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SOLO ARTIST

ALEX WILLIAMS

COMPOSER AND MULTI-INSTRUMENTALIST ALEX WILLIAMS PERFORMS A MUSICAL EXPEDITION BY WAY OF WRITTEN AND IMPROVISED ELECTRONIC MATERIAL, ARRANGED BY HIM ON PIANO AND GUITAR.

WEATHER PLAYING GUITAR OR PIANO HIS LIVE EFFECT GOES BEYOND THE NORMAL SONIC VOCABULARY ASSOCIATED WITH MUSICAL STYLE.

IT PROVIDES AN EVENING WHERE A TALENTED MUSICIAN RECOVERS AWARENESS OF THE HERE -AND-NOW.

ALEX’S DESIGNED ENTERTAINMENT INCORPORATES REAL-TIME-DIGITAL MANIPULATION OF DIVERSE SOURCE MATERIAL INCLUDING LIVE INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC,VERSATILE VOCALS, AND COMPUTER GENERATED SOUNDS THAT CREATE HIGH ENERGY AND HIGH- TECH MUSIC THAT IS UNIQUE IN NATURE WHICH BUILDS UP THICK LAYERS OF MUSICAL HARMONIES AND RHYTHM.

ALEX HAS RECORDED AND TOURED INTERNATIONALLY WITH KOOL & THE GANG, STEVIE WONDER, JIMMY CLIFF, THE MANHATTANS,

CARNIVAL CRUISE LINES

AND

THE EXCITING WILLIAMS BROTHERS BAND.

HE HAS PRESENTED HIS SOLO WORKS AT CLUBS, THEATERS, SCHOOLS AND FESTIVALS THROUGHOUT.  HE PERFORMS COMPOSITIONS BY STEVIE WONDER, KOOL AND THE GANG, THE COMMODORES, THE BEE GEES, TEMPTATIONS, GEORGE BENSON, HALL AND OATES, KENNY LOGGINS AND MORE.

ALEX PROVIDES A UNIQUE AND EXCITING BLEND OF CREATIVITY MAKING CUSTOMERS “DISCOVERERS”, NOT JUST ARRIVING, ORDERING AND CALLING IT A NIGHT.

 

Once described by none other than AT&T and Stevie Wonder

As “the most phenomenal musical programmer on the planet,

” Alex “Midi” Williams” recorded several albums of

His own but made his mark assembling some of the

biggest music extravaganzas of the 1970s and ‘80s

from Kool and the Gang number one hit (“Celebration”)

to Jimmy Cliff (“We all are one”) to Ruthless People

soundtrack starring Bette Midler and Danny Devito.

A Multi-Instrumentalist, vocalist,songwriter, producer, and arranger, Williams came from New Jersey and debuted with hometown heroes Kool and the Gang on the Celebration LP. He also witnessed the Ladies Night and the Joanna Single and then gained his own major contract with Carnival Cruise Lines.

Within two years, he’d total millions in revenue for the cruise industry. He also recorded Hits for the Manhattans with CBS and Columbia records with great success.

Alex Williams is a songwriter, producer, arranger and multi-instrumentalist who has mastered the uncanny ability to maneuver between music cultures. This has afforded him the opportunity to produce and perform music that span a number of decades and genres from funk to rock, country to pop music and techno to Jazz. His understanding of individual instruments and their role in creating great music is aided not only by his ability to play those instruments himself, but makes itself apparent through his meticulous attention to detail as a performing artist and arranger.

9 One-Man Bands Who Didn’t Need Anyone Else

The music world is full of talented multi-instrumentalists, and the best one-man bands have a unique vision that only they can achieve, alone in the studio.

With one-man bands, it’s probably best to erase the image of chimney-sweeper Dick Van Dyke prancing about in the movie Mary Poppins. Instead, think of talented multi-instrumentalists such as Stevie Wonder, not only one of the best one-man bands to sit behind a kit, keyboard, and harmonica, but one of the coolest, most talented people in music.

Thousands of top-class musicians are able to play a host of instruments – among them Curtis Mayfield, PJ Harvey, Dave Grohl, Radiohead’s Jonny Greenwood, Geddy Lee of Rush, Alicia Keys, Roy Wood, Brian Jones of The Rolling Stones, Jack White, Beck, Trent Reznor of Nine Inch Nails, and Bruno Mars, to name just a dozen – but with so many great session musicians around, it takes a certain type of boldness to play all the instruments on your own record.

Sidney Bechet

When engineer John Reid told Sidney Bechet about the possibilities of multi-tracking, the jazz maestro devised a plan to work out the individual parts on six different instruments and memorize the timing and melody of each. Bechet’s daring venture came in the days before tape recording, so each effort had to be recorded on a 78rpm wax original and superimposed on to the rest. On April 19, 1941, Bechet played six instruments – soprano saxophone, tenor saxophone, clarinet, piano, string bass, and drums – for a recording of “The Sheik Of Araby.” He also recorded four parts for “Blues For Bechet.” Bechet later said he was in a “cold sweat” about the project, recalling, “Thinking about this session was giving me nightmares. I dreamt I was playing parts for the whole Duke Ellington band.”
Hear: “The Sheik Of Araby” (1941)

Paul McCartney

From one of the world’s best bands to one of the best one-man bands in the world: just before Christmas 1969, Paul McCartney, working during The Beatles’ split, began working on McCartney, his own solo album, at his home in London’s St John’s Wood. He said that he decided to sing and play all the instruments – acoustic and electric guitars, bass, drums, piano, organ, percussion, Mellotron and toy xylophone – because “I think I’m pretty good.”

