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The creation of an
album is a complex process which involves many days
of recording, re-recording, overdubbing, mixing,
re-mixing, isolating, processing and a lot of “Let’s
see what this sounds like.” From the conceptual
stages of the recording of Ten Thousand Miles to
Bedlam, Kris Clements had a vision for the album
which fueled the bands progress. Working with
engineer/producer Don Gunn, Kris’ vision, a
character study into the various forms of insanity
with each song portraying a patient of Bedlam
Hospital (or St. Mary’s of Bethlehem), came to life.
“I love being in the studio.” Kris says, “When we
were tracking the various vocals on “Ten Thousand
Miles to Bedlam” and “Mad Tom of Bedlam”, Don Gunn
looked at me with a huge grin on his face and said
‘This sounds cool!’ That’s when I knew that all my
ideas weren’t hokey and were actually valuable.”
Celtic music has been a constant influence
throughout his life. Growing up in New Castle Upon
Tyne, England, his family, reluctantly, supported
his desire to play music, “But some of my family do
not enjoy my singing”, he says with amusement.
Kris’ first musical
experience was singing along to Tom Tom Club’s song
“Wordy Rappinghood”. As he got older, the music of
Sinead O’Conner, Martin Swan, Kate Bush and Freddy
Mercury, to name a few, influenced his style. At Andrew
College, Kris minored in vocal music but his passion, at
the time, was Theatre Arts. “I wanted to be a
playwright.”
Since his childhood,
living room debut singing along with Tom Tom Club, Kris
has performed in an eclectic collection of bands from
goth-industrial to folk and everything in between.
“Somehow I always come back to Celtic music but I always
want to keep my fingers in as many different pies as
possible.”
This is clearly
represented in Kris ‘3 Must-Have Albums’; Kate Bush’s
“Hounds of Love”, Kila’s “Luna Park”, and Mouth Music’s
“The Order of Things”.
As Ockham’s Razor
lead singer, Kris’ vocals guide the audience through the
fast paced, frenetic-fury of songs like “Whiskey &
Pills”, “Ten Thousand Miles to Bedlam” and “Lannigan’s
Ball” yet mesmerizes with an outstanding range and
control on songs like “Danny Boy”, “My Lagan Love” and
________. Kris also plays a collection of Generation,
Susato, Chieftain and Overton tin whistles, accordion,
piano, flute and is learning the guitar. “I love the
tone and airiness of my flutes and whistles, the
otherworldliness of them. I also love the obnoxiousness
of my accordion. It’s got attitude.”
With the dream of
opening for The Chieftains and performing with Enter the
Haggis, Eileen Ivers and the Immigrant Soul Band
accomplished, what’s left? “I would love to open for
Sinead O’Conner, Kila and Old Blind Dogs but it would be
a dream to do a duet with Kila.”
Band members have an
insight into the other musicians’ idiosyncrasies when
you spend that much time together. Such as one night
when the band was on the road and Kris woke up to a
freezing hotel room. “I got out of bed, quietly crept
through the dark trying not waking anyone else since we
all were in the same room, and turned the heater up”, he
remembers. “As I walked back to the bed, it shut off
again. So I walked back to it, said ‘The problem with
you is that you’re a heater and you don’t heat!’ and
turned it back up and went back to bed.” Unknown to
Kris, he was not the only band member awake in those
early morning hours. “Our fiddler at the time, Katie,
just happened to wake up as I was talking to the heater.
The next morning, she asked the rest of the band if they
heard me talking to the heater in the middle of the
night. She said she had the hardest time trying not to
laugh and wake everyone up. Imagine waking up from a
deep sleep in a dark room only to see someone talking to
an inanimate object.”
Asked to described one of his band mates in two words,
Kris describes new fiddler Tianna Byrtus as “Fucking
Fierce” and also says about bassist Dane Dorning “He’s
one of the most pleasant musicians I’ve ever had the
pleasure of playing with.”
With the recording
of a new album on the horizon, Kris looks forward to
spending more time in the studio. “We made our mistakes
and have learned from them. It will be a more relaxed
environment next time and we’ll use our time more
wisely.” Looking back to the recording of Ten
Thousand Miles to Bedlam, Kris’ favorite songs are
“The Road to Bedlam/Follow Me Up To Carlow” and “The
Night Before Larry Was Stretched”. “To me, those two
songs are the best arranged and most well produced
tracks on the album.”
With a better
understanding of the process and two years of pent up
vision, Kris looks forward to unleashing it all upon the
next album and helping shape the sound of today’s Celtic
music.
QUICKIES:
Favorite song
you perform live that’s not on the album:
“Baidin Fheilimi”
What’s your sign: Aquarius
Life
Motto: “Being honest is always a
mature decision and one that you shouldn’t feel guilty
for.”
Favorite Drink: Water

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