JGL: Hi Joshua and welcome to jazzguitarlife.com. I have been an
admirer of your playing and music since I first heard your debut
album in 1981 titled “Wonderful”. Before we get current,
can you talk a bit about that album…
JB: Sure. You’re from Montreal? Well that
record and the next one record were done on a Canadian label,
Sonora, (Sonora Records), and that’s the label of saxophonist
Glen Hall. He’s great…he’s originally from Winnipeg
but has been living in the Toronto area for years….
JGL: Oh yeah. He’s the guy you originally recorded with?
JB: Yeah, on my very first record date. (ed.note:
The Book of the Heart in 1979).
JGL: Did you record in Toronto?
JB: No. We actually recorded in New York. His
recording was also done in New York and it was the first time
I was ever in a recording studio. I had gone to Berklee for a
couple of terms and that’s where I met Glen. So he calls
me up one night and says “I’m gonna do some recording
and I’d like you to play on a few of the pieces on the recording.”
I said “great man…” Then he says “Can
I come stay at your place?” “Sure” I said. So
he came down and we were having the best time. The night before
the recording, which was at nine in the morning at Generation
Studios in mid-town, we stayed up until like three or four in
the morning, then woke up at seven am and went to the date. I
don’t know why, but I never asked him who was going to be
on the record date with us. So we were at Generation studios waiting
for the people to open up the studio and Billy Hart shows up,
who I had played with before, and JoAnne Brackeen, who I had seen
around a little bit. So I’m talking to Billy and I asked
him “what are you here for?” And he‘s like “I
got a record date.” And I said “You too? Cool, so
do I.” And so we go into the studio and there’s just
one studio. I figured there was going to be a bunch of studios
but that was it. So it turns out that we are all playing on the
same date. And that was the first time I had ever been in a recording
studio with some heavy players like Glen, Billy, JoAnne, and Cecil
McBee. It was unbelievable.
JGL: Cool…
JB: Yeah…then we did the other two, which
were also done in New York. There was a bunch of people after
me to record for quite a long time. The funny thing about that
is, I came up with all these people who knew that they wanted
to make it in music and that music was a big part of their lives
but I wasn’t one of those people. I was just playing guitar
because I thought it was fun. I always had this feeling that there
would be something else that I would end up doing even though
I never knew exactly what that was. And it’s crazy but I
still have that feeling today…lol…if there was something
else that was really, really interesting that came up, that would
be take me in another direction, I would probably do it.
JGL: Interesting…what do you think that would be?
JB: It’s funny, but just today I went into this place in New
York called Guernsey's Auction House. Did you hear about the jazz
auction they just had…
JGL: Yes I did.
JB: Well these are the guys that ran the jazz
auction and I went over there because I had gone to the auction
site where you could see all the things that were up for auction
and it was amazing. I originally bought a catalogue and then a
friend in Florida wanted one so I went to Guernsey's offices,
not the auction site, but the actual offices and there stacked
up in piles, in cases, were instruments labelled “Charlie
Parker’s Horn”, “John Coltrane’s Soprano”…lol…just
all stacked up…”Elvin Jones’ Drums”. So
anyway, I was talking to these guys at Guernsey's and I really
thought, “God, it would be great to work in a place like
this”. They do all kinds of auctions, and all kinds of interesting
things come through their offices all the time. It would be amazing.
So it’s always been kind of like that and years ago I never
really took it that seriously, even for recording. Then I was
given the opportunity to record with anybody that I wanted to.
I had already been playing a little bit with Barry Harris so I
knew I wanted to play with Barry. And of course Leroy Williams
who had been playing with Barry for a number of years. Leroy and
Barry are the best combination ever and of course I love Leroy
anyway. My first choice for bass player was George Duvivier who
I really wanted on the date. So I call people back and say “listen,
I can get Barry Harris.” And they say “ok, get Barry
Harris”. Then I say “Leroy Williams”, who was
not very expensive, so they say fine, “Leroy Williams”.
But then it was getting pretty much the whole budget. So when
I began talking about George Duvivier there was a problem. So
we haggled back and forth and I was waiting for them to get back
to me, and it just went on and on and on. Then after a few months
I get a call…and I had just seen George Duvivier playing
up at the West End with Betty Carter and had spoken with him a
couple of weeks before…so I get a call and they say “ok,
go ahead, get Duvivier, do a recording.” So I call up George…now
George Duvivier when he passed away was not a young guy, he must
have been close to 80 or so and he was one of those musicians
who still lived at home…so his mother answers the phone
and I ask for “George” and it was the day that George
had died. Which is why Earl Sauls, who I had played with a ton
back then and who I still play with a lot, is on the record. So
that’s the story of all those early years.
