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Ksyrup
08-10-2004, 07:21 AM
DON’T LET HIM FOOL YOU, WILLIAM SHATNER IS NO HAS BEEN

Produced And Co-Written By Ben Folds, Shout! Factory Releases New CD From Performer William Shatner -- In Stores October 5th

GUEST PERFORMERS INCLUDE AIMEE MANN, JOE JACKSON, BRAD PAISLEY, HENRY ROLLINS, ADRIAN BELEW AND MORE

LOS ANGELES, CA -- More than 35 years after the release of his debut solo album, William Shatner teams up with Ben Folds to create Has Been, a surprisingly pop-driven, lyrically potent collection of songs written by the duo. With the exception of “Trying,” co-written by Folds and novelist Nick Hornby (High Fidelity, About A Boy), “Real” by Brad Paisley, and Pulp’s “Common People,” Shatner proves to be a witty and self-deprecating poet, while Folds’ talent for crafting the perfect pop melody has never been more evident. Has Been will be released on October 5th by Shout! Factory.

Although it may sound like an odd coupling, the two have actually collaborated before, once on Ben’s solo album, Fear Of Pop, Volume 1, and when Ben repaid the favor by appearing in some of Shatner’s popular Priceline.com commercials. Earlier this year, when Shout! Factory executives Richard and Garson Foos approached Shatner with the idea of recording a new album, the actor casually mentioned that his friend Ben had been trying to get him to do the same thing. Everybody agreed and everybody signed on, and Shatner began writing. “These are thoughts and experiences of mine that very few people have heard before,” Shatner explains. “I wanted to share them with my loved ones.”

Shatner’s performances are stunning. His rendition of “Trying” is downright heartbreaking, as he depicts an absent father’s desperate attempt at building a relationship with his daughter long after it’s too late. His own droll way with prose makes a splash on “Common People,” in what could be an ode to a certain girl with a famous last name. And the album’s title track is a playful romp -- a spaghetti western score with Shatner embracing the lyrics, “Has Been.”

Remarks Folds on the Has Been recording experience, “If I thought that there were heaps of artists who were willing to be as honest, vulnerable, creative and as trusting with their producer as William Shatner has been with me, I’d just be a producer.”

Not only did Shatner’s lyrics surpass everyone’s expectations, but friends and fans were more than willing to be a part of the recordings. Folds brought in Aimee Mann, Brad Paisley (who wrote a song specifically for Shatner), and Grammy winners Joe Jackson and Henry Rollins to contribute vocals, while Adrian Belew adds guitars and the U.K. ambient duo Lemon Jelly weighs in on “Together.” Nearly the entire album was recorded at Folds’ Nashville studio, with Matt Chamberlain on drums (Tori Amos, Fiona Apple), Sebastian Steinberg on bass (Soul Coughing), Jon Auer on guitars (The Posies), Folds on piano and bass, and with Folds’ longtime engineers John Painter and Joe Costa manning the controls.

In 1968, Shatner released a spoken word album that was clearly ahead of its time. The Transformed Man was a collection of contemporary pop songs paired with excerpts from classic literature that were thematically alike. Written-off by many as “camp,” later generations grew to see his true poetic soul and delivery, and finally understood the conceptual goal of the album. Shatner reprised his musical beginnings with the series of commercials for Priceline.com several years ago, sparking renewed interest in his musical career and demonstrating his knack for never taking himself too seriously.


WILLIAM SHATNER: HAS BEEN
Catalog Number: DK 30349
Price: $18.98 SRP
Release Date: October 5, 2004

Track Listing
1. “Common People” (with Joe Jackson)
2. “It Hasn't Happened Yet”
3. “You'll Have Time”
4. “Trying” (with Ben Folds and Aimee Mann)
5. “What Have You Done”
6. “Together” (with Lemon Jelly)
7. “Familiar Love”
8. “Ideal Woman”
9. “Has Been “
10. “I Can't Get Behind That” (with Henry Rollins)
11. “Real” (with Brad Paisley)

http://www.adrianbelew.net/images/shatnergroup.jpg
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I love Ben Folds, and wll probably get this for his music and Shatner's UIC, but I posted this (a) because some of the commentary in the article is utterly laughable, and (b) I love this picture.

Fritz
08-10-2004, 07:29 AM
In 1968, Shatner released a spoken word album that was clearly ahead of its time. The Transformed Man was a collection of contemporary pop songs paired with excerpts from classic literature that were thematically alike. Written-off by many as “camp,” later generations grew to see his true poetic soul and delivery, and finally understood the conceptual goal of the album.

Um, I own Transformed man, and it is camp.

Ksyrup
08-10-2004, 07:30 AM
That's one of those lines I'm talking about.

What, you didn't grow to see his true poetic soul and delivery, finally understanding the conceptual goal of the album was something other than to make you laugh?

kurtism
08-10-2004, 08:10 AM
Special thanks to Neil Gaiman's Journal for this link: http://www.shoutfactory.com/av/common_people.wma

Ksyrup
08-10-2004, 08:14 AM
Beautimus!

Daimyo
08-10-2004, 09:30 AM
Sweet! I love the Shattner track on Fear of Pop.

mattwakeman
08-10-2004, 10:31 AM
Special thanks to Neil Gaiman's Journal for this link: http://www.shoutfactory.com/av/common_people.wma

This really, really (really) scared me. Especially every part where he either gets high-pitched or, much worse, tries to emote.

I feel scarred.

kurtism
08-10-2004, 11:14 AM
The "part where he gets high pitched" is sung by Joe Jackson. Do not denegrate Joe Jackson (upon penalty of pain). :)

Pyser
08-10-2004, 11:24 AM
common people is one of my favorite songs of all time.

how he got joe jackson involved in covering it...well, my curiosity is extremely peaked.

kurtism
08-10-2004, 11:37 AM
my guess is the ben folds connection - i have always seen a lot of similarity between folds' work and jackson's stuff

mattwakeman
08-10-2004, 01:16 PM
The "part where he gets high pitched" is sung by Joe Jackson. Do not denegrate Joe Jackson (upon penalty of pain). :)

Believe me mate at no time listening to that did I ever think that the singing was actually the Shatner himself. It has to be said that there is something almost endearing about someone who loves doing something that they are obviously bad at. It takes guts to be really bad in public when you KNOW that you are really bad.

duckman
08-10-2004, 02:01 PM
God hates me. :(