Keith |
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES |
|
| SHORT DESCRIPTION |
British keyboard player and composer |
| DATE OF BIRTH |
2 November 1944 |
| PLACE OF BIRTH |
Todmorden, England |
| DATE OF DEATH |
|
| PLACE OF DEATH |
|