If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed.
Post a reply to the thread: An Interview with Brian Carroll a.k.a. Buckethead
Click here to log in
What is the sum of 36 and 12
You may choose an icon for your message from this list
Will turn www.example.com into [URL]http://www.example.com[/URL].
You may rate this thread from 1-star (Terrible) to 5-stars (Excellent) if you wish to do so.
An Interview with Brian Carroll a.k.a. Buckethead yeah, i was surprised at how open and approachable he was in the interview. whenever people interview his Buckethead persona, it's always pretty awkward.
An Interview with Brian Carroll a.k.a. Buckethead
An Interview with Brian Carroll a.k.a. Buckethead I like it too, it's just a peek under the mask without revealing too much. One of the things I appreciate about Buckethead is his mysterious personae, so I actually think it's good that he stays in character as much as he does. This interview gave just a little insight which still satisfied a lot of my curiosity. I also like the story about how he made up the Buckethead character.
An Interview with Brian Carroll a.k.a. Buckethead good interview
An Interview with Brian Carroll a.k.a. Buckethead You're welcome. Electric Tears is a beautiful album. I, too, prefer his acoustic and more emotional pieces, but I feel like some listeners who were initially impressed with him through albums such as Monsters and Robots have a hard time adjusting to the duality of his work. I, for one, favor Bermuda Triangle (also released in 2002) out of what I've heard from him because I feel like it's somewhat close to a balance of his styles. I haven't heard Acoustic SharRAB in its entirety. Will have to check it out. I love music articles, so if you got anymore good ones, bring it on.
An Interview with Brian Carroll a.k.a. Buckethead Thanks! Although all I did was to find it I think Buckethead is an intriguing personae. I don't like all his music, but the stuff I like I'll admit I like a lot. Mostly, I enjoy his slower songs and I think it's an interesting contrast to have this robotic, mask-wearing, inhuman character playing such emotional guitar pieces. I think a lot of people who's mostly only heard about him think of him as a pure shred guitarist. [youtube]H1q03GuQyvQ[/youtube] People who might like his acoustic stuff should check out Electric Tears from 2002 or perhaps even Acoustic SharRAB released in 2007 which is recordings of him improvising with an acoustic guitar in a studio in the early 90s. It's mostly not complete songs, but it's still nice to listen to and it's amazing some of the things he comes up with. About Les Claypool, he actually auditioned for Metallica in 1986 after Cliff Burton had died. As we know, that didn't work out, but if there'd been no Primus, I guess he would've appeared in some other band. I also prefer him in Primus by the way! edit : Ah! I knew they'd collaborated on more than just Tommy the Cat, but I wasn't sure what .. Gonna see if I can get it straight away. Thanks!
An Interview with Brian Carroll a.k.a. Buckethead Thanks for the awesome article, toretorden. I like his solo stuff, but what he does with Praxis is amazing! I saw him live a couple years ago in NC. It is kind of creepy, but it makes the music all the more interesting. I think Les Claypool and Buckethead work together on and off. He definitely is an awesome bass player, but when it comes to Primus, you gotta have the whole band. I don't think he would have gotten that far without them. EDIT: Also, if you dig on Claypool and Brain, check out the Tom Wait's Real Gone. Mantia does most, if not all, the percussion, and Claypool appears on a few songs.
An Interview with Brian Carroll a.k.a. Buckethead thanks man. the only one of those I knew was bucket of brains. I will have to look into the others
An Interview with Brian Carroll a.k.a. Buckethead He seems to be friend with the Primus gang. For example, Les Claypool sings/plays bass and Brain (Bryan Mantia) does the drums on Buckethead's 1999 album "Monsters and Robots". Brain also does drums in Praxis which Buckethead plays in and the three also play in Colonel Claypool's bucket of Bernie brains.
An Interview with Brian Carroll a.k.a. Buckethead I'veenjoyed most of his work. Actually made GnR interesting again for a time because he took some of the spotlight away from Axl. Also played (or plays?) with Claypool who I think is a "greatest" bass player.
