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Herald de Paris Interview with Michael Wolff

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Interview: Jazz pianist extraordinaire, Michael Wolff

BY AL CARLOS HERNANDEZ ON FEBRUARY 19, 2013

HOLLYWOOD (Herald de Paris) — After several critically acclaimed performances in 2012, jazz masters Michael Wolff and Mike Clark, the Wolff & Clark Expedition, are preparing to release their self-titled debut album in February 2013. Performing with bassist Chip Jackson, the Expedition’s initial outing aims for uncharted, compelling musical territories while still entertaining a wide audience of astute listeners.

Michael Wolff says, “We have been playing together for many years – we share the same vision, energy and excitement for jazz music, for improvisation. The musical goal of The Expedition is to utilize well-known tunes in addition to intriguing originals and to deconstruct them, then reconstruct them as vehicles for self-expression. We believe it is time to bring modern sensibilities and styles of playing (and writing) to music that comes from the blues and the roots of jazz to create fresh rhythmic and harmonic/melodic adventures.” Performing together since the 1970’s, both Wolff and Clark have each had stellar music careers. Michael Wolff is an internationally acclaimed pianist, composer and bandleader, and is best known for his melodically fresh and rhythmically compelling piano style.

Wolff made his recording debut in 1972 with Cal Tjader and went on to record with Cannonball Adderley, Nancy Wilson, Sonny Rollins, Tony Williams, Christian McBride and many others. As pianist and music director for jazz singer Nancy Wilson, Michael wrote orchestral arrangements and conducted more than twenty-five major symphony orchestras worldwide. From 1989 to 1994, Michael served as the bandleader for the Aresenio Hall Show, which heightened his visibility and gave him the opportunity to perform with many established artists such as Ray Charles, Phil Collins, Whitney Houston, Patti LaBelle, Wayne Shorter, Herbie Hancock and saxophonist/President Bill Clinton. Michael Wolff has released twelve critically acclaimed solo albums as a leader, ‘Joe’s Strut’ being the most recent.

He was a recipient of the BMI Music Award for television composition and was also the winner of the Gold Disk Award in Japan for piano. On Feb 23, 2012 Michael performed a solo piano concert at the University of Toledo, in Toledo, Ohio, as part of their Art Tatum solo piano concert.

Herald de Paris Deputy Managing Editor Dr. Al Carlos Hernandez had the rare opportunity to speak to both Wolff and Clark before their jazz project takes off into the universe. Their collaboration is causing a major buzz in Europe these days…

AC: You were born in New Orleans but were raised in Berkeley. What childhood experience pointed you toward a life in music?

MW: I spent my first couple of years in New Orleans and then, until I was 9 years, old in Memphis, Tennessee. What got me into music was the fact that my father was an amateur musician. He loved jazz and always played music for me in the house. He also played clarinet, saxophone, and piano, and he taught me to play W. C Handy’s The Saint Louis Blues on the piano when I was four years old.

AC: What did you listen to growing up? Where you influenced by the heavy music scene in the Bay Area with its eclectic styles of music?

MW: When I was young I listened to the music my father loved: Count Basie, Oscar Peterson, Ray Charles and George Shearing. I loved Ray Charles and George Shearing. I didn’t know their names but knew they were both blind. I’d say to my Dad, “Play the blind guys. Play the blind guys!” When we moved to Berkeley, California in the San Francisco Bay Area, I was exposed to many types of music. I was involved with the rock and roll scene, and listened to all the bands that played for free in Provo Park in Berkeley on the weekends. I played the drums and sang in a local band called The Electronic Cucumber. We got that name by having a contest in the neighborhood for the band name. Can you imagine the names that we didn’t use?

AC: When was the exact moment when you realized you were going to be a pro musician. What was the dream at that point?

MW: I don’t remember just one moment where I decided to become a professional musician. I do remember that when I was fifteen I started taking jazz piano lessons with a great pianist/teacher in the Bay Area named Dick Whittington. I would practice every day after school and imagine myself playing a real concert in a big concert hall or recording in a real studio. I would actually feel what it would be like to play the piano in those situations. After studying and practicing and beginning to play at clubs with a jazz band, I just couldn’t think of anything else I wanted to do besides be a jazz musician.

AC: Tell us about your teenage years. What attracted you to Latin music and jazz?

MW: In my teenage years I was lucky to have a great jazz band and music teacher in my high school, Berkeley High School. His name was Bill Elliott and he was very encouraging to all his students. I studied ear training and music theory, and played and composed for the jazz band. We had many talented musicians in the band who became professional musicians like saxophonists Lenny Pickett and Steve Elson, trombonist/composer Nic tenBroek, and percussionist Johnny Otis Junior. Duke Ellington once came to a rehearsal of our jazz band and heard us playing. He even heard one of my compositions. He was very complimentary. He said, “Am I going with you or are you going with me?” He was a great guy and an inspiration to all of us. I also got to hear Roland Kirk (the great multi-reed player) play across the street from our high school at Washington Elementary School. The Bay Area was a great place to grow up because Jazz and Latin music were really appreciated and encouraged. Berkeley High was the only public high school in Berkeley so all races went to school there. It was 40 % black, 40 % white, and the rest Asian and Latin American. We all influenced each other and I think that was a positive for the music scene in Berkeley. It was also a very turbulent time, the late 60’s, and was politically wild and exciting. Music was changing constantly during this time. Miles Davis put out some amazing albums and began experimenting with electric instruments and Jimmy Hendrix was around. Rock, Blues, jazz, Latin, classical . . . it was all intermingling and that affected all of us musicians at the time. The boundaries of musical styles were melting away and we all were proud to play all styles of music and to mix them together in a soulful gumbo.

AC: How did you land the gig with Cal Tjader at only nineteen? What did that experience teach you? Do you still color some of your chops with a little Latin soul source?

MW: I had a gig at Fantasy Records in Berkeley while I was in college at UC Berkeley when I was nineteen years old. I was supposed to write out the songs of rock and roll bands that couldn’t read or write music. In order to copyright the music it needed to be written out. I wrote it out exactly and the guy who hired me told me to write it out simply, not as it was actually sung. I told him that didn’t make sense and he fired me from the job. I was walking around Fantasy and spied Cal Tjader in a small room listening to a copy of his new album. I introduced myself and told him I was a jazz pianist and was ready to play in his band. He was polite and told me to come see him later in the summer at El Matador jazz club in San Francisco. I forgot about it, but my friend reminded me and I went to the club. I wasn’t allowed in because I was under twenty-one. I went back every night and on that Sunday night a nice waitress snuck me in. I said, “Hi!” to Cal and he let me sit in on the last set. I played well and he told me to come back the following week. I sat in every night that week and he gave me the job. The first gig we played was two weeks at a club in Tucson, Arizona. The second gig I did was a huge concert at the Monterey Jazz Festival, the Latin Jam. I was playing with Cal Tjader on vibes, Al Mackibbon on bass, Armando Peraza on congas, Willie Bobo on timbales, Dick Berk on drums, and Dizzy Gillespie and Clark Terry on trumpet. I learned to play Latin music while with Cal. He loved Afro Cuban and all the different styles within that and Brazilian. I was exposed to those styles and their leading proponents and had the opportunity to play those styles every night. I still infuse my music, my composing and my playing, with all those rhythmic feels.

AC: Why didn’t you pursue pop and rock which are much more profitable?

MW: I loved pop and rock and was exposed to it and I did play drums in a rock band and some piano, but jazz was my favorite music and I wasn’t thinking about money. I was just thinking about how jazz music made me feel so good. I also love the fact that with jazz you can play however you feel in the moment. We always included rhythms and sounds from blues and rock and soul and funk and Latin in our jazz. There was a Bay Area band, The Fourth Way that was combining acoustic jazz improvisation with rock rhythms and song forms.

AC: Tell us about hooking up with jazz heavy weights Sonny Rollins and Wayne Shorter. What did you bring to the table and what did you learn from them.?What is the good and bad of working with cats of that caliber?

MW: I was lucky to play with the greatest musicians in jazz in the 70’s. I played for a year with Airto Moreira and Flora Purim. Then I was the last pianist with the great Cannonball Adderley Quintet. That was my favorite sideman gig I’ve ever had. I loved the soul and blues feel underneath the jazz that Cannonball’s band played and he was a wonderful mentor to me, telling me to play the way I play all over the piano and never listen to anyone who tells me how to play. He encouraged me to compose for the band and, had he lived, the next album we were going to record was to feature the music I had written for the band and that we were playing live.

