Thursday, October 30, 2008

Local Boys Make Some Noise

My friend and fellow muso Doug had his 50th B-party not so long ago. Listening to the local boys, the Soul Doctors, make some noise, it really struck me how good they sounded. Downright kickass in fact.

It also reminds me of the myth that because a musician lives in a small town, somehow he may not be as good as someone living in the major cities of America. It's bullshit. Charleston can put its talent up against any place, anywhere. These cats can play baby.

We also have this idea that somehow fame is equal to talent. Talent is something difficult to measure until you see it in action and it has nothing to do with fame. Fame is more about ambition, looks and incredible luck.

So, as I watched and listened to the local lads, I was truly impressed. I felt proud to think that the musical community counts me among them.

So, congrats on hitting 50, Doug. You sound and look good baby. Own it!













































Saturday, October 18, 2008

This Band Plans Ahead : )

Friday comes after a long-ass week. One spent working for four days solid on a two-hour symphonic program. Yes, that's four days to a two hour result. You do the math. That's also right on the heels of a ten day fund drive. Blah.

I was in the mood for grub and the couch. The call came forth: "Lisa called."


"Is it about a gig?"

"She left a message."

I listened to her message. She was being her usual sweet self, but said "I have a question......I've got a gig." A bit enigmatic.

Hmmmm. She knows my grumbles, so she says, "You think about it. I'll call you back in a half an hour." Good plan. Give the old goat time to think, he may agree. I do.

Gee, wouldn't it be nice to somehow plan these things? Evidently not and that's what makes it so crazy and charming at the same time. Lisa was combing the paper that very afternoon and saw our name listed as entertainment at the club.

After grub and a quick nap, I headed out to the gig. What the hell? This would be the third time I have stepped in as a sideman for this group. No surprises, right?

When I arrived, my usual parking at the bank across the street was now Parking Lot L for the Clay Center. What? Part of the charm living in Podunk Town is that parking is never a hassle. Don't take away every insider's parking areas. Despite the big sign, no one approached me for money.

Looking over at the club, I see people seated at tables where the band sets up. Rule #32 of the musician's gig guide: never lug equipment until you know where or if you are setting up. Something could have gone wrong and most likely has.

We were indeed playing as there was a handwritten sign outside advertising the band. The correct personnel was not listed nor did it have my name on it. I laughed. This is the way things go for me.

On or off? Could I just slip into the heavenly reward of a pint of pale ale or would I have to earn my keep? Yes and no. It's just the normal chaos of the place. We would have to wait until those folks finished before we could set up. Brian had a good laugh and I'm glad. He's the leader and the pressure is more on him to make owner and band happy. We are used to the disorganization.

Tonight, the dramatis personae would involve Chris, not Tim, who would be our drummer. I hadn't seen him in over a decade. After the Velvets called it quits, a quartet called The Wine Consultants was formed and Chris was our powerhouse percussionist. Getting older does bad things to you like gaining weight, losing hair, but sometimes it can bring a person a certain mellowness and focus. This is certainly true of Chris.

Back in those days, Chris was the man of chops, but sometimes at the expense of ensemble interaction. There is always a time in a musician's life when showing off one's chops is the primary concern. This may come from the ego or from an imagined standard that everything must be complicated. He was really an intense guy back then and seemed to be on his own planet wave. The chops remain, but the guy is far more relaxed, focused and listens to the group.

We began in the usual way: one man short. Ryan is always late because he always has a gig beforehand, so your humble narrator must discharge the guitar duties alone. This means you better call tunes I know and that's a mighty short list.

This is the roll of the dice, kids, and the potentially embarrassing element for me. Although this is a laid back gig at a small restaurant-club, you never know who's going to show up and listen or when you will be placed squarely on the hot seat. Both happened.

Indeed, sure as rain, one of the local jazz players and friends show up and take the table right in front of us. Although we have been in bands together and are old friends, still he is truly a jazz musician and a great one. I still feel like an interloper- a guy who once played classical only, but drifted into jazz by circumstance. I am adrift musically-neither this nor that. This may be an unfair assessment, but still this is how I view myself.

Do I feel pressure to be something I somehow cannot live up to? Nah. It's not like I'm on stage at the Clay Center about to play a show unprepared. This is jazz baby. Besides, I have a fake book if things get hairy.

Ryan shows up and finally I can relax. He is an amazing player and I have a lot of balls to sit next to him. It shows either blind arrogance on my part, stupidity or as I would like to think, a chance to learn. Some of his solos were simply astonishing last night. At once, I am lost in supportive admiration and at the same time I am jealous of how easy it appears for him. He glides along the frets laying down some serious jazzopothy. Still, this old man doesn't have thirty six years under his belt for nothin'. I wasn't firing as well as I could, but a few times I laid it out. If all else fails, lay down a tight rhythm.

