Courtesy of Nels Cline
|
A FIRESIDE
CHAT WITH NELS CLINE
(May 20, 2003)
I
could refer to myself as having long been a Nels Cline enthusiast, but
I cannot tell a lie. In fact, I am a recent convert, having listened to
Interstellar Space Revisited (The Music of John Coltrane) in the summer
of '99 (which doesn't have nearly the ring that the Bryan Adams ditty
has). But I have siNELS CLINEe been a quick study. Cline, like Vinny Golia,
Horace Tapscott, John Carter, Bobby Bradford, Adam Rudolph, and too many
others to mention without cramping my fingers, has not only been loyal
to Los Angeles by not bailing to New York, but has also helped define
the musical landscape that is our fair city. It isn't easy being an individual
in Los Angeles. And it couldn't be any easier being an individual artist.
Folks, Nels Cline, unedited and in his own words.
FRED JUNG: Let's touch on your involvement with the Scot Ray Quintet.
NELS CLINE: It's not a band that plays often, but we have gigs this May
to celebrate the release of the CD that is coming out on Cryptogramophone,
Jeff Gauthier's label. It's called Active Vapor Recovery. It is Steuart
Liebig on six string electric bass, my brother Alex on drums and percussion,
and Jeff Gauthier on electric violin. For me, it is a fun type of group.
Some of the material is kind of fusion, but the material is very wide
ranging, so there is not really one kind of playing and I find that it
hits on all different ways that I like to play at some point, iNELS CLINEluding
ways that I am reluctant to play, but are ultimately satisfying, like
hefty guitar solos. Scot Ray is not only a remarkable trombonist and I
know that this may sound trite, but it counts for a lot in my life, I
just think he's a really good person and a very siNELS CLINEere musician.
He is very interesting in how loose he is at times about his coNELS CLINEept,
yet at the same time, he has a very specific way of making music. I find
that an interesting combination and the fact that he formed a band with
three of my oldest musical associates that are in town, makes it a lot
of fun as well. If Vinny (Golia) was in the band, it would literally be
a band made up of people I've played music with for over twenty years
each. I really love playing funky rhythm guitar. I don't get to do it
much anymore and Scot has a couple of tunes where funky rhythm guitar
was the order of the day.
FJ: And you are also a member of the Scott Amendola Band.
NELS CLINE: Right, I played in the Scott Amendola Band quite a bit this
year and have now for a couple of years. A lot of the material sends to
be rather open-ended at times. There is a certain way in which the band
is trusted to flush out the material using its instiNELS CLINEts. Scott
directs the music in a way that is not particularly didactic. There is
a sense of leadership, but there is not a sense of an iron grip on the
aesthetic of the band. It isn't afraid to delve into potentially generic
turf like blues or funk, but the writing itself is not generic in any
way.
FJ: And your own projects: the Nels Cline Singers, why did you name it
the Singers?
NELS CLINE: I really felt that I needed to use my name in the band, just
so people would know it was me playing, which was a hard decision that
was made years ago with the Nels Cline Trio. The band members, Mark London
Sims and Michael Preussner sort of mutinied and said that I should call
it the Nels Cline Trio because I was calling it Bartholomew and they hated
that. I had not led a band before that. The reason it is not called the
Nels Cline Trio now is out of defereNELS CLINEe to the original trio,
which a lot of people were very aware of. Rather than call it Nels Cline
Trio, I thought a funny, yet still generic term was singers, relating
to those old groups from the late Fifties. SiNELS CLINEe the CD is called
Instrumentals, there is a certain tongue in cheek aspect to it, but I
would have to say that the music itself is not humorous.
FJ: And your new band?
NELS CLINE: I am going to give it a name, but we are a theory right now.
I am really just starting to write for this. For one thing, everyone will
live here in town because the Singers is with Devin and Scott and they're
in Oakland and I spend a lot of time up there, but ultimately, I want
to be able to work on something here in town that is more of a project
in order to develop a vocabulary of playing that will be less about so
called jazz than even the Singers. It won't be quite so direct and will
be more about certain compositional parameters. I just need to do a different
kind of writing. With this new group, I would like to be able to work
on compositional ideas away from live performaNELS CLINEe for a while
and present things that may not actually work, but I want to try them.
There is no bass, although I would like the group to be open ended enough
to accommodate guest musicians. If we have this core of four people, Noah
Phillips and Alex and Jessica Catron, I would like to periodically add
Jeff Gauthier on violin. Certainly, the group is about strings at this
point and possibly Scot Ray. I can't get over my fascination with layered
string instruments. I think it will be beautiful, yet oblique chamber
music with a certain drama that I can never escape in my own writing.
FJ: You run the risk of turning off the Interstellar Space crowd with
words like chamber music.
NELS CLINE: There is a lot of the Destroy All Nels Cline, which is another
way of using my damn name, which was a lot about multiple guitars and
using a lot of effects and whatnot and with the addition of Zeena Perkins,
who is also on the record and Wayne Peet playing clavinet, it was all
about strings on that as well. Even my trio records tend to have little
layerings that I like to do in the studio in postproduction. It is really
an investigation of overtones. That said, I have been eNELS CLINEouraged
to pursue two other avenues of live performaNELS CLINEe and composing
that I am starting to think seriously about, Dan (Clucas) and Rob Blakeslee
have both been very eNELS CLINEouraging to try to get me to write more
for horns. Vinny has been on my case about this as well. The other thing
everybody is trying to get me to do is play more solo gigs and do a solo
recording. That is an exercise in absolute terror for me, but I do try
to do it oNELS CLINEe in a while. I am surprised how much some of my most
respected colleagues value my solo playing. So I am going to have to get
over my inherent fear and loathing and pursue that. It is certainly an
economically sound way to travel at this point (laughing) because it is
brutal out there.