I played with Sonny Rollins for two years. I got the gig because the drummer, Eddie Moore, knew me and called me to come rehearse with Sonny. I loved playing with Sonny but don’t think I appreciated how great he is at that time. I think he’s the best improviser ever in jazz. His theme and development are unique. He has an amazing energy and sound on the saxophone and transcends time and style to create singular, beautiful and soul stirring music.

I think what I brought and bring to the table as a musician is an exciting energy, a focus on rhythm, and an open mind every night about what the music will be. I like to be in the moment and create on the spot. I am willing to be experimental and open harmonically at any moment. I love to react to the musicians I am playing with on the spot and go into areas that are unexpected and fresh.

I learned a lot from all the people I played with – most often non verbally. In my whole career we never discussed harmony or rhythm or anything technical. It was always what we were bringing to the audience and how we could improve that – how we could improve the set. Nat Adderley did tell me to build a solo by starting with regular musical ideas and then build up to using the effects I was using at the time on the electric piano. That was great advice. It was all good playing with those great musicians. Playing every night with wonderful musicians taught me how to play, how to bring my individuality to the music, how to be a great sideman, and how to be an effective leader.

AC: How did you land the job as musical director for Arsenio Hall? What was that experience like? How does it affect your music and career to do a steady TV gig like that? I’m told that Arsenio was you greatest tutor? How so?

MW: When I became musical director for the great singer Nancy Wilson, I learned to conduct orchestras, arrange for vocalist and orchestra, and to sing backup with her. I learned always from being on the bandstand. It was on the job training. Much different from the way musicians learn in school now. Our opening act for Nancy Wilson was comedian Arsenio Hall and he and I became good friends. He always said he’d have a talk show and he’d hire me to lead the band. And he did! It was a great experience. I got to play with so many great musicians of all styles including: Wayne Shorter, Chick Corea, Herbie Hancock, Branford Marsalis, Al Green, Ray Charles, Ringo Starr, Warren Zevon, Phil Collins, Whitney Houston, Patty LaBelle, Yo Yo Ma, Placido Domingo, Grandmaster Flash, and Teddy Riley. I also learned to compose music quickly, because often Arsenio would shoot a short video that needed music and I had to watch it a couple of times, write music immediately, and record it with our band on the spot. It was a fantastic experience that helped train me to write music for film and television. What I learned from Arsenio was to be in the moment and to respond to whatever was going on around you onstage. He is an amazing talent and responded to whatever was happening onstage and off immediately.

AC: You are one of the few straight-up jazz players that really entertain the audiences. Recently in San Francisco they said you did a little standup comedy and even danced a little on stage. How important is it to engage a jazz crowd?

MW: I learned to talk to the audience by watching Cannonball Addereley talk to the audience. He told me if you open yourself up to the audience you can take them further musically and that they will go with you musically anywhere. I’ve found that to be true. I love to make people laugh so I incorporate that into my performance. It’s not usually planned out; I’m as in the moment with my talking as I am with my playing.

AC: Tell us about your musical relationship and friendship with the late Joe Zawinul? Do you have a desire to continue his legacy?

MW: I always looked up to Joe Zawinul. He was one of the pioneers of fusion jazz and wrote some of the greatest music ever written. I met him after I got the gig with Cannonball. The drummer, Roy McCurdy, took me to Joe’s house in Malibu (in LA) and I spent the day with Joe. He showed me all kinds of cool chords on the piano. He loved music and had a healthy ego about his music. He was always friendly and supportive of me. It was like I was family because I was a pianist who had played with Cannonball Adderley. I think I continue the legacy of Cannonball and Joe Zawinul by bringing the feeling of the blues and soul in my music. There was also warmth to the music of both Cannonball and Zawinul that I hope I infuse into my music.

AC: What do you think of smooth jazz?

MW: I’m fine with smooth jazz. I like a lot of the players and enjoy playing with them. It’s not my main thing, but I like any music where players are playing their hearts out, and smooth jazz players do that. I’ve played a lot with Kenny G and Dave Koz, among others, and they’re all very talented, committed musicians.

AC: Tell us about your friend Michael Clark. What made you decide to put a project together with him?

MW: Mike Clark and I met in the 70’s in the San Francisco Bay Area. We were both on the scene there. I heard Mike on his first gig with Herbie Hancock’s Headhunters at Keystone Berkeley. We started playing together regularly in the 80’s when we were both in New York City. We had a regular trio with bassist Jon Burr. We all lived within a couple of blocks of each other on the Upper West Side.

AC: The American press says, “When two of the best musicians on the planet decide to combine their talents, they create a band without boundaries.” What does that mean?

MW: We played as a trio on our own and also with a bunch of crazy singers. We’d play with whoever hired us, playing live in clubs and recording a lot. After the gig we’d stay up all night drinking beer and playing cards or monopoly. I moved to LA in 1988 to be musical director for Arsenio Hall TV show. I returned to NYC in the late 90’s, and we began playing together again. Mike Clark played and recorded with me in my band, Impure Thoughts, and I played with him in his band. A year or so ago we decided to get together and form our own band, Wolff & Clark Expedition, so we could pursue the music we love, jazz influenced by blues and funk. We decided the band would be the two of us as the main members. We choose whoever else we want to record or play with for specific gigs or projects.

AC: What can people expect from the Wolff and Clark CD? Who are some of the artists featured?

We push the boundaries of music by not respecting limitations of styles. We play freely and what we feel. We can play with a trio, like our first album, ‘Wolff & Clark Expedition” on Random Act Records, featuring the great bassist Chip Jackson. We deconstructed known tunes, funky ones like ‘Mercy Mercy Mercy’ by Zawinul, and ‘For the Love of Money’ by the Ojay’s, more soul jazz with ‘Song for My Father’ by Horace Silver, jazz standards like Cole Porter’s ‘What Is This Thing Called Love?’ a really gospel song by Nat Adderley ‘Hummin’ and modern originals by Chip Jackson, Mike Clark, and me. We have also played gigs with horns and could play with any instruments.

AC: Touring?

We begin our touring with a concert at Dizzy’s Coca Cola Club at Jazz at Lincoln Center in New York City. We then tour in March and April in the United States: New Orleans, Indianapolis, Cleveland, Chicago, Cincinnati, Los Angeles, Oakland, Denver and other cities. We hope to tour in Europe and Asia in the summer and next fall. Our March US tour will feature the amazing Jeff Berlin on bass.

AC: Personal plans?

MW: I want to record a solo piano album in the next year. I’m also working on using cross rhythms in my playing and composing. And I want Wolff & Clark Expedition to record another album and utilize some horns on it.

AC: Advice to young people who want a career in music?

MW: I teach at The New School for Jazz and Contemporary Music in New York City. My advice to all students is to learn everything technical they can. Learn to write music on computer writing programs, to record on Logic Audio and Pro Tools, to make sure to compose their own music, to master the use of the internet and social media in the music business, and to practice and become great on their instrument.

In order to have a career in music now, the musician has to be able to do many things in order to cobble together a decent income. Play, compose, teach, arrange, publish, record, engineer – learn to do everything competently and some things extremely well.

AC: Legacy?

MW: As far as a musical legacy, I would like to be appreciated for my playing, the energy and originality of approach, and the quality of my compositions. I am currently writing a book on my BIG IDEAS about music, and I hope that will leave a mark.

http://www.michaelwolff.com

Edited by Susan Acieves

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Yahoo Voices Interview with Jon Anderson

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Jon Anderson Formerly of Yes Still Hasn’t Emotionally Left the Band
Bob Zerull, Yahoo! Contributor Network

Yes is arguably the most talented band in rock history. Their songs are so complex that your average music fan can’t comprehend; at the same time it’s so pleasing to the ear that you can’t help but enjoy it. I got the chance to catch up with legendary Yes front man Jon Anderson about his upcoming Australian tour, new music and his current relationship with his musical soul mate Chris Squire.

Q: I noticed you’re heading out to Australia in a month or two, will those be your first shows of 2013?

Jon Anderson: Yeah, I decided this year that I was going concentrate on finishing a lot of work in the studio. My studio is chockablock full of music. I’ve got to sort it all out and here I am writing a new song now, this morning. It’s compounding by constantly creating music, which is amazing, but I’ve got to get it organized. I think this year I won’t do too many shows.

Q: At this point in your career do you get a chance to enjoy the continents, countries and cities you visit? I know that back in the day you probably toured so much you didn’t even know where you were.

JA: It’s part of our idea. Me and my wife Jane we travel with a guitar and she plays the ukulele and the dulcimer. We always have a day off when we get to a new city and the day after the show we have a day off, maybe two just to walk around and feel the energy of the city. It’s worked very well especially when you’re traveling down in Brazil or Argentina. Anywhere we go we really enjoy.