When the two of us play, it soon becomes guitar madness. There is a symbiosis between us that reflects our mutual love of classical, jazz, the avant garde and a dash of King Crimson. In fact, it dawned on me that if I couldn't bring the fast lines to Ryan, he would bring the Fripp interlocking guitar lines to me. We took off into this improvised section that was amazing.

Afterwards, Lisa said, "Do you guys need a cigarette?"

I thought the band sounded pretty good and thought the night was over when someone wanted to hear Autumn Leaves. Without warning, Brian announces, "We're gonna let this be an acoustic guitar number." Wha? Thanks for the spotlight. This is the hot seat I was referring to earlier. Does anyone care that I am seated next to a Berkley graduate and quite possibly is the best jazz guitarist in town? Time to fly or fry, baby.

I did my best with some hazy changes on the end of the B section. Ryan had
"no complaints." Small mercies-thanks.

Soon I was with my friends and delightful pale ale. All other beer tastes like sh*t to me without a lot of hops typical to this style of brew. Gots to have my hops.

My friend Kai and I go back quite a ways. Kai is a monster player and teacher. His style of teaching is a bit like a samurai sword master-swift and to the point. He said, "You got the radio thing going great, but you really need to play, man."

Something tells me he is right. Goddam right.

Thursday, October 02, 2008

Keeping Creativity Alive


This is an interesting post from Fripp about Eno. The question for us is: how can we apply this to own creative lives?

15.13 In response to a question from an American writer, planning a biography of Captain Eno…

The quick answer is: Brian was right!

The question is, does knowledge get in the way? My own approach is: know enough to begin, but not enough to stop you getting where you’re going. Brian’s point was, Fripp’s knowledge was preventing us from moving into interesting territory.

So, in principle, I also hold Brian’s position.

The longer answer leads us into consideration of the backgrounds of the various characters at work in popular music of the time. There was the art school approach & the player approach: the two we’re considering now; with a third – those who were entertainers and / or wanted to be rock stars. The musical / artwork in that case being shaped outside the inner momentum of the piece itself and aimed at supporting the interests of the aspirant star / entertainer.

Brian has exceptionally good taste plus a set of working procedures developed from a different background to mine: (Brian’s is) the fine arts; and one form of his guiding principles are articulated in the Oblique Strategies.

My own background is that of the working player. The musician has guiding principles from within their particular discipline. The sense of form (arithmetical & geometrical) are comparable to notions of form within the (visual) arts. My own guiding principles can be found at the bottom of the DGM page. So, there are similarities & also differences; but mainly similarities.

Musical thinking has its own procedural dynamic – we follow where the music leads as it takes on a life of its own. This overrides any other procedural dictum or strategy. So, for someone based in musical procedures, occasionally there may be a divergence from the direction of a “non-musician” (noting that Brian’s musical life over the past 37 years now puts him outside that category).

Two points:

Brian has better taste, a more interesting mind & developed sense of play than almost all the musicians I have known.

A good professional musician knows what they’re doing, so they do what they know. This is death to the creative life.

So, working with Brian is usually a lot more fun & musically creative than working with good professional players (mastery in musicianship is necessary to go beyond the strictures of professionalism).

But, occasionally, there may be a divergence in outcome given the divergent backgrounds. I remember only one moment when an Eno musical procedure did not fully convince me musically, and that was very early in Brian’s life as a solo musician, over 30 years ago.
Regarding the specific example Brian referred to, I’d have to listen to it again today to judge whether the musical example convinces me now.

Wednesday, October 01, 2008

Willie at the Clay


Willie Nelson
Tuesday, Sep 30 7:30p
at Clay Center Charleston, WV

Malcontents (I've been called the same) bitch all the time about Charleston's lack of concerts. Seriously, we need to get off our hipper-than-thou attitudes and appreciate what we do have. Last night, I saw Willie and Jakob Dylan and paid nada for parking, literally walking less than a block from the venue. We will never ever be the nightmarish hassle of those big city concerts and thank God for it.

The Clay Center was packed to the rafters. It was a curious mix of professional types and Willie wannabes: silver haired ponytail types with biker-denim-outlaw casual wear. On the whole, this was an older crowd. One story: A girl with a mega bosom bumped into my wife and to her amusement, the twenty-something apologized, "We are so sorry" - pointing at her breasts. A+ for creativity.

Jakob Dylan opened and was very underwhelming. My wife said, "You were expecting him to be." Maybe so. This is the stuff college radio is made for: boring, predictable and bland. There were two songs that I found enjoyable, but his voice was buried in the mix (a common theme there for some reason) and what lyrics I could decipher were cliches. He has found his own identity from the seemingly insurmountable task of coming out from shadow of his father, but the depth is not there. At least not for me.

