Joe Pernice on Goodbye, Killer
Transcription
Joe Pernice on Goodbye, Killer
Pernice Brothers goodbye, killer Joe Pernice on Pernice Brothers’ Goodbye, Killer: My brother Bob once said that he started playing guitar when he was six, and 30 years later still played like a sixyear-old. How true, how true. He also engineers like a six-year-old, which is seriously, a very, very good way to engineer. In my opinion, he did a great job capturing the sound of a band. And all hyperbole aside, recording great musicians like James Walbourne and Ric Menck doesn’t hurt. For Bob, recording someone like me definitely hurt. I’m not the most relaxed guy alive. Apparently—and I have no recollection of this—I berated Bob at every turn like he was a redheaded step child. (I’m told some of the outtakes are pretty funny. My business partner Joyce wants Ashmont to release them on a CD entitled “Unknowns at their Worst.”) It’s not all my fault. I can’t help myself, and Menck and James did little to rope me in. I vaguely recall Menck saying, “Original Pernice (me) why do you treat Other Pernice (Bob) like he’s the younger brother? Don’t be an ID-ee-it. He’s working his ass off. And besides, look at him. He’d crush you like a grape.” Then James would or wouldn’t perk up from a state of constant transcontinental jet lag and exclaim, “Did someone mention grapes? I’m famished. I could murder a proper full English.” Strange, because in my mind all we did was eat. Photos: Mike Ritter (ritterbin.com)