B'Dilli

Articles

Contents...

Shewey
Schulps, Robbins & Young
August Darnell
Glp
Emily Barr
Adriana Kaegi
Kurt B. Reighley
William Ruhlmann
pingouin
David Whetstone
Vivien Goldman
Rider

Cristina
Don Shewey. Rolling Stone Magazine

One of pop music's best-kept secrets is the ongoing party being thrown by prolific producer-composer August Darnell, a founding member of Dr. Buzzard's Original Savannah Band. Over the last two years, the Darnell touch has gilded albums by Gichy Dan's Beechwood #9, Machine ("There but for the Grace of God Go I"), James White and the Blacks, Don Armando's Second Avenue Rhumba Band ("Deputy of Love"), Cristina, and Kid Creole and the Coconuts, as well as Dr. Buzzard. Along the way, Darnell has invented a new sound: a sophisticated, sidewalk jungle-jangle of Latin rhythms, pop harmonies, disco energy, black street talk, big-band swing, Caribbean lilt and Hollywood glamour. This dense, intelligent, irresistibly ebullient sound has revolutionized contemporary dance music.

Playing one Darnell-directed record after another is like swirling from room to room during a fabulous soiree at which the Original Savannah Band is the life of the party. These folk are the hip, theatrical typethe kind who take over the living room with their witty talk, complicated personalities, in-jokes and lovers' quarrels. Dr. Buzzard which features Darnell (who writes all the lyrics) on bass, guitarist-composer-coproducer Stony Browder Jr., drummer Mickey Sevilla, vibraphonist "Sugar Coated" Andy Hernandez and vocalist extraordinaire Cory Daye display their dazzling complexity consistently throughout their third LP, Dr. Buzzard's Original Savannah Band Goes to Washington. The cartoonish, syncopated swing that distinguished the group's splashy debut album has evolved into a richer, more turbulent sound, on which several overlapping and sometimes harmonically dissonant conversations converge. Darnell now fits Browder's breezy tunes to startlingly ironic lyrics. The woman whom Cory Daye plays in "Call Me" wants a man, but she's no pleading masochist: "If I choose/To sleep with you," she sings winsomely, "Don't mistake me for a whore." "Once There Was a Colored Girl ..." is a Walt Disney-style waltz over which the singers croon a cryptic protest lyric ("The Yankee! Humbug!/Neo-Nazi!").

In contrast to Dr. Buzzard's parlor prominence, Cristina presents the quintessential party girl: someone's ostentatious girlfriend or the gal in the back room letting everybody have at her. A former model and ex-girl-friend of Michael Zilkha (the Z of ZE Records), Cristina (Monet) is more a personality than a singershe sing-speaks August Darnell's saucy, custom-written songs like a disco Lydia Lunch but Darnell's exciting cinematic production redeems what might have been an obnoxious novelty act.

Between Dr. Buzzard's smart set and Cristina's trash queen stand Kid Creole and the Coconuts, the rec-room rompers. Their music is simpler and more calypso-oriented, alternately danceable and dreamy, often comical. The all-girl Coconuts taunt our hard-working hero for his limpidity in bed ("Mister Softee") and demand to be taken to Studio 54 in "Darrio ..." ("They tell me the place is just about through," Kid Creole argues haplessly. "The DJ he don't even play the B-52's!"). But Off the Coast of Me's title track brings it all back home with a wonderfully tropical, romantic image: "Off the coast of me/Lies you."

As at any good party, the various factions overlap a lot: Don Armando Bonilla, formerly of Dr. Buzzard, heads the Second Avenue Rhumba Band, whose lead singer is Fonda Rae of the Coconuts and whose producer is "Sugar Coated" Andy Hernandez, and so forth. And the party's big enough so that you can either dance or retreat to the balcony for some truly fresh air, since the diverse personalities and multiethnic inflections of this crew distinguish August Darnell from that other black party-master, George Clinton, whose funk disciples sound tediously alike. Of course, such a wide-ranging cast makes Darnell and his friends difficult to market: they sprawl across several record companies that don't quite know what to do with them. But it's okaythis is one party you can invite yourself to. Getting into it is easy.

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Kid Creole and The Coconuts
Dave Schulps, Ira Robbins, Jon Young

In an interview, black Bronxite August "Kid Creole" Darnell - writer, singer, producer- once alluded to not being able to play reggae as well as Bob Marley or salsa as well as Tito Puente, but possibly being able to combine the two styles better than anyone else. Darnell's internationalist fusion was one of the freshest new sounds of the '80s, drawing together strains of Latin, reggae, calypso, disco, rap and rock into a unique sound. Add to his vision and smarts an amiable partner in "Sugar Coated" Andy Hernandez (aka Coati Mundi), the singing/dancing Coconuts and a medley of talented sidepeople, and you have one of the most formidable bands around.

Off the Coast of Me introduces Darnell and company's unusual sound (more Latin-tinged here  than on later records). Although the material isn't strong enough to make this more than adequate, its uniqueness and danceability, along with the Kid's occasionally risqué wordplay, are enough to suggest the band's potential.

Launching a conceptual album trilogy, Fresh Fruit in Foreign Places stands as Kid Creole's tour de force, a musical odyssey in which the Kid and the Coconuts set off from New York in search of the elusive Mimi. The flavor of the music changes with each stop on the journey, providing a  perfect setting for the band to display its mastery of intercontinental bop.  Each cut is an adventure, and the album works as well as any rock concept LP. A major achievement. (Read the Saga of Mimi)

After the perfect realization of Fresh Fruit, nearly anything would have been a letdown.  Wise Guy (entitled Tropical Gangsters outside the US) follows the concept, but much more loosely.  The material is far less adventurous, with Fresh Fruit's wonderful diversity toned down in favor  of a straighter dance music approach. As a commercial move it worked, at least in Europe,  where two tracks ("Stool Pigeon" and "I'm a Wonderful Thing, Baby") became hit singles and elevated Darnell to stardom.

Doppelganger is posited as the continuation of "the saga." In this installment, the Kid is cloned by King Nignat's evil scientist. The songs don't all move the story along in narrative fashion-they sound more like the disjunct score of a Broadway musical-but that's fine, since each stands as a marvelous example of Darnell's multifarious brilliance. Mixing '40s be-bop with Carib-beat, reggae, country, funk, salsa and something like highlife, the record sparkles with a cover of "If You Wanna Be Happy" (a 1966 American hit for the Jimmy Castor bunch as "Hey Leroy") as well as such original frolics as "The Lifeboat Party" and "Bongo Eddie's Lament." Sung partially in Spanish, "Survivors" laments the death of rockers from Frankie Lymon to Sid Vicious.

In Praise of Older Women, while less spectacular, is still another (ca)rousing success, a  collection of wittily written, sublimely arranged, energetically performed songs. "Endicott" (cleverly verbose), "Caroline Was a Drop-Out" (a nasty character study),  "Particul'y Int'rested" (exaggerated, showy torch song)--to name but three--all reflect the  Kid's wonderful attitude and outlook. With Coati Mundi and the Coconuts, plus a stageful of  sidemen, King ("self-appointed in Feb. this year") Creole demonstrates his stylistic transcendence by making every track different but identifiable; no longer a mere genre dabbler,  he's developed the Kid Creole format.

