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Биография Марка Сэндмэна
1952-1999
Last Saturday, July 3, Mark Sandman
collapsed on a stage just outside Rome. He was performing with Morphine,
the Boston-based trio he'd led for the past decade. He was taken by
ambulance to a hospital, where he was pronounced dead on arrival.
He'd suffered a massive heart attack.
I was in Montreal when I got the news the following day, attending
the 20th-anniversary Festival International du Jazz with my wife.
And it hit me hard. I'd been a Morphine fan for a long time. I'd seen
Mark perform with and without the band dozens of times. And since
the release of Morphine's first CD, in 1992, I'd gotten to know him
personally. First he was just a subject to me, someone I interviewed,
wrote about, and then bumped into from time to time. But gradually
he'd become a friend who lived just up the street. We'd go out for
a drink every once in a while, usually at about 11 o'clock. He'd call
to discuss the grand piano he was thinking about buying, or to invite
me over to his loft to hang out and listen to music for an afternoon.
My wife and I would bump into Mark and his long-time girlfriend, Sabine,
at neighborhood restaurants like Eat and the East Coast Grill. Because
of tours like the one that took him to Italy last week or to NYC's
Central Park on the Fourth of July last year, Mark wasn't always around.
But eventually he would always turn up back in town, drinking Patron
and fresh-squeezed orange juice at the Middle East, playing a low-profile
gig with his buddy Jimmy Ryan as the Pale Brothers at the tiny Lizard
Lounge, or sitting in on keyboards with the Ray Corvair Trio at the
Plough & Stars. That was something a lot of people had come to
count on.
Mark through the eyes and ears of the Phoenix
And, friends and fans look back at Mark and Morphine
Morphine/Mark Sandman links
I'd planned to be in Montreal until the seventh,
but immediately I knew I had to drive back home. Because Sandman had
become, over the years, an integral part of the Boston scene -- or,
to be more geographically precise, the Cambridge/Somerville side of
the river -- that I'd come to know. It's hard to overestimate the
impact he'd had simply by sticking around and doing his thing. He
hadn't moved to New York or LA after Morphine became the second act
to be signed to the wealthy DreamWorks label of David Geffen, Steven
Spielberg, and Jeffrey Katzenberg back in 1996. Success hadn't even
changed him all that much. You'd still find him hanging out at the
same places, even playing the same rooms that he had when Morphine
were just starting out, headlining the Central Square World's Fair
whenever Morphine weren't on tour, and taking local acts like Mr.
Airplane Man, Wooden Leg, and Trona on the road to open for Morphine.
And by achieving what he had with Morphine on his own terms, he was
a walking, talking inspiration in ways that are impossible to quantify.
"Mark just made this a much cooler place to be," is how
my wife put it when we got back home.
Sandman grew up in the area -- in Newton, where
he attended high school and where his parents still live. After earning
a BA in political science from UMass Boston, he spent a period of
time traveling -- at one point working on a giant fishing boat out
in the state of Washington. Details like that about his personal life
and his past were hard to come by. There were things he just wouldn't
talk about on the record. And in the age of the confessional talk-show
interview, I grew to respect that. "I like to keep the personal
personal," is how he once put it. "I try to be a pretty
private person." He wasn't trying to hide anything, except perhaps
his age, because he was older than your average rock-and-roll star.
In fact, the only time I ever pissed him off was backstage at the
Conan O'Brien show in 1995, when after listening to him tell me about
a Rolling Stone reporter's desperate efforts to find out his age I
joked that I was going to dig up his Newton North high-school yearbook.
Sandman was 46 when he died.
So he was in his 30s when his music career began
in earnest with Treat Her Right, a unique blues-rock foursome that
paired him and his innovative "low guitar" (a regular six-string
electric that he ran through an octave-shifting effects pedal to make
it sound more like a bass) with more conventional guitarist David
Champagne and featured harmonica blower Jim Fitting and drummer Billy
Conway (who would later join Morphine). The band released their Treat
Her Right debut in 1986, signed to RCA in 1988, and got to record
one major-label album, Tied to the Tracks, before they were dropped.
Treat Her Right did garner a fair amount of critical praise (and scored
a local hit with the song "I Think She Likes Me"), but they
didn't move enough units for RCA's liking. And as a bemused Mark once
pointed out to me, the label really had no idea what to do with a
band who specialized in spare, swampy interpretations of tunes by
the likes of Captain Beefheart, Bob Dylan, Buck Owens, and James Blood
Ulmer.
