Courtesy of Greg Osby
Blue Note
|
A FIRESIDE
CHAT WITH GREG OSBY
(July
7, 2002)
Every
so often, Greg Osby goes through a ronin phase. He hermits himself from
the public microscope and works on his craft. With great introspection
and exploration, Osby returns with a renewed sense of artistry that kicks
my ass. Oz's latest release, Inner Circle, has been lauded as his "best"
by many. Since I'm not Greg, I certainly am not qualified to quantify
anything he's done as being the "best," but there are a handful
I would say are in the running. The Invisible Hand record with Andrew
Hill is choice, Zero with Jason dabbling on the organ is kick ass, Further
Ado with Tim Hagans is good ear candy, and his Sound Theater record originally
on JMT and reissued by Winter & Winter with a big ass "G"
and "S" on the cover is chill too. But the jazz know it alls
like Banned in New York and Inner Circle, both fine performances and are
pretty straight forward, but lack the drama of a Zero. And don't let me
forget the Symbols of Light date where Greg weighs in on strings records
and turns the whole concept on its head. I am always curious as to what
Oz is up to next. With both Joe Lovano and Dave Holland tinkering with
big band material, maybe Oz is looking to take on a large ensemble work?
To get it from the source, I sat down with Greg for another candid conversation
(I doubt Oz knows how to give any other kind), unedited and in his own
words.
FRED JUNG:
It's been about six months since we talked last, what have you been up
to?
GREG
OSBY: Oh, man, Fred, I've been up to a lot. Primarily, I'm just figuring
how to revamp my group sound, trying to find a host of engagements that
would take the sound of the music to the next level and that will propel
me into some unknown or uncharted territory as an improviser. And also
to write some challenging compositions that people would have to give
a great deal of thought to before they attack them. I don't like to write
songs that encourage people to rely on the familiar or familiar content
or familiar approaches. Usually, you have to engage in a great deal of
discussion and decipher the music just so we can come up with a host of
variables that fit that particular direction as opposed to relying on
stock phrases. That is not challenging to me at all. That's not even interesting.
I'd rather not be a part of something that's merely a paint by numbers
enterprise. That and I've been doing a couple of film scoring things,
a couple of small films, independent documentaries and things like that.
My playing has undergone a dramatic overhaul as I just one day got up
and decided to dismiss the logic I had adhered to for years, just so I
could satisfy myself. There had been a lot of loose ends that needed tying
up and so I just cracked open a lot of my theory books, a lot of my journals
and things that I had been working on when I'm on the road and just decided
that I take a couple months off, no touring, no playing, no public performances
at all, just so I could really work on this music. It's been a fertile
period.
FJ: In the meantime, Blue Note has released another record, Inner Circle.
GREG
OSBY: Right, well, I shelved the album upon its completion because I didn't
think the general public would be ready for it. I've endured this scenario
a few years back with the release of a CD of mine called Zero, which was
another highly conceptual composition record and people just really didn't
get it. It was one of my most proud moment, one of my proudest achievements
and people just weren't getting it and they really didn't get it, it was
kind of a retroactive response to it after I put out a live CD called
Banned in New York maybe four months after Zero was released. People heard
that. They heard what I was playing over familiar standards and things
in an environment that people could take to readily and they went back
and Zero started selling again. So upon the completion of Inner Circle,
I said that I'm really proud of this. This piece represents nine distinct
approaches to group logic, to improvisation, to communication within a
band unit. It's the best detailing of how a band can talk to one another
on the bandstand as a result of steady work because we had been on the
road a great deal, all of us. So that's why I call it Inner Circle, because
there was a lot of intuition. There was a lot of telepathy as well as
the science behind each composition. Each composition represents a different
facet of approaches that I had been working on for a long, long time.
I just didn't think it was ready for release, so I decided to do something
that I thought was equally as strong but something that I would be a little
bit more accessible and so that's when I started the Invisible Hand project
with Andrew Hill and Jim Hall. And even after that, I did the project
with the strings, the Symbols of Light recording and as I was figuring
what to do next, I think maybe folks have caught up with what I'm trying
to do and maybe it is not that alien or that foreign to anybody anymore.