JGL: So then with the next record “Four Over Four Equals
One” you recorded with Kenny Barron. It seems like you were
following some kind of theme with having some very heavy piano
players on your recordings…
JB: I had been doing a lot of playing with piano
players and when I did the record with Barry I had already been
playing with Barry. When I did the record with Kenny I had never
played with Kenny. But Kenny was somebody who I had loved listening
to. And Kenny back then, and it’s hard to fathom, but Kenny
was just some other guy. He was not yet a well-known piano player,
and I remember when I mentioned that I would like to bring Kenny
to the date, they were like “well we would really rather
you got someone with a name.” But we ended up doing that
record with Kenny anyway. We, and Jim Anderson, our engineer,
recorded at Nola Studios, which had horrible equipment. And I
was very nervous because Nola had booked another band right after
us and there was no time to change schedules or anything. We had
four hours, one to five, but at five o’clock another band
had to be in the studio so we had even less time. There was no
room for error, and we were a group that had never played together
and had no rehearsal. Upon getting into the studio we found out
that we couldn’t record because one of the modules on the
board was broken. So Jim left and they sent out for some other
piece. At three-thirty this new thing was installed and we did
that record in an hour-and-a-half…lol…and there were
a bunch of extra tracks on the CD with an hour of time. So we
spent an hour-and-a-half of recording time and we got an hour
of music.
JGL: That’s really great. So you basically blew right through
the tunes one after the other?
JB: Yeah…
JGL: Were you just calling tunes? I don’t remember if you
had any originals on that date…
JB: There were a few original tunes but they
weren’t that difficult. We had charts and it was very straight
ahead so that wasn’t a problem. And Kenny, well he’s
been on seven or eight recordings with me since and literally
speaking, there’s not one thing that Kenny has ever played,
on any take, of any song, on any record date, that has been less
than absolutely incredible. From great to incredible, that’s
Kenny Barron, every time. He’s just amazing! And that allows
you to be so relaxed ‘cause you don’t have to worry
about somebody else’s abilities. You only have to worry
about yourself.
JGL: Did you guys play live as well to support the album?
JB: We didn’t do a tour for the record
or anything like that but we did a lot of playing together.
JGL: Speaking of great players. Your bio mentions that you had
played with Emily Remler. Could you talk a bit about your association
with Emily? She has been one of my favourite players ever since
I first heard her back in the early 80’s…
JB: Well, I forget exactly how I met Emily but
I do remember that she called me up one day, she had just moved
to New York from New Orleans, and she was living on the Upper
West Side and she wanted to play. Emily was always very eager
to play with a lot of different people so she was always having
sessions and trying to get together with people. She was really
great about that. So we got together and started playing and we
became friends. I would play a bunch at her place or she would
make it out to Jersey and then we got a gig, a week playing at
the Blue Note with three guitarists: Emily, me, and Barney Kessel.
JGL: Wow!
JB: Yeah…it was great. It was one of the
first really big gigs that I had and we each played with our own
group. It was really interesting and it was my first chance to
meet Barney Kessel. And that was right when Emily hooked up with
Larry Coryell and I think that may have been the first time I
met Larry although I’m not sure. I have so many memories
of that week.
JGL: What was it like meeting Barney Kessel?
JB: Well, outside the US I hear the comment
that Barney and I are the guitar players on Contemporary Records,
I think in this way, people kind of group us together. For me,
he's the greatest of all guitar players when you consider the
level of his playing not only on his own recordings, but also
on his recordings with Lester Young, Charlie Parker, Coleman Hawkins,
Sonny Rollins, Billie Holiday, Benny Carter, Ella Fitzgerald,
Oscar Peterson, and many many more. But getting back to Emily.
I was playing in a group, I played a lot in a group with another
guitar player Harry Leahy…
JGL: Oh wow…I love Harry…
JB: Yeah…that was a great experience for
me. Harry and Billy Hart were in that group and then Harry went
with Phil Woods’ group so Emily came in and played a lot
of those gigs and we were playing around New Jersey, and we played
here and there, it was a lot of fun. I was doing work in Providence
for the Rhode Island Conservatory of Music and they were having
an annual jazz weekend with seminars, and private teaching, and
playing in a club. Emily came up with me to that so we hung out
at that point and then I would just see her every so often and
we didn’t really keep in touch that much. After she passed
away I got a call from Marty Ashby a guitar player who was the
Director of Performing Arts at the Manchester Craftsmen's Guild
in Pittsburgh. They had a concert, which I think was part of the
jazz festival there, for Emily. I was almost surprised that I
was invited to play at this concert. I mean I thought it was very
nice but I wasn’t that close to Emily but I went out and
played and it was a really nice event. I met her family, her mother
and her sister and got a chance to fly out there with Leni Stern
and that’s pretty much the whole summary about me and Emily.