Still gigging with Treat Her Right, who released
a final album on the local Rounder label in 1991 (What's Good for
You), Sandman immersed himself in the local music scene and began
playing out in various guises, mostly at the tiny Plough & Stars
in Cambridge (where he held down a weekly booking for a time) and
upstairs at the Middle East, where you could count on seeing him at
least once a month. There was Supergroup, a collaboration between
Sandman and Chris Ballew, the Seattle kid who would go on to form
the successful pop trio Presidents of the United States of America
after his mentorship with Sandman. There was Treat Her Orange, a partnership
between Sandman and Blood Oranges mandolinist Jimmy Ryan that would
later blossom into the Pale Brothers (and yield the Morphine track
"In Spite of Me" on Cure for Pain). There were the Hypnosonics,
whose line-up found Mark fronting a horn-driven funk ensemble featuring
Morphine saxman Dana Colley, Either/Orchestra leader Russ Gershon,
drummer Larry Dersch, and bassist Mike Rivard. But mainly there was
Morphine, the trio that best captured the essence of Sandman's singular
style: his deadpan delivery, his wry pulp-noir vignettes, his "less
is best" aesthetic, and his love of loose R&B grooves rooted
equally in the deep meaty blues of Howlin' Wolf and Muddy Waters and
the savvy pop funk of an artist like Prince, who was one of his all-time
favorites.
It's a tribute to Sandman's keen instincts as an
artist that he recognized the potential of Morphine's unusual line-up:
two-string slide bass, Colley's baritone sax, and drummer Jerome Dupree,
whom Conway would replace during the recording of the trio's first
album, 1992's Good (Accurate/Distortion). Mark didn't think there
was anything terribly unusual about Morphine: "Basically, we
write pretty standard three-minute rock songs with verses, choruses,
and hooks . . . they're just songs," is how he once explained
it. And in a way he was right: you didn't have to be a hardcore fan
to appreciate singles like "Cure for Pain," "Buena,"
and "Honey White." But there was nothing standard about
the interplay among Sandman, Conway, and Colley, about the intense
mix of mood and groove they created on stage. That was special. And
Mark knew it. He was always spreading the credit around, singling
out the special talents of Dana and Billy in interviews. People would
come up to him after shows and tell him how great the band sounded,
and he'd give all the credit to soundman Phil Davidson.
Morphine weren't an immediate success. That first
album, Good, was rejected by every label Sandman sent a tape to before
he decided to put it out more or less by himself on Russ Gershon's
small local Accurate label. But right after that, the larger, locally
based Rykodisc label bit. In many ways it was the perfect situation
for Sandman. Rykodisc was big enough to get the band's next two albums
-- Cure for Pain and Yes -- out there but small enough that Mark could
retain the kind of control he'd lost with Treat Her Right. Together
with Dana, Billy, publicist Carrie Svingen, and locally based manager
Deb Klein, he put together a plan that he sensed would work for Morphine.
Instead of trying to score opening slots on tours with bigger bands,
a strategy that almost always translates into playing in front of
half-full (or less) rooms of people who'd rather be seeing the headliner,
Morphine would go out on their own and play smaller clubs. Instead
of bouncing from one city to the next, they would set up two- and
three-night residencies in different cities, giving the press something
substantial to bite into and fans a deeper sense of connection with
the band.
These were simple, common-sense ideas. And Mark
liked simple. He once told me that if people really wanted to know
about his musical aesthetic, they'd be better off asking him about
his cooking techniques. "I've applied a lot of that to my music.
For example, for years I made myself a red sauce for pasta with oregano,
some thyme, some basil, black pepper, salt, some of this, some of
that. I thought that's how you were supposed to make it. Then one
day I didn't put anything in. I just forgot. And it was the best sauce
I ever made. That moment right there taught me a lot."
But simple doesn't always mean easy. And Morphine
was a lot of work for Mark. He had the final say on everything, from
CD art to magazine ads, from the mixes to the sequencing to the presentation
of an album. He'd "hired" me to "write" Morphine's
DreamWorks first and, I guess, last press bio -- mainly, I think,
so that he could write it himself and have me just touch it up. He
may have seemed laid back on the surface, but when it came to the
business of Morphine, he was focused and driven. He took it all very
seriously. "We do what we have to do to do what we want to do"
was the mantra that defined his approach to the industry, and sometimes
that also meant not doing certain things. When DreamWorks pushed him
to put a Dust Brothers remix of "Early to Bed" on 1997's
Like Swimming, he stood his ground, not out of any misguided sense
of "indie credibility" but because he could hear that they'd
bled the Morphine out of the tune. He wasn't opposed to using something
like that remix in the future, but he realized how crucial it was
for Morphine to sound like Morphine on their first major-label album.