On I, Too, Have Seen the Woods, Darnell seems to be treading water a bit within that format.  Although he introduces female singer Haitia Fuller to share lead vocals with him, her overall  impact is fairly negligible. As always, there are some very good tunes (especially "Dancin'  at the Bains Douches" and "Call It a Day"); Darnell's words are typically clever and insightful.  On the whole, though, the music seems less innovative, succumbing to repetition of previously charted lands. (Hernandez's "El Hijo" is a near carbon-copy of his 1980 dance hit "Me No Pop I.")  Good, but hardly top-notch.

Showing tons more imagination and inspiration, Darnell bounced back to full artistic strength with the marvelously entertaining Private Waters in the Great Divide, a diverse party of  singular wit and intelligence. While the lyrics of songs like "(No More) Casual Sex" and  "He's Takin' the Rap" demonstrate an awareness of changing times, the music still comes in  time-warped from a tropical dance-happy era somewhere around 1940; the only track that even acknowledges rap bends it all out of shape. (How many other hip dance records released in 1990 can claim such stylistic nonconformity?) There is a reggae-styled love song, however, a surf-pop  harmony exhibition and "Lambada," the intent and irony of which is unclear. Mundi is only a minor player here (Darnell acknowledges his departure in the self-referential "Funky Audrey and the Coconut Rag," which Hernandez co-wrote), but the Coconuts are in full effect, providing a campy foil in such fizzy delights as "Laughing with Our Backs Against the Wall"  and "Funky Audrey." Not a bad banana in this bunch.

The UK-only Cre-Ole compilation includes all the band's 1981-'83 British hits (and then some),  with such classic Darnellisms as "Stool Pigeon," "I'm a Wonderful Thing, Baby" and "Annie, I'm  Not Your Daddy," as well as "Me No Pop I." The Coconuts' solo album, produced by Darnell to resemble a stage revue (complete with crowd sounds and stage introductions), is rife with innuendo and apparent internecine squabbling. Despite the billing, Darnell sings the introductory title track without the three ladies; the inclusion of "If I Only Had a Brain" (from The Wizard of Oz) might be someone's idea of an editorial comment. Otherwise, it's a typically rich, clever dance-funk-Carib-salsa-tango stew, and the Coconuts' smooth harmony vocals are as appealing as ever.

Coati Mundi has done some odd musical projects in his time (including a production job for Germany's Palais Schaumburg!), and the singing vibraphone/keyboard player's solo album is no less idiosyncratic in lyrical outlook. In addition to the clever title reference to Stevie Wonder, the irrepressibly funny Hernandez also parodies "Grand Master Flush and the Fluffy Five" and "Kurtis Bluff" on the rap jape "Everybody's on an Ego Trip." While the album cleverly--and occasionally buoyantly--mixes soul, salsa and disco, it also suffers from Hernandez's simply trying too hard.

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In Praise Of Older Women - 1985 Press Release
August Darnell (Thanks Vincent !)

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Kid Creole and The Coconuts - YOU SHOULD TOLD ME YOU WERE...
GLP

"It's very competitive times we live in now", August "Kid Creole" Darnell remarks, "with M.C. Hammer and the rappers doing there thing, you really must present something exciting, valid, artistic, aesthetically pleasing, all of that now. and of course, there are more bands than there ever were out there these days. So, you have to fight for your space".

YOU SHOULD TOLD ME YOU WERE..., the second Columbia album from Kid Creole and the Coconuts (and the group's ninth career album), may be their most exciting, artistic and cohesive release ever. Many of the previous collections of Darnell's tropical dance delicacies were held together by the freshness of the material and the group's unique style. The new album has those elements, but sports new musical directions and a feeling of unity, as well.

"There is good a reason for that", Darnell intimates. "This was approached as an album. It was done more or less over a given period of time, whereas the previous one took a track from here two years ago, and a track from there. So, this was more of an album project."

The new album also has some of the toughest, wryest lyrics that Darnell has recorded to date. "Oh Marie," for example, comments on the phenomenon of ' Mushroom', innocent bystanders mowed down in the urban drug wars: "the only thing she was guilty of /Was living on a street where they sell drugs... Happens all the time/ Marie didn't even make the headlines "

On the other hand, "Soul Intention" and the first single, "Party Girl", deal with more interpersonal matters in a typically Kid Creole manner. Infused with playful energy, these two tunes may be among Darnell's most twisted songs. anyone familiar with Kid Creole knows that is saying a lot.

"Funnily enough about 'Soul Intention', "Darnell muses, "there has been a resurgence of the late'60s sound these days. I didn't write the song with that in mind, but that genre has always been fun for me. 'Party Girl' also has that late- 60's, early- 70s feel".

Then there's "Consequently", a musical antidote to all the hoopla over the impending Columbus Quincentennial, "but I'm sure nobody is going to hear the lyrics anyway," Darnell winks.

"The lyrics on this album are deliberately not printed inside," he notes. "So much of the music that I do, people get surface idea of what it's about, but they don't really know. I think people will love Cory Daye's vocal on that song and never know what it says. It took four years before I got a fan letter from someone asking me to explain 'Cherchez Le Femme' Back in 1976, people thought it was just a dance record."

That was the year August Darnell first rose to notoriety as bass player, vocalist and lyricist for Dr. Buzzard's Original Savannah Band, one of disco's most unusual ensembles. The brainchild of August's brother Stony Browder Jr., and featuring the vocals of Cory Daye, the vibes work of Sugar Coated Andy Hernandez and the jungle of Mickey Seville, Dr. Buzzard's Original Savannah Band was one of the most singular groups ever to cross-over pop. Sounding like a '40s big band with a more modern beat, the OSB struck RIAA gold with their first album, including the mighty hit, "Cherchez Le Femme"

In the dozen years since the OSB went on hiatus, August Darnell has fronted one of the hardest working bands in showbiz, Kid Creole and the Coconuts. They have played thousands of shows, recorded eight albums and a greatest hits collection, been featured on several film soundtracks, performed the music for "Life Without Zoe" (Francis Ford Coppola's segment of the film New York Stories), and played in Taylor Hackford's film Against old Odds. You have also seen them on television, everywhere form "The Tonight Show" and a Barry Manilow Special, to the Miss Teen USA Pageant and their own special for Granada TV in England, Something Wrong in Paradise.

Ironically, Kid Creole and the Coconuts were initially conceived as a holding action until the Savannah Band could record again, and a means for August to tour (something the OSB's elaborate strings and orchestral arrangements made very difficult). From the start, Kid Creole and the Coconuts have been playing human music you can dance to, with various Caribbean influences and one of the most interesting pop sensibilities around. (Witness the rare soca version of Darnell's hit for Machine, "There But For The Grace Of God Go I.")

This approach carried over the Off The Coast of Me, the first Kid Creole and the Coconuts album, which was rife with sardonic touches, like a dance version of the 1940s German hit, "Lilli Marlene", or the silly but sensual title track, or the song that still best sums up the band, "Calypso Pan American."