JGL: Cool…let’s get a little current and talk a bit
about your latest CD’s “A Jamais” and “Memoire”.
How did these two projects come about and how was it that you
ended up in Paris to record them?
JB: Well, I recorded twice before for Capri
Records and I am also married to a French woman in fact we ended
up buying a small house in the South of France which had been
owned at one point by my wife’s grandmother and then inherited
by her father. So we would spend time in the South of France and
I started doing some festivals, meeting musicians and just playing.
When I mentioned to Tom Burns, the owner of Capri Records about
playing with Louis Petrucciani (bass player) he was very interested
and asked if I would consider recording. It was the perfect idea
for me because I just love Louis and I wanted to spend a little
more time in France so we organized a recording session over in
France and that’s how “A Jamais” came about.
Then the following year we decided that we wanted to do another
with the same group but for a bunch of reasons we ended up at
the last minute having to make a change concerning the drummer.
So what we have is just two years in a row of recording sessions
done…actually not in Paris but way down south in Southern
France in this little town called Valflaunesse about half an hour
away from the big town of Montpellier. So we had this studio in
the middle of nowhere but it’s really a good place. It’s
been an interesting experience playing with European musicians
and also to be playing with Louis who is just a great musician.
JGL: How did you hook up with Louis?
JB: How I hooked with Louis was that I was invited…there’s
a very famous music school in Montpellier called Jams…what
is really remarkable about this place is that it is owned and
operated by the teachers who are all professional musicians. It’s
really cool. They have a performance space and regular classes
that go all day long and all week long…so anyway, I was
invited to Jams to do a presentation and I presented on my concept
of improvisation. It was a very interesting experience for me
because it was an hour or an hour and a half all in French…lol…so
I had to write everything out in French and speak it…lol.
In any case, at Jams, after I had finished, they invited me to
stay for dinner, which sounded great, and they had a band playing
that night and that’s where I met Louis because he was in
the band playing that night. So it was just really one of those
lucky occurrences.
JGL: Had he known you or of you prior to that first time?
JB: No. That was the first time. I had met his
brother Michelle (piano) once or twice…I used to play at
this place on the Upper West Side…I don’t remember
if Michelle was living around there at the time, but he used to
come into this place I played at…they had a terrace…and
he would be there quite a bit. Now I never hung out with him or
spent a lot of time with him but we would say hello and he was
very, very nice.
JGL: Ok…so that’s the French connection…now,
what was your impression of European musicians?
JB: That’s a really hard question. First
of all, I don’t know that much about European musicians,
I must confess. I mean I have played a lot in England and a certain
amount in France, and I’ve played around Europe, but…if
you had asked me about Japanese musicians…I go to Japan
a lot…I’ve been going to Japan twice a year for the
past fifteen years.
JGL: Really?! Wow…
JB: Yeah yeah. I do a ton of playing in Japan
and usually pretty long tours. Actually I am ready to leave on
the third of April again…but…let me just speak about
the thoughts I have about musicians who are not Americans because
any place you go, including the United States, there are musicians
who are just fabulous, and then there are musicians who are very
good and musicians who are technically gifted, there are all kinds
of musicians you know. I think it’s difficult…I grew
up in New York in this environment. I mean I heard Miles when
I was a little kid at the Vanguard, then I would hear Art Framer
at Boomers, Barry Harris at Bradleys. Every night it was somebody
else…Tommy Flanagan over here and the Mel Lewis-Thad Jones
big bands, Pepper Adams and all those guys, Joe Farrell and everyone
else. I grew up in this area and it was like automatic, this is
like my language, it has been ingrained in me. I mean I came up
with Rock and Roll music when I was a teenager but I already had
heard jazz although the music hadn’t grabbed me yet. In
a certain way this is very innate. Jazz music is like an innate
language and was somewhere deep inside of me…I’ve
been hearing this all my life. And we are American and we hear
things on the radio. We hear Frank Sinatra singing “Come
Fly With Me” or all the standards and its just part of our
language and so I think it’s difficult for foreign musicians
to really get it. There are musicians who are very technically
gifted and can really approximate…they can play everything…but
with jazz…you know…it’s that feeling that is
really hard to get and even in the United States now…playing
time, and getting a rhythm section to play together has become
a very rare thing. I have this philosophy and I’ll try to
shorten it to make time. The things that make music expressive…
for example, people use to say, “Charlie Parker is really
saying it…” or “Lester Young is really saying
it…” There are all these metaphors, verbal metaphors
“saying it” or “Clifford Brown is telling a
story”, all these sayings, it’s like finally I think
I got it. And what it is, is that a lot of the expressive qualities
that we use in speaking when applied to music make music very,
very expressive. I mean that literally. When we speak, if we have
a phrase that goes up we don’t have to go to speech school
to know that our voice is going to come down and if we speak down
we know it’s coming up, it’s a balance. We do this
naturally; we have a natural sense of dynamics with our voice.
