Steve Forman
Steve
Forman is an LA-based percussionist in his early sixties who is seemingly
only beginning to reach his stride, such is his passion for percussive
exploration. Many would say that Steve is a cultural institution akin
to the great artists with whom he has recorded. Augmenting his range
of Toca percussion instruments with a collection of rare indigenous instruments,
contemporary creations, artillery shells and quirky junkyard sonorous
objects, he brings a veteran's sensibility and a fresh palette of sounds
to each gig.
Originally a symphonic percussionist in Phoenix, Steve Forman became
active in the LA studios in the early seventies and, thus, has witnessed
the transition from minimal tracks to multi-track to digital-from the
Spector "wall of sound" ambience to pristine, damped discrete
tones to electronica. Forman has played on a staggering list of sessions-truly
astounding-ranging from Warren Zevon and James Taylor to Sarah Vaughn
and Linda Ronstadt. If it's a heartland artist, an American heritage
artist, or an edgy contemporary classical ensemble, Forman has probably
done the recording. Let's cherry pick a few more names from his discography:
Al Jarreau, Lee Ritenour, Carol Bayer Sager, Jimmy Smith, Jennifer Warnes
(yes, on Famous Blue Raincoat), Amy Grant, Don Grusin, Art Garfunkel,
Glen Frey, Poco, Steve Cropper, José Feliciano, Herb Alpert, Jimmy Buffet,
The Beach Boys, and the Dave Matthews Band. One might say that Steve
Forman has helped define and broaden the role of studio percussionist
in all musical genres. To top it off, he is an acknowledged pioneer in
integrating electronic and MIDI percussion with "real" instruments,
to the point where he can seamlessly sequence indigenous and electronic
percussion with a live orchestra on a film scoring stage.
So vast is his collection of percussion instruments and so complete
is his knowledge, that Forman opened a facility, Tambourine Studios,
that serves the percussion community by providing access to diverse,
hard-to-find instruments and serves as his own production facility. Here
he can work on major film scores (another long list) or devise new music
for various visual arts, dance, and other creative projects. In addition,
at the Tambourine facility (located down the hill from Pasadena but upwards
from LA), Steve hand crafts exquisitely resonant Irish frame drums. His
bodhrans are arguably the world standard, judged from the choice of skins
to the integrity of the internal frame. With such expertise literally
at his fingertips, it becomes obvious that Steve Forman's endorsement
of Toca instruments is glowing and well considered.
In 2008, amazingly Steve Forman took a sabbatical from his Los Angeles
percussion duties, which had become largely stale studio overdubs of
electronic effects, or chasing digital clicks in films, and took up residency
in Glasgow, Scotland in order to pursue his PhD. His ambition is to create
a contemporary body of work in classical music around the bodhran. Already
his compositions have been premiered by the Scottish Philharmonic Orchestra.
From his California home above the valley in Highland Park, Forman now
views life as a Glaswegian. The only Highland Park in sight is the label
of the precious Orkney malt whisky. And given Forman's past, it's a sure
bet he'll mount that glass vessel and find a way to extract startlingly
unique timbres!
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