Richard Barone

 
Artist:

Richard Barone

Richard Barone

Born:
in Tampa, Florida

Representative Albums:

Cool Blue Halo, Big Three, Between Heaven and Cello

Similar Artists:

Influences:

A Member of the Group:

Worked With:

  • Genre: Rock
  • Active: '80s, '90s, 2000s
  • Instruments: Vocals, Guitar

Biography

Since his days as the leader of the Bongos, the definitive band of the Hoboken pop scene of the 1980s, Richard Barone has pursued a sometimes low-key, but largely rewarding and acclaimed solo career.

Barone formed the Bongos in 1980 and led the group through three albums, the singles compilation Drums Along the Hudson (1982), the EP Numbers With Wings (1983), which featured the title track, the group's definitive song, and Beat Hotel (1985). In 1983 Barone and James Mastro recorded a low-key, mostly acoustic duo album produced by Mitch Easter, 1983's Nuts and Bolts. Mastro joined the band the same year following their signing to RCA.

After the Bongos parted amicably, Barone started his solo career in a peculiar fashion. Performing at the Bottom Line in New York City in 1987, Barone re-introduced himself in a musical lineup that prefigured the chamber pop mini-movement of a decade later, surrounding his voice and electric guitar with an acoustic guitarist, a cellist (Jane Scarpantoni of the Hoboken band Tiny Lights, who largely through this gig would establish herself as the leading cello player in alternative pop, gracing albums by Bob Mould, Victoria Williams and many others), and a percussionist specializing in vibes and Latin instruments rarely heard in other contexts. The resulting live album, Cool Blue Halo, is a brilliant combination of Bongos tunes, new material, and impressive Bowie, T. Rex, and Beatles covers that perfectly illustrates Barone's range and tastes, and remains his best work.

Both Cool Blue Halo and 1990s Primal Dream were hampered by label woes (in both cases, the labels went belly-up not long after the discs came out, making them difficult to find). Barone quickly followed the album up with Primal Cuts, a German EP featuring remixed tracks, acoustic demos, and new recordings of Primal Dream's best songs.

Barone then took a three-year break before re-emerging with the brilliant Clouds Over Eden in 1993. Dedicated to the memory of Barone's close friend, music journalist Nicholas Schaffner (who wrote The Beatles Forever, The British Invasion, and the definitive A Saucerful of Secrets: The Pink Floyd Odyssey, as well as the liner notes for both Cool Blue Halo and Primal Dream), Clouds Over Eden is a dark but ultimately redemptive song cycle of grief and acceptance, considerably more powerful and personal than Lou Reed's similar Magic and Loss from the year before; musically, it expands and refines the direction suggested by Cool Blue Halo.

For a follow-up, Barone basically recorded Cool Blue Halo Part Two. Replacing the acoustic guitar and percussion with a second cellist, the sound on 1997's Between Heaven and Cello is even more delicate and dark-hued than on Cool Blue Halo, but it suits the song selection, heavy on the two previous albums but with a few oldies and new songs, very well indeed.

For the next several years, Barone focused on writing, co-writing, collaborating, musical and theatrical direction, and producing other artists. In addition, he turned to the Loser's Lounge, a collective of New York-based art pop scenesters who put on tribute concerts in various local clubs. Besides playing and singing in the majority of Loser's Lounge concerts, Barone also produced their first two albums, 1999's Simply Mad Mad Mad About the Loser's Lounge and 2001's How Can a Loser Ever Win?.

In 2000, Barone's German label Line Records reissued Cool Blue Halo, Primal Dream, and Clouds Over Eden in a three-disc box set called The Big Three. In 2004, he compiled a solo anthology, Collection: An Embarrassment of Richard. Since that time, Barone was the executive producer of The Nomi Song, a film on Klaus Nomi (Barone remixed Nomi's "Total Eclipse" as well). He has been involved in a wide range of activities, including music direction and orchestration for "Bright Lights, Big City at the New York Theatr Workshop, he directed and performed in a modern interpretation of Handel's baroque masterpieces, entitled The Downtown Messiah and broadcast for six consecutive years on public radio, and he continues his focus on writing collaborating, directing, and producing major events in such venues as Carnegie Hall, The Hollywood Bowl, and New York Central Park. His first book, Frontman: Surviving the Rock Star Myth (www.frontmanbook.com) is set to be published in Fall 2007.

Barone is working with legendary producer Tony Visconti on a solo album, his first in ten years, to coincide with a relaunch of his entire catalog, as well as a special edition of The Bongos Drums Along the Hudson . ~ Stewart Mason, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Richard Barone
Richard Barone
Richard Barone (2006)
Richard Barone (2006)
Background information
Born Flag of the United States Tampa, Florida, U.S.
Genre(s) Rock
Pop
Power pop
Chamber pop
Alternative rock
Occupation(s) Musician
Songwriter
Author
Music director
Record producer
Instrument(s) Guitar, E-Bow, Mellotron, keyboards, synthesizers, percussion, Stylophone, waterphone
Years active 1980s–present
Label(s) RCA Records
MCA/Universal
Geffen Records
MESA/Atlantic
Sony BMG
Fetish
Stiff
Cooking Vinyl
others
Associated
acts
The Bongos
Website Official website

Richard Barone is a musician born in Tampa, Florida, who began his career first as 'The Littlest DJ' on a local top-40 radio station at age seven, then as the vocalist and leader of the Hoboken, New Jersey band The Bongos. Barone works as a songwriter, arranger, author, director, and producer, and releases albums as a solo artist.

