Versatile musician, guitarist, vocalist, composer, producer and arranger Steve
Lukather was born in Los Angeles on October 21 in 1957. Before his father
bought him a guitar (a simple Kay acoustic) and a copy of
Meet the Beatles
at the age of seven, Luke started to play drums and keyboards. "I love
keyboards, I write all my songs on keyboards except for the real obvious 'burn'
tunes. I find it much easier, you have all these great synth sounds and you
play a C chord and it's sounds like God, and you start thinking melodies as
opposed to chops." (Lukather, 1986).
The guitar and the Beatles album changed the life of the young boy. "Just the
sound of it overcame my whole soul, if you want to call it that. I knew that's
what I wanted to do. I remember George Harrison played a solo in
I saw her
standing there and just the sound of the guitar bending and the reverb
struck a nerve inside of me." (Lukather, 1993).
In the years following Lukather taught himself how to play the guitar. He hung
out with older friends who showed him how to play and how to set the chords. At
high school he met the Porcaro brothers who were a couple of years older than
him. Jeff Porcaro and David Paich were already doing session stuff. "I was
selftaught until about 15 and then I started taking lessons with
(classical/jazz/country player) Jimmy Wyble. He taught me how to read and I
took a lot of other classes, like orchestration. I wanted to learn. At that
point i was really intrigued by the whole session thing. It wasn't something I
wanted to do since I was a little kid. I didn't know anything about it until I
was in high school. I always thought it was kind of cool to be able to play on
all these great artists' records." (Lukather, 1993).
During his high school period especially Jeff Porcaro turned out to be like a
brother and mentor for Steve Lukather. "Jeff was like my mentor; he was a guy I
looked up to. He and the whole Porcaro family had so much to do with my getting
a break in the music business. Jeff was already in Steely Dan when I met him.
That was 1972, and growing up in that whole environment was a gift. We learned
the whole
Katy lied Steely Dan record before it ever came out. In my
high school band I was playing with Mike Landau, John Pierce, Steve Porcaro and
Carlos Vega. Everybody else has since gone on to do really well. Growing up in
that environment ..." (Lukather, 1993)
After playing and touring with Boz Scaggs, David Paich and Jeff Porcaro asked
Steve Lukather, Bobby Kimball, David Hungate and Steve Porcaro in 1976 to join
for their own band Toto. In the meantime David Paich, Jeff Porcaro and people
like Jay Graydon involved Lukather more and more in the session business. In
the late seventies and the eighties Lukather showed himself a first class and
first called session musician, who played with everybody on the planet (check
out the discography).
"Toto was Dave and Jeff's band and vision. I was 19 and so honored to be invited in. You gotta dig, these guys were and still are my hero's. I still can't believe they chose me!!! It was my personal dream come true and that's why I stepped up to the plate when someone had to. Paich and Jeff are soul brothers. I use that in the present tense because when Jeff died, so did our leader. Paich was the brains and tunesmith but Jeff was the spirit and soul. You can't do one without the other. These guys had *IT*! THE thing that you can't describe. It was like being with genius', not in a pompous way at all, just the real shit. The real heart and soul of music. Critics will never understand just how real this band was and still is! Yeah, after 4 lead singers and me being with the band from day one, I picked up the ball and ran with it! Someone had to! I have NEVER been or will ever be the "leader" of Toto... No one guy is, but I will take the bull by the balls and try and keep this legacy alive." (Lukather, 2005)
In September 1977 Toto released their first album
Toto that generated
the hit singles
Hold the line,
I'll supply the love and
Georgy
Porgy. With the album David Paich and Steve Lukather started a more
than 25 years Toto career. As the diagram in this website points out Lukather
did some minor contributions to the songwriting in the first years of the Toto
career. However his contributions increased by degrees. "I've been writing
songs since I was a kid, but I kind of stopped writing when I joined Toto
