Omega Productions
Award winning Producer, 300 major artists, 53 years, live concert television specials & event consulting Music, Television & Film. @omegatx1
Celebrating 50 Years
During the company's 50 year history, Paul Christensen, his wife Donna and their staff have worked with over 300 of the best known personalities in the business: comedy stars such as Bob Hope, Steve Allen, Jack Lemmon and David Brenner; Broadway legends like Ben Vereen, Tommy Tune, Lena Horne and Chita Rivera; film artists Leslie Ann Warren, Mack Davis, Peter Coyote and Denni
05/19/2026
“Chaka Khan decided to fire the whole band – I don’t know why. But the week after she fired us, Prince called”: How Andrew Gouche rose from playing church halls to become the guru of gospel bass with Prince.
“Chaka Khan decided to fire the whole band – I don’t know why. But the week after she fired us, Prince called”: How Andrew Gouche rose from playing church halls to become the guru of gospel bass with Prince Gouche met Prince in 2011 while leading Chaka Khan’s band
05/17/2026
Bet you didn’t know. A jazz pianist who couldn't read a note of music wrote the rule book that protects every recording artist alive.
https://bit.ly/4dfwBOd
A jazz pianist who couldn't read a note of music wrote the rule book that protects every recording artist alive. Erroll Garner sued Columbia Records in 1960, posted a forty thousand dollar cash bond his friends helped him raise, and won a landmark ruling in the New York State Supreme Court.
The settlement was $265,297.55. Every artist with the right to approve their own album release is standing on his back.
In the photograph from the studio, you cannot see the phone book at first. You see the cuffed white shirt, the cardigan, the wires running across the floor like vines, the way his face leans into something only he can hear.
Then your eye drops to the bench. Tucked underneath him, between his weight and the leather, is a thick Manhattan directory, the corners frayed soft from years of touring.
Erroll Garner was five feet two inches tall. He had been sitting on phone books to reach a piano since he was a boy in Pittsburgh, and he would carry one onto airplanes the rest of his life, clutching it under his arm the way other people carried briefcases.
The book itself sits in the University of Pittsburgh archive now, tattered at the corners. Beside it are seven thousand photographs and eight thousand reel-to-reel tapes, the trail Erroll left behind.
He was born in Pittsburgh on June 15, 1921, the youngest of six children, twin to a brother named Ernest. He started playing the piano at three years old, perched on whatever the household could find to raise him up to the keys.
His older siblings took lessons from a teacher named Miss Bowman. Erroll would sit nearby, listening, and then he would slide onto the bench and play back what Miss Bowman had just demonstrated, note for note.
His eldest sister Martha said he played "just like Miss Bowman." The family took it in stride, the way you take in the weather, and already knew what they had.
By seven, he was on KDKA in Pittsburgh with a group called the Candy Kids. By eleven, he was working the riverboats up and down the Allegheny, a child in a suit holding down rhythm for grown men.
He never learned to read music. Not in elementary school, not in high school, not when he played with Charlie Parker on the "Cool Blues" session in 1947, not when he won DownBeat polls year after year.
Decades later on the Tonight Show, Johnny Carson would ask him about it on national television. Erroll smiled the way he always did and answered, "No one can hear you read."
Carson laughed because Carson loved him. Erroll was his favorite jazz pianist, and Erroll knew the joke ran deeper than the laugh.
He moved to New York in 1944. The Pittsburgh musicians' union back home had refused to admit him because he could not read a score, and they would not relent and grant him honorary membership until 1956, by which time he was already the most popular jazz pianist in the world.
The union had a rulebook. Erroll had ears.
He would hear a piece of music once and own it. After attending a concert by the Russian classical virtuoso Emil Gilels in New York, he went back to his apartment and played long stretches of the program from memory, the way another person might recite a poem they had loved since childhood.
That was the part the white press could not figure out how to write about. They kept trying, and they kept getting it wrong.
In 1958, the Saturday Evening Post published a profile of him. The writer wanted readers to see a happy primitive, a naive savant who had no idea what to do with money or sophistication.
The article reported that when Erroll had been asked about Bach, he had thought Bach was some kind of beer. The magazine printed it like it was a punchline.
The Black press read that and saw what it was. The UCLA historian Robin Kelley would later put it plainly, saying the mainstream press wanted a man too simple to know what he had, while the Black press, which had been covering Erroll with respect for two decades, knew him as articulate, sober, and dangerous to the people who wanted to keep him small.
He had already given the world the ballad that would outlive every magazine on the newsstand. He had composed it on a propeller plane in 1954, somewhere between Denver and Chicago, with his eyes closed.
There were no jets that year, and the flight from San Francisco had to stop in Denver to refuel. The plane came down through a thunderstorm into Chicago, and through his window Erroll saw something he would never forget.
He told the drummer Art Taylor about it years later, in Paris. "When we were coming down there was a beautiful rainbow," he said, "fascinating because it wasn't long but very wide and in every color you can imagine."
The window was wet with fine rain. He told Taylor: "With the dew drops and the windows being misty, that fine rain, that's how I named it 'Misty.'"
His next line is the one nobody quotes. "I was playing on my knees like I had a piano, with my eyes shut."
