Colin Bass

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Colin Bass
Bass in 2015
Bass in 2015
Background information
Born (1951-05-04) 4 May 1951 (age 73)[1]
London, England
GenresProgressive rock, pop rock, world music
Instrument(s)Vocals, bass, piano, keyboards, guitar
Years active1968–present
LabelsKartini Music, Spark
Websitecolinbass.com

Colin Bass (born 4 May 1951) is an English musician, singer, songwriter and record producer. Since 1979, he has been a member of the British progressive rock band

Oumou Sangare
, playing on all tracks of her 1993 Ko Sira album.

Biography

Early life and career

Bass was born in London and first started playing professionally in 1968 as guitarist with a band called

Spark Records.[2]

1970s

In 1971, he joined an incarnation of the 1960s group the Foundations and spent a year playing the cabaret clubs mostly in northern England.

In 1971, he met Ernie Graham, formerly of Eire Apparent and, together with guitarist Jonathan Glemser, they formed the band Clancy. The band became part of London's growing Pub-Rock scene and briefly signed with Island Records but were dropped after differences with producer Muff Winwood.

Shortly afterwards, the band signed with

Warner Brothers and recorded two albums: Seriously Speaking (1974) and Every Day (1975). The line-up on both was: Bass (bass, vocals), Ernie Graham (guitar, vocals), Gasper Lawal
(percussion), Dave Vasco (guitar), Dave Skinner (keyboards, vocals) and Barry Ford (drums, vocals).

Clancy split in 1976 and Bass joined Steve Hillage, who was putting together a band to promote the album L on a six-month tour of Europe and the USA. The line-up included ex-Jethro Tull drummer Clive Bunker.

In 1977, Bass was invited by American saxophonist and composer

Tony Hicks
. Recordings were made with producer Tom Newman but were never released.

In 1979, Steve Hillage tour manager Laurie Small introduced Bass to British progressive-rock band Camel. The line-up at the time was

Happy The Man) and Jan Schelhaas (ex-Caravan).[3]
There followed two albums I Can See Your House From Here (1979) and Nude (1980) and respective international tours.

1980s

In 1981 at the end of the "Nude" tour, Andy Ward's health problems led to Andrew Latimer's dissolving of the band. Bass relocated to Paris where he recorded an album and performed live with old colleague Jim Cuomo.

Returning to the UK in 1983 he took up a teaching post, played sessions and club and pub gigs with various line-ups until Andrew Latimer invited him to rejoin Camel for the 1984 "Stationary Traveller" tour. In the same year he started to play with the Anglo-Ghanaian band Orchestra Jazira, which led to his induction in the pioneer world-music group 3 Mustaphas 3, who renamed him as Sabah Habas Mustapha.[3]

Between 1985 and 1991, the 3 Mustaphas 3 recorded four full albums and sundry singles and EPs and established a cult following for their live performances, touring in the USA, Europe, Japan and also in the then Eastern Bloc countries of East Germany, Hungary and Bulgaria.

1990s

When the 3 Mustaphas 3 stopped activities in 1991, Bass went to Indonesia where, over the next ten years, he recorded three solo albums with Indonesian musicians under the name of Sabah Habas Mustapha. The first, Denpasar Moon (1994), was recorded in Jakarta and explored the sounds of the popular music style dangdut.[2]

The title song, "Denpasar Moon", first released in 1993, became a major hit in Indonesia in the form of a cover version by a singer from the Philippines called Maribeth and was subsequently recorded by over 50 different Indonesian artists and also artists from Malaysia and Japan.

In 1997, Bass founded the Kartini Music record label whose first release was another Sabah Habas Mustapha record, Jalan Kopo, recorded in Bandung, Indonesia, and this time influenced by the sounds of the west Javanese province of Sunda. The title cut from that record is played as pre-show music for the nighttime fireworks/water spectacular IllumiNations: Reflections of Earth at Epcot, located in Walt Disney World in Orlando, Florida.

At the same time, the 1990s saw a rejuvenated Camel back on the scene after a long period of inactivity due to a protracted legal dispute with previous management.

