Imagine saying to a chef who just came over your house and cooked a meal:
"I mean, I've eaten lots of food, but I've never actually seen it cooked!"
I'm sure he'd look at you strangely. After all, preparing food is completely second nature to him, and he can't imagine a world where the end result is divorce from the creation of the product.
Joey Spampinato was looking at me strangely.
I had just finished what was, and still is, one of my most favorite interviews for mvy ever.
We were in Louisville, Kentucky, for a radio convention, and Joey's wife Kami Lyle was making the interview rounds, talking to radio stations about her record.
Kami was a bit nervous, but her discomfort with the interview process just motivated her to be exceptionally funny. So I was already delighted.
At the end of the proper interview, we asked her if she'd do a cover tune for us. It's mvy Standard Operation Procedure. We collect covers for our Live, Acoustic and Covers segment.
Kami's manager perked up. Kami didn't generally do covers, but her manager had recently asked her to learn a Bob Dylan song.
Kami was a little unsure. She was with her husband Joey, who had played the song before, and with Tim Krekel, a local Louisville star and old friend, who'd come to provide musical support. But they'd never played the song together, and she didn't remember the lyrics.
But we coaxed her, and a few minutes later I was holding my laptop in front of her, with the lyrics I'd pulled from Dylan's website. And they did a run-through.
As I was listening to them, I realized that despite being a lifelong music fan, despite having gone to tons of live shows, I'd never really seen music being made.
By "made" I don't just mean created, but actually built.
Joey figured out his chords, and Kami called out changes, and they talked back and forth as they played about where certain parts should come in, and how Tim should do a harmonica solo and how they'd wrap the whole thing up.
I saw all the ingredients being tossed together.
And then, immediately after, they recorded the song for us.
Afterwords, I was explaining to Joey that it was really a privileged as a music fan, to watch artists work something out of nothing. I'm sure to him, a lifelong musician, my perspective was unimaginable to him.
Anyway, check out the interview, and the song, and see if you can spot the magic.
See the video on Youtube.
Hear Kami, Joey and Tim doing "I'll Be Your Baby Tonight."
Hear the full Kami Lyle interview.
For more Dylan covers, visit mvyradio's Bob Dylan Cover Tunes Channel.
Monday, May 23, 2011
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