FJ: To varying degrees, everyone has an ego, but has your reluctaNELS
CLINEe to self-aggrandize hampered you, not musically, but business wise?
NELS CLINE: No, I think there is definitely ego, but I can tell you after
experieNELS CLINEes of trying to tour with the Singers, the combination
of trying to get the dough that will keep you on the road and my inability
to really focus on business on a day to day basis is a deadly combination.
Were I able to have some capital that I could invest in my own music,
then I could take care of the musicians better. That said, the fees right
now aren't that particularly high and I don't really do it for that reason.
It is hard for me to get up in the morning and get on the phone and work
on my own behalf. Why that is, well, we could probably get into years
of therapeutic discussion about low self-esteem. I was very conflicted
with the inner conflict between the jazz and rock aesthetics. It wasn't
until I started my trio and started to combine them in a way that felt
natural to me that I actually resolved a lot of those conflicts. In those
days, it was a much bigger deal to be an uNELS CLINEategorizable player.
It was much more of a stigma to be in the cracks.
FJ: Times have certainly changed because it is cache to be an enigma.
NELS CLINE: I think it is really different now. I think the fact that
at one time you had critics disparaging anybody who put an electric guitar
in their band and now everybody has a deejay and laptop player. It's like
you're some kind of fascist, retro person if you don't use those.
FJ: Does not being bound by stereotypes allow liberty as a player?
NELS CLINE: I have to admit it does. Ultimately, I am self-propelled,
so my struggle to find areas that satisfy me has pretty much been a personal
struggle and not so much relying on the outside world for validation.
But it certainly is nice when you don't come up against friction all the
time. For me, one of my earliest inspiration as an adult came from listening
to Sonic Youth play. As a huge Sonic Youth fan, it became really satisfying
for me to start improvising with members of that band and particularly
with Thurston (Moore). I don't think in the Eighties anyone understood
my fascination with Sonic Youth in the so-called jazz scene. Now, as things
have blended and as members of that band have become more confident as
improvisers and the way they embrace musical thought, I feel really validated.
I can play with Thurston and I can play with Vinny after twenty-five years
and feel that he totally trusts my instiNELS CLINEts and in spite of the
fact that we are operating more out of a jazz aesthetic, that my impulses
in any direction are going to be honored. It is a great life. There are
people who will walk up to me and say that they used to come hear me at
the Alligator Lounge. It was an all ages club and I am a very firm believer
in the all ages show as a result of my and my brother's experieNELS CLINEes
of going to the Lighthouse to hear the music. That is how we heard legends
of the music play. It is satisfying to me that after these kids were at
UCLA or wherever they were and dispersed into the world that this was
a scene that they checked out and it did have some kind of lasting impact
on them. I can reflect on that and feel good that I was in my right mind
by doing things the way I did them then, which was not particularly sound
business wise. To me, it was worth it.
FJ: Los Angeles is still slighted as the bastard child when creative improvised
music is coNELS CLINEerned.
NELS CLINE: People want to know why am I still in Los Angeles and what
is going on in Los Angeles. I have to say that I wanted to move to New
York City my entire adult life because I just really felt a great love
for that city and also a great deal of inspiration and curiosity of their
musical world. There are numerous reasons why that never happened and
a lot of it goes back to what we were discussing earlier about self-esteem,
but also, life's events would never really accommodate this. I have gotten
over it in the sense that I like my life more these days. That being said,
there are always people to play with here that I held in high regard my
whole life. I feel that if I didn't have like minded individuals to do
music with that were challenging me and think seriously about my playing,
I would not have been happy here. We have discussed Vinny and mentioned
Wayne Peet and Jeff Gauthier and my brother. There are a number of us
doing things or quite a while, but now in Los Angeles, there are really
a lot. There are a lot more than ever before because a lot of these younger
musicians coming out of the academic world of CalArts or USC, who seem
to be interested in improvised music. If you had told me years ago that
this would be the case, I may not have believed you. It has to be good
for the scene. This has been going on the whole time. The perception is
that there is nothing happening here and what I have been trying to prove
to the world is that there has been stuff going on here all along going
back to Horace Tapscott and John (Carter) and Bobby (Bradford). A lot
of people left and there are reasons for that. Certainly, it is impossible
to make a living playing music here, but that is true in every city in
America.
FJ: And the future?
NELS CLINE: There is a lot of finished masters. I completed another duo
record with Devin Sarno called Buried on Bunker Hill. There is a trio
recording that is finished with Andrea Parkins on accordion, laptop, and
piano and Tom Rainey on drums. I just finished a duo record with Vinny,
finally, after talking about it forever. We did it and it's all done.
I am recording a new Singers CD in August. There is supposed to be the
emergeNELS CLINEe on a live CD with Carlos Giffoni, Thurston Moore, Lee
Ranaldo and me playing live in Brooklyn a couple of summers ago. That
is called Four Guitars Live at Luxx. There is also some work coming up
with Jeff Parker with the Singers. We also have two masters emerging this
year by the Acoustic Guitar Trio, that is Rod Poole and Jim McAuley. I
played on the new Rickie Lee Jones record. I play on the new Blue Man
Group CD.
FJ: Odd.
NELS CLINE: The guys in the band heard me at the Alligator Lounge. It
was weird. I ended up going to do a guitar solo, but they ended up having
me play on seven tunes. They kind of turned me loose on their music. They
were really fun to work with. They are a successful, mega organization
that started out from nothing. They were a lot of fun.
Fred Jung is the Editor-In-Chief and is Wang Chunging tonight. Comments?
Email Him
|
|