Darnell expanded on the idea with Kid Creole and the Coconuts' next album, Fresh Fruit In Foreign Places. Loosely conceptual, that album found Kid Creole searching for Mimi, with "15 cronies, seven mariners and (his) skipper, coatimundi." The album was performed more or less as an opera, with former Savannah associate Gichy Dan rapping the narration in concert in New York and for Joseph Papp's Public Theater.

Their next album, entitled Wise Guy here and Tropical Gangsters nearly everywhere else, became the great European hit of 1982, and spawned three top ten U.K. hits, "I'm A Wonderful Thing Baby," "Stool Pigeon" and "Annie, I'm Not Your Daddy." A continuation of the Mimi cycle, it brought the band a level of wealth and adulation they had not previously even imagined.

The cycle was completed with the next album. Doppelganger. The story then became the basis for There's Something Wrong in Paradise, a Granada TV special broadcast in England on Boxing Day, December 24, 1984.

The next two albums, In Praise Of Older Women and Other Crimes and I, Too Have Seen The Woods, were supported by extensive touring through Europe, with notable engagements such as the Montreux Jazz Festival, a performance before the Princess of Wales, and a gig for the United Nations in Geneva. Darnell also wrote the music for an Off-Broadway performed wall-to-wall Kid Creole music throughout the 1989 "Miss Teen USA Pagenat."

After a two and a half year break between albums, Kid Creole and the Coconuts recorded Private Water In the Great Divide, the group's Columbia debut. The album featured the single "The Sex Of It," written and produces by Prince, and offered a dozen prime slices of Kid Creole, like "No More Casual Sex," "Dr. Paradise", "He's Takin' The Rap" and a tribute to Darnell's self-described extravagance, "Laughing With Our Backs Against The Wall." That tune and "Cory's Song" reintroduced Cory Daye into the full time world of popular music, as the former Savannah Band lead singer became a full time Coconut.

One constant theme in Kid Creole and the Coconuts has been personnel. Nearly every person who has been a member of the band, every person Darnell has ever worked with, either is still with the group or makes guest appearances. On YOU SHOULDA TOLD ME YOU WERE... such stalwarts in the Darnell talent directory as Gichy Dan and former Coconut Lourdes Cotto sing. Stoney Browder Jr. also lends a hand.

"Same old family," Darnell adds. "It's like the old days in Hollywood, when the studios, 20th Century Fox, MGM, they used to have an extended family, like a repertory company. That's been my philosophy from 1976 on. You find cats that you know can cut the music, and you stick by them. You work with them time and time again, because you know they can give you what you need. Consequently, it makes life easier for you. I'd hate to have to go through that whole process of finding the guys again. It took such a long time to find the right band that I'm for holding onto them, against all odds. David Span, the drummer, goes back to 1975. Long time.

"On this album," Darnell continues, "Bongo Eddie raps and plays percussion. Who else are the special guest stars on the album? Peter (Schott) played the tracks on the album; he also co-wrote 'Oh Marie' and 'Something Incomplete' with me, but he recently became a father, which cut into his time factor. So, he's not with us on the live show anymore. He's been replaced by Kevin Nance, who used to play with Machine. He co-wrote 'There But For The Grace Of God' with me.

"Carol Colman had a hiatus for six months," August goes on, "but she's back. Father Grey from Jamaica is still on guitar; Danny Blume is still on lead guitar. The horns are still the same; Ken Fradley, Lee Robinson and Charlie Lagond. The Coconuts are still Adriana (Kaegi), Janique (Svedberg) our Swedish entity; and Taryn (Hagey), who was on hiatus for about three years, is back with us."

Not that he's conten to rely strictly on the old gang. True, Kid Creole and Coconuts has been the launching pad for singers like Fonda Rae, Lori Eastside and a host of early '80's dance artists. But new talent works its way into the fold, too.

"There is a new singer that we used on the album," says August. "New for us, not new for the world. Her name is Dian Sorel. She's the soulful voice that you hear on 'Oh, Marie at the end and on 'Baby Doc.' She's all through the album, and I thought that was a nice added twist. She's an opposite entity to Cory Daye's mellow approach."

Always the road animals, even as YOU SHOULDA TOLD ME YOU WERE... hits the racks, Kid Creole are touring. As wonderful as the albums are, Kid Creole and Coconuts live is something else again.

"Of course, my something else is more theatrical," August laughs. "If you remember, choreography was a word that no one could even pronounce twelve years ago. No one even knew what it meant. Couldn't even spell it. But now, it's become part and parcel to almost everything with the video world out there. Everyone needs a choreographer these days.

"Needless to say," but he does, "choreography has been a large part of our thing since the very beginning, and is still a very large part of our thing. You have to et the audience's attention. I've known this lesson for a long time. The Coconuts used to come onstage in bathing suits, scantily clad, strategically ripped, leopard skin, to get your attention.

So pay attention, because live and on record there is a lot going on. Beyond everything else, Kid Creole and the Coconuts are quintessential entertainers. The live show has always proved this. Appearances in the forthcoming film Love Stinks will no doubt add to this. YOU SHOULDA TOLD ME YOU WERE... takes it even further.

"You can be as creative and esoteric as you want to be," August Darnell states, "but you damn sure better make somebody happy at some point. I'm a hard working individual, and I'll always be that. I make a lot of money and I spend a lot of money. And that's my life-style. And that's why I'll always have to do what I love to do, which is to entertain.

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SHOW OF THE SUMMER - COCONUT SHY
Emily Barr - The Guardian (UK) - Arts
June 27, 1997

He had a lovely bunch of coconuts ... but now he's playing the summer season in Blackpool. Emily Barr falls for the cool charms of Kid Creole, the best-dressed man in Lancashire.

Kid Creole leans back in his dressing room and smiles. `It's going to be great,' he tells me in his New York drawl. `We're nervous, yes, but excited.' He is already in costume, a bright orange zoot suit and trilby, and is picking sporadically at a mushroom salad and sipping orange juice. We are not, however, backstage at a major gig, or one of Europe's leading concert venues. We are at the Blackpool Opera House, where Kid Creole, formerly of Coconuts fame, is starring in the summer show, a seventies musical written specially for the occasion, called Oh! What A Night. More unlikely still, he is pleased to be here, because it allows him spend the summer near his family: he lives in the countryside outside Sheffield with his wife, Karen, and their young daughter.

In the eighties, Kid Creole was, in his own words, a `mega-mega-mega-superstar' (he has many strengths, but modesty is not among them). Everyone wants to know what happened after the cool, Calypso-style hits Stool Pigeon and Annie I'm NotYour Daddy, from the album Tropical Gangsters. He was the epitome of cool. How has he ended up in Blackpool?

