Skip Drinkwater
Skip Drinkwater is an American record producer. He is best known for working with jazz artists, Norman Connors, Alphonse Mouzon and Eddie Henderson, as well as discovering the Catalyst and working with the all black heavy metal band Sound Barrier.
Production Discography
- Catalyst - Catalyst 1972
- Neptune - The Visitors 1972
- Dance Of Magic - Norman Connors 1972
- Realization - Eddie Henderson 1973
- Dark Of Light - Norman Connors 1973
- First Time Out - James Montgomery Band 1973
- Monkey In A Silk Suit Is Still A Monkey - Duke Williams And The Extremes 1973
- Inside Out - Eddie Henderson 1974
- Love From The Sun - Norman Connors 1974
- Slewfoot - Norman Connors 1974
- Sunburst - Eddie Henderson 1975
- Saturday Night Special - Norman Connors 1975
- Mind Transplant - Alphonse Mouzon 1975
- Level One - The Eleventh House featuring Larry Coryell 1975
- Mango Surprise - John Lee & Gerry Brown 1975
- Heritage - Eddie Henderson 1976
- Yesterday's Dreams - Alphonso Johnson 1976
- You Are My Starship - Norman Connors 1976
- The Man Incognito - Alphonse Mouzon 1976
- A Tear And A Smile - Catalyst 1976
- Anticipation - Willie Tee 1976
- First Course - Lee Ritenour 1976
- Still Can't Say Enough - John Lee & Gerry Brown 1976
- Comin' Through - Eddie Henderson 1977
- Romantic Journey - Norman Connors 1977
- Captain Fingers - Lee Ritenour 1977
- Mahal - Eddie Henderson 1977
- René & Angela - René & Angela 1979
- Runnin' To Your Love - Eddie Henderson 1979
- Total Control (album) - Sound Barrier1983
- Chico DeBarge - Chico DeBarge 1986
- Skin on Skin - Vanity 1986
gollark: *continues not being scared of giannis*
gollark: They have a regular structure, and you could store one bit per atom, which is a lot. The main problem is that you would probably need stupidly advanced technology to read and write them.
gollark: One very dense method for storing information in science fiction stuff is sticking it in patterns of isotopes in a diamond or something.
gollark: I don't think *individual* microorganisms store that much DNA (in bytes) so you would have to split it across many of them like some sort of vaguely insane RAID array.
gollark: You would also have to *catch* enough copies afterward.
External links
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