Maybe it will meet a welcome reception and so that is when I decided to
put out Inner Circle. It was recorded in '99 actually.
FJ: Have folks caught up?
GREG
OSBY: Well, it remains to be seen, Fred. Despite what I always think and
what I always endeavor towards, I see a lot of raised eyebrows and a lot
of people scratching their heads when we play. When I am playing with
people in my group or with someone else, they just, some people don't
get it and some people are curious and then some people whole-heartedly
embrace it because they've been waiting for that next offering. So all
in all, I can't allow myself to be influenced or swayed by public opinion
or whatever because that will in some way tarnish the level of creativity
and the nature of what I'm trying to do. I'll probably won't be shelving
anything from this point on. Either people get it or they don't or they'll
get it later. I just have to crank them out because ideas are non-stop.
FJ: People will misinterpret that as being part of your rebel and anti-establishment
persona.
GREG
OSBY: That's a very interesting description to give anybody. I don't really
understand what that means because in this music, people who are the strongest
and who have made the most profound statements did what they thought was
correct. They did it with honesty, with earnestness. Those are the people
that we still celebrate. I don't believe that. I'm not anti-establishment.
I'm playing acoustic music and it's coming from a jazz base. I study.
I try to come out of the box with something different and refreshing and
progressive each time. I'm not doing the same thing over and over again.
I would think anti-establishment would be somebody who is not concerned
with moving forward and who is not embracing the value system of a living
music. It is supposed to be propellant. It is supposed to continue to
grow. I think anti-establishment would be somebody who allows themselves
to stagnate and to embrace things that represent non-chance. I'm very
much establishment, Fred. I love music. I love the world. I love culture.
I travel and I incorporate all of that into the music. I grow. I develop.
You couldn't be more establishment than that. However, I don't believe
in living up to expectations or accommodating desires or needs. That has
become the standardized approach in music and that is directly responsible
for the great impasse that we are dealing with right now. The creative
prowess for a lot of musicians is on a complete shutdown right now and
people are stymied. They don't know what to do next because they are waiting
on somebody who is "anti-establishment" to take the fall. They
stick their neck out there and take the lumps so then people would know
which way to go and which way not to go, not that that's my role and not
that I embrace it, but I just embrace satisfying myself with doing something
that will keep me inspired.
FJ: Ironic that you seem to attract these monikers while merely trying
to be your own man.
GREG
OSBY: Absolutely, Fred. It's ironic. It's ironic that in this new millennium,
we're still dealing with a society that discourages progress. Given what
this government and this country is supposed to represent, they still
expect you to adhere to a host of principles that really, truly are suppressive
in their own way. I'm paying for it. I'm still paying for it. I'm the
poster child for wearing many hats and self help and self reliance. I
don't have a booking agent. I don't have a manager, a real manager. Clubs
won't book me. I go largely, everything I get I get on my own basically
and I'm just grateful that I have a fan in the president of my record
label, Bruce Lundvall who really believes in my music and concerned with
artist development and not concerned with the fast buck or else I would
have been dropped a long time ago. I'm very fortunate that I've had a
twelve year run with a record company who has allowed me to document things
as I see and hear them. It is really challenging, Fred, when I have to
look and see people that have just come on the scene and they don't have
any track record, they don't have any credentials and they are on every
jazz festival and they're making top dollar. I'm not even a money cat.
It is just activity. I like to keep my band working, keep developing.
It is hard to do that when you only have one or two gigs a month. So it
is just an interesting dynamic. In speaking with Andrew Hill and Muhal
Richard Abrams and other people that I admire, they have had to endure
the same trials so I guess it just comes with the territory. Artists grants
as well as teaching positions, those things helped to sustain an artist
through the dry spells and to subsidize the meager earnings they make
actually performing their great music. I guess it is some of the perils
of individualism and having a clue.
FJ: I shouldn't bitch since I participate in it, but have you seen the
latest Downbeat Critics Poll?
