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Bass
Player Magazine
August 2000
Mike Rivard: Groove Chameleon
Boston's
Mike Rivard has developed a big niche for his bass approach.
"I try to be as versatile as possible," he explains. "I
play upright and electric, and I have a lot of different
instruments. When producers hire me, they know I'll have
a lot of different sounds available. If a tune calls for
a fuzz bass, then a fuzz bass it shall be! If you listened
to four albums that I've played on, then you'd have a hard
time telling it was the same bass player." "Micro" has also
developed a knack for melody down low. "I like to get counterpoint
and call-and-response in the bass. I love what the bass
does, and I love filling up the bottom with wonderfully
diverse sonic delicacies."
Rivard holds the distinction of being the only bassist to
have played behind both Wild Man Fisher and Cab Calloway
(though not simultaneously). His many credits include gigs
and recordings with Morphine (now Orchestra Morphine), Either/Orchestra,
Mighty Sam McLain, and Paula Cole. In addition, Mike leads
his own project, Club d'Elf-an amalgam of jazz, world music,
electronica, and hip-hop. The band's regular gigs at the
Lizard Lounge in Cambridge, Massachusetts, have featured
special guests such as John Medeski, DJ Logic, and Reeves
Gabrels. Winners of the Best of Boston's Best Cutting-Edge
Band, Club d'Elf is releasing its first LiveArchive CD,
As Above (Live at the Lizard Lounge), this summer.
Starting
first on guitar, Micro picked up the bass at age 12 to play
with the school stage band. Soon he became attracted to
the exploratory styles of Jack Casady and Phil Lesh, and
John Paul Jones. It wasn't long before he became sought-after
for his ability to get inside a tune and play supportively,
yet still inject his personality. Rivard's instrument choice
usually dictates how he approaches a tune. "If something
is feeling stagnant, I switch to something different." For
inspiration Mike draws upon fretted and fretless Lakland
5-strings, a Danelectro Longhorn, Wal fretless, '61 Fender
Jazz, '66 P-Bass, '76 Music Man StingRay, '60s Rossmeisel,
'67 Guild Starfire, '60s Hofner solid-body, '70s Gibson
Les Paul Signature, and a Chapman Stick. His upright is
a 1990 Rheinhold Schmidt that he bought used from Dave Holland.
"Dave used it on his solo album One's All [Intuition].
It's incredible owning an instrument with that kind of legacy."
Mike strings his upright with D'Addario Helicore Hybrids
and amplifies with a David Gage Realist pickup. Live he
uses a Demeter preamp and an Ashly power amp and a couple
of SWR Goliath Jr. 2x10 cabs. With Club d'Elf Rivard uses
a Lexicon JamMan for loops. "Both the drummer and I get
a MIDI click from the keyboardist, so we can do some pretty
hip live loops." Rivard also uses a Mu-Tron III, EBS Octabss
and Uni-Chorus pedals, DigiTech Whammy pedal, and an SIB
Vari-Drive for distortion, plus T.C. Electronic and Fishman
parametric EQs for the acoustic bass.
Rivard
has been touring with Orchestra Morphine, a nine-piece version
of Morphine, since the band's 2-string slide bassist/leader
Mark Sandman died last summer. Mike played mostly upright
with Morphine for five or six years; he appears on Like
Swimming, The Night, and B-Sides and Otherwise
[all on Dreamworks]. "I haven't played 2-string slide bass
yet, but if they want to do old tunes on the tour I might
pick it up."
Rivard
continues to pull in a wide range of interesting projects.
He recently played on Patty Larkin's new CD due out on Vanguard
this summer, as well as Experiments in Truth [Grapeshot],
a spoken-word record by Paul Auster with Oteil Burbridge,
John Medeski, Billy Martin, Vernon Reid, and Bob Moses.
Rivard helped with a WGBH documentary on George Wallace
for PBS's American Experience series. He has also
been getting into North African Gnawan music, created by
mystic troubadors for healing and inducing trances. And,
inspired by sintir player Hassan Hakmoun, Rivard has been
scouring the East Coast in search of his own Moroccan bass
lute to add to his already healthy collection of options.
"I
listen to many different types of music, but the unifying
principle is always the groove. I want to play bass from
the heart and tune into it as a way of getting closer to
the life force of the universe."
-Ed Friedland
*Groove
Tip: One of Micro's favorite practice techniques is to play
along to his Boss Dr. Beat clicking triplets. "I like to
play with the two-against-three feel, or four against three.
I love the wonderful ground where four meets three."
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