JGL: Hi John and thanks for taking the time to talk with Jazz Guitar
Life.com. First off, how old are you?
JB: 50 this year.
JGL: What geographical area do you live in?
JB: Originally from Boston I’ve lived
in the NY metropolitan area since 1979.
JGL: How long have you been playing guitar for?
JB: Since I was about 15.
JGL: What was your first guitar and what are you playing now?
JB: My first was an old Guild Starfire III but
I also eventually got a Gibson Byrdland that I had for years and
wish I still had now – a very cool instrument. For the last
10 years or so my main instrument is a custom Tom Doyle. Tom is
a wonderful luthier who also designs the pickups as well. It’s
sort of a thin body, spruce archtop model, very versatile, that
can function in any situation. It can really crank, play soft
“acoustic” Freddie Green style, as well as get a nice
clean and dark sound at any volume level.
JGL: At what age did you first get into guitar playing and were
you interested in jazz from the beginning or were there other
musical interests before jazz?
JB: In Boston at that time there were lots of
“show bands”. 8-10 piece show groups that worked 7
nights week playing cover dance music etc. It was mostly funk/”soul”
music of the day and lots of fun. That led me into a lifelong
love of organ groups and working in that context for years and
opening the door to jazz/straight-ahead influences.
JGL: What excited you about jazz guitar or jazz in general when
you were young?
JB: Really the time feel and a real general
excitement and joy in hearing the playing of people like Wes and
Jimmy Smith, Cannonball, Miles, etc. etc. It felt like only a
very select, privileged few had access to this special music and
I wanted to “throw my hat into the ring” and see what
could happen.
JGL: Who were your influences on jazz guitar when you were beginning,
and have they stayed the same or have they changed over the years?
JB: I really identified with the darker, warmer
sound of “older”players like Wes, Kenny Burrell etc.
at that time and not the “Boston” jazz guitar of the
day (kind of a thinner, chorusy, single line approach). It wasn’t
until I truly discovered Jim Hall and really understood his playing
that a real total conception of what was possible on the guitar
came into view for me. Jim plays the “whole” guitar
with an incredible blend of lyricism and composition that defies
comparison. I love the way his playing has evolved over the years
as other players of his generation (really great ones) sort of
stayed put conceptually. “Less is more” and the way
he achieves intensity in a solo by way of harmonic, chordal density
and not by way of volume and playing more notes speaks clearly
to his mastery of the instrument and maturity as a total musician
– not just a guitarist. We got close in the late 80’s
and I consider the times we got together socially and played duo
some of my most important experiences. He’s a good friend
and a continued big influence.
JGL: Who are you listening to today (guitarists or non-guitarists)?
JB: Mostly pianists as I really think of the
guitar like a piano in many respects and I’m constantly
trying to emulate a “right hand/left hand” approach
to playing. I really like Brad Melhdau and I’ve been checking
out old Wynton Kelly lately and always Bill Evans. When just hanging
out it’s usually a good singer as that’s how I learn
new tunes – usually from a vocal version by a singer who
“dig deep” like Sinatra to truly get a strong conception
of the melody.
JGL: Did you know early on that music was something you wanted
to do as a career choice and if so, what were some of the things
you did to make this choice work for you?
JB: I felt then and still do that as strong
an education as possible was essential so I ended up both at Berklee
College in Boston and eventually graduated from the New England
Conservatory of Music. During those years I was always playing
in clubs any kind of gig possible. I took up the seven-string
guitar back in the early 70’s to specifically develop as
an accompanist in duo situations as most small gigs were usually
a duo for financial reasons. I also became very aware of becoming
a good accompanist and really what that means as a guitarist.
I tried to work with good singers and really worked hard at the
art of accompaniment. I still feel that’s one of the hardest
things to really “get” effectively. In many respects
it’s easy to be an accomplished soloist and get attention
etc. etc. but the idea of effectively making someone else sound
good and making the subtle, selfless musical decisions needed
to make that happen has always turned me on and stood as an ideal
to go for.
