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"Looking
under the hood never did any good ..."
Drummer Nick
Mason spent some of his time between Pink
Floyd's 1979's "The Wall"
and 1983's "The Final Cut" involved
with a project that resulted in "Nick Mason's Fictitious Sports"
album, a mostly oddball collection of experimental pop, rock and
jazz, released in 1981. (Of course, he spent a little time in there
working on "The Wall" tour,
too!)
The project
easily could have been called "Carla Bley's Fictitious Sports."
It was Bley who wrote all of the album's numbers, played keyboards
throughout and co-produced the effort with Mason. But Mason was
guaranteed a hefty advance for any solo album as were all
of the members of Pink Floyd. Furthermore,
it was believed that a solo album with the name Nick Mason on it
would surely sell better than one with Bley's, so it was Mason's
name that graced the cover, designed by Hipgnosis.
Mason had
become involved with Bley and her brass playing husband, Mike Mantler,
in 1976, when he contributed to Mantler's "The Hapless Child
and Other Stories" album. This time around, the musician roster
included Mason, Mantler, Bley, former Soft Machine drummer Robert
Wyatt on vocals, and guitarist Chris Spedding, among others.
Vocalist Karen
Kraft was invited to join the project when Spedding brought Bley
to hear her play in an R&B band in New York City. "Nick
and Carla informed me that they didn't want me to sing in my natural
voice, but wanted me to sing like I looked," Kraft explains
in an exclusive interview with "Floydian Slip".
"I was
then and still am a very petite blueish-eyed blonde with a very
big, deep, booming quasi-black singing voice," she says. "Nick
and Carla were into the dichotomy of it all.
"They
were looking for a 'burbling gospel sound' for 'Hot
River,' which is a Pink Floyd takeoff.
I volunteered that I could sing and gargle at the same time, so
I have the 'gargle solo' on the record.
"We performed
live a few times and had a blast. Nick Mason is a lovely man. It
was a mighty strange trip for a girl from Bryan, Texas," says
Kraft, who's now in Los Angeles, Calif., and records with SoulSkin
for Askew Records.
"Fictitious
Sports" was produced at Grog Kill Studio in Willow, N.Y., in
October 1979. It was released in 1981, and rose to number 170 in
the United States.
Written
by Craig Bailey
©1995-2007 Random Precision
Media. All rights reserved.
Updated:
Feb. 6, 2003
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"Fictitious
Sports "

May 1981 (U.K.)
May 1981
(U.S.)

Fictitious
Sports CD
"At
the Limit: 25 Classic Cars ..." by Nick Mason book
-
-
I
Was Wrong (Bley)
04:10
-
Siam
(Bley)
04:46
-
-
Boo
To You Too (Bley)
03:24
-
Do
Ya? (Bley)
04:29
-
Wervin'
(Bley)
03:55
-
I'm
a Mineralist (Bley)
06:14

-
"Can't
Get My Motor to Start," a
wonderfully bizarre number with an infectious groove, as far
away from anything Pink Floyd would ever do as one can get
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