Dylan had a very relaxed stage presence, speaking very little except to remind us that it "was great to be back." Really? We feel so special. Dylan's acoustic guitar work was more interesting than his singing, but was even more buried in the mix. That was a shame because he was doing some creative things with retuning.

His guitar player was quite good. His style reminded me of Albert Lee and Mark Knofler. His playing was very subtle at times, creating musical lines and fills that went perfectly with the harmony-not a common thing among players. His sound was a bit biting and on the treble side for me, but you have to consider the source. He eschewed the rock star persona and played. That was appreciated. He kept switching back and forth between three instruments. I find that annoying and pretentious on some level. What can't you get out of one instrument? For a 40 minute set, do you have to switch to the Les Paul just to rock out on one song?

The drummer's (who resembled Rasputin), setup was pared down to the basics. He might have had five pieces. Good grooves that never too busy, but he was too loud in the mix. This didn't help Jakob Dylan's soft voice in the mix at all. Ditto for the bass player-economical and solid, but too loud.

I found myself drifting a bit during their short set. That's bad. Maybe I'm too old. A couple of girls screamed during his brief patter. Without a doubt, this is part of the appeal. At least he's not John Mayer. On that one, I am clueless.

Willie took the stage unceremoniously, opening with "Whisky River." At 75, he's still got all the charm, charisma and that don't-give-a-damn attitude that makes Willie so enjoyable and ultimately lovable.

Nelson looks he's just as comfortable on the world's stages as he would be at a bar or among friends backstage. He has no cocky celebrity vibe even after all these years. He's just a rowdy boy from Texas.

The big hits were there including the lessor known "Me and Paul." - an ode to drummer Paul English who took the prize for most pared down musician of the evening-only a snare. That's all you need if you can play. In light of certain local events, we burst out laughing at "Almost busted in Laredo, but for reasons that I'd rather not disclose."

Then there's that damn guitar of his (I should talk). Trigger has a rather conspicuous hole right next to the bridge, no doubt due to the rather forceful down stroke style of playing. I have to admit that either I have missed how well Willie has been playing the guitar over the years or the man is getting better. Every TV appearance I have seen, his playing was always a little rough and often he seemed like a lack of technical skill would often limit what ideas he was trying to get out of the instrument, but my opinion has changed. Willie still clobbers the beast, but his melodic and harmonic ideas were wonderful; revealing an understanding of harmony that's rare among players with greater technical ability. That's what counts, baby: hearing it.

Nelson is not really a true rhythm player, but rather uses it to constantly do little fills, bass lines and leads. Sometimes that seemed to occupy so much of his attention that the vocals were an afterthought.

The rest of the band reflected complete and professional support to one aim: back up the man. It was a very sparse lineup with an equally simple equipment setup. The atmosphere onstage was professional, but totally casual. At one point, drummers switched places and even one took over bass duties for a song.

The auxiliary percussion guy added nothing significant. He even added bongos to "On the Road Again." Bongos? Willie Nelson? Hummmmm.

One of my colleagues said that he was expecting a larger band and cited no lead or steel guitarists to be found. I agree that a steel player would have been nice, but with each added band member the musical space becomes fuller and more cluttered. Willie would have had to adjust his style of playing.

Musicians talk about "behind", "on" and "ahead" of the beat. It's hard to explain in words, but suffice it to say that the drummer, Paul English, most likely is used to and ignores Nelson's offbeat (way behind) sense of time. Nelson is never on the beat in any way, especially his voice, which wanders on its own. This is not a criticism, but a very strong observable fact. Nelson's guitar playing reflects this same liquid sense of the beat, but surprisingly
not nearly as much as his voice. Curious. Perhaps it's the percussive nature of the guitar.

One of my colleagues told me his girlfriend told him regarding the drummer, "That man is getting on my nerves." Even non musicians felt this intuitively.

Then there is Willie's voice. How does someone who sings almost like he's speaking communicate such intimacy and sincerity? That can never be answered in Nelson's case. How does he pull off "Georgia" after Ray Charles? Don't ask me, but it sure works.

Frankly, I'm going to take off my malcontent's shield and tell the truth: many times I was completely swept up by the whole magnetism of this man and his wonderful music. He is an American icon, an unlikely survivor, still untouched by the star machinery, representing that Martha Grahamism "salty and original." A great show.

The merch booth had T-shirts for $40. We all agreed that that price was a bit steep. Perhaps the tax man stills haunts the Texan legend.

Word was that as soon as the gig was over, the man was on the bus. No doubt off to another city. Another among countless other gigs.

The road is a terrible place they say, but somehow Nelson has survived with his mind "still fairly sound", but more importantly, his soul still intact.