August Darnell (his real name) has, in fact,experienced success twice. In his early twenties, he threw in a career as a Long Island schoolteacher to become a musician (he became a teacher accidentally, after hastily swapping from a drama major at university to English: `They were drafting the frivolous majors. Not that I was a coward, but I couldn't see in my destiny going to Vietnam'). His brother offered him a position as bass player, backing singer and lyricist in Dr Buzzard's Original Savannah Band, and he accepted. `I look back,' he says, `and I say to myself, how did I have the courage to do something so ridiculous?' Straight away, though, the incredible happened. `The gods must have been smiling down, because our first record was a hit,' says Darnell. Caught up with the unexpected success of the single Cherchez La Femme, the Savannah Band, millionaires in their mid-twenties, moved to Hollywood. The brothers fell out, the second album didn't sell, and by 1979, he was back in New York, broke.

So he started again, writing the songs, leading the band, doing it all himself. The result was Kid Creole And The Coconuts. Kid Creole's first two albums were acclaimed in Britain and more or less ignored in America. `The first sold five copies, and they were to relatives.' Island Records suggested that lyrics such as `Gina, Gina, he's just a ski instructor' were too obscure, and sent him away to write something `accessible'. `So I goofed it up,' he says. `You want something commercial, I thought, I'm gonna give you schlock. Bottom line nonsense. A mockery of the present dance scene.'

The result was Tropical Gangsters, and worldwide stardom. The silly music fitted the times perfectly, and the band spent 360 days of the year on the road, where Darnell's marriage crumbled. `I was in doing my womanising stage,' he says coyly, and the fact that his then-wife, Adriana, was on the road with him led to a swift separation. `I couldn't control myself,' he says, and, seeing him gyrating on the Blackpool stage with 20-year-old Spice Girls-alikes, you can well believe it. Karen, to whom he refers as `my current wife', has insisted that his contract for Oh! What A Night has a clause specifying no love interest. `These Hollywood stories,' he laughs, `they scare her, about leading ladies and all that. Even though I assured her that would never happen ' Better safe than sorry? `That is correct.'

It began to go wrong when Sony offered Kid Creole And The Coconuts a $2m deal, which they accepted (`Island were pissed,' he recalls). Sony wanted the music to be yet more commercial, and Darnell does not like to be dictated to. Prince saw them in concert and wrote some songs, but the next two albums didn't sell in any significant way `because the promotion wasn't correct'. When the contract expired, Darnell began producing and distributing his albums independently. This was when we lost him. `It was what I call my Far Eastern Period,' he explains, meaning that the band suddenly became big in Japan (and Scandinavia), while he could find no distributors in Britain. The band put out four albums, which never made it to our music stores. However, when Oh! What A Night opens on Monday, they will be for sale in the foyer.

There followed an inspired deal with the French company Canal Plus, who put out a Kid Creole record tied in with a documentary. `They took me around the world, living with indigenous tribes,' he says, laughing at my surprise. He and Karen lived with tribes in Ecuador, Africa, Indonesia and Australia for four months. `There was no running water, and we were bathing in streams, living in tents. 'He describes it as `humbling'. While the tribes people were wearing loincloths, Darnell made no concessions. `I was dressed the same way I am now,' he says, smiling down at his orangeness. He is hoping Oh! What A Night will be a success, and that this will ease the distribution of his next album, due out `maybe in December'.

In the meantime, he is happy to be near his children, three of whom live in this country (the other two in Manchester). The only time he becomes slightly flustered during the interview is when I ask how many children he has. `A few,' he says. `People get carried away with that question, and they put the wrong angle on it.' Then he cracks: `I have seven children.' (So if he's not Annie's daddy, he's just about eveyone else's.) They were dancing in the aisles at the end of the first preview, and the elderly audience even joined in the movements to YMCA. Whenever Darnell is not on stage, I find myself hoping he'll be back soon. He is the reason to see the show. As he finishes his salad, he admits that `they didn't say Blackpool' when they offered him the role. `I'll survive,' he shrugs, looking at the hazy sunshine through the window. `You follow your heart in life, and you can end up in the strangest places.'

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Kid Creole and The Coconuts
Adriana Kaegi
November 19, 1998

Kid Creole and The Coconuts was conceived on my 20th birthday when August, Sugar Coated Andy and I had drinks to celebrate. Soon after we went into the studio and had lots of fun creating a sound. Our first live show was at the Scuat theater 1979. It was packed and a great success. August was wearing his robe and a shower cap on his head and slippers on his feet. The Coconuts then were Anna Ratafia and myself. We were wearing leopard loincloths ala Jane in the jungle. More will Follow. Love, Adriana.

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Can disco revivalism reclaim the music behind the nostalgia?
Kurt B. Reighley
1998

It's not easy being a disco purist in the late '90s. Ninety-nine percent of the time, daring to admit this passion yields responses like "Oh yeah . . . Gloria Gaynor was awesome!" That might not sound so bad to some folks. But imagine being a jazz collector, only to meet a chorus of "Kenny G is so cool" every time you mentioned your hobby, and maybe you'll begin to appreciate the level of discomfort '70s dance music fanatics must contend with, even today.
     Admittedly, the state of affairs has improved vastly since 1979's infamous anti-disco record burning held in Comiskey Park. Thanks to countless compilation CDs packed with  the biggest hits (not to mention the golden touch of Puff Daddy), the sound that signified the second half of the '70s has moved beyond being needlessly reviled. Now disco shakes its bountiful groove thing under the glowing auspices of nostalgia. That's progress. Yet along the way, five years of great music has been pared down to an entrenched canon of 20 or so hits - "Ring My Bell," "More, More, More," "Y.M.C.A." - that are starting to wear as thin as the bareback Bianca Jagger's birthday suit.
     It was a movie-Saturday Night Fever-that took disco out of the underground and made it a phenomenon. The accompanying double-LP won an Album of the Year Grammy Award, elevated squeaky Australian geeks the Bee Gees to sex symbol status, and became the best-selling soundtrack of all time. Two years later, even Kiss had a disco hit, and the mood turned ugly almost overnight. Now, like a stilled mirror ball set in motion once more, several new soundtracks - two for Hollywood movies, and one for a book-aim to more accurately reflect the diverse sounds of the era, shedding new light on facets of disco that have faded from mainstream memory.

     "I spent a lot of time at [Studio] 54 during its heyday, just partying as a musician," chuckles Andy "Coati Mundi" Hernandez (of Kid Creole & The Coconuts fame), who - along with Susan Jacobs - assembled the soundtrack to 54. The balance struck between the familiar (Sylvester, Thelma Houston) and the forgotten (The Gibson Brothers' "Que Sera Mi Vida") on the 32 cuts of 54: Music from the Miramax Motion Picture, Volumes 1 & 2 (Tommy Boy) was their goal throughout the 18 months spent on the project.
     "We were trying to include stuff off the beaten path, to show people that, despite what overtook disco towards the end, with the 'Disco Sucks' movement, there were a lot of great melodies and rhythms, and even lyrics, on some of these tracks," insists Hernandez. "That was the whole purpose of including songs that are not stereotypical signature songs, the ones young kids have heard on every compilation record."
     Likewise, while The Last Days of Disco (Work/Sony Music Soundtracks) weighs in more heavily with recognizable numbers, it compensates by concentrating on the likes of "I'm Coming Out" and "He's the Greatest Dancer," well-crafted songs that have shown greater durability than most rock compositions of the same era. Which #1 hit from 1979 would you rather hear: Chic's "Good Times" (featured here) or "Escape (The Piña Colada Song)" by Rupert Holmes?
     Hernandez insists that before the crass commercialization of disco set in, post-Saturday Night Fever, quality songwriting was very much the rule, not the exception. "You can take a lot of songs from that era, break them down, and play them on a piano ballad-style. You had serious writers. They accepted disco and dance rhythms, but a lot of thought and structure went into their music."