Q: Is there anywhere you really want to play but haven’t gotten the chance to play?

JA: I always wanted to play and sing in China, for many reasons. I was there about 25 years ago. I was going to work with a local musical project there, a lot to do with something I was very interested in. They found a tomb in central China in Hubei province; you may have heard about it, it was full of Terracotta Soldiers, 1000 of them in this tomb. It’s an amazing event in itself that they found this tomb with 1000 soldiers, all different. A few years later they found a tomb of instruments, this is like 2 and a half thousand years ago. The instruments they found were unbelievable. They ranged from harps to guitar style ideas, drums, bells, a full orchestra of musical instruments. I was wondering what kind of music they were creating in those days. I went to China and I was going to work there, but the guy that was financing it smoked too much marijuana I think (laughs).

Q: You mentioned you were working on new music right now. In a recent interview you stated that you’ve been working on a sequel to your first ever-solo album “Olias of Sunhillow.” Is that going to be your next studio album?

JA: I’m not going to make any more albums. I’m just going to create new music, probably through apps. You’ve got your app and you’ve got a couple hours of music. That’s what I’ve got, I’ve got so much music that I want to put it out there, but it has to be put out there in a certain form other than the norm because we’re not living in the norm any more.

Q: You did that on your last song “Open,” it’s great to hear you doing those long form songs again.

JA: Yeah I’m halfway through my second piece on that. I just love the idea of doing them. First of all they’re like a journey for me and second of all they’re exciting to create. When I was doing “Open” there are times when I’d sit back and say, oh this is just too cool, then there were times when I was like, oh this is not right. After I released it I thought I hope people like this.

Q: Is creating new music the most important part of the creative process?

JA: Yeah, music is life. It’s around all the time. Birds are singing everyday. There’s music all the time. Culturally as you grow older you start to learn from indigenous music and some of the classic music and that’s what I do.

Q: I want to go back to that first solo album you did. You played every instrument on that album correct?

JA: Yeah, I locked myself in a garage with a friend and I had all these instruments arranged from guitars, sitars, drums, flutes, woodwinds, altos, bells, everything. I had to learn how to play everything. I didn’t want to go to school, but I thought this was a great way of sending myself through music university by learning to play everything.

Q: Back then was it intimidating coming from a band with arguably the best rock musicians in the world to go out and do your own thing where you played the instruments?

JA: The idea was that solo means by yourself. I didn’t see the point of going out and making an album with a band, I was already in a band and as you said probably one of the best bands musically that were available at that time. I was so thankful to work at that time with Rick (Wakeman), Chris (Squire), Steve (Howe), Alan (White), Bill (Bruford), Peter (Banks). I was a guy who could sing and I was very into directing them musically. To be able to go away from all of that, I had actually met Vangelis around that time. I’d see him creating his music, just one person with 10 keyboards. I’d stand there and just wonder how the hell he’d do that. That inspired me to do “Olias” and be committed to learning all those instruments. That’s why I did the album.

Q: When you mention the band Yes the first thing anybody thinks of is your voice. The other guys can go out and do Asia or whatever else and separate themselves from Yes. Is it frustrating for you that no matter what you do it’s going to be associated with Yes?

JA: No, I think what I did with Yes was very important for me; it touched a lot of people. Yesterday I got an email from someone I hadn’t heard from in 20 years and he emailed to tell me that his son had just listened to “Gates of Delirium” and he just can get over it, thank you for liking such wild and crazy music. I thought that’s like a gift for somebody to tell me something that I was involved with writing almost 30 years ago. I wrote that on piano…it must have sounded terrible, but I had this whole idea of the sections. The band was very gracious and helped me create the piece of music, but the idea that it has survived thirty some odd years later is amazing to me.

Q: A few months ago I talked with Chris Squire and he had told me that he’s never turned down the opportunity to work with you again, but currently your health is too poor to do an extensive tour. How is your health, because I know it got pretty scary there for a while?

JA: Yeah, I nearly died a couple of times. My health is very good. The bizarre thing is I sing more on stage now doing my solo shows than I ever did with Yes. I sing and talk for an hour and three quarters. Chris just wants to own and control the band, that’s his life. I wish he’d have called the band something else, it would have been more real, but bands do it, Journey carried on without their singer. I wish them luck; it’s not my idea of Yes, obviously. My idea of Yes is “Open” and what I’m doing now. Emotionally I haven’t left Yes at all. I still believe in Yes music. I still have a great feeling about the future of my idea of Yes music. I’m still committed to the wonderful Yes music we’ve created over the years. I want to continue to make that kind of Yes music; it’s part of my life.

Q: I think if you were to ask any fan, out of the 20 some odd people that have been in the band, the two guys that represent Yes the most would be you and Chris. So in a way there are two versions of Yes and we’re still getting great music from both of you. Are you open to the idea of an extensive tour with them?

JA: I wanted to tour in 2009 when I got better and they said no. They turned me down. They said maybe next year. That’s kind of bizarre to me that they’d say they already had a singer, six months later that singer, probably a lovely guy, couldn’t handle the touring, because it’s so hard. Now they have another singer, they didn’t call me or ask me if I’d be interested, they just say oh he’s sick, which is a lot of rubbish.

Q: Would you ever work with them again?

JA: Sure, I’d love to. There’s no reason why we shouldn’t bury the hatchet, get together and make some music and do something very special for all the Yes fans around the world. And there are thousands of people who would like us to get together…with Rick (Wakeman) as well. Rick would have to be in the band. There’s no point in just me. We’d probably do some shows or something, some beautiful new music and it would be wonderful, we could make a movie or something like that, just to honor all the fans.

Q: That’s all I had thanks for taking the time and good luck with your new music and your tour in Australia.

JA: Thank you, I wish you well. I just want to say to the guys, Alan, Chris and Steve, they play amazing still and good luck to them.

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Herald de Paris Interview with Mike Clark

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Headhunting jazz drum master Mike Clark

BY AL CARLOS HERNANDEZ ON FEBRUARY 20, 2013

HOLLYWOOD (Herald de Paris) – When two of the best musicians on the planet decide to combine their estimable talents to create a band without boundaries, the result is the Wolff & Clark Expedition. Dizzy Gillespie famously said that jazz must have, “One foot in the past and one in the future.” With the Wolff & Clark Expedition, the music embraces the past, ventures into the future, but remains rooted in the improvisational present.

Drummer Mike Clark is a true percussion legend – Clark gained worldwide recognition as one of America’s foremost jazz and funk players while touring and recording with Herbie Hancock’s group in the early 1970’s. Mike became known as a major innovator through his incisive playing on Hancock’s ‘Thrust’ album which garnered him an international cult following. While often referred to as the “Tony Williams of funk,” Mike, a JAZZ musician, has, in fact, become one of the most vital to ever sit behind a set.

He has performed with jazz greats Herbie Hancock, Wayne Shorter, Tony Bennett, Bobby Hutcherson, Christian McBride, Joe Henderson, Woody Shaw, Wallace Roney, Donald Harrison, Nicholas Payton, Fred Wesley, Vince Guaraldi, Chet Baker, Larry Coryell, Eddie Henderson, Geri Allen, Billy Childs, Chris Potter, Bobby McFerrin, Al Jarreau, Dave Liebman, Oscar Brown Jr., Lenny White (Mike has a two-drummer band with Lenny called “New Brew”), Mose Allison, Gil Evans and his Orchestra and many more luminaries.

Mike is currently finishing his forthcoming solo CD ‘Indigo Blue’, which features Randy Brecker, Christian McBride, Donald Harrison, Rob Dixon and Antonio Farao. Clark said, “We have years of combined experience playing with many masterful jazz artists so we share an innate understanding as to how to play at a consistently very high level with a feel for improvised music. We both spent time in the Bay Area and since we’ve been friends and band mates for many years, The Expedition is a natural result of our shared, cumulative experiences.”

Herald de Paris Deputy Managing Editor Dr. Al Carlos Hernandez spoke with Mike one day before he spoke with band mate Michael Wolff in a Herald De Paris world exclusive interview.

AC: Growing up, tell us about how your dad influenced you. I’m told you would sit in at some of his gigs at seven and eight years old.

MC: Yes there was always a set of drums at home and he played jazz records all the time. When I made my way to the drums I could play right away – it made sense and had a beat. He was really excited about this and he took me to a nightclub that night and I played with some of his friends. He booked me as a child drum prodigy on many gigs from then until I was about fourteen. I played with some famous people while I was very young.

