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Carole Kaye : ウィキペディア英語版
Carol Kaye

Carol Kaye (born March 24, 1935) is an American musician, known as one of the most prolific and widely heard bass guitarists, playing on an estimated 10,000 recordings in a career spanning over 50 years.
As a session musician, Kaye was the bassist on many Phil Spector and Brian Wilson productions in the 1960s and 1970s. She played guitar on Ritchie Valens' "La Bamba" and is credited with the bass tracks on several Simon & Garfunkel hits and many film scores by Quincy Jones and Lalo Schifrin. One of the most popular albums Carol contributed to was the Beach Boys' ''Pet Sounds''.
==Life and career==
Kaye was born in Everett, Washington, to professional musicians Clyde and Dot Smith. She grew up in poverty near Port Angeles and in 1949, at the age of fourteen began teaching guitar professionally.〔Carol Kaye official website (Biography ), retrieved 29 Nov 2007〕 Throughout the 1950s, Kaye played bebop jazz guitar in dozens of nightclubs around Los Angeles with many noted bands including Bob Neal's jazz group, Jack Sheldon backing Lenny Bruce, Teddy Edwards and Billy Higgins. By her own account, Kaye got into lucrative studio work "accidentally" in late 1957 with Sam Cooke.〔 A few years later, when a bass player failed to show for a session at Capitol Records in Hollywood, she was asked to fill in on what was then often called the Fender bass. She was a member of the so-called "Wrecking Crew", a name she rejects, preferring instead to call the group "The Clique", a group of studio musicians that played on a large number of hit records from Los Angeles in the 1960s.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Carol Kaye : Songwriter Interviews )
Throughout the 1960s, Kaye played bass on a significant percentage of records that appeared on the ''Billboard'' Hot 100, though almost wholly unknown to the general public at the time. It has been estimated that she played in 10,000 recording sessions. Kaye played bass on many of the Beach Boys hit recordings, including "Help Me, Rhonda", "Sloop John B", and "California Girls". She worked on Brian Wilson's ill-fated but legendary ''Smile'' project and was present at the "Fire" session in late November 1966 when Wilson reportedly asked the studio musicians to wear toy fire hats. Kaye's work also appears extensively on well-known television and film soundtracks from the 1960s and early 1970s.
She worked with most of the leading producers and musical directors in Los Angeles during that era, including Terry Melcher, Brian Wilson, Michel Legrand, Phil Spector, Elmer Bernstein, Lalo Schifrin, David Rose, Dave Grusin, Ernie Freeman, Hugo Montenegro, Leonard Rosenman, John Williams, Alfred Newman, David Axelrod and Lionel Newman. Her intense solo bass line, reverberating in quiet moments in Spector's production of "River Deep, Mountain High", lent drama to the song's "Wall of Sound" and helped lift the record into the Grammy Hall of Fame. Kaye played the bass tracks on several of the Monkees hits, and did soundtrack work (including sound effects on bass guitar) for a young Steven Spielberg. She also came up with the famous intro on Glen Campbell's greatest hit Wichita Lineman. Her tracks for Quincy Jones so impressed him, that he said in his 2001 autobiography ''Q'' that "... women like... Fender bass player Carol Kaye... could do anything and leave men in the dust."〔Jones, Quincy, ''Q: the autobiography of Quincy Jones'', Doubleday 2001 ISBN 0-385-48896-3, Pg. 126〕
Kaye performed on several American television themes including the Quinn Martin produced ''Cannon'', ''The Streets of San Francisco'', ''Mission: Impossible'', ''M
*A
*S
*H
'', ''Kojak'', ''Get Smart'', ''Hogan's Heroes'', ''The Love Boat'', ''McCloud'', ''Mannix'', ''It Takes a Thief'', ''Peyton Place'' and the ''Cosby Show''. She is credited with performing on the soundtracks of ''Hawaii Five-O'', ''The Addams Family'' and ''The Brady Bunch'' along with ''Ironside'', ''Room 222'', ''Bonanza'', ''Wonder Woman'', ''Alias Smith & Jones'', ''Run for Your Life'' and ''Barnaby Jones''.〔IMDb, (Carol Kaye - bio ), retrieved 29 Nov 2007〕
In 1969, she wrote ''How To Play The Electric Bass'', the first of many bass tutoring books and DVD courses. She gave lessons to thousands of students, including John Clayton, Mike Porcaro, Alf Clausen, David Hughes, Tony Sales, Karl E. H. Seigfried, Roy Vogt and David Hungate. Kaye retired from studio work during the 1970s because of arthritis. She later became active again as a session musician, live jazz performer, and teacher of bass and guitar, giving seminars and interviews.
Kaye played 12-string guitar on Frank Zappa's album ''Freak Out!''. She also played on a few songs for his next album but declined to continue, saying she found some of the lyrics offensive. Kaye later said Zappa was good-natured and understanding about her qualms and they remained on friendly terms.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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