Nile Rodgers,
Behind the Mixing Desk
We talk a lot about the artists behind the microphone. But for every word written about the artists working on one side of the recording studio, tragically few words are written about the artists on the other side of the sound-proof glass. In his 40 year career, Nile Rodgers has worked with everyone from Bowie to Madonna, from Sister Sledge to Master Chief. His music unwittingly formed the backbone of hip-hop with the Sugar Hill Gang basing their breakthrough Rapper's Delight on Rodgers' Good Times, and Public Enemy making frequent use of Chic samples in their music. Beginning with his band Chic, through his reign of producing terror in the 80's, Nile Rodger's sound is one of the most identifiable and coveted in all of pop music.
Words by Nathan Leigh
After spending the first half of the 70's playing in the house band for the Apollo Theatre and for Sesame Street, guitarist Nile Rodgers connected with bass player Bernard Edwards. The duo formed the core of the rock band The Boys, then later The Big Apple Band. Bernard introduced funk techniques to the band, and though they achieved some local popularity, were consistently turned down by record labels who felt American audiences weren't interested in an all black rock band.
After seeing a Roxy Music show in 1977, Rodgers was inspired to create what he described as a black version of Roxy Music. He wanted a band whose shows were outrageous parties. So he and Bernard Edwards enlisted drummer Tony Thompson to form Chic. The newly minted disco group performed with a revolving door of female lead singers, most notably Norma Jean Wright. The band spawned hits like Good Times and Le Freak (whose Ahhh Freak Out! chorus was originally written as Ahhhh Fuck Off! about being denied entrance to Studio 54).
The trio of Rodgers / Edwards / Thompson became a coveted backing band, and while working as their own band, hired themselves out as The Chic Corporation backing Luther Vandross, Sister Sledge (producing their hit “We Are Family”) and Diana Ross. But as disco died a violent inglorious death after the infamous Disco Demolition Night in 1979, Chic as a band became an increasingly lost cause and disbanded after poor reception to their 1983 album Believer.
Though their style of music had gone out of style, the legendary tightness of their sound was still in demand. Rodgers made an overnight transition from guitarist to producer. By 1983, Rodgers was behind the console for Bowie’s defining work of the 80’s Let’s Dance. The album combined Rodgers tight drum sound, slinky bass, and percussive guitar with some of Bowie’s best post-Ziggy Stardust songwriting (the less said about Tin Machine, the better). The album featured a young not-yet-world-famous Stevie Ray Vaughan on lead guitar and even employed the full Chic Corporation rhythm section on the single Without You.
Rodgers proved beyond a doubt that his ability to produce danceable soulful music was not limited to disco. His trademark sound of tight danceable rhythms, jittery guitar, slithery bass, low mixed, but high energy backing vocals, and simple but memorable guitar mimicking horn lines, transcended the 70’s glut of disco also-rans. As Let’s Dance became an increasing critical and commercial success, his talents and sound were sought after by Madonna for her Like A Virgin album, INXS, Duran Duran, and the B-52s. Basically if it was recorded in the 80’s but felt like it owed a debt both to 70’s dance music and 60’s soul, it was probably produced by Nile Rodgers.
As the pop landscape changed in the 90’s with increased usage of synthesized instruments, Rodgers shifted his focus to film scoring, and later video game scores. (remember the awesome score to Halo 2? That's Rodgers...) I have always found it ironic that Rodgers’ skills as a producer were rendered obsolete by the rise of hip-hop and sequencing in pop music when his riffs continue to be sampled by hip-hop artists ad nauseum, and he was one of the pioneers of digital recording (Like A Virgin was one of the first albums to ever be recorded digitally instead of to analogue tape). “Good Times” earns a distinguished place as one of the most sampled and copied songs this side of James Brown's “Funky Drummer,” and The Incredible Bongo Band's “Apache.” It has formed the basis for Queen's “Another One Bites the Dust,” “The Adventures of Grand Master Flash on the Wheels of Steel,” and even “Wot” by punk pioneer Captain Sensible.