The passenger next to him watched a small Black man humming and pressing his fingers down on his own thighs with his eyes shut tight. The passenger summoned a flight attendant, thinking the man was ill.
Erroll was composing the song that Frank Sinatra and Ella Fitzgerald and Sarah Vaughan and Aretha Franklin and Johnny Mathis would all record. He kept the entire piece in his memory until the plane landed and he could get to a piano and play it for someone who could write it down.
That was 1954. Four years later, a national magazine would tell America that this man was too simple to know who Bach was.
The article was on newsstands when his label, Columbia Records, started releasing his old studio recordings without telling him. Columbia had bought the goose, and the label was going to keep cooking eggs whether the goose wanted to lay them or not.
There was one problem with that plan. Erroll's manager, Martha Glaser, who had taken him on as her only client in 1950, had grown up in the labor wars of the 1930s in Pittsburgh and Detroit, where the rules of engagement were tough.
She had negotiated a clause into his 1956 Columbia contract that nobody at the label had bothered to take seriously. Erroll had the right to approve the release of his own music, every record, before it ever left the warehouse.
No artist contract had ever contained that clause before. Nobody on either side of a recording table had thought to put it there.
In 1960, Erroll Garner sued Columbia Records for breach of contract. Columbia hit back with a countersuit in federal court, which meant Erroll had to post a forty thousand dollar cash bond out of his own pocket just to keep the injunction alive.
He did not have forty thousand dollars to spare. Friends raised it, and he paid it.
And he wrote the words that would later run in the press, words that should be carved on a wall somewhere. "I paid the cash bond because I felt, and I feel, that not only my rights are at issue in this case, but the rights of my fellow members of the record and music industry are involved."
He added one more line. "I truly hope that the future for all recording artists might hold greater security for creative property as a result of this action."
He was thirty-nine years old, sitting on a phone book to play the piano. And he was about to change the rules for every recording artist who would come after him.
While the case dragged on, Columbia put out two more of his sessions without permission, including an album it had the nerve to title "The Provocative Erroll Garner." The provocation, of course, was that he had refused to be quiet.
Three years of litigation. The most popular jazz pianist in the world sat out studio recording at the peak of his career, watching the label release his work and pocket the receipts.
In 1962, the New York State Supreme Court ruled in his favor. The settlement was $265,297.55, Columbia was ordered to return his masters, and the label was ordered to recall the unauthorized records.
He used the money to start his own label with Glaser, Octave Records. He recorded twelve more albums there over the next eighteen years, and he never went back to Columbia.
The legendary Columbia talent man John Hammond, who had signed Billie Holiday, Aretha Franklin, Bob Dylan and Bruce Springsteen, wrote a letter about Erroll years after his death. He called him "possibly the first Black artist, or artist of any color, to stand up to a major record company."
Hammond knew. He had been inside the industry for half a century, and Erroll was the one who drew the line.
Erroll Garner died on January 2, 1977, of cardiac arrest related to emphysema, the ci******es catching up with him at fifty-five. He is buried at Homewood Cemetery in Pittsburgh, not far from the houses where, as a child, he had first sat on a stack of books to reach the keys.
His star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame is at 6363 Hollywood Boulevard. His face is on a 1995 US postage stamp, and his "Misty" is in the Grammy Hall of Fame.
Every recording artist alive today who can stop a label from releasing an album they did not approve is standing on the phone book Erroll Garner left them. Most of them have never heard of him.
In the photograph from the studio, the corner of that phone book is peeking out from under his thigh. Once you know it is there, you cannot stop looking at it.
He sat on it to be heard. Then he made sure the rest of them would be heard too.
I put a lot of effort into researching and sharing stories that matter. If you'd like to support the work, here's the link:
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05/17/2026
How a pilgrimage to the crucible of rock ’n’ roll inspired the ’90s classic Walking In Memphis.
“I knew it was a better song than I’d written up to that point. I’d turned a corner as a songwriter. But in terms of thinking it was a hit, I had no idea”: How a pilgrimage to the crucible of rock ’n’ roll inspired the ’90s classic Walk “Me and the piano – that’s all I cared about”
05/16/2026
Not for every musician, but… “Links the exhilaration of shaping guitar sounds to the everyday act of checking the time”: You can now get an official Ibanez Tube Screamer watch. 😆
“Links the exhilaration of shaping guitar sounds to the everyday act of checking the time”: You can now get an official Ibanez Tube Screamer watch Its design features a nod to one of the most iconic pedals of all time
05/14/2026
How a gospel choir and the Lord’s Prayer saved one of rock’s greatest power ballads. More behind the song from Foreigner, another band we recorded. GOOGLE: Louder Sound How a gospel choir and the Lord’s Prayer saved.
How the Lord's Prayer powered one of Foreigner's biggest hits "I looked over in his direction and tears were rolling down his cheeks. I thought: My God! I've done it!"
05/14/2026
I just gotta share this killer live jam again with Bruce Horsby and Goose, doing Bruce’s classic hit, “That’s Just The Way It Is.” What a performance! # GOOGLE: You Tube Bruce Hornsby Goose That’s Just The Way It Is Hampton, Va 12/9/23.