AC: How did the music of New Orleans and Texas in the early days inform your musical palate today?

MC: Well I think I assimilated the regional sounds, dialect, style and feel of those places as I was young and didn’t think about it. In Texas I really learned the blues and the Texas shuffle. The cats in New Orleans were real funky and could play as well. I also moved to the East Coast which is where my style fits the best as far as jazz goes.

AC: What kind of music did you listen to? Who impressed you the most? Any musical mentors?

MC: Jazz music. Coltrane, Miles, Blakey, Philly Joe, Roy Haynes, Monk, Sonny Rollins, Max Roach, Wayne Shorter, Tony Williams, Basie, Duke Ellington, Clifford Brown, Ray Charles, James Brown and all blues and R & B artists. Most all jazz artists impressed me deeply from the time I was a child until now. I can’t name them all or we would be here forever. There aren’t many that I don’t like no matter what the style.

AC: When was the moment when you realized you were going to be a professional musician? What was the dream at that point?

MC: At four years old: the first time I played the drums and that night playing with the band. I knew this is what I am going to do.

AC: Tell us about your teenage years. What attracted you to R&B, and jazz?

MC: Well, as I said, I was already deep into the music way before being a teenager but I guess the exhilaration of swing, the blues and the feeling was the attraction.

AC: Why didn’t you pursue pop and rock which are much more profitable?

MC: This type of music never hit me where I live. I never listen to it. I don’t hate it; I just have no connection to it.

AC: Tell us about meeting up with Herbie Hancock and life in the 70’s as a headhunter. What was the good and bad of all that?

MC: I met him through Paul Jackson – I auditioned and he hired me. He was a genius as a person and an artist so I tried to understand how he thought and what he held in high esteem. He also told me a lot about the band with Miles and Tony and I wanted to know everything about that. Playing with him was fantastic and it was at a very high level so I could play easily in that setting. This also made me a very well known drummer. Herbie also encouraged me to chant Nam Myoho Renge Kyo and practice Nichiren Buddhism. I am still practicing today.

The unattractive part for me was that the music was limited and I became known for playing funk which is not my passion. It is something I like to do now and then, but jazz music is what speaks to my inner world and what I have the most experience playing. It was also very loud and hard to find space for self expression. Most of the musicians involved were always talking about making a lot of money and being commercial. Exploring new vistas musically, which is where I was coming from, was not part of what seemed to be important or even talked about during my time in that setting. When I did bring it up it brought out a bad vibe.

AC: Did being a headhunter open the doors to work with Brand X and Phil Collins? Isn’t he quite a drummer himself? What was the objective of that project?

MC: Yes it did. I really enjoyed playing with Brand X as it was a totally creative experience and they let me play anyway I saw fit. I had never played rock or rock influenced music before so it was all new and exciting for me. I really had a great time with them. They were innovative cats trying to break new ground. Yeah, Phil Collins could play his ass off – a natural.

AC: Why did you leave the West Coast and go to New York? What did you find there?

MC: The jazz music on the West Coast, at least in the Bay Area where I am from, was very polite and almost like hotel type playing or playing for a wedding. People seemed upset if it really swung hard with no blues influence. After all I had experienced there was no way I could return to this type of understanding so I came to New York. There I found everything I was looking for in jazz music and more. All of the masters where alive and lived here at that time and I heard them every night. The music was raw and on fire. This is what I love.

AC: Tell us about your foray into the young jam scene. How would you characterize what they were doing and what was your level of participation? Les Claypool?

MC: I had a manager and he wanted me to try to mix my style with what was going on with those cats so I did. Some of it was pretty good but a lot of it was at a high school or junior college level and sort of like fake funk. Many were trying to do what I had done much earlier with Herbie but it wasn’t really funky with zero harmony. Many young artists are still very popular on that scene and still are playing at the same level as there is no room for growth, even though it is dressed up like a forward-thinking scene. It was moving backwards for me. I knew cats like that in high school. I didn’t really dig it but I did meet some great cats and still play with them at times. Les was a raw and soulful artist that was totally natural and had a hell of a groove.

AC: Some of your beats are the most sampled by hip hop artists. How do you feel about that? Should they pay royalties?

MC: Well, how I feel about that is: if you don’t know how to play, if you use people’s beats or music that they have spent a lifetime learning how to play and you don’t know how to play, then it is a crime not to pay them. It is ripping them off. It is doing the same thing many rap artists are complaining about – being ripped off by the man. So don’t rip musicians off. I am flattered that some of those artists liked my playing but I would rather them not like me and pay me. I would like to be paid just as they like to be paid. You don’t see me wearing a Rolex (not that I would want to) and I am on a ton of those CD’s.

AC: Tell us about being a faculty member of Drummers Collective. What is that all about?

MC: I haven’t taught there in many years but it was great. It is a great school with great teachers and a great staff. I always look forward to stopping by there or doing a clinic or whatever. A musician can learn a great deal about playing from that school. Top shelf place to learn. I recommend this to any young musician trying to learn his craft.

AC: Talk about Blue Prints of Jazz – one of the most critically acclaimed recording of the decade according to Downbeat magazine.

MC: I was offered a chance to make a CD playing whatever music I wanted to play. I called Christian McBride, Patrice Rushen, Christian Scott, Jed Levy, and my dear friend Donald Harrison. These are some bad folks who can swing real hard and they certainly did on this record. We had a blast making it and it reflected where I was at with hard bop with a twist on it at that time. Great people who were involved and a great experience.

AC: What about Carnival of Soul with Delbert McClinton. How was it to work with a country blues singer?

MC: Delbert is great. He can sing anything. I worked with him in the sixties briefly and I love playing with him. He is totally instinctive, natural and can sing the blues with the best of them. He is a real talent and has lived it. Much respect! Also check out Rob Dixon on sax, Delbert Bump on organ and Steve Homan on guitar – all top notch artists. These cats are waaay into feeling it. Check it out.

AC: Tell us about your friend Michael Wolff. What made you decide to put a project together with him?

MC: Michael and I have played together since the seventies. We seem to share a musical understanding that does not have to be talked about. We had done so much playing and enjoyed it so much that we finally said, since we are working together all the time and see a similar vision, why not put a group together? And we did! He is brilliant and I never know what he is going to play even though I have played with him for so many years. Totally creative and refreshing. We have skeleton arrangements and we fill them out differently every night. Very open!

AC: The American press says, “When two of the best musicians on the planet decide to combine their talents, they create a band without boundaries.” What does that mean?

MC: It means that we don’t adhere to the norm but the tradition is with us big time. In other words, we stretch out or not; whatever or whenever the feeling hits us. It is always improvised although we know the tunes forms.

AC: How do you combine the roots of jazz and blues together? How much does improvisation have to do with the final product?

MC: Let me just say that for me if you can’t play the blues you can’t play jazz. Improvisation has everything to do with everything about Wolff and Clark.

AC: How do you deconstruct a tune in order to construct a new one?

MC: I would say this is different according to the tune and the moment. We start to experiment harmonically and rhythmically and push the boundaries without falling off the cliff and still having it swing. Like playing without a net.

AC: What can people expect from the Wolff and Clark CD? Who are some of the artists featured?

MC: On this CD it is a trio: Michael, Chip Jackson on bass and myself. I would say you will hear some very nice surprises and we are beholding to no one except ourselves. We try to marry what went before us into the future and never lose sight of the blues. We bend it many different ways and never sacrifice the groove.

AC: Plans on touring?

MC: Yes we are touring the US this March and April and are looking at festivals around the world.

AC: What are some of the musical things in life you would still like to accomplish?

MC: Having Wolff and Clark and my own visions on the main stages at jazz festivals and clubs worldwide. This is now more about business than anything else. We are always looking for people who love our music to help us and many have joined the effort. As far as music, I practice every day and want to deepen my playing on every level; to present music that I believe in so people can hear an interesting musical conversation, find music that is uplifting, non-patronizing and to enjoy!

AC: What advice would you give a young jazz player who wants to follow in your footsteps?

MC: That practice and learning never stop no matter what shape your career is in; good, bad or in the middle. To study everything you can, listen to everything you can and play as much as you can in a band setting. Playing with others, learning how to listen, comp and interact is the most important tool to master at the end of the day. Playing with live artists is crucial.

AC: Someday, when it’s all over and done, what would you like your musical legacy to be?

MC: That I could swing hard, had my own style, broke new ground and made the listener feel good.

Check him out at: http://www.mikeclarkmusic.com

Edited by Susan Acieves

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Blastzone Online Interview with Dave Kilminster

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Interview By Mike Wilkerson

MW: Please introduce yourself?