     One of the best examples is August Darnell a.k.a. Kid Creole, with whom Hernandez began his career in Dr. Buzzard's "Original" Savannah Band (who scored a Top 40 hit in 1976 with "Cherchez La Femme"). Darnell and Hernandez later were integral members of the Ze Records family. Perhaps more so than any other label of the era, Ze - which featured artists including Kid Creole & the Coconuts, Was (Not Was) and Material - recognized how to mate dance rhythms with a diverse mix of musical elements. "I cared a lot about the lyrics," reiterates former Ze founder Michael Zilkha today. "Bob Dylan is my hero."
     When Zilkha was approached to compile The Last Party (Island), a collection inspired by Anthony Haden Guest's 1997 nightlife memoir of the same name, he retained that sensibility. If the key to a brilliant club is just the right mix of patrons, ideally the music reflects that diversity. The programming of The Last Party zigzags from Lipps, Inc. ("Funkytown") and the Village People to Grace Jones and Third World with all the grace of a drag queen on roller skates soliciting a light from a cocaine-addled Wall Street suit.
     And even so, Zilkha encountered obstacles creating a collection he felt nailed the spirit of the day. "One of the songs I most wanted to get was 'Is It All Over My Face?' by Loose Ends. That's one of the best dance records ever, and you never see it on compilations," he laments. Ditto for Machine's "There But For the Grace of God Go I," another August Darnell creation. "Those were the two songs I really wanted to put on there that I didn't get to." (You can find both, however, on the 1997 Harmless U.K. import Jumpin', alongside equally seminal cuts from Dinosaur L, Musique and Two Tons of Fun.)
     There are numerous explanations as to why the history books fail to take disco seriously as a genre. "It was meant for clubs, and since it was meant for clubs, people didn't listen to it at home," opines Zilkha. "But it was made with incredible integrity. Patrick Adams, when he was making [Musique's] 'In the Bush,' thought he was making an epic. Even with the trite lyric, it's an amazing record. I really think it's a question of attitude. There's a certain snobbery that Patrick Adams isn't a singer/songwriter."
     Hernandez points out that the ease with which disco records could be made, regardless of quality, didn't improve matters. "It got to a point where everything had a dance beat, and what was on top didn't matter. You had Ethel Merman and people who knew nothing about disco getting into it. Rod Stewart and Mick Jagger and Kiss doing disco songs? When that started happening, these people's real fans resented it. That helped the backlash."
     And what of the tunes that did survive? Were they indisputably the finest, or merely the selections simplistic enough to have endured America's short attention span for 20 years? "The Village People had a package, a sound, a style," says Hernandez. "Kids would be dressed up [like them] at their concerts. Donna Summer is a great singer. Her treatment of things was bound to last. Those records are nothing to be ashamed about. The only problem is they totally dominated the field. A lot of other great music got pushed aside."
     "The disco canon is pretty meat and potatoes. But there were a lot of other things going on," concludes Zilkha. Regardless of quality, certain songs will always survive. "Maybe it's because now you go to a bar mitzvah and you hear 'Good Times,' 'Le Freak' and 'Last Dance' played by the orchestra. They're just so familiar. They're like 'My Way.'"

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Biography
William Ruhlmann, All Music Guide
1999

Thomas August Darnell Browder (a/k/a August Darnell) was born in Montreal on August 12, 1950, the son of a French Canadian mother and a Dominican father, but was raised in the New York City borough of the Bronx. In 1965, he formed the In-Laws with his half-brother, Stony Browder, Jr. He earned a master's degree in English and became an English teacher, but in 1974 again joined his half-brother as bass guitarist, singer, and lyricist in Dr. Buzzard's Original "Savannah" Band, a group that mixed disco with big band and Latin styles. In 1976, Dr. Buzzard achieved a gold-selling album with its self-titled debut release, which featured the Top 40 hit "Whispering/Cherchez La Femme/Se Si Bon," but its subsequent recordings were less successful. Darnell began to write and produce for other acts, co-composing Machine's 1979 chart entry "There But for the Grace of God Go I" and working with James Chance among others.

In 1980, he became a staff producer at Ze Records and created the persona of Kid Creole (the name adapted from the Elvis Presley film King Creole) with a backup group, the Coconuts, consisting of three female singers led by his wife Adriana ("Addy") Kaegi, and a band containing vibraphone player "Sugar-Coated" Andy Hernandez (a/k/a Coati Mundi), also from Dr. Buzzard. Kid Creole was a deliberately comic figure, a Latinized Cab Calloway type in a zoot suit and broad-brimmed hat who sang songs like "Mister Softee" that found him decrying his impotence while being berated by the Coconuts. Off the Coast of Me, the first Kid Creole and the Coconuts album, was released in August 1980 by Island Records subsidiary Antilles through a distribution deal with Ze. It earned good reviews for its clever lyrics and mixture of musical styles, but did not sell.

Ze made a deal with Sire Records (in turn part of Warner Bros. Records), and Sire released the second Kid Creole and the Coconuts album, Fresh Fruit in Foreign Places, in June 1981. It reached the charts briefly, and Coati Mundi's dance single, "Me No Pop I," was a Top 40 hit in the U.K. Fresh Fruit was a concept album that found the Kid Creole character embarking on an Odyssey-like search for a character named Mimi, and it was given a stage production at the New York Public Theater. Darnell continued the story with his third album, which was released in the U.K. under the title Tropical Gangsters in May 1982. The band toured Britain for the first time to promote the album, and they broke big: The LP hit #3 and three singles, "I'm a Wonderful Thing, Baby," "Stool Pigeon," and "Annie, I'm Not Your Daddy," made the Top Ten, with "Dear Addy" reaching the Top 40. In the U.S., where the album was retitled Wise Guy, the band remained cult favorites, though the album charted and "I'm a Wonderful Thing, Baby" made the R&B singles charts.

In 1983, Darnell produced side projects for the Coconuts (Don't Steal My Coconuts) and Coati Mundi (The Former Twelve Year Old Genius) before releasing the fourth Kid Creole album Doppelganger, which completed the Mimi cycle. The album got into the charts in the U.K., where the single "There's Something Wrong in Paradise" made the Top 40, but it did not chart at home and was a commercial disappointment after the breakthrough represented by Tropical Gangsters/Wise Guy. Nevertheless, Kid Creole and the Coconuts remained a compelling live act with an imaginative visual style, which led to film and television opportunities. They appeared in the film Against All Odds in 1984 and continued to be tapped for movie projects in subsequent years, either for appearances or music: New York Stories (1989), The Forbidden Dance (1990), Identity Crisis (1990), Only You (1992), Car 54, Where Are You? (1994). They also made a TV film, Something Wrong in Paradise, based on the Mimi cycle and broadcast on Granada TV in the U.K. in December 1984.

