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Jimmy Vivino and the Basic Cable Band

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected fromThe Max Weinberg 7)
Former house band for Conan O'Brien
Jimmy Vivino
and the Basic Cable Band
OriginNew York, New York,U.S.
OccupationsHouse band
Years active
    • 1993–2018
    • 1993–2009 (as The Max Weinberg 7)
    • 2009–2010 (asthe Tonight Show Band)
    • 2010 (as The Legally Prohibited Band)
    • 2010–2019 (as The Basic Cable Band)
    • 2021 (as The Basic Cable Four)
LabelsHip-O (as The Max Weinberg 7)
Past members

Jimmy Vivino and the Basic Cable Band was thehouse band forConan O'Brien'slate-night talk showConan from its debut on November 8, 2010 to the final episode of its 60-minute format October 4, 2018.[1]Guitarist andarrangerJimmy Vivino is the group's leader. The group was originally formed and led bydrummerMax Weinberg in 1993, and played under the nameThe Max Weinberg 7 when it was the house band forLate Night with Conan O'Brien in New York through 2009. The band then played underMax Weinberg and The Tonight Show Band during their brief 2009–2010 stint onThe Tonight Show with Conan O'Brien in Los Angeles. They were then briefly known asThe Legally Prohibited Band during their participation with O'Brien in the 2010The Legally Prohibited from Being Funny on Television Tour.

During The Max Weinberg 7 days, the band included Jimmy Vivino onguitar, Richie "LaBamba" Rosenberg ontrombone,Scott Healy onkeyboard,Mike Merritt onbass guitar,Mark "Love Man" Pender ontrumpet andacoustic guitar, and Jimmy's older brotherJerry Vivino onwoodwinds. When the group moved to Los Angeles to becomeThe Tonight Show Band, they added an eighth member,James Wormworth, on percussion. Wormworth had often substituted as drummer when Weinberg toured withBruce Springsteen as a member of theE Street Band, prior to being made a permanent fixture in the band; Jimmy Vivino had served as the band's leader during those periods. Weinberg did not participate in the Legally Prohibited Tour and his departure from the group and from O'Brien was made official in September 2010.

The band's final regular appearance onConan was on the show's last hour-long episode on October 4, 2018. With the show switching to a half-hour format, it was announced the band would not be returning in 2019. They appeared on four special episodes recorded atSan Diego Comic-Con that year, and the final eight episodes of the program in 2021 asJimmy Vivino and the Basic Cable Four.

History

[edit]

The Max Weinberg 7

[edit]
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Max Weinberg was bandleader from 1993 to 2010.

Max Weinberg was the drummer forBruce Springsteen as a member of theE Street Band until its dissolution in 1989. Weinberg returned to college to finish his communications degree and contemplated law school, but soon desired to resume drumming. He auditioned to be the principal drummer for the Broadway showTommy, but was selected as the second substitute. That night, Weinberg had a chance sidewalk meeting outside theCarnegie Deli with newly selectedLate Night hostConan O'Brien, where Weinberg spoke about his ideas for music on the show. O'Brien agreed to give Weinberg an audition asbandleader for his forthcoming show. Weinberg quickly put together The Max Weinberg 7, recruiting musicians he had worked with during his career, and got the job.

Rosenberg and Pender had played withThe Miami Horns, and had a long joint history with Weinberg from touring or recording together with Springsteen,Southside Johnny,Little Steven,Gary U.S. Bonds, andDarlene Love. In the early 1990s Weinberg and Pender were also in a band together called Killer Joe, which also featured Jimmy and Jerry Vivino. The Vivino brothers were experiencedNew York session musicians and had been members of variousBroadway pit bands. They recruited the final two members of the band, Healy and Merritt, who had played together in various bands such as Jimmy Vivino & The Black Italians and The Vivino Brothers Band.[2] Fill-in James Wormworth was also a member of the Vivino bands, but was initially left out of the ensemble because there was no need for two drummers.[3]

Members of the band have participated in skits onLate Night, particularlyfedoraed LaBamba—who rarely speaks on air and is often thepunchline of O'Brien's jokes—andbald,bespectacledMark Pender, who will often sing a tribute to one of the show's guests only to invariably launch into hysterical shrieking as he climbs thescaffolding of the studio's seating area. Pender was also told by O'Brien to imitate soccer playerZinedine Zidane's famousWorld Cupheadbutt due to both Pender and Zidane's lack of hair. O'Brien would tease Wormworth because he drummed barefoot.