because Dave had all these incredible tunes. Every day he'd come in and say
'Dig my new tune' and when he played it, it would be a killer tune. To my ears
anyway. But towards the second album, like the song
Hydra, which was a
group written tune and I came up with the riff parts. So it started with that
album and on the third album I wrote three tunes and the fourth also had three
or four tunes, and then gradually I'm writing more and more. And then there
were a couple of hit records with other people, like with The Tubes I wrote
Talk
to ya later and
She's a beauty and also the Benson tune
Turn your
love around with Jay Graydon and Bill Champlin. So I started writing
different weird things for other people and that made me a little more
confident about my song writing. Then we started co-writing in the band a
little bit more, and by the
Toto IV album we were really writing a lot
together." (Lukather, 1986)
The year 1982 turned out to be the most successful (commercially) in Toto's and
Lukather's career. Lukather, Paich and Jeff and Steve Porcaro contributed
heavily to Michael Jackson's
Thriller album, that turned out to be the
most successful album in music history ever (over 50 million copies). The album
Toto
IV went platinum and the hitsingles
Rosanna and
Africa became
all time classics. A year later Toto received six golden grammophones at the
Grammy Awards in relation to
Toto IV and Lukather gained a Grammy for
best rhythm & blues song
Turn your love around, co-written with Jay
Graydon and Bill Champlin.
Although the next Toto albums were less successful than
Toto IV,
Lukather was (co-)writing more than ever and appeared to be more and more
selective in his session work. "We did the sessions for a long time but we're
not doing that anymore. It kind of bugs me that people still go, "Oh yeah,
those studio guys." I'm tired of that label. I'm proud of a lot of the work I
did and I'm ashamed of some of the other work. You know, sometimes you have to
polish a turd. That's the bottom line. That's what it is, man - get out the
brown polish, man, here we go. I just didn't want to do that anymore. I wanted
to play music that I liked with people that I respected." (Lukather, 1993).
After touring with Jeff Beck, Simon Phillips and Carlos Santana in Japan,
Lukather released in 1989 his first solo album
Lukather, music wise a
very heterogeneous album with contributions of lots of musical friends he
respected and had worked with: Michael Landau, Danny Kortchmar, Randy Goodrum,
Eddie Van Halen, David Paich, Steve Stevens, Jeff Porcaro, Richard Marx etc. In
the same year he released the first (self-titled) album of his side project Los
Lobotomys, live recorded with the cream of westcoast musicians like David
Garfield, Jeff Porcaro, Vince Colaiuta and Will Lee for example. "I like to be
making records or playing live. That's why I play with Los Lobotomys. We don't
rehearse; it's just fun to get together and play in a club just to keep the
chops up. I like to feel the tips of my fingers and it makes me feel like I'm
doing something." (Lukather, 1993)
In 1991, right after the departure of Toto's fourth lead singer Jean-Michel
Byron, Steve Lukather takes over the role of lead singer in the band. "There's
certain techniques that you can learn from professional vocal coaches. I never
lost my voice in the all the shows that we did. It was amazing to me. But I
warm up properly. It takes me 20 or 25 minutes just to sing along with this
tape while I'm getting dressed. Then I'd play the guitar for 20 minutes, have a
beer and shoot the shit, stretch out and I was ready to go. It's like anything
else. It's like playing guitar, man. If you haven't played for a while and you
pick it up and you start playing all this stuff, after a while your muscles
feel tight." (Lukather, 1993).
In 1992, right after the
Kingdom of desire recordings, Lukather had to
cope with one of the most heavy losts in his life, the sudden death of his
brother and mentor Jeff Porcaro, who died of a heart attack after an allergic
reaction to a pesticide he was spraying in his garden. "How can I equate this?
It's so hard for me to actually come to grips with how to put how I feel into
words. It's so hard. I'll never be the same without him. But he'll always be
with me. I have pictures of him over at my house. I feel his presence."
(Lukather, 1993).