DK: Hi, I’m Dave!! I play guitar, sing, play keyboards… write, compose, produce…

I’ve played/toured/recorded with a variety of artists including Roger Waters, Keith Emerson, John Wetton, Carl Palmer, Guthrie Govan, Ken Hensley, etc… I’ve also taught guitar at several private music schools (including ‘The Guitar Institute’ & the ‘ACM’ in Guildford), recorded various instructional DVD’s (as well as a TV series!!), and transcribed, written and recorded over 200 articles for ‘Guitar Techniques’ magazine.

Oh, and I also won a guitar playing competition way back in 1991 called ‘Guitarist of the Year’, for the European magazine ‘Guitarist’.

MW: How did you get the gig as Roger Waters guitarist on The Wall Tour 2010-2012?

DK: Well I played lead guitar (and sang some lead vocals) for him on the ‘Dark Side Of The Moon’ tour (2006-2008), and so early in 2010 when I was in New York playing a charity event with Roger (for The
Alzheimer’s Association Rita Hayworth Gala), he asked me if I’d like to play on the ‘Wall’ tour.

MW: What was the biggest show you played on The Wall Tour 2010-2012?

DK: The biggest show was actually the final show in 2012, when we played on the ‘Plains of Abraham’ in beautiful Québec. There were over 70,000 people there!!

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MW: Where has been your favorite place to play on The Wall Tour 2010-2012?

DK: The whole tour was just so much fun, it’s really difficult to pick out any highlights… The gigs in Mexico were great, as the audience is always a little crazy!! Also I have very fond memories of the shows in Greece that were filmed for the live DVD… partly because of the red lighting on the audience, which looked incredible!! The two shows at Yankee Stadium were also amazing…

I guess if I had to pick a favorite it would be the last one in Québec, partly because we spent a week there before we played and it’s such a gorgeous place… with lovely people… and also we knew that it may be the last show ever, so it was an incredibly emotional evening…

MW: How is it playing with Roger Waters?

DK: I love playing with Roger!!! He’s a total perfectionist (like me), so we get on very well… We sound check before every show, and every sound check he’ll be tweaking certain elements… constantly trying to make it the best show possible… :O)

MW: How big of a rush is it to be up on that stage playing iconic Pink Floyd songs?

DK: Well that’s the trick… to try and be professional and keep it all together, when the little kid inside you just wants to scream and go “Fuck”!!!!! :O)) Yeah, it’s pretty intense sometimes…

MW: Did you like Pink Floyd before playing there songs on The Wall Tour 2010-2012?

DK: I wasn’t actually what you’d call a Floyd fan… although I’d enjoyed the songs that I’d heard… things
like ‘Shine On You Crazy Diamond’, ‘Great Gig In The Sky’, ‘Wish You Were Here’ etc really are amazing…

MW: Will there be a 2013 leg of The Wall Tour?

DK: Yes, there will!! The dates are already on Roger’s website http://tour.rogerwaters.com and also on mine, which is http://www.davekilminster.com/tour.html)… We kick off in July, and I really can’t wait!!! :O))

MW: What else are you doing other than playing with Roger Waters?

DK: I released my solo album ‘Scarlet – The Director’s Cut’ shortly before Christmas… and I also have an acoustic album due out in March called ‘Closer to Earth’, recorded with my good friend Murray Hockridge… both albums are already on iTunes, but I know that there are still a lot of people out there (me included) that like a physical CD. In fact, I miss LPs!!! Haha…

I’m also planning on going into the studio soon to start recording the follow up to ‘Scarlet’… I was actually booked in to start recording on the 10th December, but then the 12.12.12 concert for Sandy Relief in New York came up and so obviously I cancelled my plans so that I could contribute to that.

MW: What would you like to say in closing?

DK: Thank you for the questions… and please check out my music!! :O))

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Something Else Reviews Interview with Jon Anderson

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‘You get an instant feeling to sing’: Jon Anderson talks about his remarkable post-Yes resurgence
by Nick DeRiso

Four years ago, Jon Anderson was in the midst of a series of medical crises. You’d never know it these days, as the ex-Yes vocalist has emerged on a creative jag unseen across his legendary career.

Anderson suffered an asthma attack in 2008 — an issue that had been bothering him for as long as four years while touring with Yes. Only this time, the event escalated into respiratory failure, and Anderson was forced to spend several days in the intensive care unit. He also underwent multiple operations for pancreatitis that year, and even reportedly nearly drowned.

By the time Anderson had gotten his health back, Yes — the progressive-rock band he co-founded in the 1960s — had moved on without him. That left him to try to jump start a solo career that had gone completely dormant. Anderson’s last studio recording away from Yes had been The More You Know, from a decade before. He hadn’t even made a recording with his old band since 2001.

Those days seem very long ago now. Over the course of just three years beginning in 2010, Anderson has issued two studio recordings (The Living Tree, with former Yes-mate Rick Wakeman; and Survival and Other Stories), a live album (The Living Tree in Concert), a long-form composition (Open) and sat in with Marco Sabiu as well asDennis Haklar, among others.

And Anderson isn’t about to slow down. In a new talk with Something Else! Reviews, Anderson discusses a trio of on-going solo projects — including his follow up to Survival; part two of the epic “Open,” to be called “Ever”; and a sequel to Olias of Sunhillow, his solo debut from nearly four decades back — as well as the on-going collaborative spark he’s getting from the internet …

NICK DERISO: Let’s run down some of the things you’ve been working on. There’s the long-awaited sequel to Olias of Sunhillow.

JON ANDERSON: My son kept saying, “Why don’t you do ‘Son of Olias’?” He’s been saying that for 10 years. Over time, I have been compiling a lot of different kinds of music, relating to tribal energy, and I sort of felt like maybe it’s time to explain the next part of the story. It’s always been there in the back of my mind. I started sketching out the story, and putting together the music for it. I realized then that it wasn’t the same as it was all of those years ago. You have a different perspective about how to present music, and I want to do it visually. So, I’ve been working with a Polish animator, and another couple of people. It just takes time.

[ONE TRACK MIND: Ex-Yes frontman Jon Anderson talks with us about the twin inspirations of Tolstoy and Vangelis, and how mountains once actually did come right out of the sky.]

NICK DERISO: There has been talk of a separate, original solo album, as well. Haven’t you returned to working with Jonathan Elias, a songwriting partner going back to Yes’ Union album?

JON ANDERSON: We’re working on maybe a dozen really beautiful ideas, but it’s a slow process on how to present them. I was working with someone yesterday who is doing some orchestration, and another guy who is doing some rhythms. We want to make the project very entertaining, that’s what I am trying to go for. Again, things take time. It’s not like I’m thinking I have to hurry and get this done, because I’m going on tour — which was the way it was in the old days. You had to get it finished before you were on tour. That’s an advantage right now; I can take my time on projects. Maybe over the next 8 or 10 years, I can let them grow into long-form projects. You can do various projects, and work on them over time.

NICK DERISO: Will there be more extended compositions like “Open”?

JON ANDERSON: It was very important to do it, and I’m already working on another one. I have done all of the necessary sketches now, and I know how it’s going to sound and what the processes are. I’ll probably start it next month.

[SOMETHING ELSE! REWIND: Asked about the possibility of a long-hoped-for reunion with his former bandmates in Yes, Jon Anderson says: ‘We haven’t spoken in years.’]

NICK DERISO: “Open,” which recalled Yes at the peak of its powers in the 1970s, certainly signaled that you were ready to reclaim your piece of the band’s legacy.

JON ANDERSON: I think it’s logical that when you are in a band, you don’t want to go outside of it and make a record that sounds like the band. I don’t see the point. You want to do something totally different, which I did — and I still do. You can get into indigenous music, Irish music. All sorts of different kinds of music. You go out there and do it, and you hope that someone is going to like it. You can’t get into: “I’ve got to have a hit record.” What’s the point? You make an album, and you hope that somebody out there is going to enjoy it. I’ve learned, over the years, that it isn’t a process of “oh, it’s gotta happen this year. If I release the album, it’s going to be a big hit this year.” Like “Open,” it sells thousands of records, but it’s over a long period of time. Music is an endless thing.

NICK DERISO: Have you continued to work with collaborators via the web, as you so successfully did more recently on Survival and Other Stories?

