Difference between revisions of "Patrick O'Hearn"

From Zappa Wiki Jawaka
Jump to navigation Jump to search
 
(11 intermediate revisions by 5 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
Patrick O'Hearn, born 9/6/1954 in Los Angeles, CA (raised in Oregon), the son of working musicians, studied cello, violin, and flute, and gained early experience playing bass with his parents' lounge act. In early 1976, he won the audition to play bass in [[The Mothers]].
+
[[File:Patrickohearn.jpg|right]]
  
O'Hearn provided bass and/or vocal for [[Zappa In New York]], [[Sleep Dirt]], [[Sheik Yerbouti]], [[Joe's Garage Act I]], [[Joe's Garage Acts II & III]], [[Tinseltown Rebellion]], [[Shut Up 'N Play Yer Guitar]] set, [[Ship Arriving Too Late To Save A Drowning Witch]], [[Baby Snakes]], [[Them Or Us]], [[You Can't Do That On Stage Anymore Vol. 1]], [[You Can't Do That On Stage Anymore Vol. 4]], [[You Can't Do That On Stage Anymore Vol. 6]], [[Läther]], [[Frank Zappa Plays The Music Of Frank Zappa]], [[Halloween]], and [[Quaudiophiliac]]; also for the [[Beat The Boots]] series disk [[Conceptual Continuity (BTB)|Conceptual Continuity]], the unreleased [[Trance-Fusion]], and on the Zappa bootleg [[An Evening In Detroit]].
+
[[Patrick O'Hearn]] born 9/6/1954 in Los Angeles, CA (raised in Oregon), the son of working musicians. Studied cello, violin, and flute, and gained early experience playing bass with his parents' lounge act.  
  
In the early 80's he became bassist and keyboarder of the band [[Missing Persons]], featuring Terry Bozzio, also a formal member (drummer) of the [[The Mothers]], according with Dale Bozzio, the sister of Terry, as the lead singer and Warren Cuccurullo (ever heard his name on the recordings of Valley Girl?), who was (is?) also a member of [[Duran Duran]].
+
In early 1976, he won an audition to play bass in [[The Mothers]].
 +
 
 +
==Instrument & Gear ==
 +
During Patrick's tenure with Zappa he had a very distinctive fretless electric bass tone which he explains here: "Live", I used an MXR digital delay with a short delay (80 - 120ms) with a slight, slow sine wave modulation to achieve a doubled and subtle de-tuned effect. For "Live" recording or studio, Frank would, in post, use an Eventide H-910 to create the same effect.
 +
 
 +
On early performances with Zappa, Patrick made what is now commonly called a Ramp. When asked about this Patrick wrote:  "A device I fashioned to make playing bass guitar feel a bit closer to upright, which I was more accustom to at that time . (right hand pizz off the fingerboard) I eventually removed it as was no longer needed for feel. Also moved to playing closer to neck and fingerboard anyway. -- fuller, rich and darker tone for me."<ref>[https://www.talkbass.com/threads/patrick-o-hearn-bass-tone.540970/ "Patrick O'Hearn bass tone???" Talkbass.com]</ref>
 +
 
 +
 
 +
 
 +
==Zappa Performance Discography==
 +
[[Patrick O'Hearn|O'Hearn]] provided bass and/or vocal for:
 +
 +
*[[Zappa In New York]]
 +
*[[Sleep Dirt]]
 +
*[[Sheik Yerbouti]]
 +
*[[Joe's Garage Act I]]
 +
*[[Joe's Garage Acts II & III]]
 +
*[[Tinseltown Rebellion]]
 +
*[[Shut Up 'n Play Yer Guitar]]
 +
*[[Ship Arriving Too Late To Save A Drowning Witch]]
 +
*[[Baby Snakes]]
 +
*[[Them Or Us]]
 +
*[[You Can't Do That On Stage Anymore Vol. 1]]
 +
*[[You Can't Do That On Stage Anymore Vol. 4]]
 +
*[[You Can't Do That On Stage Anymore Vol. 6]]
 +
*[[Läther]]
 +
*[[Frank Zappa Plays The Music Of Frank Zappa]]
 +
*[[Halloween]]
 +
*[[Quaudiophiliac]]
 +
*[[Conceptual Continuity (BTB)|Conceptual Continuity]]
 +
*[[Trance-Fusion]]
 +
*[[An Evening In Detroit]].
 +
 
 +
In the early 1980s he became bassist and keyboarder of the band [[Wikipedia:Missing Persons (band)|Missing Persons]], which also included  [[Terry Bozzio]] and [[Warren Cuccurullo]]
 +
 
 +
Patrick can be seen in the [[:Category:Videography|Zappa movies]]:
 +
*[[Baby Snakes (The Film)]]
 +
*[[Video From Hell]].
 +
 
 +
Patrick O'Hearn was also mentioned and thanked in the liner notes of ''[[The MOFO Project/Object (Fazedooh)|The MOFO Project/Object]]'' (2006) album. <ref>http://donlope.net/fz/notes/The_MOFO_Project_Object.html#Contributors</ref>
 +
 
 +
==Sources==
 +
<references/>
  
Patrick can be seen in the Zappa movies [[Baby Snakes (The Film)]] and [[Video From Hell]].
 
  
 
[[Category:Bandmembers|O'Hearn, Patrick]]
 
[[Category:Bandmembers|O'Hearn, Patrick]]
[[Category:Musicians|O'Hearn, Patrick]]
+
[[Category:Bassists|O'Hearn, Patrick]]
 +
[[Category:Singers|O'Hearn, Patrick]]
 +
[[Category:Cellists|O'Hearn, Patrick]]
 +
[[Category:Violinists|O'Hearn, Patrick]]
 +
[[Category:Flautists|O'Hearn, Patrick]]
 +
[[Category:Keyboardists|O'Hearn, Patrick]]

Latest revision as of 14:27, 17 December 2022

Patrickohearn.jpg

Patrick O'Hearn born 9/6/1954 in Los Angeles, CA (raised in Oregon), the son of working musicians. Studied cello, violin, and flute, and gained early experience playing bass with his parents' lounge act.

In early 1976, he won an audition to play bass in The Mothers.

Instrument & Gear

During Patrick's tenure with Zappa he had a very distinctive fretless electric bass tone which he explains here: "Live", I used an MXR digital delay with a short delay (80 - 120ms) with a slight, slow sine wave modulation to achieve a doubled and subtle de-tuned effect. For "Live" recording or studio, Frank would, in post, use an Eventide H-910 to create the same effect.

On early performances with Zappa, Patrick made what is now commonly called a Ramp. When asked about this Patrick wrote: "A device I fashioned to make playing bass guitar feel a bit closer to upright, which I was more accustom to at that time . (right hand pizz off the fingerboard) I eventually removed it as was no longer needed for feel. Also moved to playing closer to neck and fingerboard anyway. -- fuller, rich and darker tone for me."[1]


Zappa Performance Discography

O'Hearn provided bass and/or vocal for:

In the early 1980s he became bassist and keyboarder of the band Missing Persons, which also included Terry Bozzio and Warren Cuccurullo

Patrick can be seen in the Zappa movies:

Patrick O'Hearn was also mentioned and thanked in the liner notes of The MOFO Project/Object (2006) album. [2]

Sources