Yet we don’t have this on our instruments, especially on
guitar, which is not related to…we’re not blowing
into it, it’s not relating to our breath or vocal mechanisms.
And if we’re talking, if we’re good speakers, if we’re
interesting, we are using a combination like musical notes in
a fashion. Some are 16th’s or 32nd notes and then we get
these long notes. So the note values have a balance, a dynamic
to them. We have places where we are talking and we have spaces
where we are not, where there is space. And really great speakers
understand the use of space as the most effective dynamic of all.
It creates a vacuum and when you’re playing music it’s
the same thing. When you leave space people want to know what’s
coming next. So all these things, the dynamics of the voice, and
language are extremely important. I’ve always had a sneaking
suspicion that being able to speak English has a lot to do with
understanding jazz.
JGL: Interesting…
JB: I think you can appreciate it and I think
you can understand it emotionally, but to play it, I think it
relates to how English is spoken…I mean, that whole connection
with the voice is a very, very deep connection for communicating.
We play all this stuff and we learn all these tunes but all we
are trying is to express something unique, to come up with our
own way of saying something…
JGL: Our own voice…
JB: Yeah! Right…exactly. And there it
is…another vocal metaphor…our own voice. So that’s
one thought I have about non-English speaking musicians and jazz.
And yet, you have some musicians from other countries that play
so great. Some people just get it.
JGL: Lol…I think that’s the bottom line…do you
get it!?
JB: Yeah. I’m trying to get it myself…lol…
JGL: Well I think you got it…lol…From hearing your
playing I am always impressed how your phrasing and improvising
communicates, there’s that word again, your musical intentions
where I can almost hear the thought process of what you are playing
and about to play, much like Jim Hall’s musical sensibilities.
JB: Thank you for that. What that’s about…you
know, I do a lot of teaching and I try and get my students to
number one, have control over what they play, so that you are
not just playing stuff, not just filling time. Man, people were
always saying “yeah, he’s telling a story, telling
a story…” I don’t see or hear any story. It
was always so ridiculous to me. And then one day I sort of got
it. It’s a start and a finish. I tell my students, it doesn’t
matter what you play so much. But it really matters what you do
with the things you do play. And that is the driving force of
how I play. I mean I hear some people play and they have this
incredible vocabulary, they can play so many things but they’re
not really doing it for me, they’re not really saying anything
to me. For me, hearing people playing out their ideas, that’s
doing it for me, that’s great music.
JGL: Do you remember that one moment where you became conscious
of your playing developing in that way? Or was it something that
you became aware of over time?
JB: Over time…definitely over time. When
I was really young I did some playing with Warne Marsh and he
was a big influence in my developing of ideas. Hearing somebody
who is the ultimate developer of material, that really influenced
me. And there have been times when I sort of had gotten away from
that, but then when I rediscovered that…and now it’s
just how I play…but in the past, and even now when I come
back to that, that’s when music becomes really exciting
for me. Music becomes thrilling because there are so many things
that you can do, there’s so many places you can go with
the music, there’s so many new things that you can play
all the time if you just go for it, and not worry about what to
play so much but play things that you can develop and let that
thing lead you to the next idea or don’t let it lead you.
Do something new and let that lead you on, that’s the thrill
of improvisation to me.
JGL: Most definitely. It’s that mystery of not knowing what
is coming up, not knowing where that last note is going to take
you, yet there is still that intrinsic knowledge that enables
you to carry on from one note to the next given the context…
JB: Yeah, it definitely is context. Because
when you play with other musicians like a great drummer or a great
trumpet player, or like Kenny Barron. Oh man, when you play with
Kenny Barron it’s like he can hear everything. I would play
something and he would hear it and take it over, reharmonize it.
I would play something and let him finish it, then I would start
with something new and finish something he started. It was the
dialogue that we would come up with. I mean you start out playing
your own stuff but it’s the musicians you are playing with
that establish what you play and how you phrase on any given night.
JGL: I liked the way you said that…that’s excellent…now
if we could travel back in time again to the early days. When
did you first start playing guitar?