Weinberg was often involved in short, awkward, and/or humorous banter with O'Brien. O'Brien often made jokes about Weinberg's supposedly perverse sexual habits. Rosenberg is often the butt of jokes for both his healthy sized mustache and his often awkward demeanor on air, and his sexual orientation is occasionally questioned by O'Brien through monologue jokes and other comedy bits. O'Brien often has Rosenberg participate in potentially humiliating skits, such as dressing up his mustache in Christmas lights, or shaving it off. Additionally, Rosenberg provided thefalsetto interludes for the formerly regular skits "In the Year 2000" and "In the Year 3000". A noted incident of ridicule occurred in 2007 when the camera, which had unexpectedly cut to the band for a reaction shot, caught LaBamba consulting his sheet music with a somewhat puzzled look on his face. This caused O'Brien to draw attention to Rosenberg's goof, and to claim that LaBamba could not read music. The others are rarely used in sketches, although Mike Merritt takes part in sketches where O'Brien talks about race, to which Merritt's supposed thoughts are used in a voice-over where he ridicules O'Brien's lack of knowledge aboutAfrican-American culture and O'Brien's own "abnormally" pale complexion.

The show often features a performance by a musical guest (a band or a solo artist) at the end, and some or even all members of The Max Weinberg 7 perform as backup musicians for the guests when needed, such as Weinberg performing the drums for the last half of theDeath from Above 1979 song, "Romantic Rights" while singer and drummerSebastien Grainger stands on thebass drum.

Weinberg has, in the past, taken long leaves of absence to tour with the E Street Band. During his absences, he has typically been replaced by James Wormworth, and the band is led by Jimmy Vivino, then referred to as "Jimmy Vivino and The Max Weinberg 7".

The band plays an eclectic selection of music on the show, including frequent performances of songs byThe Clash, one of O'Brien's favorite bands. Examples of songs by The Clash performed by the group include "Police on my Back", "The Magnificent Seven", "Rock the Casbah", "Spanish Bombs" and "Train in Vain".

The Max Weinberg 7 during a taping ofLate Night with Conan O'Brien inChicago in 2006.

The band will often play a song to match a holiday or event ("My Funny Valentine" onValentine's Day), or sometimes play a song that is irrelevant to the event, causing O'Brien to question their choice of song ("Paint It Black" duringChristmas).

The band's song "R.C.4" featured in the filmBewitched (2005).

Members of the band performed withBruce Springsteen and the E Street Band atSuper Bowl XLIII.

Max Weinberg andThe Tonight Show Band

[edit]

When O'Brien relocated to Los Angeles to become host ofThe Tonight Show, The Max Weinberg 7 relocated with him, and added an eighth member, James Wormworth, on percussion.[4] Jimmy Vivino and Weinberg reworked theLate Night theme into a "less manic"The Tonight Show theme.[5] The backdrop used for the bandstand depicts theEmpire State Building and theChrysler Building set within a Los Angeles skyline, in recognition of theLate Night roots.[5]

As part of his preparation for the move, Weinberg consulted withDoc Severinsen, theTonight Show band leader during theJohnny Carson days.[4]

As was the case onLate Night, Weinberg temporarily left theTonight Show on occasion to tour with Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band. Jimmy Vivino took over as bandleader in this instance, and Wormworth moved over to drums. Ronnie Gutierrez was also brought in to cover for Wormworth on percussion. In the open, announcerAndy Richter referred to the group as "The Tonight Show Band", and the graphic was changed to acknowledge Weinberg's absence.

Also, as a result, a skit was born that whenever Weinberg appears on his last show before leaving, O'Brien would note that Weinberg deserves a 'proper send-off' and the band would start playing, as suddenly his pedestal would begin to drive itself outside the studio with Weinberg still playing. The pod would then move into the streets of Los Angeles where usually something absurd would happen such as Weinberg being pulled over or hit by a speeding truck.

The band leftThe Tonight Show along with O'Brien after O'Brien's last show as host, which aired January 22, 2010.[6]

The Legally Prohibited Band

[edit]

In April 2010, Conan O'Brien began hisThe Legally Prohibited from Being Funny on Television Tour. While the rest of the group was part of the tour under the moniker The Legally Prohibited Band, Weinberg was not,[7][8] though he did appear at the tour's New York stop.[9] Weinberg later revealed that he had undergone complex openheart valve repair surgery two weeks after the conclusion ofThe Tonight Show and had taken three months to recover from it.[10]

Jimmy Vivino and the Basic Cable Band

[edit]
Jimmy Vivino was bandleader from 2010 until the group disbanded in 2018.