On the other hand, Mark wasn't "afraid of
success," and he knew how to capitalize on his and the band's
talents. Early on he came up with sly marketing terms like "low
rock" and "implied grunge." And as the band became
more of a commercial presence, he took advantage of opportunities
to broaden their base -- in terms of both audience and the band's
own versatility. That included licensing songs for movies and television:
their work showed up on the soundtracks for Spanking the Monkey and
Very Bad Things, among other films, and recently a Morphine video
popped up on HBO's hit series The Sopranos.
Mark was proud, deeply proud of what he'd accomplished
with Morphine, with Billy, Dana, Carrie, Deb, Phil, producers Paul
Kolderie and Sean Slade, and all the other people who'd become directly
or indirectly part of the band over the years. And, yes, I get all
choked up when I think about that now. He was happy, really happy
with Sabine. And that kills me too. In the last year or two, he'd
finally begun to enjoy, modestly, the fruits of his success. He replaced
his crappy Japanese hatchback with a nice new Saab. He bought that
grand piano. He and Sabine were looking for a house in Cambridge or
Somerville, and they'd finally found one they liked. He'd upgraded
the recording studio in his loft -- Hi-N-Dry, as he'd christened it
-- with state-of-the-art speakers and digital outboard gear, the studio
that had yielded a number of Morphine album tracks even back when
it had only eight-track-cassette capability and one tiny Radio Shack
speaker for playback. And, of course, he'd continued to add to his
collection of oddball two- and three-string basses, cheesy keyboards,
and cool guitars.
For reasons I'll probably never understand, he'd
been struggling with Morphine's next DreamWorks album. I say I'll
never understand because all the tracks he'd played for me over the
past year sounded, at the very least, like the seeds of great Morphine
tunes, if not completed album tracks in the rough. But he was consumed
with the desire to push Morphine to the next level, to incorporate
new sounds and textures into the band's minimalist style without destroying
the essence of what made Morphine special. And, maybe because that
was the only time I spent with Mark when he seemed even remotely unsure
of himself, it made me respect him as an artist and a human being
even more.
In the month before Mark left on Morphine's final
tour, his issues with the new album had all been sorted out. After
searching in vain for someone to mix the new tracks, he'd gone to
New York and done it himself. He was happy with the results, and with
the thought that he finally had a completed album to give to DreamWorks.
Working with local engineer Brian Dunton, he'd even finished putting
together a Morphine live album, which I hope will see the light of
day, because Morphine were such a great live band. And because, though
he was a private person, Mark loved living where he died -- performing
on stage with Billy and Dana (and he was a performer). He loved performing
his music for people, whether it was a crowd of thousands at a giant
European festival or just a small club full of friends at his favorite
room in town, upstairs at the Middle East.
The last time I heard from Mark was two and a half
weeks ago. He left a message to remind me that he was going to be
sitting in on keyboards with the Ray Corvair Trio that night at the
Plough & Stars. He was excited about the show and he wanted me
to come down and check it out. He knew I hadn't seen him with the
Ray Corvair Trio yet. I didn't get the message until late that evening,
and I guessed that by that time word would have gotten out that Mark
was playing and the tiny Plough would be uncomfortably jammed with
people. So I decided to stay home. I knew I'd have plenty more chances
to see Mark do his thing with the Ray Corvair Trio, plenty more opportunities
to see Morphine, the Hypnosonics, the Pale Brothers, and whatever
his next little project would be. It was hard to imagine it being
any other way. Mark would be away for a while, touring Europe and
then the West Coast. But he'd be back with some great stories about
interviews he'd done overseas with music critics who were more like
musicologists, or about some fabulous Italian meal he'd had. Mark's
spirit, I think, is still with us, as is his music. But like a lot
of people in Boston right now, I'm still trying to get a handle on
the reality that this time Mark won't be coming back.
A Mark Sandman Music Education Fund to benefit music-education programs
in the Cambridge public schools has been set up in Mark's honor. Contributions
should be mailed to Morphine, Box 382085, Cambridge, MA 02138.