Compass Point All Stars

The Compass Point phenomenon was designed to be to reggae-based pop/rock music of the 1980s, what Nashville was to country music, or the Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section was to soul and R&B in the 1960s: a recording facility animated by in-house sets of artists, musicians, producers and engineers, all dedicated to a specific and highly recognisable sound and style.

Story

The Beginning

Compass Point Studios was built in 1977 in Nassau, Bahamas, by Chris Blackwell, founder of Island Records. The core of what would later be called the Compass Point All Stars (sometimes spelled Allstars), stricto sensu, was a recording band that Blackwell put together in 1980, based on Jamaican (reggae) foundation shaped around Sly and Robbie,[1] with Sly Dunbar (drums), Robbie Shakespeare (bass), joined by Mikey Chung (guitar) and Uziah "Sticky" Thompson (percussion), with British rock flavour brought by Barry Reynolds (guitar, of Marianne Faithfull's Broken English fame[2]), spiced up by synth-dominated keyboards from French-African Wally Badarou[3] (of burgeoning Level 42), and Tyrone Downie later (keyboards of The Wailers fame). Together, under Blackwell's direction in person, and building on co-producer Alex Sadkin's skills at engineering and mixing, right from the beginning the recording band managed to deliver a highly praised and distinct sound for what are today viewed as seminal albums by Grace Jones and Joe Cocker.[4][5] "I wanted a new, progressive-sounding band" said Blackwell, "a Jamaican rhythm section with an edgy mid-range and a brilliant synth player. And I got what I wanted, fortunately".[6]

The Rise

Another prestigious resident of this early period was Robert Palmer, who augmented the CPAS sound on Joe Cocker's project.[7] Sly and Robbie went on to use some of the CPAS for Black Uhuru and Gwen Guthrie projects, eventually adding Darryl Thompson, Spaceman Patterson, and Monte Brown (guitars) to the core of the band. An attempt to record a band album was made, but ended up as Sly and Robbie's Language Barrier Album. The stars would eventually encompass all Compass Point resident stars of the era, most notably Chris Franz (drums) and Tina Weymouth (bass) of Talking Heads. Together with co-producer Steven Stanley engineering and mixing, they would start the Tom Tom Club. Brit engineer Andy Lyden came to work on a Badarou solo project, and became a resident engineer as well. The core of CPAS resided in a condominium called Tip-Top, at top of the hill behind the studio. It was a highly productive body by then, even appealing to business giants, as reported by Wally Badarou on his website: "The Compass Point All Stars (as we ended up being called) even had a try at godfather of soul, Mr Dynamite, James Brown, yes. But that one did not work out, mainly due to publishing disputes".

A larger family

A musical community was born,[8] and the Compass Point All Stars label would eventually extend throughout the 1980s to anything either originating from Compass Point Studios, productions by Bill Laswell and remixes by Larry Levan and François K Kevorkian included; or somewhat related to what went on over there, from resident or non-resident artists, regardless of genre and sonic identity, starting back from The B-52's. This largo sensu acception has been displayed on compilations such as Funky Nassau/The Compass Point Story/1980-1986 released by Strut Records, incorporating works by Chaz Jankel, Cristina, Will Powers, Guy Cuevas, along with extensive interviews by David Katz: "I don't believe anything could ever sum it up" said Wally Badarou of Compass Point's heyday, "like nothing could ever sum up Motown or Stax sounds: the studio itself, the engineers, the producers, the artists, the vibes of the time, and only the specific combination of elements does the job".[9]

Hard rock acts such as AC/DC and Iron Maiden made very successful recordings at Compass Point, but were never labelled "Compass Point All Stars". Conversely, initial CPAS members found themselves producing numerous projects abroad, for the likes of Foreigner, Power Station, Marianne Faithfull or Valerie Lagrange.

The 1990s

Despite the overall excitement for what was produced over there, the experience didn't last past the early 1990s mainly, because of personal agendas. About half of the greatest recordings that took place were hardly planned in detail. Things were done in a constant happening fashion most of the time, for the groove to rule, sometimes to the cost of efficiency. Virtuoso Alex Sadkin no longer was there,[10] and Blackwell's growing interests in other ventures did not allow the momentum to sustain any further.[11] The studio itself went through rough times in the early 1990s, only to be successfully salvaged by producer Terry Manning and his wife Sherrie: a long list of prestigious personae, from Julio Iglesias, Diana Ross, Celine Dion, Sade to Mariah Carey, has kept the studio's spirit high ever since.

2006 and beyond

CPAS members kept busy individually nonetheless. They never did re-unite physically in a recording studio but, thanks to technology, they collaborated remotely on half a dozen projects since the mid-2000s. Those projects include Warrior by ex-Black Uhuru Michael Rose, and Grace Jones' Hurricane which got the whole of the original line-up re-united somehow.

CPAS Live

In 1987, for Island Records 25th belated anniversary, some of the initial CPAS performed live for the first time, backing Eric Clapton on "I Shot the Sheriff". Mikey Chung and Sticky Thompson did not participate. The event took place at Pinewood Studios dubbing stage, UK. A Video of it has been released as Island 25: Alright Now.[12]

CPAS were to back VV Brown, Tynchy Strider and Grace Jones on 26 May 2009, launching the Island 50 festival held at the Shepherds Bush Empire, London. Percussionist Sticky Thompson still could not attend.

2010 - Bahamas Studio Closed

In September 2010, the studio in the Bahamas closed. According to the Compass Point web page, "Compass Point Studios ceased operations in Nassau as of the end of September, 2010 because of a series of incidents, socio-political based happenings which made it untenable to continue business in The Bahamas."[13]

Discography

Deemed as genuine CPAS work

(i.e. involving all initial musicians)

Produced by (or contributed to by) some CPAS members

At Compass Point Studios in the 1980s (list far from complete):

Outside Compass Point, Nassau (list far from complete):

External links

References

  1. Sly & Robbie were signed to Island Records in the 1970s
  2. M. Faithfull was signed to Island Records in the 1970s.
  3. Nicknamed Prophet, for his near-exclusive use of the Sequential Circuits Prophet 5 synthesizer.
  4. G. Jones Warm Leatherette, Nightclubbing and Living My Life / J. Cocker Sheffield Steel
  5. "Broken English" excerpt from Faithfull: An Autobiography / David Dalton / Little, Brown & Co, New-York
  6. "Keep On Running – The Story of Island Records" by Chris Salewicz, p. 135. Interview by David Katz.
  7. Adding backing vocals on "Sweet Little Woman", along with Jimmy Cliff.
  8. Chapter 45 from Nathalie Delon: Pleure pas, c'est pas grave / Flammarion
  9. "Keep On Running – The Story of Island Records" by Chris Salewicz, p 135.
  10. Died in a car crash in 1987.
  11. Chris Blackwell had longed for the movie business for quite some time.
  12. On Amazon
  13. "Compass Point Home".
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