Courtesy of Pat Metheny
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A FIRESIDE
CHAT WITH PAT METHENY
I recall first listening to Song X and marveling at its sheer density.
Often noted as what Pat Metheny should have, would have, could have been,
Song X has long been an unwarranted foil for one of improvised music's
most enigmatic figures. Critical dogmas have long burdened Metheny, whose
versatility has liberated him from convention, playing with Ornette Coleman
and Charlie Haden (Song X), Dewey Redman and Michael Brecker (80/81),
Derek Bailey and Gregg Bendian (The Sign of 4), John Scofield and Steve
Swallow (I Can See Your House from Here), Kenny Garrett and Brian Blade
(Pursuance: The Music of John Coltrane), Joshua Redman and Billy Higgins
(Wish), Gary Burton and Chick Corea (Like Minds), and Joni Mitchell (Shadows
and Light). Yet his own Pat Metheny Group has largely been critically
ignored. A shame since as much as Metheny's past may say, it says little
about his future, where once again, he is certain to defy categories,
confounding the very critics that have failed to honor his music. But
Song X should be reminder enough. Should have, would have, could haves
be damned, boys and girls, Pat Metheny, unedited and in his own words.
FRED
JUNG: Let's start from the beginning.
PAT
METHENY: Well, my whole family is very musical. My mom's dad was a professional
trumpet player his whole life. He was just an incredible, intuitive, natural
musician. My dad played trumpet all through his high school and college
years and still plays pretty good. My older brother Mike is a great trumpet
player and was kind of a child prodigy. He's five years older than me.
Really as far back as I can remember, there was trumpet. We were always
going to concerts. It was classical music. It wasn't jazz or popular music.
At the same time, there was music on the radio that I really liked that
I would sing along with. When Mike got to be about fifteen or sixteen,
he started to get an awareness of jazz on a larger level through the trumpet
and his interest in the trumpet. One of the records he brought home was
a Miles Davis record called Four & More, which for me, hearing that
record was sort of like a light switch getting turned on that illuminated
this big room that I have been investigating ever since. In fact, I started
on the trumpet when I was eight and played trumpet and later French horn
all through high school, desperately needing those few credits to squeak
out a graduation (laughing). The thing that affected me most at that time
was that Mike was such a great trumpet player and I was constantly being
compared to him. As far as I knew, my name was Mike Metheny's little brother.
I was playing the trumpet and he was really exceptionally good and as
much as I liked playing the trumpet, I didn't have a natural affinity
with the instrument at all. Trumpet is a notoriously difficult instrument
to maintain your chops. Everyday, when you pick it up, you don't even
really know what is going to come out. Even the best trumpet players have
to deal with that as a lifelong issue. In my case, that was especially
true and particularly true starting when I turned around twelve and got
braces on my teeth. It added a pain component to the equation (laughing).
That all coincided with cultural history in the mid-Sixties where suddenly
rock and roll and the guitar was a sort of iconic symbol of this youth
movement that continues to this day that was embodied in the electric
guitar. The ironic thing in my case was that I noticed that and was aware
of that. I loved The Beatles. I went to see A Hard Day's Night thirteen
or fourteen times when it came out. But as soon as I heard the Miles record,
all of that changed. Suddenly this whole other universe opened up that
I immediately switched to. Most of my contemporaries started out playing
rock and then sort of gradually moved to jazz. In my case, I really had
almost a minimal connection with rock guitar and was in to jazz right
from the beginning. Ironically, it was only later that I sort of got interested
in rock-type things, way after I had been playing quite a bit of jazz.
FJ:
I am curious what they are putting in the water at the Metheny household
because as much as your brother Mike was a prodigy, so were you. When
I was in my youth, I was fiddle farting around with the gals, not teaching
at Berklee.
PAT
METHENY: (Laughing) You know, Fred, I do have to give a lot of credit
to my parents and being a parent myself now, I get a sense of what that
means from the other side that when you are a kid, you have no sense of
whatsoever. They exposed us to high level music. We didn't especially
like it, but whenever the Kansas City Philharmonic would play, we would
go. From a very, very young age, it was part of our life. They always
had music playing around the house. The popular music of their era was
Glenn Miller and all that sort of thing. That is kind of jazz related
music as well. Parents get extra credit of doing a good job of keeping
us musically aware.
FJ:
You featured Jaco Pastorius on your ECM debut, Bright Size Life.
PAT
METHENY: Well, he was one of my very closest friends, one of my best friends.
It was a very exciting period for all of us. Of course, for anybody getting
to make your first record is a significant occasion and certainly, in
my case, it was magnified by the fact that it was going to be on ECM,
which at that time was probably the most exciting music label as far as
presenting new musicians and new artists of that era. To be picked by
them to do a record and they had very few guitar players at all, to get
that opportunity was a huge thing for me and very exciting. At the same
time, Jaco and I were both really on a mission to find a way to play and
find a way to present our instruments in an improvisational environment
that expressed our dissatisfaction with the status quo at the time. It
is funny because our take on things, as reflected on that record and particularly
in the trio as it existed around that time, which the record somewhat
represents, but doesn't fully capture, was quite a departure from the
sound of jazz at that moment in time. Ironically, I now am classified
by people who should know better as a "fusion" guy, but at that
time, first of all, that word didn't exist. In fact, I was a violent reactionary
to the fusion of that time. I really didn't want to hear backbeats and
rock beats and distorted guitar sounds. I really wanted to deal with harmony.
I didn't want to play on one chord or two chords. In Jaco's case, it was
the same thing. We were really interested in dealing with a harmonic territory
that hadn't really been dealt with much at all. The general reaction to
that record when it came out at the time was kind of blasé. People
noticed it a little bit, but it seems like every year that goes by, that
record has a more higher standing. It is interesting to see how long it
takes for the message that you are trying to communicate to trickle down.