Darnell broke up with his wife in 1985, and the original band split, with the Coconuts forming a group called Boomerang, while Andy Hernandez appeared in the Madonna film Who's That Girl? (1987). Darnell pressed on, appearing at the Montreux Jazz Festival and releasing the fifth Kid Creole and the Coconuts album, In Praise of Older Women and Other Crimes, which did not chart. Neither did the sixth album, I, Too, Have Seen the Woods (1987). The group joined Barry Manilow on "Hey Mambo," a song on his Swing Street album that made the singles charts. Darnell then took time off to write In a Pig's Valise, an Off-Broadway show that ran for 12 weeks.

Kid Creole and the Coconuts, now featuring former Dr. Buzzard singer Cory Daye, resurfaced in 1990 on Columbia Records, issuing a seventh album, Private Waters in the Great Divide, which featured "The Sex of It," a song written by Prince that made the British Top 40 and the American R&B charts. It was followed a year later by You Shoulda Told Me You Were .... Kid Creole and the Coconuts spent the 1990s touring internationally and releasing albums primarily outside the U.S. To Travel Sideways and Kiss Me Before the Light Changes both appeared initially in Japan, though they found stateside release on a small label in 1995. The Conquest of You was released in Germany in 1997. (An American release on Fuel 2000 was scheduled for 1999, but did not occur.) In the U.S., the group appeared in Atlantic City and Las Vegas. Kid Creole starred in the British musical Oh! What a Night, which ran in the West End from August to October 1999.

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Kid Creole and the Coconuts
pingouin
Mar 4 2001

A band formed during a "hiatus" occasioned by the meteoric rise and fall of Dr. Buzzard's Original Savannah Band -- Stony Browder and Cory Daye took the blueprint in one direction, straight R&B, featuring nouveau diva Daye. Not a success. Thomas August Darnell Browder and "Sugar Coated" Andy Hernandez formed Kid Creole and the Coconuts, a downtown NYC rock band with the OSB's multi-media ambitions, an encyclopedic grasp of urban(e)mudpeoplepartymusik, past and present, and a backlog of songs. "Kid Creole" was Darnell's onstage alter-ego, a skinny wiseass Cab Callowayish rake with a name swiped from one of those cheesy Elvis flicks (King Creole; The Kid would, years later, crown himself King as well, but it was too late to change the band's name). The Coconuts were, originally, two chick singers dressed in fake-leopardskin loincloths; when the budget permitted, there were three Coconuts. Hernandez became "Coati Mundi", The Kid's wacky sidekick.

They signed with Ze Records (where Darnell was then working, and which would have been the grimy, genre-smashing, multiculti NYC equivalent of 4AD, had they lived long enough to prosper) and debuted with Off the Coast of Me (1980), followed the next year by Fresh Fruit in Foreign Places, the first installment of a Caribbean rock opera, of sorts, "The Saga of Mimi"; just as in Savannah Band days, the lyrical content steered clear of R&B generica, in favor of an imaginary B-movie musical (Darrio / can you get me into Studio / 54? -- a bridge and tunnel Judy Holliday singing and chewing gum at the same time). They peaked, perhaps, with Tropical Gangsters (1982), gaining enough UK success to put the band on the biz map even to this day, but were, as much as with the previous LPs, pretty much ignored in the US -- I can recall seeing them on SNL back around 1980 (doing "Mister Softee" or "Darrio" and maybe a soca cover of a Darnell hit from his days as a disco producer, "There But for the Grace of God Go I"; my memory's fuzzy), but you have to remember that those were the days that Mr. Michaels would have bands on that the NBC suits (and their damn kids, for that matter) had never heard of (Ahhh.. those were the days...)

The deals with Island Records, and later Sony, took the edge off the concept and music, but the craftmanship is, still, always there (Darnell has always been too proud a man to take the money and run). It's a little odd, seeing them in recent years, on The Tonight Show, mainstream enough now to be invited onto the famed stage of dull old Mr. Leno to run through their paces, but it's always nice to see Darnell et cie doin' their thang. But I'm nagged (OK, only a little) that Darnell could have been the Duke Ellington of his era but will now probably end up a huffing-and-puffing case of Fat Elvis Syndrome, like septugenarian James Brown, though a less cringe-inducing one, since a cult figure like Darnell has less need of maintaining the illusion of legendhood.

The original band lasted until around 1985, returning full-time in 1990; they've always been Darnell's little repertory company, with Daye and Browder joining the group on occasion over the years; the late reggae master-drummer Winston Grennan was a member, as was singer Fonda Rae, probably better known for "Over Like a Fat Rat" and Don Armando's Second Avenue Rhumba Band's "Deputy of Love" (a Darnell project as he was transitioning from flaky disco producer into The Kid), and Adriana Kaegi (the former Mrs. Creole) as one of the Coconuts, who spun off their own solo LPs (and had appeared on U2's War), as did Coati Mundi (The Former Twelve-Year-Old Genius, with the (uhhh...) hit "Me No Pop I") before splitting semi-permanently from the group. One of his more recent projects was helping compile the period soundtrack for 54, the Studio 54 film. (Gee, I wonder how the OSB's "Cherchez La Femme" got included?)

Last year saw the release of Too Cool to Conga! (approximately the 20th Kid Creole disque) which was my first occasion to really cringe, as I collapsed into visions of Mr. Sony, chomping a cigar, ordering The Kid to come up with "one of those swing rekkids that the kids like to dance to these days" -- you, dear listener, are better off with the fonky original version of "Endicott" (from In Praise of Older Women / Other Crimes) than the I-missed-the-damn-party rendition on the new CD. Swing? That's sooooo 1990-something, isn't it?

Mine own subjective fave moments: I think even before Tropical Gangsters was released in the States (as Wise Guy), I was sitting, stoned, in my sister's house in Dutchess County, New York, and WBLS plays this new song with a gently loping dance beat. (It turned out to be "I'm a Wonderful Thing"). I spontaneously begin to get up off the couch and unselfconsciously waggle my little tush to the music (I had the house to myself). Then I recognize Darnell's voice, and my buzz is heightened, because -- if only for this one time -- he and the band are getting airplay on a mainstream US radio station, and the biggest R&B station in the country, to boot. I lift an imaginary champagne glass to salute him as the song starts to fade, and there's this passage in the horn section with (IIRC) a piccolo and baritone saxophone crisply playing the same line, in their respective ranges, grabbing my attention, and I marvel and think, "where else are you going to hear something like that on the radio?"

A couple of years ago, I was listening to a Leicester City football match on the RealPlayer, and the BBC station, having no commercials to fill up the halftime, plays, out of nowhere, an extended mix of "Stool Pigeon" (from the aforementioned Tropical Gangsters); my till-then lethargic mood (for only the truly hardcore can get worked up over a radio broadcast of Leicester City playing an equally-dull opponent) switched immediately to jubilation as I Callowayed around my cramped quarters, hot-cha-cha-cha.