In 1991, Andrew Latimer, now relocated to California, invited Colin to participate in the recording of "Dust and Dreams", the first release by his own label Camel Productions, which was followed by a world tour in 1992 with the line-up of Latimer, Bass and Mickey Simmonds (keyboards) and Paul Burgess (drums).

Between then and 2003, Camel released another three studio albums and undertook subsequent tours all documented with live albums and DVDs.

In 1998, Kartini Music released Bass' first album under the name Colin Bass: An Outcast of the Islands. Recorded in Poland and California and featuring Andrew Latimer on guitar, the then Camel drummer Dave Stewart and a number of Polish musicians, the album gathered critical praise and helped establish his reputation in Poland. Subsequent tours produced two live albums: Live at Polskie Radio 3 (1999) and Live Vol.2: Acoustic Songs (2000).

2000s

2000 also saw the release of another Sabah Habas Mustapha album recorded in Bandung: So La Li. It further explored the sounds of the Sundanese region and featured again the multi-instrumentalist

BBC Radio 3 World Music Award
.

Bass lived in Berlin, Germany from 1988 to 2011. From 1994 until the end of 2008, he wrote and presented a weekly radio show for RBB Radio Multikulti and WDR Funkhaus Europa in Germany: "Sabah am Sonntag", presenting musical rarities and curiosities from around the world.

2010s

In 2012, Bass moved to North Wales, and set up Wild End Studio.

In 2013, he travelled to Niger to produce an album for Etran Finatawa, recorded in a tent in the Sahara desert. That same year Camel returned to the stage with a European tour and a live DVD recorded at their concert at the London Barbican.

In 2014, Bass co-produced the album Tincian by Welsh band 9Bach with post-production and mixing completed at Wild End Studios. Camel embarked on part 2 of the 'Snow Goose' European Tour.

2015 saw another Camel European Tour and 9Bach winning the 'Best Album' category at the BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards for Tincian.

Discography

Solo

  • 1998: An Outcast of the Islands
  • 1998: As Far as I Can See EP
  • 1999: Denpasar Moon EP
  • 1999: Live at Polskie Radio 3 2 CD
  • 1999: Poznań Pie – Live in Concert VHS
  • 2000: Live Vol. 2 – Acoustic Songs
  • 2002: Gently Kindly
  • 2003: In the Meantime
  • 2003: An Outcast of the Islands – Remastered + 3 bonus tracks
  • 2005: Planetarium – With Józef Skrzek
  • 2006: In the Meantime – Remastered + 5 bonus tracks
  • 2012: An Outcast of the Islands - Reissue
  • 2015: At Wild End

Albums by other artists produced by Colin Bass

As Sabah Habas Mustapha

  • 1994: Denpasar Moon
  • 1998: Jalan Kopo
  • 1999: So La Li
  • 2004: Denpasar Moon 2004 – remastered + bonus

With Camel

  • 1979: I Can See Your House from Here
  • 1981: Nude
  • 1984: Pressure Points: Live in Concert (live, 11 May 1984, Hammersmith Odeon, London, UK)
  • 1991:
    Dust and Dreams
  • 1993:
    Never Let Go
    (1993) (live, 5 September 1992, Enschede, Netherlands) 2 CD
  • 1996: Harbour of Tears
  • 1997:
    On the Road 1981
    (1997) (live, BBC radio, 2 April 1981, Hammersmith Odeon, London, UK)
  • 1998:
    Coming of Age
    (1998) (live, 13 March 1997, Billboard, Los Angeles, USA) – Live CD and DVD
  • 1999: Rajaz
  • 2001:
    The Paris Collection
    (2001) (live, 30 September 2000, Bataclan-Club, Paris, France) Note: CD wrongly states concert as 30 October
  • 2002:
    A Nod and a Wink
  • 2012: The Snow Goose (new re-recorded version)

With 3 Mustaphas 3

References

  1. ^ "Colin Bass". IMDb.com. Retrieved 6 May 2020.
  2. ^ a b 21d 3h 96s. "Colin Bass biography, solo discography, album credits & user reviews". Progarchives.com. Retrieved 1 July 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  3. ^ a b Gary Davis; The Artist Shop. "Colin Bass' Kartini Music catalog in The Artist Shop". Artist-shop.com. Archived from the original on 8 September 2018. Retrieved 1 July 2011.

External links