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Saturday, May 17, 2025
The Nields - Bulletproof
Gotta Get Over Greta began in the fall of 1994 when Dave Hower called me up a few minutes after I’d called him to tell him we had twelve gigs in October for which we’d be needing his services. He said, “I’d better join the band for good.” I ran, shrieking, to the building next door [the NEO theatre at Loomis Chaffee School] where David Nields and Dave Chalfant were working on some music for Peer Gynt. I told them the great news. At that point, after many years and three previous recordings, The Nields, the five of us, was complete.
The first song written after that fateful day was “Bulletproof” which David and I wrote in a little lookout tower on the Outer Banks of North Carolina over Thanksgiving holiday. A few weeks later came “I Know What Kind of Love This Is.” I wrote the melody on a piano and walked around the room singing it to myself until it turned into a story. Around Christmas time as I was wrapping presents, I heard David playing my acoustic in the next room and singing “Gimme my ball back, yeah.” We didn’t arrange that song for another nine months, but that’s when “King of the Hill” was born. “Fountain of Youth” and “Best Black Dress” were written in the Spring of ’95. I was thinking about power relationships and generational warfare and Steely Dan’s “Hey Nineteen.” We arranged these two at Loomis Chaffee’s NEO Theatre and I remember our excitement when David Nields and Dave Chalfant came up with their bass/guitar interlocking duo on “Fountain.” Around that time, David wrote “Cowards,” and the five of us went up to Dave Chalfant’s brand new studio, Sackamusic, in Amherst [now in Conway] to record a demo of these five songs [all the above except “King of the Hill”] to send to record companies. We did a show at the Bottom Line, along with Acoustic Junction, Hart Rouge and our dear friend Dar Williams. It was hosted by WFUV DJ Rita Houston and Dar said, “Why don’t we work up ‘Lovely Rita’ to sing in her honor?” Dar’s record company, Razor & Tie was at the show and said, “Hey Nields, we’d like to put out your record.”
So we began preparing for that eventuality by seeking out different producers. A trip to Memphis was in order to do some work with John Hampton at Ardent Studio (he produced the Gin Blossoms there). Out of those sessions we kept takes of “Cowards” and “Alfred Hitchcock” for our EP Abigail. We also recorded “Fountain of Youth,” which later made it onto “Greta.” We had a great time with Hampton and ate a lot of peanuts and played with the velcro cats who prowled around the studio and would stay suspended on the carpet-covered walls just like those birthday party balloons do when you rub them just so.
In the fall of ’95 we relocated to Long View Farm Studio in North Brookfield MA to record with Kevin Moloney, a lovely, delightful Irishman fond of Guinness and the Beatles. We were psyched to work with him because we greatly admired his production of Sinead O’Connor’s first record The Lion and the Cobra. He slept in Keith Richard’s windowless room and ate a strict vegetarian diet, except for the last night when he had lamb with mint sauce. We breathed in the good New England autumn air, patted the horses and made our record, track by track. From: https://nerissanields.com/thoughts-on-the-history-of-gotta-get-over-greta/
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