Nelson Bragg
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Nelson Bragg | |
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Background information | |
Born | August 14, 1961 Dover, New Hampshire, U.S. | (age 60)
Genres | Drumming |
Occupation(s) | Musician, drummer, songwriter |
Instruments | Drums |
Years active | 1979 - Present |
Website | www |
Nelson Bragg (born August 14, 1961) is an American percussionist, vocalist and songwriter based in Los Angeles, California.
Biography[]
Nelson Bragg was born in Dover, New Hampshire on August 14, 1961.[1] He played in several bands from 1979 to 1999, including positions as a pit drummer for more than twenty stage musicals. He later played at the Emerson College theater in Boston, Massachusetts and at the New London Barn Playhouse in New London, New Hampshire.
Bragg's bands include the horn-driven/post-punk dance band Big Noise (1981–1987) based in Woodstock, New York, and Farmhouse (1989–1992), a harmony-based folk rock group based in Northampton, Massachusetts. Bragg moved to Los Angeles in 1999.[2]
Bands[]
In 2000, Bragg joined several Los Angeles pop bands, including The Now People, The Quarter After, Twenty Cent Crush and Cloud Eleven. In 2001, Bragg joined Stew for his album, titled Naked Dutch Painter, and played subsequent shows promoting the album, which was named Entertainment Weekly's "Album of the Year" for 2002. Bragg also played with pop group The Negro Problem, Stew's former band and alter ego.[3]
In 2003, Nelson joined Brian Wilson's band as a percussionist-vocalist for live performances of Wilson's unreleased album Smile. The February 2004 premiere in London and subsequent tour was followed by a formal recording of "Smile", released in September 2004. "Smile" received multiple nominations for the 2004 Grammy Awards, including Best Pop Vocal Album[4] and Best Engineered Album, Non-Classical (for Mark Linett).[5][6] The album later won a single Grammy, in the category of Best Rock Instrumental Performance, for the track "Mrs. O'Leary's Cow".[7]
In 2005, the Smile two-DVD set was released, featuring a full-length documentary of Brian Wilson's "Smile" story, and the making of it, both in 1966-1967 and newly again in 2004. The documentary aired on Showtime in October 2004, and was directed by Beach Boys authority David Leaf. A live concert performance of "Smile" is featured on the second disc.
Tours[]
Bragg continues to perform many tours worldwide, including performances from the "Smile" album. This includes a total of twelve nights at London's Royal Festival Hall, two nights at Carnegie Hall (broadcast on NPR radio, nationally on Thanksgiving Day 2004), two nights at , The Hollywood Bowl, three nights with The Los Angeles Philharmonic in 2008, Royal Albert Hall, , , , - Berlin for the worldwide Live 8 benefit and at The 2005 Glastonbury Festival in the United Kingdom, setting attendance records.
Bragg has also performed with Brian Wilson's band on several television appearances, including The Tonight Show with Jay Leno and on .
Bragg's recordings include Brian Wilson's Christmas album, All I Really Want For Christmas, released in 2005 and That Lucky Old Sun, released in 2008. Between 2006 and 2007, the band performed the Pet Sounds album in the U.S. and Europe, celebrating its 40th anniversary (Beach Boy and Al Jardine joined the band for the U.S. leg of the tour). That Lucky Old Sun was an anticipated album that garnered mixed reviews.[8][9]
Albums[]
In 2003, prior to his position with The Brian Wilson Band, Bragg started recording a solo album which was completed and released on Side B Music in 2007. Day Into Night was reviewed very favorably[citation needed] and continues to garner college and Internet airplay worldwide. The album features Nick Walusko, fellow Brian Wilson bandmate and Wondermint Mike Randle, guitarist with Baby Lemonade and longtime member of Morley Bartnoff, keyboardist with Burning Sensations and currently member of Dramarama Rob Campanella, organist-guitarist with The Brian Jonestown Massacre and The Quarter After, Probyn Gregory, fellow Brian Wilson bandmate and Wondermint, Severo Jornacion, bassist with The Smithereens and Debbie Shair, keyboardist with Heart. The album also features the on seven of its twelve tracks. Bragg performed all acoustics, vocals, drums and percussion among other instruments on the record. The record is influenced by CSNY, George Harrison, The Byrds, The dB's, and Canada's The Grapes Of Wrath, and was produced by L.A. pop-garage producer Steve Refling.
Other projects[]
Performances[]
Bragg has been involved with many bands throughout his time as a professional percussionist. He has recorded albums with the , The Quarter After, , , (The Grapes Of Wrath), Andrew Sandoval and most notably The Mockers. Bragg has also garnered three tours of Spain with The Mockers in 2002, 2005 and 2007. A documentary about The Mockers and the American dream is in the works[when?] with a 2008 release in mind. 2008 brought Bragg back to Carnegie Hall as the house percussionist for Sting and Trudy's annual rainforest benefit. Performers included Sting, James Taylor, Billy Joel, Brian Wilson and John Sebastian. The house band included Narada, Michael Walden, Larry Carlton, Will Lee, and Hiram Bullock.