Goose 31K likes, 1.3K comments. "Goose - The Way It Is (feat. Bruce Hornsby) - 12/9/23 Goosemas X, Hampton, VA [4K]"
05/11/2026
The story behind the song from another band we recorded. The accidental classic that lifted Lynyrd Skynyrd to immortality – and defined a whole genre.
“Ronnie was not interested in improvisation. Every bit of it was planned out. Every guitar solo was played exactly the same. I have never met a band that did that”: The accidental classic that lifted one band to immortality – and defined a whol Lynyrd Synyrd’s Free Bird was the monster hit that the band themselves didn’t believe in
05/11/2026
I posted yesterday about losing Stephen Bruton and his relationship with Kris Kristofferson. I promised to post this project we recorded in the late 80s, a concert shoot with them both.
Omega Productions records Kris Kristofferson and The Borderlords in Boulder, CO – Omega Productions Omega Productions records Kris Kristofferson and The Borderlords in Boulder, CO One of Omega’s more interesting concert recordings over the years was an outing in Boulder Colorado for what was to become a music documentary on Kris Kristofferson, later titled Breakthrough. The Company had worked wi...
05/10/2026
On This Day in 2009, Kris Kristofferson Bid Farewell to His “Soul-Brother,” Longtime Bandmate, and Friend of 40 Years, Stephen Bruton. Lots of memories from working with these two (I’ll post more tomorrow).
On This Day in 2009, Kris Kristofferson Bid Farewell to His “Soul-Brother,” Longtime Bandmate, and Friend of 40 Years Stephen Bruton wasn't exactly a household name during his heyday, but his music has graced the home of many a country fan.
05/08/2026
We got stories. Here’s one from recording the Tornado Jam II. You never know what will happen during a gig. And what shenanigans folks will attempt after.
https://bit.ly/48RhHLw
A photo captures the Cadillac that ended up in the lake during Tornado Jam II. But a closer look at the story behind the infamous “Cadillac in the lake” reveals something most people miss.
It wasn’t a Cadillac - at least not at first.
It was a Rolls-Royce. In fact, it was reportedly the only Rolls-Royce in Lubbock at the time. Borrowed to impress a girl - and it ended about how most of those plans do.
As Joe Ely explained in a 2002 interview with Chris Oglesby for Y’all Magazine:
“The second year, this guy brought his girlfriend to the Tornado Jam. They came out in the afternoon. Her daddy was a lawyer, Harley Huff, and he had
the only Rolls Royce in Lubbock. And this guy had borrowed that car from his girlfriend's daddy to drive it out there, you know, to look cool, so they could kinda' stud around.
And I remember this, Man! We were doing a sound check, late afternoon; I look over and here comes this Rolls. It parks over faced toward the creek, and the two people get out and start walking over to the stage. And I notice that car just roll just a tiny bit. I thought somebody else was in it; I couldn't see. It was pretty far from the stage, so I start kinda' walking over there 'cause I wanted to go over and see that car, anyway. And it started rolling a little faster and pretty soon I yell at those people; I said, ‘Is that your car?’ And they turn around, and by then it had started pickin' up speed.
They'd forgot to set the parking brake and that Rolls rolled into Buddy Holly River, or whatever it's called. I'll never forget this: I ran down to it - they were in a panic, just screaming, running down - I ran down to it, and I remember it went in head first and then it flipped over like a big bubble. It just flipped, and then it turned and just that angel on the hood was the only thing sticking out of the water. It was the most amazing sight.”
That’s the real origin story.
As for the well-known photo of the submerged Cadillac, that came later - and it wasn’t exactly organic.
Joe explains:
“And then the next year, Steve Moss, who was in charge of kinda' promoting & videotaping the thing, he just thought, well, ‘Let's kinda' set up a tradition,’ so he went and bought a Cadillac and just rolled it in the lake himself. So it was kind of a fake thing. The Cadillac was in the paper, the Rolls never was.
He thought well, this is a tradition so let's keep it going. I got a picture of the tow-truck pulling the Cadillac out. I've got my hand on the side of it like it was a big fish.”
So the moment everyone remembers - the Cadillac in the lake - was staged. The real story, the one with the Rolls-Royce quietly sinking nose-first into the water, never made the paper.
And you can imagine how the Lubbock City Council felt about the idea of a car ending up in the lake every year during Tornado Jam.
But officially, of course, the event was shut down to protect the beloved buffalo grass.
Nothing else to see there.
Courtesy of Flatland Sports Podcast
Photo courtesy of Steve Moss
05/08/2026
“My boss said, ‘Paul Simon’s in town, and they’re looking for you in the studio. Here’s the money. Take the bus’”: When Bakithi Kumalo got the call to audition for Paul Simon’s 1986 multi-platinum album.
“My boss said, ‘Paul Simon’s in town, and they’re looking for you in the studio. Here’s the money. Take the bus’”: When Bakithi Kumalo got the call to audition for Paul Simon’s 1986 multi-platinum album Kumalo had been helping out a local mechanic when he was invited to Ovation Studios in downtown Johannesburg
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