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Kid has lost his lovely bunch of Coconuts
David Whetstone - The Journal
November 12th 2001

The name is August Darnell but a lot of people don't know that. "People in the street and in shopping malls tend to know me as Kid Creole," says Mr Darnell. "A lot of people call me Mr Creole." Mr Darnell (alias Kid Creole aka Mr Creole) roars with laughter. Mention the name Kid Creole to anyone with a passing knowledge of the late 1970s and early 1980s music scene and they are likely to raise an eyebrow and say: "... and the Coconuts?" That's him. Kid Creole and the Coconuts were one of the hardest working, outrageously flamboyant bands of a pretty flamboyant era.

When Kid strutted his stuff in his baggy, 1940s-inspired suits, the kids in the audience bopped and boogied till their feet hurt. Kid and his glamorous Coconuts performed thousands of shows, recorded 12 albums, spawned four greatest hits collections, featured on six film soundtracks and appeared on so many TV shows that they have lost count.

And now Kid, minus his Coconuts, is touring the country with a stage show called Oh! What A Night, recreating the heady, disco world of the 1970s. Thirty actors, dancers and musicians plus a clutch of Seventies classic songs - and Kid Creole at the top of the bill. The whole caboodle rolls into Sunderland today (Monday November 12) for a week-long run at the Empire Theatre.

But at one point recently it looked as though the thing might not happen. August Darnell, a proud New Yorker, has not only had the horrors of the World Trade Centre attack to contend with, but also a tragedy closer to home. August's older brother, Stony, died two months ago of alcoholism. It was Stony we can thank for the very existence of the character Kid Creole and all the fun he has given us.

Without the older brother's youthful ambition, his younger sibling would never have figured on the showbusiness Richter scale. "It was quite difficult because he was the big influence on my life," says August, remembering his big brother. "It happened just as the tour was kicking off. We were in Scotland and there was a point where I thought: this is the worst thing that could possibly have happened. I didn't know if I could continue. "But after a while I realised it was my destiny to continue and that it could be a tribute to him if I did so."

Without the intense rivalry between the two brothers, there would never have been a Kid Creole, says the man behind the alias. "My brother was always the musician in the family. He was the first to follow his Bohemian dream and did music while I was still a conventional school teacher." In the end August joined the band, writing the lyrics for the songs. "But in my silly, youthful head, I thought it was the guy who wrote the music who would get the accolades. He thought you couldn't do the music and the lyrics and so he wanted things to continue as they were. The more he restricted me, the more I rebelled. "When things really started falling apart, I suggested I could do it all on my own. They all laughed and I left."

The result was Kid Creole and the Coconuts and a swift rise to fame. The name didn't take too much agonising over. "I had the nickname Creole Kid from high school. In America, Creole is a general term for a person of mixed race, and particularly for people who have a bit of a French heritage mixed in. "It also applies to a language, the language of the Caribbean. The name does have quite a high standing in America."

The brothers parted and followed different courses. "His lifestyle was quite the opposite to mine," says August. "He liked the Bohemian lifestyle and he always liked to drink. I have never wanted to. "We tried to steer him away from alcohol but we never managed to do it. We could see the way he was going but couldn't do anything about it. It's strange because Mum and Dad brought us up the same way. "It's just amazing how two people can be brought up the same and go such different ways. It has taught me an extremely important lesson.

"I have children of my own now and it has taught me to monitor them in everything they do. If something is going wrong I want to spot the signs, and it isn't always easy." I suggest that in August Darnell's case, the monitoring process must be particularly difficult. We have already established that he has seven children, ranging in age from six months to 25, although he does not yet qualify for the name Grandad Creole. "That will come," he chortles.

Talking of his children, he says: "They came to see the show in Blackpool, the two boys from Manchester and the little daughter from Sheffield." The wife mentioned in the Kid Creole and the Coconuts biography, Adriana Kaegi, one of the original Coconuts and the choreographer and stylist responsible for their look, is no longer Mrs August Darnell. "She was Swiss," says August. "She is no longer my wife and we had no children together. All she gave me were the Coconuts. "And that," he says with a gleeful burst of laughter, "is all you are going to get on that subject." Suffice to say that August Darnell - or Kid Creole - has been popular in different spheres, public and personal.

None of the above information has been shared with anything approaching despondency. August says he has always had a sunny personality and finds that happiness is generally the best approach to anything. He turned 50 recently. How does that feel? "It feels magnificent," he enthuses, as if he's been waiting for it all his life. "I'm still alive. When you think of all the traps that are out there, it's amazing anyone can survive that long. It's down to luck as much as anything." He attributes a pretty high energy level to his invigorating career. His approach to showbusiness, avoiding the traps such as drink and drugs, has kept him in shape. His approach to romance, you suspect, has also contributed something.

The stage show, which opened with a try-out run in Blackpool in 1997, has done very well. It is set in a New York nightclub called The Inferno in 1976. August Darnell as Kid Creole plays DJ Brutus T. Firefly. Ironically, part of his job is to keep the club owner, Paul Burns, an alcoholic, back on the straight and narrow. This aspect of the role, at least, August should be able to play with high credibility. Then there's a young wannabe from England who comes to New York looking for fun and falls in love with the nightclub boss's daughter.

August didn't create the piece but he has almost become synonymous with it and he revels in its success. It is on tour until December 15 and then goes to Hamburg for four months, taking over from a production of Cats. After Europe it heads for Las Vegas, one step nearer August's dream of having it open on Broadway. You may spot August Darnell on Wearside this week. He'll be hard to miss. "My stage persona has never been that different from my real-life persona," he confides cheerfully. The 1940s-style gear is what he wears on and off stage. He started with the real McCoy and gradually replaced the authentic garments with new ones cut in a baggy, 1940s style.

August Darnell is his own man and happy with it, despite recent blows. He would love to share his memories of performing in the North-East but confesses with a fruity chuckle: "When you've been performing in as many places as I have, and for as long as I have, it all becomes a bit of a blur."

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Vivien Goldman
Kid Creole and The Coconuts: Indiscreet

1984, Zomba Books (UK) ISBN 0 946391 23 8

(96 page biography - currently out of print)

 

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Rider (Extract)
Early 1990s

STAGE / RISERS:

Minimum stage size is 28ft. by 24 ft. The downstage 8 ft. should be covered with black or gray Marley, Stagelawn, or Roscoe flooring. Kid needs this to dance properly and safely.

A riser configuration is necessary for our stage set: 2, 8 ft. by 8 ft. platforms at a height of 3 ft, 1,8 ft. by 8ft. platform for drums at 14 ft. and another 8 ft. by 8 ft. for horns at low height. Stairs or step units should be provided for the tall risers. The drum riser should be carpeted.

BANDGEAR / BACKLINE:

The Promoter shall provide at his own expense the necessary bandgear -- see Appendix B. Within the New York citty area, the official supplier is Studio Instrument Rentals.

SOUND SYSTEM / MONITORS:

Kid Creole requires a world-class sound system with the following minimum specs -- a 40-channel mixing console, speaker cabinets, and amps commensurate with the room and the expected number of fans using a ratio of 5 watts per head, that is , 1000 people = 5000 watts. The front of house rack should contain a professional assortment of compressors, gates, reverb, delay as well as a cassette deck. Talk back to the stage is essential. The preferred console is the Yamaha PM3000.