An Interview with Brian Carroll a.k.a. Buckethead While his phrasing is unmistakable, a trule personal, distinctive tone has always eluded Buckethead. Possibly his best recorded sound was on Praxis' "Metatron", on which Axiom house guitarist Nicky Skopelitis hooked him up with a Well's 17 1/2 watt head designed by gear wizard Matt Wells. The Wells amp wired through a Harry Kolbe 4x12 cab produced a full, bright tone that was particular effective on Buck's Eddie Hazel-ish auto-filtered clean chorRAB and psychedelic shred-blues passages. It also tracked his hyperspeed leaRAB and trill-punctuated chunk rhythms equally well. But Buckethead, a fan of solid- state gear's even response and good tracking is just as likely to turn up at a gig with a VHT Pitbull 50 watt head, and for a recent "Buckethead and FrienRAB" show at Manhattan's WetlanRAB he rented TWO Mesa dual rectifier full stacks and ran them in stereo. "That sounded soooo gnarly", he gushes "I was freaking out." Then again, the devastating tones on Sacrifist were recorded direct through a Zoom multi-effector. Go figure. For all those nightmarish, chandelier-smashing swirls, Buckethead plays his characteristic tapping flourish through a Roland SE-50 multi-effector set to harmonize the part in four ascending half-step voices above each pitch, essentially forming a cluster above or below each note. Apart from that, his effects are limited to a ProCo Rat, an Alesis Midiverb II for echo, occasional wah and a recently acquired Lexicon Jam Man for looping. "I think a lot in loops now", he says, "because of rap and dance music. Sometimes instead of using a harmonizer, I'll take one of those tapped things and record it four times, moving it up a half-step each time. You can get some really dense harmony that way." It's getting late and Space Mountain, the last ride of the night beckons. Chowing greasy fries in the shadow of the Matterhorn, a stone's throw from Tomorrowland, Carroll squirms slightly at the thought that he's unmasking Buckethead for this interview. Like Peter Parker and Bruce Wayne, Buckethead has always tried to protect his anonymity, although he feels it's finally time to learn to co-exist with this monster. Buckethead, the story goes, was raised in a chicken coop. But Carroll, who first performed in character regularly with his old band the Deli creeps remerabers a parallel genesis. "I had just seen Halloween IV", he recalls of a dark night in 1989, "and as soon as it was over I went into a store across the street and said 'Do you have any Michael Myers masks?' They had a white mask, which really wasn't like a Michael Myers mask, but I liked it a lot. That night I was eating chicken out of a bucket that my dad brought home. It wasn't a Kentucky Fried Chicken bucket either. It said "Deli Chicken" on the outside. I was eating it, and I put the mask on and then the bucket on my head. I went to the mirror. I just said 'Buckethead. That's Buckethead right there.' It was just one of those things. After that, I wanted to be that thing all the time." The corabination of Buckethead the friendly ax murderer with Buckethead the guitar wizard and robotic stage performer was practically instantaneous. "I thought it made sense with the way I play", he explains. "I play all this weird stuff, but if I just look like me, it isn't going to work. But, if I'm like this weird freak..." If anything, Carroll feels that becoming Buckethead has allowed him to express himself more freely than he would as unassuming Brian Carroll. "It opened the door to endless possibilities", he concurs as fireworks erupt in the Tomorrowland sky. "I can work anything into that character and make it totally work: all the thing I love in my life, like Disney, Giant Robot, Texas Chainsaw. Even though I'm wearing a mask and have a character, it's more real, more about what I'm really like, because I'm too shy to let a lot of things out. Every reason I became Buckethead and am Buckethead has to do with the way I live. It's not because I thought it would be successful. I never use anything that isn't part of what I really loved as a child or love right now." You can contact Buckethead and purchase CRAB directly by writing to Bucketheadland, Suite 545, 976 W. Foothill Blvd., Claremont, CA 91711 or e- mailing to [email protected].
Forum Rules