Tony Green



   To me music is life, and it is my life.

A lot of the music that’s out today says nothing to me.


   I went from singing in the church choir to producing.

I’m happy if I make other people happy.



As iconic as basslines get: Tony T. Money Green's work on "Gin & Juice" with Snoop Dogg 



SOME THINGS ON THE YEARS WITH THE DRAMATICS 

(Editor’s note: If you are new to The Dramatics you may want to check out some Dramatics’ basics to get the most out of this segment… and we strongly recommend that you check out some Dramatics’ basics and familiarize yourself, if so…because you have been missing out if you are new to The Dramatics. We get straight into things, mostly into things in the 1970s, in this text, which is a treat for those who know their Dramatics!)



L.J. Reynolds, Tony Green, Ron Banks

L.J. Reynolds, Tony Green, Ron Banks



   What it smelled like inside United Sound? OMG. Behind George it smelled of funk. They took the funk seriously and didn’t wash. And cocaine. It smelled of booty and cocaine. Around us it smelled of weed.

It looked a little like a spaceship. There was a studio to the side when you came in through the door and then eight steps down there was the main studio. It was huge. The big old board lit up. It felt like you made it when you stepped in there, just being there. Sometimes when the sessions ran late I took a snooze under those steps. 


   They want to move that building to the parking lot. Once they start moving things they move other things too. 


It happened that we recorded in other places.


 

United Sound, Detroit



   I came to the studio making deliveries… I was 17 and it turned out that I had a band. Surprise! So they came to see a show, and thought that we were good – and that was the start of my journey with The Dramatics. It was Ron who got me in the band. 



   I didn’t work with Tony Hester but I saw him work, and he really really couldn’t sing. He would say ‘’Here Ron – can you do this part?’’ and then there would be some type of noise coming out of him. 

He really was the best writer for The Dramatics, and people got jealous of him for his talent. There was so much talent going down the drain with the loss of him, and The Dramatics were lost for what to do. 


 

Tony Hester & the original Dramatics in the studio



  LJ and Ron lead the band rehearsals. Ron could say things like ‘’Go to the round! Go to the round...’’. So I told the band to go to the change. That was what he meant in Ron Banks’ language. 

  Ron was the charismatic one. So many times when we were in places people would call out ‘’ – Hey Ron Banks’’, ‘’ – What’s up, Ron Banks?’’. 

   LJ would really rehearse. He can play four-five instruments, and at times I practiced with LJ every day – every day. LJ liked that and we could translate that to the band and know that we would have a hell of a show. 

   LJ and Ron were often arguing wanting different things. But our rehearsals were very serious rehearsals because we wanted to deliver good shows. The dance rehearsals were different rehearsals and the band got to see it at the end.



   During the first years we traveled in a Trailways bus. It was a 50-seater. The group would sit in the front. The band would sit in the back. Tony Anthony, our bus-driver, got us anywhere and could handle anything. It said The Dramatics on the side, so people looked at the bus. 

We slept on that bus, and you either stretched your legs across the isle or slept cramped sitting up. This is why I have arthritis now. 

Once the group flew to California and the band went on the bus – and didn’t make the show. The Dramatics are great but people didn’t really want to hear the acapella show. They realized that they needed the band, that we were as important for the show to happen as they were. 

After “Be My Girl” everything changed. We got treated a lot better. The group started flying places and we got two buses with beds and living rooms.


   Normally we would do shows from Thursdays through Saturdays. In California we would do shows every night of the week, and two shows a night. 

Our manager Forest Hamilton did the show bookings. 



The Dramatics live in Houston...



  The Dramatics had two roadies who carried our luggage and one valet, Andre Barber. 

Usually we did shows with other groups so there wasn’t much backline to set up, as it was already there. The roadies carried our instruments. 


   Sometimes LJ and Ron were at the soundchecks, sometimes the whole group was there. 

LJ was always going to make sure that the show would be kicking ass. We knew that we would kick ass.


   The set-lists changed a lot in the beginning. At the time of the Dramatics’ reunion we kept the same show for two years. That was when Wee Gee was back for a while. I do the same thing now. I have had the same show for four years, and you work on perfecting it.