JB: I started playing guitar when I was about
14 or 15 and there was a rock group in my high school, Moon Unit,
and they were playing around the area, in New Jersey. Something
happened to their guitar player, either he got grounded or he
couldn’t come to rehearsals anymore, but whatever it was,
somebody told them that I played guitar. They came to me and said
“Listen, we have a group and rehearse every Saturday. Why
don’t you come and audition for the group, you could be
the guitar player. You play right?” And I said “hmmmm…yeah…”
lol. So I went home, this must have been on a Monday or Tuesday,
and I begged my father for a guitar. He took me to the music store
in town and bought me this most horrible red electric guitar and
amp set and I sat there everyday just practicing and practicing
and practicing and just to show you how “great” this
group was, by Saturday I got the gig…lol. But this group
became very big in that area and we worked all the time and we
had offers to actually record. We became managed by this musician
who wrote a lot of scores for Broadway, Sheldon Harnick, and he
did a show called “1776” while he managed us which
one a lot of awards. He wrote a lot of Broadway stuff and it was
pretty good and it was good experience. Actually it was a little
different because it was guitar, bass, drums, organ, and a guy
that played flute and saxophone. It was really different…
JGL: What year was this around…
JB: Must have been around ’69…
JGL: Ok, so that was definitely during the acid rock days…
JB: Yeah…
JGL: You said that you needed to practice incessantly for that
week to get the gig with that band, but you must have had some
experience playing guitar before that…no?
JB: Not really…my older sister had a guitar
that I messed around with a little bit but not too much. But shortly
after that I started taking lessons from Sal Salvador…
JGL: Ok, there’s a little jump from rock…
JB: Yeah…I was very serious about wanting
to learn how to play the guitar and my sister had a very good
friend who was playing with Buddy Rich’ band in the saxophone
section. He gave me a couple of numbers to call and I hooked up
with Sal Salvador. That was a fabulous experience.
JGL: I can imagine. At that time was it just a yearning to learn
guitar or were you getting into jazz at that point…
JB: Yeah…I was starting to get into jazz
and I just wanted to learn how to play right and to read. Basically
I just wanted to learn everything I could…but yes, I was
interested in jazz around that time. The thing that really turned
me around and made me interested in jazz was hearing Lee Morgan’
“Search for the New Land” record with Grant Green.
The funny thing was that I hated Grant Green. I thought “Oh
man, this guy can’t play”…lol…I mean,
it wasn’t because of Grant Green, it was because of Lee
Morgan. It was the first time that I had heard anything so exciting
and I just loved Lee Morgan. I couldn’t understand what
it was but I just loved it.
JGL: Cool…Lee Morgan’s the man…
JB: Yeah!
JGL: Ok, how long did you end up studying with Sal Salvador for?
JB: Well it was kind of on and off but definitely
over a year and he was a great teacher who gave me a strong background
with all kinds of different books. I use to go there with eleven,
twelve, sometimes thirteen books every week and I would have to
do one thing out of each book. There was Arbans trumpet book,
and George Van Eps guitar book, a mallet book, and Lenny Niehaus’
Saxophone books. Of course Sal Salvador wrote a method book too
so we used that as well…all these different books like Johnny
Smith books…it was an incredible grounding. And then he
became my really good friend and really went out of his way to
try and help me years later. He was a really sweet guy and he
actually hooked me up with Carl Barney the guitar maker and Carl
Barney gave me a guitar, which surprised me, as a result of Sal
Salvador’s recommending me and when Sal passed away they
had the memorial service, as they do here. Usually when musicians
die they have a memorial service at this church in mid-town called
St. Peter’s and I played at Sal’ memorial service.
JGL: Did you both ever have a chance to play professionally?
JB: No…we really didn’t. But he
was really great, always encouraging. I only studied with him
for a short time but every now and then I would give him a call
or I would run into him someplace and he was like “I’m
so proud of you…” He would always say the nicest things
and everyone knew that I was his student. And he used to teach
with Barry Galbraith, who is one of my all-time favourite guitar
players, Alan Hanlon, and a couple of other guys, basically a
group of killer guitar players.
JGL: I can imagine. At the time that Lee Morgan turned you on to
jazz, were there any guitar players that you were into as much
either in jazz or in general?