GREG
OSBY: No, I haven't but I heard I was nominated in several categories,
at least eight or nine categories, which is flattering. It's quite flattering,
but I don't even mean to dismiss the whole thing, but I take it with a
grain of salt. A lot of times, that acknowledgment doesn't translate into
work. I win polls. I won the Jazz Journalists Association best alto saxophone
award three years in a row and I looked around the room and I was the
only cat there that doesn't work regularly (laughing). It is interesting
to me. A lot of the people in the journalists community regard what I
do as valid, but they don't book the gigs. It is the shortsightedness
of a lot of promoters who don't hear my music or they may have seen me
in a situation that was repugnant to them and they're mind's ear is tuned
to that and they just can't get away from that. People still make references
to Greg Osby doing that hip-hop. I did that in 1993. They heard me with
Jack DeJohnette or with Muhal Richard Abrams or Lester Bowie or the World
Saxophone Quartet, way back in the Eighties and they still can't shirk
that imagery. So they don't acknowledge what I'm doing now or know the
contributions that I've made or where my music is going and the wonderful
musicians that have come through my band and they will give the gig to
somebody else.
FJ: First impressions are a bitch in music.
GREG
OSBY: It is unfortunate, Fred. People don't go back and listen to things
after they do a little bit of learning and a little bit of growth. We're
obligated to do so because we don't know everything and after a little
bit of life experience, that compounds our intellect where we can revisit
things and get a different impression of it, get a whole different spin
and a different take on it. A lot of people don't honor themselves with
repeated listening, which contributes to the lack of progress. There are
many factors that contribute to that. The musicians themselves are at
fault. Promoters are at fault. Record companies, they just put the records
out and they don't do any kind of creative marketing. They just hope that
the records will sell themselves or hope that the artists will get his
own work. It's very different. Every hand should wash the other, but they
don't. There's too many islands and we need more unification in the industry.
I've tried to do that on some small level. I've chatted with many of the
writers in New York to try to establish a stronger rapport and keep the
pipeline active. I've initiated calls on my own to talk to people and
tell them what I think or what I'm working on or what I think should be
there focus as opposed to talking about what a musician isn't doing, talk
about the people that are doing something and try to encourage some activity.
That us versus them mentality, musicians in direct opposition with the
journalist community, that doesn't work. That's proven that it doesn't
work because it makes for bad reviews. It makes for dissension and skepticism.
That's not healthy. We need to join forces to thrust this music out there
and to give it the shot of adrenaline that it needs.
FJ: With Tommy Mottola appearing on CNBC along with other music executives
crying wolf that the music industry is losing their shirt to downloads
and CD burners, do you foresee major labels even keeping a jazz division
in the future?
GREG
OSBY: The wane is in effect right now. A lot of the majors are dropping
artists because they don't concern themselves with the long run. They
don't concern themselves with artist development. A guy was a young protégé
or whatever and they snatched him up and the records didn't sell or the
fervor died down and they drop the cat like a hot potato and now they're
damaged goods. All they can do is get a deal with some independent label
in Europe or some fly by night label or do something on their own and
hope to sell it out of the trunk of their car or at their gigs, which
are a lot more difficult to come by now because of the damage goods nature
and they don't have major label backing. But I whole-heartedly advocate
internet sales, E commerce, file sharing, networks. I am totally down
with that. Last weekend, I played with Phil Lesh again, ex-bassist for
The Grateful Dead and I've been playing with him off and on for the past
three or four years. As a result of my relationship with him and talking
to him, I put six live concerts on my website in MP3 format, available
for download. Now, this doesn't compete at all with my legitimate record
sales. I do have a problem with people downloading legitimate property
but live concerts and outtakes and bootlegs, that's great because that
stimulates. It creates a buzz. It keeps your music and what's going on
with your band in circulation, even when you're not actively touring.
The Grateful Dead and these jam bands, they allow people to tape. You
look out to the audience and you see people with their boom mics and mics
on tripods and after the concert, they get the set lists and they put
the stuff into global circulation. How come the jazz community couldn't
embrace that? Now I've been on gigs with my peers and elders when they
just stop tunes in mid-flight and tell people to turn off the video camcorders
and to turn off the mini-disc players and to turn off the cassettes. They
huffed and puffed off stage thinking that people recording a couple of
tunes or recording a set is going to adversely effect their sales, not
realizing that that tape might wind up in the hands of somebody in the
farthest reaches of the earth or the continent or whatever, who did not
have access to it. They could download it or it may get mailed to somebody
and they may talk to a promoter or somebody that may want to book your
band and they may in turn become interested in what you do and they may
encourage a young player to start playing the instrument that you play.
