Beginnings At the end of his junior year in high school, Brigham moved with his family to
Paris, and from 1969 to 1970 attended The
American School of Paris. It was in Paris that Brigham met Phil Steele, then known as Phil Trainer. He was a 22- or 23-year-old bass player and vocalist, and he "raided" Philip's high school rock band, taking Phil on guitar, Gerry Murphy on drums, and flute player Chris Hayward. Steele had previously played in Japan and Italy and knew British keyboard player Alan Reeves, then 25 or 26, because Reeves had played in a band called Clinic in both countries, and Phil Steele did some Clinic gigs in Italy. They put together a five-piece band, and because they were British-American, and had some music industry connections, they immediately got signed to a production company, and subsequently were signed to
EMI in France.
The Road to Salina After signing with EMI France, Reeves' fashion model wife,
Albane Navizet, took a bit part in a French film by director
Georges Lautner called
Road to Salina. Lautner already had French pop singer
Christophe on board for a few songs, and some orchestral stuff, but wanted some rock music for his film. He originally wanted
Pink Floyd, then popular in Europe though virtually unknown in the U.S., but they were not available, so Clinic got a demo tape together and Albane gave it to Georges Lautner. He liked what he heard. By mostly luck, Clinic were in the right place at the right time, and got the nod to work on the soundtrack. Since the songs were being written individually by Steele, Reeves, or Brigham, or in some combination, they decided to say that all songs were Brigham-Reeves-Steele, to avoid arguments over which songs got shown to the film people.
Early recordings Some of the seven songs used in the film were written before they saw the sections of film the director wanted music for, but luckily they fit. In a few cases, such as for example "The Chase", they were brand new compositions and really was a collaborative effort between the writers. They were very young when they got the chance to write music for
Road to Salina, mostly in their late teens, or early 20s, and young, as in the band had not been together very long. By the time they got to do their own album, ''Now We're Even'' (recorded in 1971, released in 1972 in France), they had more of a style, similar to
Santana on instruments meeting
Crosby, Stills and Nash on vocals. When they were either writing new tunes specifically for the movie, or trying to find songs that fit from songs various Clinic members had written before, they were still trying to find a sound.
Forming a sound Phil Steele was t by the likes of
The Hollies,
The Turtles and
The Zombies. Alan Reeves had learned jazz piano from his paternal relatives when he was a boy, and had become a Hammond organ player in the style of
Jon Lord or
Keith Emerson. Chris Hayward had studied classical music for flute and recorder while Gerry Murphy was a jazz fan but also appreciative of the likes of
The Band. Phil Brigham was coming at music like a singer-songwriter, although since Clinic, other musicians have thought of him more as a rock lead guitarist. Bringing all of those influences together was exciting for the young band, but it took them a long time to figure out how it might all fit.
The Chase "The Chase" was put together initially as a jam thing that they wrote specifically for
Road to Salina, as opposed to some of the other tunes in that film that were written before it, and they just happened to fit. Phil Brigham started playing "The Chase" by spontaneously playing the guitar riff that opens the tune. Alan Reeves played some rock/classical organ on top of it. At one point, they go to another section with four sustained chords which Alan Reeves came up with, just to get some relief from the repetitiveness of the riff.
Scoring a movie Brigham was a senior in high school when Clinic did the soundtrack, and he never saw the totally completed film until later. They would be shown say 1:03 minute's worth of film, and told "put some music of such-and-such type here". When the movie came out, even at age 19, Phil was a little embarrassed at how bad the quality of the production was. The movie was neither a commercial or critical success, but Brigham, Reeves & Trainer all did receive royalties, as the three songwriters from 1972 to 1988. So, while
Road to Salina is admittedly "low budget", Phil Brigham feels that if he never took part in it, he would never have gotten a writing credit years later for the
Quentin Tarantino film,
Kill Bill Volume 2. == Back in the United States ==