JON ANDERSON: Right now, I have a total of three projects sitting around, trying to be finished. I’m working on one with some young musicians that I worked with on School of Rock. As you know, it’s easier these days, because you’re on the internet. You send Mp3s to each other. So that’s a project that’s going to be very interesting. It’s has that wild, a little bit crazy, young energy, when you’re working with younger musicians — because they’re not yet locked into any one style. They’re still trying to find a style, so you can help mold them a little bit.

[SOMETHING ELSE! REWIND: We delved into the largely unexplored modern era of Yes, focusing on post-1970s recordings like ‘Drama,’ ‘Union,’ ‘Talk,’ ‘Open Your Eyes’ and ‘Magnification.’]

NICK DERISO: Adding those new voices seemed like such an important part of pacing, of the variety, on your last album.

JON ANDERSON: You’re working with people who are sending you music which you haven’t heard before. It’s fresh, and so you get an instant feeling to sing — so that’s what I would do. I’m still doing it. I’m still working with everybody that I worked with on the album, plus other people, and I’m working on new concept ideas with each one of them. With Jamie Dunlap, we’ve written five or six songs in the last six months. He did a couple of songs on the album. His main job, really, is he makes music for “South Park,” and a couple of other projects on TV. I’m also working with people like the young musician (Peter Kiel) who I did “Understanding Truth” with, a guitar player out of Holland. He sent me some music about a month ago, and I wrote a song about my new grandson. So, maybe people will hear that in the coming months. I’m in touch with them all the time, so you never know what the next piece of music will be. When it comes, I’ll just be happy to add some ideas, and then eventually there will be an audience out there. We’re just trying to figure out the best way to get the music to them.

NICK DERISO: Will you release some of these things as stand-alone items, or will you wait until there’s an album?

JON ANDERSON: I don’t think I’m hearing albums. I’m hearing a combination of songs, I think. But I have to be careful how I do it. I could put out something every three or four weeks, and eventually it would be enough for three albums. I’ve got to decide how to do it, so that I get the best attention from the people who are interested in what I am doing. You can put it on your Web site, and then onto iTunes and Amazon for downloads, but we’re also thinking of putting something out on vinyl. That sounds cool. I’d like to do that.

[SOMETHING ELSE! INTERVIEW: Yes’ Jon Anderson goes in depth on his terrific 2011 solo release, and enthuses about the long-awaited rebirth of progressive rock.]

NICK DERISO: This has been such a period of creative rebirth for you. Could you imagine, at the lowest ebb when you were so ill, that all of this was in front of you?

JON ANDERSON: You just have to let it go, and get on to the next point in your life. Getting sick, you know, a lot of people do it. A lot of people go through things like that in their lifetime, so it’s no big thing, in so many ways. It happens. You’ve just grin and bear it, and then gather your energy for the next journey. I have to say, I’m having a lot of fun, doing so many different things that I enjoy doing musically. And, of course, writing is never ending. It’s just an endless procession of ideas.

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Blastzone Online Interview with John Lawton

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Interview With Singer John Lawton Ex Front Man Of Lucifer’s Friend and Uriah Heep

Interview Done By Mike Wilkerson

MW: Please introduce yourself?

JL: Hi this is John Lawton ex front man of Uriah Heep and Lucifers Friend and various other projects….

MW: You got your start in Asterix in 1970. Why did you all decide to change the name to Lucifer’s Friend?

JL: Actually Asterix was a Lucifer’s Friend project recorded at the same time as the first Lucifers album, but with a different theme running through it and 2 vocalists…..

MW: Tell me about each of the following Lucifer’s Friend albums:

MW: Where The Groupies Killed The Blues…

JL: 2nd Lucifer’s Friend album, very progressive I thought. Several lyrics written by a guy called John O’Brian Docker buta very strong album, got into the Billboard chart which was very good for an unknown German band..

MW: Banquet

JL: My own personal favourite of all the Lucifer’s albums. Featured the brass section from the James Last Orch. Great songs only 6 of them, but great to record….A bit jazzy for some fans but it just showed how diverse we were….

MW: Mind Exploding

JL: Back to the rock roots and again a good album with some terrific musicianship from the band….

MW: Mean Machine

JL: After a time away from the band with Uriah Heep I rejoined the guys for this album which we recorded in England. Wasn’t the best work we have done, but still had some good songs on it and was unfortunately the last album with the original line up.

MW: Sumo Grip

JL: The last album that the original guitarist Peter Hesslein and I worked on. Again some great material but some say the album was overproduced and I tend to agree, but it was well received….

MW: During this time you were pretty busy because you would also sing for Uriah Heap from 1977 – 1979. How did this come about?

JL: After David Byron left Heep, they contacted some friends of mine who new my work from Lucifers Friend and my work with Deep Purple’s Roger Glover. I had sung for Roger on the iconic Butterfly Fly Ball concert at the Albert Hall in London. I received a call from Ken Hensley from Heep asking me to come to London for an audition. I got the job and the rest is history….

MW: Tell me about each of the following Uriah Heap albums:

MW: Firefly

JL: The tracks were already recorded when I joined, so it was a case of me learning the songs and putting my own style to them…Some great songs here including on of my favourites WISE MAN.

MW: Innocent Victim

JL: Back to a more rocky style for the band and a chance for me to write something. The single FREE ME became a big hit for Heep all around the world and took the album on to greater things….

MW: Why did you leave Uriah Heap after such a short time in the band?

JL: Many reasons really and too many to list here but basically musical differences. I think the guys had got the taste for commercial success after FREE ME and were consequently looking for the next hit. To my mind that is not what Uriah Heep were noted for. Songs like JULY MORNING, THE WIZARD, SUNRISE and songs of that ilk is what made the band different….

MW: You would go back to Uriah Heap in 2001 to do the live album The Musicians Birthday Party?

JL: Actually I went back to the band in 1995. The singer Bernie Shaw was having some problems with his voice so they asked me to do a tour of South Africa with them, which of course I did. The Magicians Birthday was a good gig with the original lineup including Ken Hensley….

MW: Do you think you will ever go and play with Uriah Heap or record with them again?

JL: I have learnt in this business to never say never J) who knows we have remained friends throughout the years and Mick Box and I collaborated on a Bulgarian Cinema Movie a year ago. Heep are very settled in their present formation and I can’t envisage my going back or them asking me, we both have our paths to follow.

MW: Tell me about each of the following bands:

MW: Rebel

JL: I was invited to go over to Germany to produce an album by the band. Unfortunately the singer they had couldn’t crack it in the studio, so they asked me to sing it. It turned out okay and opened the doors for future productions…

MW: Zar

JL: The same guitarist but different musicians in the “engine room” J) some really good songs on this album and we did do a couple of presentation gigs, but it was never going to be long term for me….

MW: Gunhill

JL: A band I put together with some friends to try and get back to what I started off doing all those years ago, ie playing songs that I liked and playing smaller clubs really just for fun…but we were very good I have to say J).

MW: the Hensley Lawton Band

JL: After so many years away from the music scene, Ken Hensley decided to make a come back. We put our differences to one side and played together at the Uriah Heep convention in 2000. The gig was recorded and we went out on the road together promoting the album and playing the good Heep stuff. It was never our intention to take it further than this and after 6 months we went out separate ways…

MW: the Lawton Dunning Project

JL: Myself and Steve Dunning from the John Lawton Band did a couple of acoustic gigs as a duo and it was so successful that we were asked to record an album which we did called STEPPIN IT UP. It was never going to be more than that and it was just a slight side step from the John Lawton Band.

MW: the John Lawton Band

JL: A terrific band with some great musicians and we recorded an album called STING IN THE TALE. We were together for about 2 years and did lots of gigs abroad aswell as England but the guitarist decided to go back to Canada and my buddy Steve Dunning developed some health problems, so we called it a day…pity but there you go.

MW: OTR – On The Rocks

JL: I met with ex Focus axeman Jan Dumee who played me some of his new material which sounded very exciting for me. He had written most of the music for guitar, so it was a challenge to convert the melodies for vocals. The musicians were from Brazil and the basic tracks were recorded in Sao Paulo. I did the vocals in a studio in Holland and we did plan to take the album out on the road. However the lack of promotion from the record company didn’t help, so we had to let it slip.

MW: How did Diana Express – The Power Of Mind come about?

JL: I have done a lot of work in Bulgaria over the past few years and one of my musician friends introduced me to a guy called Milen Vrabevski who is actually a doctor. Milen had written and produced an album with some Bulgarian musicians called DIANA EXPRESS who had been a very successful band back in the 70’s. Milen asked me to have a listen to this album with the idea that I would sing it in English…. I liked the album a lot, the songs were very well played and produced, so after looking at the English lyrics and thank god they were not a Google translation, I decided to do it. It’s a great album and just goes to show that there are some excellent musicians on the other side of the world J)

MW: What do you have planned for 2013?