You may even get a few new fans. There may be some legitimate sale activity
and so I believe in it. I think it is a great thing and cheap promotional
vehicle. Back in the Eighties, I used to do a lot of sampling sessions
for hip-hop music, for hip-hop producers. I had a group called Sample
Bandits and we would go into the studio and replicate samples of recordings
that they couldn't get sample clearance for. So we would do that and dirty
it up a bit and change it so it wouldn't be a direct plagiarization. And
the thing is, they would give me passes to their shows and when they would
do their shows, they would throw out cassettes to the audience, like whole
boxes of cassettes of an artist that they were producing who had a release
that was about to happen in six months. So six months later, when that
artist's CD was released, it would ship platinum and everybody on the
scene would already be aware of it because they got these free singles
six months prior. How come jazz labels can't do that? How come they can't
go in the Village Vanguard and put a CD single of the table because CD-Rs
are dirt cheap now, so that when those artist's recordings are released,
everybody will be familiar with it and they probably will go out and get
it. They'll say, "Oh, I know that guy. I got this at the Vanguard."
It just becomes a sharing thing and once again, my experience with Phil
Lesh has shown me that people will support you legitimately when they
know that they can get something from you for free, when they can get
free music or they get a pass out of it or they get a download. When you
do a record, they will buy it. There are a lot of grassroots techniques
that people in improvised music could stand to embrace that would do wonders.
FJ: Jazz artist's are capped off at the knees because of the perception
of jazz today is not cool, but rather a gage of age. It isn't helped that
club covers run north of twenty bucks and then bangs the kid for a two
drink minimum. This has created an avalanche that has jazz being Humpty
Dumpty, where all the king's horses and all the king's men will be useless.
GREG
OSBY: That's right. Well, the bar is raised when a host of artists and
their greedy managers demanded a whole lot more. So everybody followed
suit and now, musicians have out-priced themselves in the marketplace.
That is a lot to play for one set of music. At least if you go to a rock
concert or a pop concert, at least you get fireworks, scantly clad girls,
and you get a show. It is more like a review. It's not just one set of
music and then they kick you out after the set. That's too much. Artists,
they will just have to embrace the reality of the situation. I'm not,
I've never been a money guy. I've been an activity guy. I'd rather work
a lot more and receive less. It will all balance itself out. I don't want
to do twenty concerts a year for high money. I'd rather do a hundred concerts
that make the same amount of money because you reach more people and you're
able to develop more as a group and as an individual. The institution
of double bills, that is all but defunct now. You get more for your money.
Musicians would collaborate with one another and you'd have like minded
bands or like sounding bands on the bill and that would be a lot more
enticing to patrons and you could fill clubs a lot more readily. Who wants
to see the same group that you just saw a couple months ago playing the
same material and it is obvious that they haven't developed anything.
They haven't been doing anything, so labels as well as clubs and concerts,
they're going to have to think about presentation and think about how
they're going to package the music and make it appealing to that slippery
demographic, that host of money bearing individuals who elude these venues.
I've been able to get a younger crowd due to some of my collaboratives
with alternative musics. That's been good, but it can still use a lot
more work. I think college activity is the key. The problem is that that
is so selective. I talked to the people at Blue Note and I am just this
close with convincing them about my idea of caravans. We get four or five
vans and emblaze them with the Blue Note logo and just travel across the
country and hit every venue from little bars to school gymnasiums to retirement
communities or whatever, wherever people will have it and just do a showcasing
of the artists on that label presenting their new work. It was proven
a few years ago when we went out with the New Directions group that playing
in alternative venues and hitting these different markets like clockwork,
it can be effective. We sold a lot of product and got a lot of new, instant
fans. I don't know. I don't know what people are thinking in marketing
and promotion, I really don't. I don't know how they are earning their
money and how they're figuring that their job is secure when no creative
ideas are flowing.