JB: Well don’t forget, I was coming from
rock and my sister worked at the Fillmore East, so I use to go
for free and attend as many shows as I wanted to. I mean I used
to hear so much…I was really crazy about Jimi Hendrix…in
fact I saw Jimi Hendrix over a hundred times. I saw Jimi with
the Band of Gypsies. I was at that New Years Eve record that they
did. I went to all that stuff. Frank Zappa I just loved. And I
got to meet most of those guys. My sister knew all these people
so when I was really young I went to a Richie Havens recording
session, we had Joni Mitchell stay at our house, and there’s
a ton of stories..lol. But as much as I loved these guys it was
really saxophone players for me. It took me awhile to appreciate
jazz guitar. I guess I heard Wes, and there were things about
Wes that I could appreciate but it wasn’t as exciting to
me as Lee Morgan, who was first, then Charlie Parker, and Sonny
Stitt, those kind of people.
JGL: Were you finding at that time that jazz guitar was limited?
JB: Not limited, it just wasn’t exciting
to me like the way those other instruments were to me. I mean,
you listen to Lee Morgan with Art Blakey and everyone playing
and you start to sweat man. I remember hearing the Wes version
of “Body and Soul” where he doubles up the time and
I remember loving that and thinking that a lot of the things he
was playing were really pretty. I started getting into it at that
time but the guy who I really liked was Kenny Burrell. I have
listened to a lot of music but not that many guitar players. Although
I did listen a lot to Pat Martino and actually I have listened
to most guys. It’s funny, I remember right when I had my
first or second record out, I was driving across Florida late
at night and I was listening to the radio picking up a jazz station
in the distance, and I heard this music and I thought “whoa,
they’re playing me!” I couldn’t believe it…anyway,
it turns out that it was Jimmy Raney..lol. Later on I did get
to meet Jimmy Raney and I did get to hear a little bit of Jimmy
Raney and I always thought that Jimmy Raney was the guitar player
that I sounded like the most although I haven’t exactly
heard that from too many people throughout the course of my life.
I always thought his playing was similar to my concept of playing…
JGL: Because the guys he was listening to were similar to the cats
you were listening to?
JB: Probably. He was just a great guy…There
was one time when I was playing in Louisville and some friends
said “hey, were gonna get Jimmy Raney to come down and hear
you”. So they would say that and then he would never show
up. Then one night I’m playing, and I’m playing better
than I have ever played in my life and towards the end of the
set I happen to look down into the audience and there’s
Jimmy Raney sitting right in front of me. So after the set I sit
with him and we’re talking, and he’s very sweet, and
I ask him “so what did you think of the music?” And
he says, “well, to tell you the truth…” and
tells me about his hearing problem. Actually his hearing problem
wasn’t deafness, it was a nerve. When this nerve became
inflamed he couldn’t hear right and then it would clear
up for a few days every month he told me and then he’d be
able to hear fine, absolutely perfect, but then he could feel
it coming on and then he’d have a lot of problems with his
ears. So he told me that he couldn’t hear anything, the
sound coming from the band sounded like static to him. But he
heard my records and actually had some of my recordings and he
knew in detail what I was playing. He would tell me things like
“on this recording you use a quote which was great because
thirty-five years ago I was in this club and George Barnes played
the same quote.” I mean he really knew my stuff…
JGL: That’s like a compliment and a half…
JB: Yeah…it surprised me you know…
JGL: Any other memorable moments from your career?
JB: I don’t know…there are just
so many things…it’s too hard…I got so many…
JGL: One thing I am interested in finding out about from you is
what’s up with all those tribute albums you have done? Stuff
like “Walk Don’t Run”, “I Wanna Hold Your
Hand”, “Oh! Darling”, “Remembering Grant
Green”, the Monk album, the Bud Powell album…
JB: That started when I signed with King Records.
I’ve been very lucky. I did my first two records with Sonora
and then I immediately got signed with Contemporary under Fantasy
Records, for a four records-four year deal and then just before
that contract expired I was in Japan travelling and there was
a guitar AR guy for King records which is the largest record company
in Japan who I had met at the Blue Note when I did that three
guitar gig I mentioned earlier. I didn’t remember meeting
him but he assured me that we did and so while I was in Japan
he asked me to join him for lunch at King Records. So I met with
him and we spent pretty much the whole day together, from around
11:45 in the afternoon to 5:30. So he walks me to the elevator
we shake hands and I get on the elevator and just as the doors
are about to close I realize that I have to say one more thing
to him. So I hit the open button and walk down the hall to find
King Records. The doors were locked because the business day was
over so somebody had to open the doors for me and I ask them if
they could get him and they bring him over and I said “I
just want to mention to you, in case you are ever interested in
the future, my contract with Fantasy is running out officially
July 1st and if you are ever interested in doing some recording
please keep me in mind.” The guy grabs me and pulls me inside
the door…lol…brings over a guy from the legal department
and in less than half an hour we had a contract that was post
dated and so I went from four years and four records with Fantasy
to four years and four records with King.