JL: We have some new material to sort out for the next album, but right now the plan is to get out there and present POWER OF MIND live….

MW: What would you like to say in closing?

JL: Happy New Year to all the readers…and take care

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The Morton Report Interview with Jon Anderson

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A Short Conversation with Jon Anderson
Jon Anderson once fronted the popular rock band, Yes, and hopes to again.
January 11, 2013
By Matt Rowe, Columnist

To talk with those who journeyed with you, in their way, as you made your way through this thing called life, well, that’s special.

Being a Yes fan, I followed much of their music as I made my uncertain way through my teens. They were unlike any other band I had heard. And they still are. So when I discovered that Audio Fidelity would reissue Close to the Edge, the enduring 1972 classic that, as Jon Anderson so eloquently puts it, “…changed the musical landscape a little at that time,” as a high-resolution Super Audio CD (SACD), I became excited.

It’s not every day that a fan can get one of their favorite albums remastered in the highest quality. It has the potential to become a whole new experience.

I sought out an opportunity to talk with one of the architects of Close to the Edge and other Yes classics, Jon Anderson. What follows is a short—and memorable—conversation I had with the writer and voice of all those songs.

Yes has been an important part of not only my life, but many others as well. Part of that is the distinctive voice that powered many of those great albums and songs. Another part of the allure is the great songs, their lyrics, and their music that you had a deep part in helping create. Let me take this moment to thank you on behalf of myself and a wealth of fans that feel the same. We’re deeply grateful for Jon Anderson.

You were a part of the original configuration of Yes that did not have Steve Howe in it. Somehow, in strange ways, that seems inconceivable. The legacy of Yes owes much to the collaborative talents of both you and Steve, lyrically and musically. How did that partnership begin, and how did it evolve?

When Steve joined the band, we became inseparable. His knowledge of the guitar was amazing to me, and it was very easy to to sing melodies and write lyrics with him at that time. We were free spirits in a way.

As time progressed, so did we. He would come to me with ideas of a song. I would help develop the songs and add my ideas. That’s how we were able to write longer format songs, like “And You and I” and “Close to the Edge.” Again, with his guitar knowledge, I would ask him to try ideas out. He would happily follow my thoughts, and there it was, ‘magical’ moments that seemed to last forever.

The Yes Album and Fragile are excellent albums. But many, myself included, have a profound love for Close to the Edge. Would you tell us what ideas went into the creation of that album?

I think, first and foremost, we had a connection to create a very large work. Steve sang to me, “…close to the edge, down by the corner…”, and I sang, “…down at the end, round by the river…”, and off we went creating the verse and chorus to the song. It was then that I thought of a sort of ‘chanting’ intro, even starting with some sound effects, like the cosmic ocean, diving into a guitar-based solo intro, then into the ‘chanting’, “a seasoned witch,” etc.

After creating the first half of the song, jumping from a verse-to-chant-to-verse-to-chant sort of thing, we needed a middle section. Again, I created a cosmic ocean of sound, and we needed a song. So Steve played me these chords, and I sang, “I get up, I get down”, and “two million people barely satisfy,” etc. Steve then remembered that he had written a song on those very same chords, which he started to sing, “in her white lace,” etc. And lo and behold, the two songs worked together. The rest of the song needed Rick’s solo building to the chant once more, and then the final verse. We all felt that we had changed the musical landscape a little at that time.

There are few Yes albums that I do not revere as much as others. Those include releases without you in them. Despite the absence of Rick Wakeman, I have a deep love for Relayer. I also deeply appreciate the whole of Going for the One. Do you have any Yes albums that you value over others?

Fragile, Close to the Edge, Tales from Topographic Oceans,Relayer, Going for the One, especially “Awaken” [from that album], 90125, Talk, Magnification. All of them were very worthwhile creations.

Your first solo album, the brilliant Olias of Sunhillow, showed Yes fans that there were facets of the band that could be enjoyed outside the confines of Yes. Even so, it is difficult to escape the majesty of the Yes sound. CouldOlias of Sunhillow have been a Yes album?

Not really. I was very committed to this idea of ‘solo’, creating a work by myself. Like going to a musical university and learning about my potential.

I have followed and enjoyed your work outside of Yes, including your collaborations with Vangelis, as well as your film contributions (“Loved by the Son” with Tangerine Dream). All of your solo albums after Olias of Sunhillow take on various musical styles. Do you have a side that you particularly enjoy exploring musically?

I always feel the need for adventure when I create an album. That’s why they are all so different.

I understand the sequel to Olias of Sunhillow is underway, with you playing all instruments? Can you tell us about this album?

Again, it was just like going to school every day, and being guided by ‘spirit’ to make this enormous musical project come to life. It drove me a bit crazy, but in the end, it was amazing to me that it worked so well.

Your Three Ships Christmas collection is an essential for my holiday enjoyment. Did you record other standards that didn’t make the cut for the LP?

Not really. I wanted to try something different, like the jungle making music, and songs for spirits, it was such a fun album to do. Maybe one day I will sing the carols I sang at school.

Will there be a time that you re-record popular Yes classics, perhaps with Rick Wakeman?

Maybe some acoustic versions for fun. Rick and I already perform those songs on the live albums.

Will there ever be a chance at reconciliation with Yes that could result in a new tour, perhaps even a new Yes album?

I would love that to happen!

Are you aware of the reissue of Close to the Edge in the audiophile format SACD coming from Audio Fidelity?

Yes, very cool!

It will be presented in stereo, however many love a multi-channel effect. If such technology were available to you back when your albums were created, would Yes have widely availed themselves of it?

I’ve always wanted to record in surround sound, still do.

Assuming that you have heard the DVD-Audio multi-channel of Fragile released some years ago by Rhino Records, do you have any thoughts on how it made the album sound?

Not really. I just remember that great feeling I had at Advision Studios when we recorded it.

Have you heard the SACD version of Close to the Edge that was mentioned earlier? If so, what are your thoughts on it?

I don’t have it, sorry.

Thank you for your time. I cannot tell you what a pleasure it was to communicate with one of the greats. Thanks again for your immeasurable impact on my recognition of beauty in song and lyric.

My pleasure.

If the thought of hearing Close to the Edge in great clarity appeals to you, Audio Fidelity will release the intended SACD version on January 22.

Source


Russell Trunk’s Exclusive Magazine Interview with John Lawton

the power of mind

John Lawton
‘Now I Know – The John Lawton Story’

The music industry is buzzing about the new concept album by former legendary Uriah Heep / Lucifer’s Friend vocalist John Lawton titled The Power of Mind.

An innovative new CD, conceived, written and produced by the CGI member, Dr. Milen Vrabevski, but performed by John Lawton and Bulgarian ensemble Diana Express, The Power of Mind is an exploration into the science of positive thinking and its applications to the subconscious mind. Featuring 14 amazing songs that showcase the soulful vocals of John Lawton and the powerful instrumentals by Diana Express will leave you wanting to hear it again and again.

“The Power of Mind is a concept album with positive thinking being the theme,” John explains. “In the world of today, I don’t think there are many better things to focus on. The way the songs flow into each other is really the way one would read a book or relate stories to friends. The melodies and lyrics say a lot about how we should view each other.”

Chatting further with the man himself, and taking it right from the top, he began his music career in North Shields (England) in the early ’60s with The Deans. So, was it true that they were all just a bunch of kids who simply decided at random to name him as the lead singer?! “Yeah it worked out that way. We were 15 years old at that time and of course music was what everybody wanted to do. One of the guys could play guitar a bit, one of the others decided he was the bassman, another took drum lessons, which left me. And so it was decided I was the singer! I spent the early rehearsals with my back to them staring at the wall because it felt so wrong at that moment. Great days though, in many many ways :-)”

You then moved on to West One and later Stonewall, which also included John Miles, Vic Malcolm (Geordie) and Paul Thompson (Roxy Music)! Wow, now that must have been a brilliant band to be part of at the time?! “It was decided that we would put a band together from the best of the local guys and I got the singing spot 🙂 Vic had written some songs so we went out and played in Hamburg (no recordings unfortunately) and by the time we were about to return to England, the band was really tight. However my future seemed to lie in Germany and so I stayed. The rest of the guys returned home went their separate ways and the rest is history :-)”

Things got more commercial for you when you became the lead singer for legendary German rock cult band Lucifer’s Friend. You ended up, through two stints, recording nine studio albums with them, so that must have left an incredible impression on you. Can you, perhaps, pull a true highlight from your time in the band to reveal to us today? “Lucifers Friend was such a great band, as musicians they were first class, always looking for a new way forward musically. It has been said a lot we were ahead of our time in many ways. The 1st album (Lucifers Friend) set out to be heavy rock but after that we went a little more prog. With the 2nd album (Where The Groupies Killed The Blues) and from there we went slightly poppy until my favourite album came along which was Banquet, an absolute stunner of an album in my opinion 🙂 I have worked with some great musicians in my time and the Lucifers guys are up there with the best of them.”