   New York was a hard place to tour at times. They didn’t like us there. We played something and after we did nobody clapped. We broke New York with “Be My Girl”. It changed there after that and they started to like us. 


   I was in this band for a long time, and others who were include Anthony Booker and Dewayne Lomax, though maybe no one was in the band for as long as I was.



The Dramatics "Welcome Back Home" co-written by Tony Green



   I wrote songs with Ron and LJ. 

I couldn’t write lyrics but you can always count on me for a bass-line to build on. 

We wrote songs in the basement of Ron’s house. Ron could get a little worried at times. He wasn’t a great lyricist but he really could sing. 

LJ could really write and produce songs. He’s very talented and plays drums, piano, did everything himself. 

The other group members didn’t show an interest in writing songs, but Lenny would sometimes show up when songs were written because he wanted to make sure that he would be singing on them. 


   When we did Do What You Want To Do we were on the cutting edge of a new sound, going into synthesizers. We lucked out and people liked it. It was their first gold album. Many of their albums are of course gold by now… 



A LITTLE ON T MONEY MAKING THE SWITCH TO CALI



Dr. Dre, Tony Green



   I got The Dramatics in the studio with Dr. Dre, and after that other soul groups came running to me asking if I could do the same thing for them – but I really couldn’t. The Dramatics were streetwise enough to do a record with Snoop Dogg, it might not have worked with another group. 

   I got more people from Detroit in that studio though. George Clinton of course, but also Ricky Rouse and Butch Small. Working with Dr. Dre I got a band in. That was new, because they hadn’t had one before.


   The day Dre hired me was a good day. 

He never had a musician of caliber in before. I didn’t tell him. I didn’t want to seem old. 

He gave me drumlines and I put basslines on top. My bass was the groundwork. That was a song. Everybody added things on top of that. 


   It’s hard to tell me what to play. I’ma give you what you want. Just give me a beat. I played the bass for 52 years now, I’ll give you what you want. 


 

Tony Green, Snoop Dogg



   Everybody loves Snoop Dogg for his twangy little voice. He had it when he was young and he has it now. People also love him because he’s a real nice guy. He carries himself like a superstar and he always did. 


   His work process was that Dre had the music laid out for him, then Snoop would take all day to write for it. He did not rush his writing. He came up with something good so you are glad that you did the waiting. 


   They did a lot of things that were new and innovative at the time, such as the singing-rapping. 



   It’s good that you hear that the bassline on “Gin & Juice” is slightly off! That means that you have a good ear… 

What happened was that I had just gotten the bass out of the bass bag and I wanted to tune up. Dre said don’t. I said that ‘- I’m a professional and I have to tune up’. Dre said ‘- If you tune up you’re fired’. 

That bassline proves that there is no right and wrong in music. 


  I play the bass upside down. My father (William Austin - a well known bassist, editor’s comment) told me to put it down. I thought that he was hating on me, but later he said that he sure was glad that I didn’t listen to him. 

Now my daughter turns things upside-down. 



A BIT ABOUT THE PRESENT


 



   I just signed a distribution deal with Universal. 


   I have a massive vault with unreleased material. I have so much great stuff that just never came out. That includes artists that just never were heard and people who did things behind the curtain. And my own material, in some cases my material that other people just took and put their name on it. 


   There is going to be good stuff coming out. 



T Money Green and Roadwork's G Funk Review live in Detroit




TONY T MONEY GREEN is a successful and DMA-decorated bassist, composer, producer, band leader and the CEO for his label Hyped International Records – based in Detroit. After he formed his band the Roadwork Crew, in the early 70s, Green has contributed his bass magic to some of the most iconic music made in the last few decades. He is currently busy getting new and previously unreleased music to people’s ear-drums through a new distribution deal with Universal. 


FIND OUT MORE HERE


There is a more content about and with The Dramatics on this platform.

There is an In Memoriam for Mr. Willie Ford, who sadly passed on in May of this year. READ IT HERE

There is also an interview with L.J. Reynolds, published in 2018. READ IT HERE