JGL: Cool…
JB: Yeah…to get back to your question…the
Japanese labels are into theme records and that’s what they
wanted me to do. I had specific dates when I had to deliver each
one of those records and I was waiting and waiting and waiting
to figure out what they would allow me to do for the first record
and a couple of weeks before this record is to be made he says
to me that he proposes that I do the music of the Ventures which
turned out to be “Walk Don’t Run”. I said “forget
it!” I was living in Cincinnati at that point and I thought
“you know what…f**k this guy, I don’t care about
the money, I don’t care about the contract, I don’t
care about anything. I’m not doing it, there’s no
way…and I wrote this fax, this horrible fax and I put it
in the fax machine and I didn’t send it. I waited until
the next day. Then I took it and I ripped it up and I wrote another
fax saying, “I’m not inclined to do this but please
explain what your ideas are.” He wrote back saying “
I sense that you are not pleased with this concept but please
be aware that you can pick any song they have ever recorded. Please
research this. You can say yes you’ll do the record or you
can say no and it will be fine either way.” So I started
looking at what they had recorded and it was all these great tunes
from “Caravan” to “Slaughter on 10th Avenue”
to, well of course “Walk Don’t Run” the Johnny
Smith tune. In fact, they recorded it wrong. The way it was written,
it was a Johnny Smith line over “Softy As In A Morning Sunrise”.
So we recorded these tunes the same way I have recorded every
theme record where I would play the melodies right and then play
them so they meant something to me, I had to play them my way.
So I did that and then the next record was the Grant Green record
I think and then I did two records of Beatles songs for them,
which really turned out great.
JGL: It’s funny because a friend of mine, when I mentioned
to him that I received some CD’s from you, said that he
knew of you because of your Beatles and Ventures theme albums,
and he even owns your Ventures CD. And he’s not a fan of
jazz guitar in any way…but he knows you. So you added a
lot of credibility to my site…lol…
JB: Lol…the Beatles were like the big
records that I did and they were never released in the United
States…only released in Japan and other parts of the world
but not in the US or Canada. So that’s where the themed
records came from. When I finished my contract with King I started
doing some recording for Jamey Aebersold and he just loved the
idea of themed records and one of his whole attractions towards
me was that I could do that kind of thing. I really wasn’t
into the whole idea of themed records but we started on this idea
of doing music of piano players, Bud Powell, Thelonious Monk,
and then the third one, it was like a triumvirate, with these
three guys hanging out together, visiting each other’s homes,
it was Bud Powell, Monk, and Elmo Hope and even though Elmo is
like the least commercially viable I would love to get around
to Elmo Hope sometime. Although Jamey Aebersold is not doing too
much recording on Double Time right now so I don’t know
if that’s going to happen.
JGL: I hope it does some day. I thank you for talking about the
themed records thing because I was always under the impression
that you were just a fan of those artists and wanted to put your
personal stamp on those tunes?
JB: Nah…you know, recording for me is
like, well you know, some people record to approximate a live
session, you bring a few tunes and you just play hard. But for
me, recording is like a whole other world from what I do in clubs.
It’s about presenting some things that I find meaningful
to myself or that I find beautiful. You try and communicate what
you feel is special about a tune or something that you love to
other people. And having the “confines” of someone’s
music like Grant Green is fine with me. It’s interesting…I
have never loved doing records because it takes me away from other
things that I am doing or thinking about doing but having a theme
kind of makes it interesting and challenging. I learn stuff as
I research what Grant played or wrote or what Bud played…tunes
of Bud’s that I used to play years ago or tunes of his that
I never played. So it’s kind of interesting for me as well.
JGL: Have you found that even though some of these albums have
not been released in North America, when you go to Japan or Europe
that they know you from these albums? And are expected to play
tunes from these albums? Have they made you more popular over
there?
JB: You mean the theme albums or just my recordings
in general?
JGL: Well, I guess the theme albums…
JB: Well the Beatles albums are huge in Japan.
Nearly my whole audience knows my Beatles albums and I would have
to play some tunes from them. I had a thing happen when I came
out with the Beatles albums in Japan. I got a call from this guy
in Japan who was sort of in the middle of nowhere, he was on this
island Awaji Shima, and he offered us a ton of money to come and
play at this club. We had to take a ferry from Kobe. So we get
to this club and he’s charging a fortune to get into this
place, something like $200.00 a person and he’s doing two
shows and clearing the house and it’s packed already as
we walk into this place. So we play the first show and people
love it, it’s great and we get a standing ovation. So they
leave and we take a break. Now we haven’t had time for dinner
so he takes us to the back and says “I have Sushi for you.”