"Lots of people think when Jeff died, so did Toto. True in some ways but... The rest of us left to noy play together would not bring Jeff back. We are trying to keep the music alive. I am the only guy that has made every Toto gig and been there from day one, nor have I backed off of trying to keep this thing burnin'. Maybe we will never write an
Africa again etc... but we will die trying! We have been together as Toto for 28 years; more if you count High School. We have done amazingly well against all odds and critics hatred worldwide. Jeff lives in our hearts and the music he created with us, and Jeff was always the last word! He just happened to be the coolest and smartest and most together... despite bullshit rumours, of which there are many!!!" (Lukather, 2005)
A few weeks before the
Kingdom of desire tour the three Toto members
Steve Lukather, David Paich and Mike Porcaro decided to go ahead with the tour
and asked Simon Phillips, who toured with Lukather before in Japan, to replace
Jeffrey. This decision turned out to be a 'lucky' one, because Simon developed
himself as an integrated member of Toto and a very stimulating musical partner
for Lukather and his band Los Lobotomys. "But I'm still here to play and we've
been playing. At one point of course we thought we should break up. We haven't
had a record out in the States in five years. This record,
Kingdom of Desire,
is the last piece of work that Jeff did with us. He had something to do with
the writing and the whole spirit of the four guys who went to school together,
without the three lead singers who for various reasons just didn't last. That
was always a big problem with Toto as far as identity. We started out as a hard
rock band and we ended up with the record company getting way too involved with
the choice of singles. Since we have a new record company it's like a new lease
on life. Then Simon Phillips came out and played with us." (Lukather, 1993).
After the
Kingdom of desire tour Lukather apparently had to change his
mind, on his life and on his musical career. On the Toto album
Tambu he
and his musical mates did a lot of personal reflection in the lyrics of the
songs. "Where do I go from here? How do I find my way? When is it loud and
clear, that there's no turning back? No looking back. Where do I go from here?
Nobody gets away. It's a new kind of fix, for the poor and the rich. You never
know what's coming next..." (
The turning point, 1995).
What's coming next for Lukather is a second solo album,
Candyman (1994),
actually a very coherent and heavy Los Lobotomys project with Simon Phillips,
David Garfield and Fee Waybill, his third solo album
Luke (1997), a very
personal and musical journey through the past, his fourth solo album
Santamental
(2003), with very hazardous fusion and rock interpretations of classic and new
Xmas songs, five new Toto projects culminating in the return of Bobby Kimball
as lead singer on
Mindfields (1999),
Livefields (1999),
Through
the looking glass (2002) and
25th Anniversary Live in Amsterdam (on
dvd and cd), and lots of interesting musical side projects. Contributions to
projects of David Garfield, Richard Marx, Mike Terrana, Pat Torpey, Gregg
Bissonette etc. and touring with his friend and musical mentor Larry Carlton
and his mate Edgar Winter.
During their Japanese tour in 1998 Carlton and Lukather recorded a couple of
shows. In 2001 they released a selection of songs recorded in the Blue Note in
Osaka, in November 1998, on their live album
No substitutions. They
finally got their honour on February 27th 2002 in L.A.: Larry and Luke are the
winners of the Grammy in category 11 Best Pop Instrumental Album for solo
artists, duos or groups with their album
No substitutions. Luke stated
that this award was particularly meaningful for him because of who his winning
partner is. "When I was just starting to play, Larry was my hero. To be
standing here 25 years later on stage with him with awards in our hands, it's a
dream come true."
In view of his musical development, Lukather became more and more open,
sensitive and pure. His voice developed strong and warm and his guitar sound
became more and more direct and sharp, no matter if he's raging or playing
tender ballads. All these developments seem to come together on Lukather's
contributions to the album
Inertia (2001) by Derek Sherinian, with Simon
Phillips, Zakk Wylde, Jerry Goodman and Tom Kennedy. "Derek's cd is probably my
best recorded work in my whole career. Simon got the best outta me. It's just
me playin thru a 1/12 Marchall with my guitar, no efx, just a little delay from
the board. Great cd! I'm very proud of it!" (Lukather, 2001).