In 2009, Bragg produced the album "Tangle Free World" for singer/songwriter . Nelson also toured the UK and Europe with Celsi in 2009, 2010 and 2011, where the duo was augmented by guest musicians including Roland Wolff, Duncan Maitland, Richard Snow, and Nico J Wouters.
Records and albums[]
Bragg is the drummer-percussionist and harmony vocalist on several dozen records, but his most well-known recording other than "Smile" came in 2006, on the In My Room CD tribute to Brian Wilson, included with Mojo magazine's January 2007 issue. Nelson sang lead and drummed on The Mockers Beatlesque version of "God Only Knows." That recording was the largest exposure of Bragg's lead vocal to date with a pressing of over 200,000 copies worldwide. In the Spring of 2007, Bragg embarked on a 30-date tour of Europe and the U.S. with Brian Wilson and Al Jardine from The Beach Boys. The tour included a premiere in London of Wilson's new work That Lucky Old Sun. That Lucky Old Sun, and the CD and DVD will be released on Capitol Records September 1, 2008 in the UK and September 2, 2008 in the US. That Lucky Old Sun Tour starts September 4. A follow-up to the Day Into Night tour is scheduled to start in late 2008.[citation needed]
In 2009, Bragg completed work on his first musical production with singer-songwriter Anny Celsi. "Tangle-Free World" garnered three tours of Europe in 2009, 2010, and 2011, respectively, with Bragg receiving much praise on percussion and vocals. "Tangle-free World" was also well received by the music press, indie and internet radio prompted by a '60s jangle pop opus as a title track. Production on this album featured elaborate arrangements including strings and horns but was best known for the authentic, subtle and velvety vocal delivery by its singer and writer Anny Celsi.
In 2010, Bragg embarked on two album tours with Brian Wilson for the Disney-Pearl label; Brian Wilson Re-imagines Gershwin and an album of Disney songs were released in 2010 and 2011, respectively. Bragg was the percussionist on both records and also contributed some vocals to the set. "The Re-imagines" Gershwin record garnered The Brian Wilson Band an elaborate tour of North America and Wilson's first-ever complete tour of Canada. The band also toured Europe supporting what many consider one of Wilson's finest solo efforts to date. As of 2012, Nelson Bragg has completed his second solo record entitled We Get What We Want. The release date for the new album is slated for April 25, 2012.[citation needed]
Beach Boys 50th Anniversary tour[]
Bragg participated in The Beach Boys 50th Anniversary Reunion Tour as the band's percussionist. John Voket wrote in his review that "...percussionist Nelson Bragg was amazing to watch as he deftly handled some of the unique hand instruments that flavored so many Beach Boys numbers while simultaneously contributing backing vocals to almost every tune."[10] Greg Kot, a Chicago Tribune music critic, also positively reviewed Bragg's performance.[11]
References[]
- ^ "About Nelson Bragg". Viacom International. Retrieved August 29, 2012.
- ^ Interview with Nelson Bragg from Ear candy Mag.
- ^ "Stew: Residency". www.arts.wisc.edu. Archived from the original on 26 November 2011. Retrieved 20 September 2012.
- ^ CNN.com - Kanye West leads Grammy nominations - Dec 7, 2004 Archived October 7, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Grammy Award nominees in top categories". Usatoday.Com. February 7, 2005. Retrieved April 7, 2011.
- ^ "CNN.com - List: Major Grammy nominations - Dec 7, 2004". Edition.cnn.com. December 7, 2004. Retrieved April 7, 2011.
- ^ "2004 Grammy Awards - Grammy Nominations - Grammy Winners 2005". Links2love.com. Retrieved April 7, 2011.
- ^ Michael Keefe (2 September 2008). "Brian Wilson: That Lucky Old Sun". Pop Matters. PopMatters.com. Retrieved 9 August 2012.
- ^ Sound Opinions (2008). "Reviews for Show #147". Chicago Public Radio. Chicago Public Radio. Retrieved 9 August 2012.
- ^ John Voket (14 May 2012). "Concert: Beach Boys 50th Anniversary Tour in Uncasville, CT". SoundSpike. SoundSpike Media, LLC. Retrieved 9 August 2012.
- ^ Greg Kot (22 May 2012). "Beach Boys mix nostalgia, surf, melancholy at Chicago Theatre". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 9 August 2012.
External links[]
- 1961 births
- Living people
- American rock drummers
- American rock musicians
- People from Dover, New Hampshire
- 20th-century American drummers
- American male drummers
- 20th-century American male musicians