FJ:
Through the years, you have stymied writers who have tried to pin a category
on you by playing with free jazz icons Dewey Redman and Ornette Coleman,
while playing an audible musical spectrum with your own groups classified
as everything from "folk" jazz to "contemporary" jazz,
and then throwing in the critical monkey wrench, playing with avant superhero
Derek Bailey.
PAT
METHENY: Every new little thing that comes up, there are these different
terms that are used that are foreign to me. Fusion would be a good example,
or world music, or even avant-garde. What does that mean? All these terms
kind of come and go. It is weird. I have been around a long enough time
to see the ebb and flow of all of the things that swirl around thing and
they are largely political. I have been able to just keep my eye on the
music and have watched with a certain kind of amusement over the years
as people try to struggle to fit whatever my thing is into whatever their
thing is. For better or for worse, there is nothing even remotely like
it. It is kind of not connected to other things. I have occasionally gone
over to somebody else's yard for a while and I enjoy that, but the larger
day to day stuff that I'm working on and trying to get good at, doesn't
really connect with the larger trends and the larger issues.
FJ:
The current Pat Metheny Group features new additions, Cuong Vu and Antonio
Sanchez, as well as Lyle Mays and Richard Bona.
PAT
METHENY: It is a very particular thing. We don't all, in the context of
the group, do everything that we all like to do as individuals. The group
thing has evolved to the point that it is a wide open opportunity to explore
areas of form and sound, but it doesn't allow everybody to do everything
they do. That is the nature of anything that is as long running as this
band's history is. It kind of has a life of its own. I wouldn't have somebody
come into the group that wasn't extremely aware of what the group is and
what it has been and where it can go. In the case of Cuong, the guy is
a complete scholar of ours. He knew everything about everything, all the
records, all the tunes. In his case, it was a goal for him to be in the
band at some point. Antonio Sanchez, our new drummer, is just a musician.
I can't even believe somebody like that was born. He is really one of
the greatest musicians I have ever seen. Same with Richard Bona, he had
heard us a bunch of times and had always wanted to do it. With those guys,
in a way, it is a first for me, to have guys from clearly one generation
younger come into the band that had a very strong sense of the band and
its history and knew all the tunes before we even started. Having said
that, there was a fairly long period of orientation. For almost any guy
I've played with, what you think these tunes sound like and what they
actually are when you have to play them, they are much, much harder and
require an awareness of lots of things in the area of dynamics and the
specific harmonic details of it. We really needed a record and a tour
to just get everybody on the same page. That has allowed us to get to
the point where we are at now and the record that I am in the studio working
on now that will be our next record with the same lineup.
FJ:
One Quiet Night is a solo guitar record, a challenge to avoid the trappings
of predictability.
PAT
METHENY: It is an incredibly hard thing to do, but it is something that
I never had a burning ambition to make that a central part of my thing.
I have always enjoyed doing that a little bit, but I certainly never thought
I would be doing an entire album of solo guitar. This one came about because
I wasn't really trying in a way. It just kind of came out and I think
that is part of what made it releasable to me. It really is just a documentary
of a particular kind of sound and a particular way of playing that just
kind of showed up and seemed worthy or pursuit. Next thing I knew, there
was the record. The people who can really play solo guitar is less than
one handfuls worth. It is a very, very difficult thing to do and I am
not including myself in that group. To play a truly varied and fully expansive
solo concert on the guitar is probably the hardest thing I can imagine
doing. It is not just a baritone guitar, but it is a baritone guitar in
a tuning that this guy in my hometown showed me when I was about fourteen
years old. I had tucked it away in my mind and used variations on that
tuning through the years. The tuning itself is a variation on what they
call Nashville tuning, in which the bottom four strings of the guitar
are tuned up an octave. It is a baritone guitar, but at the same time,
it is sort of functioning in the same register as a conventional guitar
where the middle strings are tuned up an octave. It really opens up some
very interesting voicing possibilities.
FJ:
The Ahn Trio, a classical supergroup recorded one of your compositions.
PAT
METHENY: I heard something about that. We are getting lots and lots of
people recording the tunes these days. That's great. I think for somebody
that writes a tune and gets the chance to hear somebody else play what
they've written is a special compliment, that somebody has found something
of their own in a tune you've written.
FJ:
You are currently in the studio, recording the new group album. Without
letting the cat out of the bag, give me the scoop.
PAT
METHENY: I don't want to say too much, but I will say that compositionally,
this takes everything to an entirely new level. This is certainly the
most ambitious writing project that Lyle and I have embarked on. It is
coming out really, really well. We are really, really excited about it.
It is going to take a fair amount of time to finish. It is very complicated
and probably won't be around until sometime next year. This has been refreshing
because usually we are in the studio with the tour already booked and
not only are we worried about how we are going to play it live, but how
we are going to get done. This time, we are not worrying about either
thing. We are just letting the record be the record.
FJ:
You have come full circle, from being influenced by a Miles record to
becoming the primary influence for a generation of guitarists. Alas, the
circle of life.
PAT
METHENY: I have been very, very lucky through my life as a musician to
be around musicians that were much older than I was and playing in Gary
Burton's band with Swallow and those guys. Then getting to be around great
older musicians like Sonny Rollins and Ornette and Derek Bailey or Billy
Higgins and Charlie. But also, I have enjoyed, now, being in the middle.
I am happy to have a relationship with Antonio and Christian McBride,
Brad Mehldau, Joshua Redman, and Kenny Garrett. It is nice to be part
of the ongoing thing. I just want to find the good notes and try to play
the music that I really love that has some kind of meaning to me as a
listener.
Fred Jung is the Editor-In-Chief and is Wang Chunging tonight. Comments?
Email Him
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