It was initially unknown whether Weinberg would be joining O'Brien whenhis new late night show onTBS began in November 2010.[11] Most or all of the rest of the band were expected to follow O'Brien, alongside his other non-musical staff and crew, to the TBS program. By September 2010, it was clear that Weinberg would not be part of the show, now namedConan.[3][12] Jimmy Vivino was now the leader of the band, with Wormworth full-time on drums, and the band was firmly ensconced in Los Angeles as a base.[3] Upon announcing Weinberg's split from O'Brien in September 2010, O'Brien said, "Max has been a huge part of my life for the past 17 years and he is an incredible band leader and musician."[13] Weinberg said, "my association with Conan, his staff, and crew has been a deeply rewarding experience for me. And, making music with Jimmy Vivino, Mark Pender, La Bamba, Scott Healy, Mike Merritt, and percussionist James Wormworth enabled me to become a better musician and bandleader. I thank them for their first-rate work on the bandstand. I wish Conan and his show the best and I do look forward to dropping by."[13] Both looked forward to Weinberg occasionally stopping by to sit in on the new show.[13] Weinberg said his health was better than ever but that the "life-changing experience emotionally and spiritually" of the surgery and a desire to remain in New Jersey with his family had played a chief role in his departure from the band and O'Brien.[10]

On October 19, 2010, it was announced that the new band name for theConan show would be Jimmy Vivino and the Basic Cable Band.[14]

Weinberg made a cameo appearance in a monologue bit on the October 28, 2014 episode ofConan, briefly "filling in" on drums for regular drummer Wormworth, who had "gone missing" in the middle of the episode.[15]

On October 4, 2018, with the announcement of the show’s switch to a half-hour format, it was announced that The Basic Cable Band would no longer appear regularly on the program. Members did reunite for four special episodes atSan Diego Comic-Con in July 2019,[16] and for the show's final eight episodes (as Jimmy Vivino and the Basic Cable Four) in June 2021.

Discography

[edit]

Albums

Members

[edit]

Final lineup:

Past members:

References

[edit]
  1. ^Katherine Schaffstall (October 4, 2018)."'Conan' Airs Last Hourlong Episode, O'Brien Pays Tribute to Longtime Band".Hollywood Reporter. RetrievedOctober 4, 2018.
  2. ^Merritt, Mike."Biography". MikeMerritt.com. Archived fromthe original on February 1, 2011. RetrievedJanuary 16, 2011.
  3. ^abcSchaeffer, Christian (2010-09-22)."Jimmy Vivino Talks Johnnie Johnson, Conan O'Brien, and St. Louis' Role as a Rock & Roll Breeding Ground".Riverfront Times. St. Louis. Archived fromthe original on 2010-09-26. Retrieved2010-09-25.
  4. ^abSteinberg, Jacques (June 5, 2009)."For TV Band, Jet Lag Is Part of the Job".The New York Times. Retrieved2009-06-07.
  5. ^ab"Conan's 'Late Night' Theme Being Adapted for 'Tonight'".TVWeek. Retrieved2009-06-07.
  6. ^"Conan O'Brien, NBC Seal 'Tonight Show' Exit Deal".Fox News. 2010-01-20.
  7. ^Schneider, Michael (2010-03-11)."Coco Coast to Coast: Conan O'Brien announces his national tour (Updated)".Variety. Archived fromthe original on 2012-07-29. Retrieved2010-03-12.
  8. ^Sepich, Scott (2010-04-13)."Conan O'Brien Revives Edgy 'Late Night' Vibe at First Live Show".Rolling Stone. Archived fromthe original on April 17, 2010. Retrieved2010-04-16.
  9. ^Bleyaert, Aaron (2010-06-02)."Thank You Radio City!!". teamcoco.com. Archived fromthe original on 2010-06-07. Retrieved2010-06-03.
  10. ^abBuckman, Adam (2010-10-07)."Max Weinberg: Open Heart Surgery Influenced My Decision To Leave Conan". Fancast. Archived fromthe original on 2010-10-10. Retrieved2010-10-12.
  11. ^Adalian, Josef (2010-04-13)."How TBS outfoxed Fox to land Conan".Today.com. TheWrap.com. Archived fromthe original on 2014-05-14. Retrieved2010-04-16.
  12. ^Greene, Andy (2010-09-24)."Max Weinberg Officially Splits With Conan O'Brien".Rolling Stone. Archived fromthe original on September 26, 2010. Retrieved2010-09-25.
  13. ^abcJensen, Jeff (2010-09-27)."Bandleader Max Weinberg won't be following Conan O'Brien to TBS".EW.com. Retrieved2010-09-27.
  14. ^Gillin, Joshua (2010-10-20)."Anne Hathaway discusses nudity in new movie with Jake Gyllenhaal".St. Petersburg Times. Archived fromthe original on 2010-10-23. Retrieved2010-11-09.
  15. ^Max Weinberg Returns To CONAN - CONAN on TBS
  16. ^Jay Allen Sanford (2019-07-17)."No Comic-Con pass, no problem".San Diego Reader. Retrieved2019-07-20.
Episodes
See also
Incarnations
Episodes
The Tonight Show Band
Recurring sketches
Soundtracks
Related articles
Incarnations
Music
Episodes
Sketches
See also
International
National
Artists
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