Though Nile Rodgers regrouped with Chic in 1993, and continues to tour semi-regularly with new members (both Edwards and Thompson died in 1996 and 2003 respectively) he has largely taken more of an elder statesman role in regards to dance music for the last 2 decades. His output as a producer has slowed considerably, working on only a handful of projects over the last 10 years. Rodgers is currently in the studio with electronic music superheroes Daft Punk working on their upcoming record. It is somehow fitting that a group whose breakout song “Around the World” was yet another song based on “Good Times” should return to the source for their next project. He may have slowed down in recent years, but Rodgers’ pioneering and distinctive sound as a producer remains an indelible and unavoidable part of the American pop landscape.
Nile Rodgers:
soundtrack of my life
The leadman of Chic and hugely successful music producer on singing along to Elvis in little blue suede shoes, dropping acid with Timothy Leary and how Roxy Music led to Chic
- The Observer, Saturday 29 October 2011
THE FIRST SONG THAT MEANT SOMETHING TO ME PERSONALLY
"Blue Suede Shoes", Elvis (1956)
When I was very young, there was a lot of music at home, mostly jazz. I was walking around singing and pretending I was in bands from a very young age. But the first song that was really personal to me was "Blue Suede Shoes". When I was five, my grandma gave me a pair of blue suede shoes, along with the record. I would dance around the front room in my shoes, listening to it, pretending I was Elvis.
WHEN I WAS PLAYING SCHOOL MUSICALS
Porgy and Bess, George Gershwin (1935)
I used to play flute and clarinet at school, and although I wasn't thinking about making a living or getting a pay cheque, I already knew I was going to play music all my life. That was probably the happiest time of my life. Gershwin had a mega influence on me and the music fromPorgy and Bess was especially powerful. Not just "Summertime", but songs such as "I Loves You Porgy" and "There's a Boat Dat's Leavin' Soon For New York". I liked the more sophisticated stuff, because I could play.
WHEN I TOOK ACID WITH TIMOTHY LEARY
The End, the Doors (1967)
When I was about 15 and living in LA, I got turned on to what people call the hippie scene, although they called themselves "freaks". The freaks invited us to a party at their house and gave us acid. Timothy Leary was there and I heard "The End" by the Doors, which had just come out and sounded amazing to me. I was tripping in this house for a day and half and they just kept playing this song over and over. I'd never heard of the Doors before but the freaks turned me on to them, Love and the Monkees.
WHEN WE WERE STARTING CHIC
"Hijack", Herbie Mann (1975)
"Hi-Jack" changed a lot of things for us when we starting Chic. I had always known Herbie Mann as a jazz flautist. He wasn't a virtuoso like Eric Dolphy or Yusef Lateef, he was more of a commercial jazz player. So when he came up with "Hijack", with a chorus that went: "I'm going to steal your love", and everyone would groove to it in the clubs, I thought, wow, we could do this. Not only could I groove, but I was a good musician. Seeing Roxy Music live in London was equally important, as they showed me how you could create a completely immersive experience. I called my partner, Bernard Edwards, in New York after the show and said: "Man, I got the concept for our new band."
HIP-HOP'S BIG BANG
"Rapper's Delight", Sugarhill Gang (1979)
Hip-hop's big bang was "Rapper's Delight", which was based on a sample of our record "Good Times". It was the first time I heard a record sample another record in that way, a musical collage, where the person who puts the collage together gets all the hoopla, rather than the people who created the original art. We'd seen this cut-and-paste approach in art, but not in music. We ended up suing them and reaching a settlement. Chic are now one of the most sampled groups ever.
THE LAST GREAT SONG I HEARD
"Otis", Jay-Z and Kanye West (2011)
The last great song I heard was Kanye West and Jay-Z's recent single "Otis", from their collaboration album Watch the Throne. I heard it on the way to the studio yesterday. It samples Otis Redding's "Try a Little Tenderness", so I think it's cool that they give that recognition to him in the title of the song.
>via: http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/2011/oct/30/nile-rodgers-soundtrack-my-life