Kid Creole requires an extensive monitor system. For fullsize stages, a 32 by 12 mix system is called for. On smaller stages it may be possible to use a 32 by 10 mix system. This must be discussed in the advance with our production manager. A list of the mixes can be found in Appendix C2. The preferred console is the Ramsa S840.

LIGHTING:

The extent of the lighting system will vary somewhat depending upon the type of venue, size of stage, power availability, etc. However, a basic minimum would be a tow-truss system, each truss to contain 24 Pars as well as 6 specials (Leicos) in the front an a bar of ACLS in the back. A smoke machine is necessary. Any Vary-Lights, Telescans, Colour Mags, etc., that may be available would greatly enhance. the look of the show. Depending on the size of the facility, the Purchaser agrees to provide at his sole cost and expense 2 to 4 Super Trooper spotlights.

MEALS AND CATERING:

Crew Lunch: The promoter shall provide lunch for a crew of 4 to 6 people consisting of sandwiches, hamburgers, etc., soda and coffee.

Dinner: A nutritious hot meals shall be provided directly after sound check for the entire touring party of 20 people. There are 4 vegetarians who eat seafood.

Dressing Rooms shall be stocked with snacks consisting of chips, nuts, cheese, fruit, veggies, etc.

Beverages: The promoter shall provide an ample amount of the following: water, soda, and fruit juice. This should be available from sound check on.

Alcohol: The band requires 2 cases of domestic beer, 2 bottles of wine, and one liter of imported Vodka, that is, Absolut.

These should be made available after sound check.

DRESSING ROOMS:

The Kid Creole band contains a minimum of 12 people and sometimes more; therefore, at least 3 dressing rooms will be required. The breakdown is as follows: No. 1 for Kid, No. 2 for the Coconuts and Cory Daye, and No. 3 for the Band.

All rooms should be stocked with the following items: mirrors, towels, chairs, hanging racks for costumes, as well as the aforementioned catering requirements. During the winter, it is essential that Kid's room be warmed with a heater.

WARDROBE:

As costumes are an essential part of the show, the promoter shall provide a "wardrobe mistress" equipped with an iron, ironing board, sewing kit, etc. She/He should be on call from the end of sound check through the start of the show. They will not work during the show and can view the performances if desired.

PARKING AND MISCELLANEOUS:

In the event that the band is arriving by bus, the promoter shall take steps to ensure adequate, safe parking as near to the stage door as possible. The same shall be provided for the crew car and Kid's car as that may apply.

MISCELLANEOUS:

Tent poles and obstructions -- occasionally Kid Creole has the dubious experience of playing in a tent. In no case shall the band perform on a stage obstructed by a tent pole or other vertical hazard. Also, in cases where the staying company is erecting a stage behind a pole, steps must be taken so that the pole is not directly in front of the stage; that is, the stage must be positioned in such a way so that the sight line of the stage-left or stage-right musician is obstructed but not the center, Kid's position.

SUMMARY:

All of the above points as well as such items as show time, load-in time, support acts, hotel arrangements, stage hand requirements, curfews, etc., shall be discussed in advance with the band's production manager, Ernesto Kulka. It is highly advised that the promoter compile a "reserve rider" with address, phone numbers, show times, technical specs, etc,. and fax same to Ernesto.

A full and complete discussion of these points as well as any other matters that relate to individual venues, etc., is the best insurance toward a successful show.

SOUND- MICROPHONE PATCH LIST:

Kick
Snare
Rack 1
Rack 2
Floor
O.H. (House Right)
O.H. (House Left)
Guitar Mark (House Left)
Bass D. I.
Guitar (on stage)
Keys Top D. I.
Keys Bottom D. I.
Trombone XLR
Trumpet XLR
Bongos
Conga High
Conga Low
Timbales
Drum Machine D.I.
Coco 1
Coco 2
Cory Daye
Mark Vox
Danny Vox
Horn Vox
Percussion Vox 1
Percussion Vox 2
Kid Vox
Spare Vox

BACKLINE:

Keyboards:

1 Roland D-50
1 Korg M-1
1 mixer
1 keyboard cabinet with power amp
1 Apex Stand
1 stereo volume pedal

Guitars:

2 Roland JC 120 + 1 Fender "The Twin"
1 SVT Bass Cabinet
2 SVT Bass Amplifier
3 guitar stands

Drums:

1 Yamaha drum kit (Pearl, TAMA)
1 ride cymbal, 2 crash cymbals
1 straight stand, 2 boom stands
extra snare and pedal

Percussion:

1 bongos w/stand
2 congas w/stand
1 timbales w/stand
1 16" crash cymbal with stand
1 Roland octapad w/stand
1 Roland R-8 Drum machine
Misc. 1 110/220 transformer (Europe only)
2 additional drum seats (thrones)

SOUND - MONITOR MIXES:

1. Percussion 1 wedge
2. Kid 2 wedges
3. Keys 1 wedge
4. Horns 2 wedges
5. Guitar Dan 1 wedge
6. Bass 1 wedge
7. Guitar Mark 1 wedge
8. Cory 1 wedge
9. Coconuts 2 wedges
Drums
Side Fill Left
Side Fill Right

CONTRACT APPENDIX RELATING TO OPEN AIR SHOWS

Where no adequate roofing protection is provided and the performance is subject to weather conditions, please be aware of the following:

The Purchaser will provide a stage area with adequate covering against inclement weather conditions. Any change or shortening of performance or cancellation resulting from failure to comply with this clause will result in full payment of the ARTIST'S fee.

The Purchaser is responsible to and accountable for the ARTIST'S equipment at all times once it is within the grounds of the engagement. Should any damage or loss occur, the PURCHASER shall be financially responsible for:

Repair or replacement of all missing or damaged items to the ARTIST'S satisfaction;
The cost of hire of such items while repair/replacement is being undertaken; and
Freighting/forwarding costs of any equipment replaced or repaired.

The PURCHASER will provide both PA and lighting monitors and mixing systems to the ARTIST'S specifications, as directed in the ARTIST'S rider or as previously forwarded to the Purchaser by FA.

Compliance with the ARTIST'S specification is of paramount importance, and major consideration must be given by PURCHASER in supplying specific equipment required even if this equipment will be solely used by the ARTIST and no other artist appearing at the engagement.

Should the ARTIST'S playing time be delayed for any reason outside the direct control of the ARTIST, the ARTIST will not be required to shorten the length of their set unless the ARTIST so desires. If the delay is more than 1 hour, the ARTIST reserves the right to cancel without prejudice to the full ARTIST's fee.

Where safety permits, no tent pole(s) should be located in a position facing the very center of the stage (up to 20ft. on either side of the center line of the stage). For open-air concerts, the entire stage area must be covered over (above the lighting system up to a height of 26ft.) and the same applying to the wins where the sound equipment is located. Overhead guards should like wise be provided for the lighting and sound consoles and spotlights.

Where tents/marquees are concerned, an overhead guard should be provided for sound and lighting consoles, spotlights, and stage equipment to prevent harmful effects caused by falling dust, condensation, or rain.

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