McCartney later admitted to enjoying working as a solo artist, saying, “I only had me to ask for a decision, and I generally agreed with myself!” After its release, the album reached No.1 on the Billboard charts in America and No.2 in the UK. McCartney’s experimental album also inspired Emitt Rhodes, of the band Merry-Go-Round, who played every single instrument and sang all of the vocal parts on three baroque pop albums released in the early 70s.
Hear: “Maybe I’m Amazed” (1970)

Mike Oldfield

Just one month after John Fogerty’s solo effort came the prog epic Tubular Bells, from England’s Mike Oldfield. On the album, Oldfield played a remarkable array of instruments, including acoustic guitar, bass guitar, electric guitar; Farfisa, Hammond, and Lowrey organs; flageolet, fuzz guitars, glockenspiel, mandolin, piano, percussion, timpani, and, of course, tubular bells.

The album was recorded at The Manor in Oxford, and its success and iconic status was confirmed when music from “Tubular Bells” was used in the hit horror film The Exorcist.
Hear: “Mike Oldfield’s Single (Theme From Tubular Bells)” (1973)

Alex Williams

Once described by none other than AT&T and Stevie Wonder

As “the most phenomenal musical programmer on the planet,

” ALEX” recorded several albums of

His own but made his mark by assembling some of the

biggest music extravaganzas of the 1970s and ‘80s

from Kool and the Gang’s number-one hit (“Celebration”)

to Jimmy Cliff (“We all are one”) to Ruthless People

soundtrack starring Bette Midler and Danny DeVito.

A multi-instrumentalist, vocalist, songwriter, producer, and arranger, ALEX came from Jersey and debuted with hometown heroes Kool and the Gang on the Celebration LP. He also witnessed the Ladies Night and the Joanna Single and then gained his major contract with Carnival Cruise Lines.

Within two years, he’d total millions in revenue for the cruise industry. He also recorded Hits for the Manhattans with CBS and Columbia records with great success.

ALEX is a songwriter, producer, arranger, and multi-instrumentalist who has mastered the uncanny ability to maneuver between music cultures live. This has allowed him to produce and perform music that spans several decades and genres from funk to rock, country to pop music, and techno to Jazz. His understanding of individual instruments and their role in creating great music is aided not only by his ability to play those instruments himself but makes itself apparent through his meticulous attention to detail as a performing artist and arranger live.

Hear: “Forever Kool and the Gang” “The Manhattans Back to Basics”

 

Prince

In September 1977, at the pioneering Sound 80 recording studio in Minneapolis, Minnesota, Prince began working on his debut album, For You. It was an album which bore the soon-to-be iconic credit “Produced, arranged, composed, and performed by Prince.” Like the best one-man bands, the late Prince, then just 17, was almost obsessive about getting the sound he wanted. When he was asked by Dick Clark about how many instruments he played on the album, Prince responded with “thousands.” He actually played 27 instruments on For You (29 if you include hand claps and finger snaps).
Hear: “Soft And Wet” (1978)

Steve Winwood

Steve Winwood was ranked by Rolling Stone as No.33 in its 100 Greatest Singers Of All Time list, but the man who was part of seminal bands such as Spencer Davis Group, Traffic, and Blind Faith was also an excellent multi-instrumentalist. With his first solo album, he took complete creative control, and on Arc Of A Diver, released by Island Records, in December 1980, he took charge of everything at a studio he had built on his own farm in Gloucestershire.

Winwood played acoustic and electric guitars, mandolin, bass, drums, percussion, drum machines, pianos, synthesizers, and organ, as well as singing lead and backing vocals. Just for good measure, he produced, engineered, and mixed all seven tracks. Both the album and its lead single, “While You See A Chance,” were Top 10 hits.

Phil Collins

Phil Collins admits he was going through a troubled time when he recorded Both Sides at his 12-track home recording studio. It was in the wake of his second divorce, when he even took refuge in playing the bagpipes (he took lessons from a Scottish piper). Both Sides, released by Virgin, in 1993, started as home demos which Collins then decided to turn into a full album release after working on it entirely by himself.

Collins earns his place among the best one-man bands for playing all the instruments on the album as well as taking on the main production duties. He even wrote the sleevenotes. The former Genesis star said, “Both Sides is my favorite album, from a songwriting and creative perspective. It was very much a solo album. I played everything, the songs just streamed out of me, and as a writer that’s the kind of thing that you dream of.”
Hear: “Can’t Turn Back The Years” (1993)

Sufjan Stevens

When he was a schoolboy in Detroit, Sufjan Stevens took music lessons in the oboe and English horn. He would play both on his 2003 concept album, Michigan. It also features the singer-songwriter – who has an Oscar song nomination to his credit – on piano, electric organ, electric piano, banjo, acoustic and electric guitar, bass guitar, vibraphone, xylophone, glockenspiel, recorders, wood flute and whistles, drum kit, percussion, shakers, sleigh bells, tambourine, and cymbal.

However, Stevens, like the best one-man bands featured here, has some way to go to beat the record set by the late Roy Castle. The television star and trumpeter played the same tune on 43 different musical instruments, including the world’s smallest violin, in just four minutes.
Hear: “For The Windows In Paradise, For The Fatherless In Ypsilanti” (2003)

Dave Edmunds

Dave Edmunds rose to fame in the 70s – especially after his wonderful hit “I Hear You Knocking” – and made a few albums where he took creative control and played all the instruments. He returned to that format in 2013 with the album … Again, though this time it was a 21st-century digital production. Edmunds said, “I’ve been making records on my own since the mid-60s, when I started in a tiny, ill-equipped studio in a barn… I did … Again on my laptop in my spare bedroom. I got myself a MacBook Air, it came with something called GarageBand, and I did one track on there and then I bought its big brother, 130 quid or so, pressed a button and within 30 seconds I had the studio in front of me, an infinite amount of tracks and effects.”
Hear: “Standing At The Crossroads” (2003)

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