After a shot at the Eurovision Song Contest in 1976 re: the Les Humphries Singers, you joined Uriah Heep for three years and three studio albums. Again, please reveal a true highlight from your time in the band; something that left you with a great memory? “Joining Heep was momentous for me, coming from the Humphries Singer to one of the best rock bands around – well, what can I say 🙂 In that time I got to see places especially in the USA that I had heard of as a singer starting out. The tours were long compared to what I had done previously, but we toured with some great bands KISS, FOREIGNER, CHEAP TRICK, and played some incredible venues. I think a highlight has to be playing Kansas City stadium to 20/30 thousand people and seeing them flick the cigarette lighters on for the song ‘July Morning.’ Truly memorable.”

Since then you have worked with some of the finest record producers and some incredible musicians through the years – and today have just released your latest album; a concept album entitled The Power of Mind. But, this innovative new album was actually conceived, written and produced by the CGI member, Dr. Milen Vrabevski, but performed by you AND a Bulgarian ensemble, Diana Express! So, first things first, how did you first meet Dr. Vrabevski? “I was introduced via a musician friend in Bulgaria to Milen who gave me a copy of a CD sung in Bulgarian of some really good songs. I really liked the melodies and the way it had been recorded all live no computerised stuff :-)”

“Milen asked me if I was interested in singing the songs in English, so after looking at the translated lyrics (not Google translate, thank god) 🙂 I really wanted to do this album.”

And how long ago did Dr. V. suggest the idea to create a “concept album” to you? (ie: how long did it take to complete the album, from start to finish?) “From our first discussion about the project until actual completion was about 6 months. I had other commitments that had to be fulfilled before I could start, but basically everything was there. The tracks remained as they were from a playing point of view, all I had to do was re-sing all the lead lines. But, of course all the backing vocals had to be re-done as they were all in Bulgarian also! I had everything recorded in the space of 10 days, but it was fun to do.”

With the concept songs showcasing 14 amazing songs that explore the science of positive thinking and its applications to the subconscious mind, did you yourself find that during its recording you were suddenly feeling, well, more positive and free within the confines of your own mind, perhaps? “I understood where Milen was coming from and we had a good time in the studio while putting down the vocals. At the time it felt like I was reading a book to somebody and every song seemed like the next chapter of the story. I was suffering from a bout of flu at the time of recording so I guess positive thinking played a part in getting it all done :-)”

Indeed, with regard this new album, how easy or hard is it to create a new, vibrant, wanted-by-the-public sound that both builds on and surpasses the musical wonderments and accomplishments that preceded it within the industry? “Wooahh !!! That’s a loaded question! I hope that we have created something that will last, and not be seen as a “one off”. Whether it surpasses any musical accomplishments of other artists, remains to be seen. I truly hope that POWER OF MIND opens doors to a second album already in the writing stage, and gives us a chance to fulfil the promise.”

Do you have a favorite track from ‘The Power of Mind,’ perhaps? And if so, which one and why? “I have 2 favourite tracks, TWO HEARTS and THE SEARCH. I just love the melodies especially on HEARTS, but the transitions on THE SEARCH from the intro to the powerful ending, absolutely awesome. Even if I say so myself :-)”

If you had to sum yourself up in just five (5) words today, after all you have been through, encountered and succeeded in/at, what would those five (5) words be? “Actually it would be 7, if that’s allowed? It would be, Still Paying My Dues to the Blues”

If asked to record one for charity, what ’80s (and possibly cheesy!) pop/rock song would you love to cover today … and why? “I honestly don’t like much from the 80’s. It might be an ABBA song 🙂 But if any, it would have to be ‘You’ve Lost That Loving Feeling’ by The Righteous Brothers. I just love the vocals on that song especially Bobby Hatfield. A really good singer, sadly no longer with us :-(”

Lastly, and throwing you a journalistic curve ball, Exclusive Magazine loves Penguins (the birds) … do you?! “Love em !!! And their dancing feet :-)”

Interviewed by Russell A. Trunk

Source


Skylight Interview with Roye Albrighton of Nektar

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1. How did you decide to record this album full of covers?

The idea originated from Cleopatra who thought that Nektar doing a covers album might be of interest to their fanbase.

2. Many famous musicians participate in this album, did you or the label contact the musicians?

The label were the instigators of this..they had the contacts accumalated over the years and conacted them with the offer to do it.

3. Did you meet any of the guest musicians or they had already recorded their own parts before you enter the studios?

Apart from Joel and John Wetton I have never met any of the other musicians..the whole album was recorded remotely via internet. This has it’s advantages in such a scenario, however, recording an album of new music would need a different approach.

4. There a few risky numbers in this album such as covers of non progressive tracks such as “Africa” by Toto. Were you worried about the reactions from your oldschool fans?

Not at all..our fanbase know that we try something different all the time and a covers album wouldn’t be that different, after all when Nektar were in it’s infancy we aso did a couple of covers.

5. What is the scope of this album, to extend your fanbase or satisfy your artistic will?

Bassically just to show that we are human and not a progressive rock machine.

6. Did you ever share the stage with any of the artists that you decided to cover?

Never

7. Who was the artist of the cover artwork?

Pease ask Cleopatra

8. Do you have any plans for an album with new music?

Yes we have a new Nektar studio album called “Time Machine” that appears early 2013.

9. Do you have plans to tour for the Spoonful Of Time album?

Not really but we may put a track or two into the set over the next shows.

10. Are there any other covers that were recorded for a new cover album?

No

Info: http://nektarsmusic.com

Source


musicradar Interview with Jon Anderson

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Jon Anderson talks Yes’ Close To The Edge track-by-track

“We were on top of the world when we made Close To The Edge,” says singer-songwriter Jon Anderson, recalling the early months of 1972 when he and his Yes mates (guitarist Steve Howe, bassist Chris Squire, keyboardist Rick Wakeman and drummer Bill Bruford) holed up inside London’s Advision Studios to record the follow-up to their breakout hit, Fragile, which was released a year earlier.

“The band had just done a huge tour for Fragile,” says Anderson, “and we were quite pleased at how the audiences were loving the longer pieces that we played live. Roundabout was eight minutes long, Starship Trooper was nine, and Heart Of The Sunrise was over 11 minutes. These are well-constructed pieces of music that really worked on stage. We were feeling very powerful, like we could do anything.”

And that they did. Comprised of just three songs – the title track along with And You And I, both four-movement epics, plus the relatively short (at eight minutes, 55 seconds) Siberian Khatru – Close To The Edge was the result of the progressive rock band’s musical impulses running on full, a broad canvas of dizzying instrumental exchanges supporting Anderson’s sublime, mystical poetic vistas.

“It’s very representative of what I think is the Yes style,” Anderson says. “We experimented a lot, but we also had the talent to back it up – it wasn’t just solo after solo. We told stories and created moods. It was all very daring and wonderful.”

The group eschewed making demos, preferring to work on rough ideas while co-producer Eddy Offord rolled tape. After several weeks, concepts were sewn together into elaborate song structures. “We’d get the basic sketch of something, and then it was a matter of refinement,” says Anderson. “A piece would start to feel complete, but then I’d look to Steve and say, ‘We need a very poignant 12-string guitar introduction.’ He’d come up with it, it would be great, and we’d be off.”

Released on 13 September 1972, Close To The Edge bested the performance of Fragile, reaching No. 4 on the UK Albums Chart and placing a spot higher on Billboard’s Top 200 in the US. “FM stations really supported us, particularly on the college campuses in the States,” says Anderson. “They weren’t interested in what was commercial – they were just into playing great music.”

On the following pages, Anderson looks back at the writing and recording of Close To The Edge, offering his insights into the record track-by-track (and, more specifically, movement-by-movement). “It was the beginning of my musical journey in terms of really understanding structure,” he says. “I was able to help guide the band into Tales From Topographic Oceans, The Gates Of Delirium and Awaken. Everybody was so talented, so we could play these epic songs marvelously. The biggest thing was that we were all in harmony. We were truly connected.”

For the full interview, please visit MusicRadar.com.