Profoundly cool guy, renowned record producer, musician, and Assistant Director of the Alan Lomax Archive, Don Fleming, has started recording a new album with singer Jenni Muldaur and has provided some insight into the project:
"The story is that we have started recording tracks and will continue to do so through the next couple of months. Jenni is singing a variety of songs based on the field recordings of Alan Lomax: Appalachian tunes, blues, gospel, British ballads. We're recording at Bearsville Studio at Turtle Creek in Woodstock. We're using Alan Lomax's reel-to-reel Ampex 601 tape deck and the same type of RCA mics that he used for field recordings. The primary guitarist for the sessions is Nathan Salsburg from Louisville, Kentucky who now lives in NYC. Nathan played in the band The Halifax Pier. Also on the recordings we did last month was guitarist Scott Bondy who used to be in the band Verbena. Jenni's dad, Geoff Muldaur will also do some playing on the album."
Fleming's path to the Alan Lomax Archives has been as winding as it is notable:
A singer/songwriter/guitarist and leader of noise-pop bands Velvet Monkeys, B.A.L.L. and Gumball, as well as a member of the BackBeat soundtrack band (with Greg Dulli, Dave Grohl, Mike Mills, Thurston Moore and Dave Pirner); Don Fleming is also one of the top American alterna-rock producers of the ‘90s, scoring successes with tuneful guitar workouts including Teenage Fanclub’s Bandwagonesque, The Posies’ Frosting On the Beater, Screaming Trees’ Sweet Oblivion and Hole’s primal Pretty On the Inside.
Self-proclaimed “Air Force brat” Fleming was born September 25, 1957 in South Georgia, but spent his childhood hopping from Oklahoma to Florida to France: “Two years here, two years there - on the road already,” he sighs.
A “total record collecting freak” and desultory guitar player, the young Fleming chose the path less taken - eschewing the obvious Beatles and Stones fixations for Herman’s Hermits - before succumbing to the inexorable pull of the Fab Four in the time of Sgt. Pepper.
Through the Beatles’ Apple label connection, Fleming was drawn to Badfinger’s Straight Up, and the album’s producer Todd Rundgren. Fleming was attracted to the producer/musician stance of Rundgren’s Something/Anything? “and all of that great analog sound.”
In the mid-’70s Fleming threw himself into the punk revolution and recorded with the punkish Stroke Band out of Valdosta, GA for the local Abacus label in 1979. Even then Fleming displayed studio awareness, keeping a wary eye on the mixing process.
He next moved to Washington DC and fronted the Velvet Monkeys, a prolific if ragged singles band. Fleming recorded the Monkey’s records “out of economic necessity and interest,” and then began assisting friends’ bands with their recordings for similar reasons.








Article comments
1 - Temple Stark
Eric,
I put this one up - and many many more for yesterday and now today on Advance.net.
One link to where the review also now sits is this one you'll have to scroll down some, but it's there.
You might already, but go ahead and e-mail the band / PR the link here. No really Eric, it's healthy :)
- thanks. Temple