Biography

Barone first gained attention in the 1980s as the lead singer and songwriter of the Bongos. Shortly after the Bongos' breakup in 1987, Barone released his first solo album, Cool Blue Halo (Passport), recorded live at the Bottom Line. As a solo artist, Barone's albums venture into chamber pop and more narrative, singer-songwriter tones. New York Times' critic Robert Palmer praised Barone as a "gifted pop-rock tunesmith," calling his first solo effort a "substantial" album, and its arrangements "ingeneous." [1] Trouser Press, on the other hand, called the record "intimate but confused," and criticized Barone's "sometimes coy vocals." [2] In 2007, though, NPR's Tom Moon called Cool Blue Halo "a plaintive masterpiece" in his "Shadow Classics" series, and credited Barone with foreshadowing Nirvana's Unplugged performance of Bowie's "The Man Who Sold The World" [3].

Cool Blue Halo by Richard Barone, album cover.
Enlarge
Cool Blue Halo by Richard Barone, album cover.

The next few years saw the release of two more solo albums: Primal Dream (MCA, 1990) and Clouds Over Eden (Mesa-Bluemoon/Atlantic Records, 1994), with a cover photo portrait by Duane Michals. Trouser Press championed the "fine set of yearning love songs" on Primal Dream, while harshly panning their production and arrangements as a "step backwards" from his debut album. [4] David Browne, writing in Rolling Stone, summarized his four-star review with: "But most of Primal Dream proves that Barone is fast moving beyond the limited vocabulary of twelve strings and wimp-pop vocals. And the transition sounds not only necessary but also perfectly logical." [5] Billy Altman, writing in The New York Times, called its followup, Clouds Over Eden, "unquestionably the most fully realized effort of Barone's career," while Trouser Press described the album as "wrenching and thoroughly worthwhile" and "the great album fans always imagined him making" [6].

Since the late 1990s, Barone has worked on a variety of collaborations and production projects. In 1997, Barone released a stripped-down Between Heaven and Cello (Line), recorded live at NYC's intimate Fez nightclub. A boxed set of his first three solo albums was released in Europe in 2000 as The Big Three. In 2004, he released a solo anthology entitled: COLLECTION: an embarrassment of richard, comprised of personal favorites from his back catalogue.

As a record producer, Barone has produced numerous recordings, including a recent duet between pianist Johnny Rodgers and Liza Minnelli, and a children's album for former model Jolie Jones, daughter of Quincy Jones. As a producer/director, he has created large-scale concert events, such as a tribute to Peggy Lee at Carnegie Hall and the Hollywood Bowl in 2003 and 2004, and concerts in New York's Central Park.

Other projects have included executive producing The Nomi Song (Palm Pictures, 2005), which includes his remix of Klaus Nomi's "Total Eclipse", musical direction and orchestration for Bright Lights, Big City at the New York Theatre Workshop (with Rent director Michael Grief), as well as directing and performing in The Downtown Messiah, a modern interpretation of Handel's baroque masterpiece, broadcast annually on over 200 public radio stations nationwide for six consecutive years. His songs and collaborations have been heard on several television programs, including The West Wing and Dawson's Creek.

In 2006, he and the reunited, original Bongos entered the studio with Moby producing, to create bonus material and a music video for a special edition re-issue of the group's debut album, Drums Along the Hudson, released by Cooking Vinyl Records in June, 2007.

In September 2007, Barone's memoir, FRONTMAN: Surviving the Rock Star Myth [7], was published by Backbeat/Hal Leonard Books. At the same time, his complete catalog was re-launched at the iTunes Music Store.

Barone is currently in the studio working on his next solo album with veteran producer Tony Visconti (Bowie, T. Rex), planned for Spring, 2008 release. Also working with Barone are producers Mike Thorne (Bronski Beat, Communards, Wire) and Steve Rosenthal (Lou Reed, Monster Magnet), songwriter Paul Williams, photographer Mick Rock, and others.

Discography

Solo albums

  • Collection: An Embarrassment of Richard (2004) - Compilation; ITunes Store
  • The Big Three (2000) - Box set; Line Records, Germany
  • Between Heaven and Cello (1997) - Live; Line Records, Germany
  • Clouds over Eden (1993), Produced by Hugh Jones - MESA Bluemoon/Atlantic Records
  • Primal Dream (1990), Produced by Richard Gottehrer and Don Dixon - MCA Records
  • Cool Blue Halo (1987), Recorded live at the Bottom Line, New York City - Passport Records
  • Nuts and Bolts (1983), with James Mastro and Mitch Easter - Passport Records

With The Bongos

Publications

  • FRONTMAN: Surviving the Rock Star Myth, Backbeat/Hal Leonard Books, 2007, ISBN-10 0-87930-912-1, ISBN-13 978-0-87930-912-1
FRONTMAN: Surviving the Rock Star Myth by Richard Barone, book cover.
Enlarge
FRONTMAN: Surviving the Rock Star Myth by Richard Barone, book cover.

See also

References

External links

Richard Barone
Other musicians and collaborators: Jane Scarpantoni - Fred Schneider - Paul Williams - Mick Rock - Moby - Donovan - Duane Michals - Nancy Sinatra - Bea Arthur - Jill Sobule - Tiny Tim - David Johansen - Rolan Bolan - Throbbing Gristle - Gary Lucas - Terre Roche - Amy Rigby - Vin Scelsa - Joyce DeWitt - The Bongos
Producers: Tony Visconti - Richard Gottehrer - Don Dixon - Hugh Jones - Mitch Easter
Discography
Albums: Cool Blue Halo - Primal Dream - Clouds Over Eden - Between Heaven and Cello
Compilations: The Big Three - COLLECTION: An Embarrassment of Richard
Soundtracks and Television: Next Year In Jerusalem - The Nomi Song - The West Wing - Dawson's Creek - Felicity - South Of Nowhere

 
 

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Copyrights:

Artist. Copyright © 2008 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ® , a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
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