Copyright 1996 by Jim
Dorsch
Reprinted from Exposé, Issue #10
Spring/Summer 1996.
Outside the living room
window of Christopher “Kit” Watkins, hummingbirds feed, framed by an
expansive view of the Blue Ridge Mountains. Except for a generous
sprinkling of gray in his close-cropped hair, the 42-year-old Watkins
looks little different than he did 15 years ago, when he played
keyboards and flute at the Cellar Door in Washington, DC with drummer
Coco Roussel. The slightly built musician carries himself in a
relaxed manner, plopping into an easy chair to engage in coffee and
conversation. Quiet, yet animated, his eyes burn with a quiet
intensity, and his face freezes into a sparkling smile when he makes
a point.
In 1980 Watkins was
rebounding from the dissolution of Happy The Man, a Washington-based
progressive rock band that was critically acclaimed but achieved only
moderate commercial success. Today Kit Watkins is a solo artist who
has produced 13 recordings in several genres, fulfilling all
capacities-composing, playing and recording the music, designing the
cover art and selling the product on his own label, Linden
Music.
Downstairs at his home,
one passes Watkins’ Yamaha grand piano, which he inherited from his
father, on the way to the recording studio, a small space dominated
by a wall of electronics. In one corner hangs a variety of percussion
instruments, a couple of children’s whistles and assorted
noisemakers. “I haven’t used the whistles in a recording yet,” Watkins says, “but I will.” Front and center is his newest toy, a
Yamaha VL1 Virtual Acoustic Synthesizer, which is triggered by a
breath controller and responds like a wind instrument. In the studio,
Watkins plays a couple of DATs of recent work. One has a catchy, jazz
feel; the other is a pensive piano composition.
Growing up in
Harrisonburg, Virginia, Watkins studied piano with his parents, both
teachers of the instrument. He learned flute in school. At age 13, he
developed an interest in rock, and found his parents more tolerant
than most when he asked if he could stop his classical lessons and
join a neighborhood band: “My mother said that as long as I was doing
music, that would be fine. She even bought me my first Ace Tone
portable organ and a Fender amp.”
The core of Happy The
Man was formed in 1972 by guitarist Stanley Whitaker, saxophonist and
keyboard player Frank Wyatt and Watkins, all students at James
Madison University. Mostly instrumental, the band’s music was
inspired by progressive bands of the time, incorporating extensive
thematic developments that became the group’s trademark. In 1975
Happy The Man moved to the Washington area, where the band received
steady support from Georgetown University’s radio station,
WGTB-FM.
Expecting the band to
develop a dependable cult following, Arista Records president Clive
Davis signed it to an eight-album contract that year. Working with
producer Ken Scott, Happy The Man released a self-titled effort in
1977 and “Crafty Hands” in 1978. “Scott was a stickler for
precision,” Watkins recalls. “The down side was that, after 30 takes
of a part, the life was often gone.” Perhaps for Watkins, but a small
cult of fans covets the band’s records, especially the Japanese CD
reissues, which he says are back on the market after being out of
print for some time.
The new wave exploded
onto the scene in 1978, erasing any chance Happy The Man had for
success. Arista canceled the group’s contract after “Crafty Hands.” The band recorded a third LP, “Better late...,” in 1979, then broke
up on May 31 of that year when Watkins was asked to join the British
band Camel. (“Better late...” was released on CD by Cuneiform in
1990.)
Watkins played on
Camel’s 1980 LP, “I Can See Your House From Here,” and toured with
the group in support of it before leaving in 1981 to work on his
first album. Recorded with Coco Roussel, Happy The Man’s drummer at
the time of the group’s dissolution, “Labyrinth” placed in Keyboard
magazine’s 1982 readers’ poll. Watkins and Roussel played some live
shows, accompanied by instrumentation on a reel-to-reel tape
recorder.
Before retiring from
live performing, Watkins toured again with Camel in support of its
1981 album, “Nude,” and its 1982 release, “The Single Factor.” Watkins says that working solo deprives him of the interaction of a
group, but provides “the freedom to create imaginary ensembles
without the concern of leaving someone out or worrying about how to
pull it off live.”
In 1987 Watkins and his
partner, Bob Toft, moved from Arlington to their mountain-top home in
Linden, Virginia, where they publish a grants newsletter for colleges
and universities. The two men designed and built their house
themselves.
Watkins started Linden
Music in 1990 as a vehicle for his more esoteric work, such as the
two ambient “Thought
Tones” CDs, the
environmental collage “Circle” and a classical album, “A
Different View.”Originally issued by East Side Digital, his other
albums—“In
Time,” “Azure,” “SunStruck,” and “wet, dark, and
low”—are now sold
under the Linden label.