FJ: A model is the Empty Bottle in Chicago. A dive with ten dollar covers
and beers are a buck. Shows start at 10 and go into the wee hours of the
morning. Artists play to a packed house and indie labels that sell their
records consistently sell out pressing, twenty-five hundred, four thousand
CDs with zero marketing and no record store presence. I can't recall the
last record on Verve to sell four thousand copies of anything. The artists,
clubs, and labels sell T-shirts and the kids eat it up. I haven't seen
an Osby shirt.
GREG
OSBY: Right, thing is Fred, a lot of these companies, they work off of
precedent. They may have done something like that before and it was ineffective
for whatever reason and so as far as they're concerned, that won't work
for anyone. I've run up against this with my label and other labels. We
tried that with so and so, whose music was infinitely a lot more different
or less provocative than my music and so they say that they can't do that
because they did it before. If that didn't work, how do you justify putting
these ads in these jazz rags.
FJ: I have never heard of anyone ever buying a record because they saw
an ad is Jazz Times.
GREG
OSBY: Right, people don't buy records just because they see a record in
Jazz Times, Jazziz or Downbeat. Take that money, which is a great deal
of money and put it somewhere else. Try something else and see if that
will stimulate some sales or activity. They are steadfast to certain things
because it is standard. The record comes out and they place it here, here,
and here, but things that are potentially innovative and could make a
lot of noise, they won't do. It's difficult to convince people. Also,
people are challenged because they figure you are trying to tell them
how to do their job. They just want you to be the lowly musician and play
the music and they do this. I've run up against that from everyone from
people in the record company to promotions people to club owners to agents
to even recording engineers.
FJ: Last time we talked, you were still on the fence about Jason and whether
he was staying on. Is Jason still in the band?
GREG
OSBY: He is, but only a few gigs left because he has become excessively
popular with his own trio, which is outstanding and I've encouraged it.
It's time. It's been a six year run and I need to stimulate myself and
look around and see if there is somebody else, even though we have a marvelous
relationship, a marvelous connection, I can't allow myself to be crippled
by that. Just like I found him, I have to find someone to cultivate as
well. It is time. It's time. Like I said to you in the beginning, Fred,
I'm revamping my sound and my direction, composition and the band. At
this point, I am kind of leaning towards being guitar based. There are
a couple of guitarists that I am interested in because to be quite honest,
there are not any other piano players that I like enough to come behind
Jason. I'd hate to put it out there like that even though there are some
great stylists in their own right, but a lot of people are too established
and too set in their ways to follow my lead or to give me what I think
I need unless I find another unknown. I pulled Jason out of college and
so if I find another youngster in college that has prodigious talent,
then it may happen, but it has just become difficult to travel with piano.
It will be a lot easier to travel with guitar and it will change the sound
too. I look forward to change.
FJ: Trio or quartet?
GREG
OSBY: Quartet. I'm going to do some trio things too, but without piano
or guitar, just sax, bass, and drums. I have some guys. I have Damion
Reid on drums. His father is Richard Reid (bassist). He's from Los Angeles
and he's an outstanding, young drummer. I fluctuate between him and Eric
Harland. Eric Harland is back in the fold again as well as I've been doing
a couple of things with Ed Simon again on piano. We will just see. The
bass chair, I am kind of playing musical chairs with that because I haven't
really settled on somebody who is solid enough to give me what I need.
They have to be very, very well versed in a great deal of music, not just
jazz, swinging real hard and walking bass and all that kind of stuff.
Somebody who is too entrenched in that, I would recognize it as a debilitating
situation because they will play up to expectations and I really don't
want that.
FJ: Do you have another album in the can?
GREG
OSBY: I don't have anything in the can, but I have about four albums worth
of material already ready and I don't know which one to do first yet.
Bruce Lundvall, he wants me to do a standards recording.
FJ: Not another concept record.