And there’s table after table of platters with Sushi on
them and they are covered with Saran Wrap and just waiting for
us after the gig. And were starving…we’re playing
and we’re thinking about this food while we’re playing…lol…the
second set comes and the audience loves it but we can’t
wait for these people to leave so we can finally eat and as we’re
putting away the gear we hear screaming! I had brought a friend
with me and we look at each other wondering what is going on.
I have learned to speak Japanese pretty well but this was when
I didn’t speak the language very well. It turns out the
club owner is screaming at the bass player because he hired me
to play Beatle songs and we didn’t play any Beatle’s
songs. So the club owner comes over and pays us the money, thank
God, and then says, “I refuse to give you any food. I’m
not giving you Sushi!!”…lol…and this is a place
that has no restaurants so we go back to the hotel and we’re
just starving to death. So we get back to the hotel where earlier
that night they were bowing to us and all that and the doors are
locked! We can’t get into the hotel…lol…we began
to walk around the island looking for phone booths but there were
no phone booths anywhere. So we’re walking and walking and
we are carrying all our instruments and stuff and we finally come
across a phone booth and call the hotel time and time again until
finally someone wakes up and let’s us into the hotel. So
that’s something that those theme albums can do for you
in terms of expectation…lol.
JGL: Sheesh…it’s kind of like the “Stairway to
Heaven” syndrome…
JB: Yeah…It’s a little different
now. I just recorded “Memoire” at the end of August,
so it’s not that long ago. And that record sat around until
about a month ago when I went in and did the mastering and a little
bit of editing and it took a month for this thing to be made up.
It’s like back then you would do a record and it would come
out a year later let’s say…and for me, like these
theme records, man, that’s what I was doing a year ago.
Like I might play a few of those things but I’m not still
in that place. But people sort of expect you to be playing that
stuff. Man, I feel sort of relieved when I finish up a record
and walk out of the studio. You’ve absorbed that stuff,
and that’s part of you and now you’re going on to
something new. It’s a great feeling.
JGL: It is indeed…before I forget, what kind of guitar are
you playing now?
JB: I have many guitars but the one I use most
frequently is an L5 from the early '70s. I use an old Yamaha 100
watt amp, solid state, with a 12 inch JBL speaker. It has an equalizer,
which I like quite a lot.
JGL: I want to thank you Joshua for taking the time out of what
is undoubtedly a busy schedule and I would like to wrap this up
with a big question. It’s obvious that you have had and
continue to still have a wonderful career…and you have been
very fortunate and lucky in a lot of aspects and please do not
take this the wrong way but why you and not someone else who may
be just as competent a player?
JB: What a great question. Well, there’s
a lot of different things that occur to me but one thing is that
playing music, and there are a lot of frustrating things about
playing music, but the business of music is a really, really hard
business and it’s a real struggle playing for people who
are involved in this music only as a business and playing for
people who really don’t care what you’re playing.
And as you know, it is a struggle to play good music anyway and
there’s a lot of pressure playing music as great as that
is. I’ve known so many people who are just incredible players
who have passed by the wayside over the years. Not because they
weren’t the greatest players but the people who have ended
up making it are the people who have paid the dues that you have
to pay psychologically to be a musician. So there is some kind
of psychological component that allows you, or maybe even induces
you to go on and to keep on in this business, which I think, is
a very difficult one. Certainly nobody is doing this for the money.
If money was the question there would be a million different things
I would be doing that would be smart alternatives. For some it
is a difficult lifestyle to live. You are your own product and
the values of this music in a way are sort of non-commercial in
a kind of way that can’t ever be sold. So it’s kind
of a very fine line. That’s one thing that occurs to me.
The other thing that occurs to me is the advice that I get asked
by young players all the time. They keep asking me “what
do you think about a life in music?” and “how do you
make it in music?” and “how do you do it” and
all of this stuff. And one of the things that I have told people
over the years is…I’ve already had this belief and
I don’t know if it is naïve or an accurate reading
of the music business but I’ve always thought that if you
stayed true to playing your own way, playing something with solid
values, playing something beautiful, something that communicates,
something that’s real, playing something that is simple
in a way, playing things that have emotional content, playing
things that have a range of emotions. If you do all these things,
you may not end up being the most famous person ever but I think
that if you continue to play with these types of values you’ll
always have people interested in what you are playing. I’m
not talking about the commercial side of things but I always thought
that there would be some people out there interested in what I
was doing just because it was done honestly and well and there
were values that spoke for themselves.
JGL: Thank you Joshua, it’s been a pleasure.
JB: Same here Lyle and thank you.
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