His complex, sometimes
playful compositions are executed with a deft touch and framed by
clean production. They embrace classical, rock and tribal elements,
and sometimes incorporate noise and found sounds. Watkins takes full
advantage of sound-shaping devices, but avoids their overuse. “I
don’t use effects for effects’ sake,” he says.
Shortly after the move
to Linden, environmental sounds began to show up on Watkins’ recordings, starting
with “Azure.” For “Circle,” he
recorded animals, rains,
trains and other sounds. The “Thought
Tones” CDs were
based on multi-processed recordings of thunder and saw blades, among
other things. The results sound nothing like the source material,
and, unlike some ambient works, support attentive listening as well
as they function as background music.
“Holographic
Tapestries” is
divided into two interleaved sets. Odd-numbered cuts drift
introspectively, while even-numbered selections are more extroverted
and rhythmic. The CD booklet includes verses and artwork that
complement the selections. Partly due to fans’ reactions to
“HoloTap,” Watkins now partitions his work into more homogeneous
sets, so listeners can pick one type of music or the
other.
The recently released “Beauty Drifting” consists of introspective, mostly solo acoustic
piano pieces, augmented with samples, electronics, electric piano and
VL1. Watkins is pleased with the album, saying, “It has a certain
organic quality. The sound of the acoustic piano is so great. There
are things I couldn’t write on an electric piano.”
Watkins is working on
professional CDs of sounds that musicians can sample. The first
contains a lot of ambient material, while the second, which will
include Coco Roussel, will focus on rhythm.
Several projects in
various stages of development are in the running for Watkins’ next
release. He is working on some “jazz landscapes,” similar to “wet,
dark and low,” but with a more abstract feel. He is considering a
solo flute project that will involve recording the instrument in a
variety of ways. With “the flute as the limit,” Watkins expects this
effort to test his resourcefulness. Finally, he might release a
“world tunings album,” based on tuning schemes employed by different
cultures. “Working with non-Western tunings is jarring me into
thinking a different way,” he says. Watkins tends to let his various
projects run their own courses until one emerges that’s close to
completion.
His method of
composition reflects Watkins’ “quest to reach into something that’s a
lot deeper than just me.” He says, “I premeditate certain things, but
when I [ compose], I don’t have a feeling of where it’s going. I
don’t sit down and think cerebrally, ‘I want to write a jazz piece in
11/8.’ In fact, I usually write the music, then the
title.”
Watkins, Wyatt and
Whitaker discussed recording a new Happy The Man album in early 1994,
and decided the only practical method was to trade DATs and MIDI
files by mail. By June 1994 Watkins saw that the project wasn’t
proceeding satisfactorily, and quit to record “Holographic
Tapestries.” It’s
doubtful that the three will ever produce an album, but Watkins, like
an evil twin, fantasizes doing a plunderphonic number on the old
Happy The Man LPs.
Many fans yearn for a
Happy The Man reunion, but the fact is that Watkins passed down that
road long ago; he, Wyatt and Whitaker are different people, doing
different things; and a new Happy The Man would surely have a
different feel. To those who prefer to dwell on the past, Watkins
paraphrases the late John Lennon, saying, “The albums are there. Go
back and listen to them.”
Watkins has stopped
selling his releases through record stores, and now deals only by
direct-mail, an avenue that keeps him in touch with fans. “I get a
lot of supportive letters from people because of the mail-order and
that’s really important,” he says. “I always create music for both
myself and an imaginary audience. I don’t know that I’ve ever created
music without the thought that at least one person other than myself
will hear it,” he says.
To complete his turn
away from the conventional music business, Watkins will produce
future Linden releases on his CD recorder, one unit at a time. He may
release a “signature series” of compilations, each produced entirely
at home and personally signed. Watkins likens these to
limited-edition prints by visual artists.
But initially he plans
to release his first two albums, “Labyrinth” and “Frames of
Mind,” on separate
CDs. The “Early Solo Works” CD combined all of “Labyrinth” and part
of “Frames of Mind.” The new releases will be remastered and will
contain bonus tracks.
He wishes that sales
permitted him to pursue music full-time, but Watkins is thankful he
can make music that pleases him. “Ironically, more successful
musicians are also more confined,” he says. With modest but steady
sales of each release, regardless of genre, Watkins can change
musical directions at will.
Asked about his current
release, Watkins responds with comments about his next project. “I’m
always thinking about the future, thinking about the next one,” he
says. At the same time, he keeps all his past recordings in
print.
Although his projects
proceed at different paces-the “Thought
Tones” CDs were
completed in weeks, while “Holographic
Tapestries” took
over a year-Watkins says he “[doesn’t] like to have long lapses
between releases. Ideally, I’d like to have an album out every year
or two. It’s what makes me tick.”
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