GREG
OSBY: No, I'm giving it my own treatment. I had to tell him that if I
do the recording, you won't recognize these songs at all. They will sound
like I wrote them and he said that that is exactly what he knew I would
do. So I am kind of considering that and I have a tentative lineup of
either Jack DeJohnette or Terri Lyne Carrington, Dave Holland or Christian
McBride, Jason Moran or Gonzalo Rubalcaba. So we will see what happens.
I have everybody on hold and so it is kind of an availability thing. I
already have my arrangements together and like I said, these songs will
barely be recognizable unless I do an obvious melodic quote.
FJ: How many records do you have left on this contract?
GREG
OSBY: I don't really know. It maybe one, but we've already discussed re-upping
because it is just my home. I don't really know any other thing, any other
situation. I would be a fish out of water anywhere else because they know
me, they know what to expect from me, they don't bother me. "When
are you going to do another record?" I tell them when and I deliver
it. They don't come to the studio. They don't make questions or suggestions.
Bruce has just made this request because it is just something he'd like
to hear. He likes the way I interpret the standards that I incorporate
in my sets. Of course, I wouldn't leave any stone unturned. I also have
this organ trio with Jason and Eric Harland and guitarist Liberty Ellman
that I would like to record too. I did a few of those tracks on my Zero
recording, but I'd like to do a whole thing and really revitalize that
institution. I also have a trio with Bobby Previte and Charlie Hunter.
We played the Knitting Factory two weeks ago and we intend to record that
as well. There are a lot of irons in the fire. There are many things happening.
I would like to do a duo recording with Jason, but now, I spoke with Andrew
Hill yesterday and now he wants to do a duo recording. So there is so
much to do and so few opportunities. I can't record all these things for
the label. They only grant one a year. That's when this whole independent
thing keeps coming up. I should do my own recordings and I should put
them out on my own because that is the frustration that Prince had when
he was writing slave on his face. They want him to do one record a year.
Cats are too prolific to be confined to that release schedule. There is
also the element of saturation and just because you crank out more, doesn't
mean that they're all good. I know a lot of people that are very prolific,
but the quality is questionable at best. That would have to be mapped
out because anything that is in direct competition with contracted products,
it could get pretty hairy, but that could be done. Often times, I do go
into markets and they don't have any of my product in stock at all. I'm
talking about major retailers. I will call the guy at Blue Note whose
job it is to do retail roundup and ask how come he knew what my dates
were on this tour and how come he didn't call Tower or Virgin and made
sure they had what was necessary. What can I say, Fred, you try not to
tell people how to do their jobs. You try to sit back and wait and see
if people are going to honor their position by doing it and then the record
doesn't do what it should do and all fingers are pointed at you. Like
I wear all of those hats.
FJ: You're damned if you do and you're damned if you don't.
GREG
OSBY: Yeah, I have to try to just keep cranking out interesting music
that is interesting to me and hopefully I can share with others and they
can embrace it and find it interesting too. I am in the middle of this
study period. I took off two months really and turned down a whole lot
of work. I have a couple of little gigs, but I said that there was too
much on the line here and I had all these journals and approaches and
all my journals and notebooks and things, unfinished concepts and things
that you can't do on the road because of jet lag and the fatigue and hairy
schedules. It has been a very fertile and very productive period right
now and I'm writing a whole lot, cranking out almost a new song a day,
practicing like a fiend all night long. I live out in the woods, so I
can just make all the noise I want. So it has been a very good period.
FJ: Is it time to get back out into the public eye?
GREG
OSBY: Oh, absolutely. I am leaving tomorrow for Maine. We're playing a
jazz festival up there. I have a gig with my group and a duo with Jason.
We've been doing that quite a bit. We have a duo tour in the spring in
Europe. We have a few chamber society hits as a duo. For me, as a duo
player, I have to assume the roles of the missing elements, so sometimes
I walk bass on the saxophone or I play rhythmic or percussive elements
to make up for the lack of drums. Jason is an orchestra in it of himself,
so we kind of fill it up. It is very taxing for a player because you are
blowing non-stop. So it takes a lot of thought and a lot of stamina, but
it has worked very well for us. I've gotten a lot of interest to it.
Fred Jung
is the Editor-In-Chief and it's in the game. Comments? Email
Him
|
|