In 2004 and 2005 Lukather contributed to new albums and songs of some old musical friends like Van Halen, Joe Cocker, Edgar Winter, Les Paul & Friends and Tommy Lee. On top of touring with Toto and his new own band El Grupo (with Steve Weingart, Oskar Cartaya and Joey Heredia), Lukather spent alot of time in the studio in 2005 with his Toto mates to record the new Toto album
Falling in between, released in 2006 and followed by a major world tour in 2006 and 2007 and the first months of 2008, ending up with a Japan tour together with Boz Scaggs in March 2008, which makes the Toto circle round. Having Greg Phillinganes as an official Toto member, replacing David Paich at the live concerts, Lukather and his Toto mates have given their best for the new album. Lukather: "If this is the last record we ever make (it won’t be, I hope), I can walk away knowing we threw DOWN the best we got. I hope the fans will all enjoy and appreciate the love and passion that went into making
Falling in between. Our old singer Joseph Williams came back and did a duet with me that's total radio, almost like
Africa part 2, plus there is Ian Anderson (Jethro Tull), the Chicago horn section, L. Shankar (Peter Gabriel), Lenny Castro, Steve Porcaro, jazz trumpeter Roy Hargrove and more guests. I think when people hear it everyone will have a smile on the face. EVERYONE in the band brought their best to the party!"
From September 2006 till the summer of 2007, during the spare weeks he wasn’t on tour with Toto, Lukather worked on his new solo album
Ever changing times, encouraged by his longtime co-writing friend Randy Goodrum. Lukather: “My writing partner / executive producer Randy Goodrum suggested that I should do this record. He got me excited to do something different and work with such great players and songwriters. I was also thrilled that my son Trevor co-wrote two of the tunes with us and my daughter sang on a tune and all my friends and amazing musos came out to support”. The list of special guest also includes former Toto singer Joseph Williams and Chicago’s Bill Champlin on background vocals, Leland Sklar on bass, Steve Weingart, Jeff Babko, Randy Goodrum on keyboards and synths plus a Steve Porcaro cameo on the instrumental track, Abe Laboriel Jr. on drums and other friends and guest stars who all lent their talent to ensure a truly exciting and fresh result.
The results of this new studio effort, released in February 2008, are eleven songs which incorporate all aspects Steve Lukather is well known for. “The record rocks harder than Toto, but there is enough melodic stuff on there to please any Toto fan. There is also music that sounds youthful because my co-producer Steve MacMillan and my son were keeping me honest and up to date” says Lukather, “It shows a lot of my influences and music I like. If it sounds good, then I keep it”. Of course the release of Ever changing times will get a follow up by a solo world tour from June 2008. Lukather: “I'm the guy that's really gonna go out and go for it right away. I have a cool product and I'm putting together a great band and I got dates on the books. So I'm hoping that the record does well and I'll be able to build on that and stay out there for a while and get my own thing going on.”
In the 1993 duologue with his good friend Eddie Van Halen Lukather sighed that
he would have been more respected as a guitarist if he had just done Toto. That
statement has got everything to do with the mind setting of the critics who
tried to shadow the musical development of Steve Lukather. How easy and
comfortable is it to get a musician into an explicit corner of the musical
history? And how much trouble do you want to give yourself to sift out the
versatility, the importance and the delight of the musical capacities of Steve Lukather?
Grammy Awards:
1982, Best R&B song: Steve Lukather, Jay Graydon, Bill Champlin (for George Benson) - Turn your love around.
1982, Producer of the year: Toto - Toto IV.
1982, Album of the year: Toto - Toto IV.
1982, Record of the year: Toto - Rosanna.
2001, Best pop instrumental album: Larry Carlton & Steve Lukather - No substitutions, live in Osaka.
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