JGL: Were your parent(s) and family members supportive of your
musical career choice?
JB: Very much and I’ve been very fortunate
in that regard. My father really “caught the jazz bug”
with me over the years so we spent a lot of time together during
those early years.
JGL: In a previous discussion you mentioned, "I have been
'off the scene' for about 8-9 years studying and working in the
field of radiology and currently manage a radiology department
here in NY". If it is not too personal, why were you "off
the scene" for so long? Do you feel it hurt your career or
the possibility of becoming better known and what are you doing
now to get back in the scene?
JB: I’m still not sure what exactly the
“scene” is, as it seems very intangible sometimes
but back in 1994 I had had a long series of shall we say disappointing
events that occurred regarding the music business specifically
that caused some real soul-searching as to who I was and wanted
to become musically and personally for the rest of my career.
Although I was not sure what I could possibly do or offer other
than play/teach music etc, I somehow gravitated toward medical
imaging and ended up in x-ray school – an initial step into
an exciting field. This led to becoming an MRI technologist and
eventually teaching MRI and managing a number of imaging centers
here in N.Y. – a much bigger, longer, and time-consuming
journey than I ever expected. It’s really been a great trip
as I’ve gotten exposed to a completely different world in
a field that has an incredible future. Technically it really appeals
to that side of me (digital technology in medical imaging) and
personally the “people skills” piece is so very tied
to how/why/we try to communicate in playing jazz music. There
are tremendous parallels between the two fields that I ‘m
still discovering and it feels like a gift in having a chance
to experience those opportunities in two completely different
areas. Medical imaging has definitely taken me off of the traditional
career path in music but in the last few years coming back to
playing more often really feels totally different. Many of the
heavy “career expectations” are gone that foster a
lot of negative emotion and playing is really fun again. Underhill
Jazz is a long-range goal I have to release music and educational
projects in the next few years.
JGL: Could you describe some of your best musical situations or
experiences and the worst?
JB: The best are any situation that people are
really listening and the sound is good. If you have any doubt
in the connection between spirituality and improvisation it’s
clear as day when those factors are in effect. It’s truly
the convergence of years of technical study merging with an “in
the moment” experience with an audience. Conversely during
the journey of making a living as a working musician we often
end up in less than ideal situations where you need to draw on
whatever professional skills it takes to get through. For me,
a common downside is typically noise. Ambient noise in a performance
setting or (although rarely for me these days) noise/distractions
in my head that block the path to those “in the moment”
moments, if you will.
JGL: What type of musical situation do you enjoy the most (i.e.:
trio, quartet, duo, solo, etc.)
JB: Each for different reasons but probably
duo is my favorite. I learned to play by just literally sitting
down with players much more experienced than myself but in duo
contexts. It’s a real challenge but one with huge payoffs
in learning how to play with a more conversational approach. You
need to become aware of how to structure both your accompaniment
and solos simultaneously so as to “tell a story”.
Otherwise the music can get reduced to certain sameness. Composition
and form become of paramount importance – it has to, as
there’s no place to hide!
JGL: You are a major exponent of jazz education having designed
the original Jazz Guitar curriculum at The New School in NYC.
Plus, you are also a very in-demand clinician throughout Europe
and have created an instructional video with John Abercrombie.
How did musical education become so much an important part of
your life and how do you approach teaching? What were the kind
of things you brought to the New School?
JB: I try to break down the major components
of any topic (chordal/single-line improvisation/listening etc.)
and reassemble them to the student so the process can become clear.
That can sometimes be a real challenge as it forces you, the teacher,
to codify each piece of what you do and put a logic to it so as
to make sense to a student. Lot’s of jazz education can
get reduced to ‘let’s just play a tune” and
although that can be a huge learning tool in itself most students
of jazz guitar I’ve found, need something more to take with
them as a “lesson”. I felt a strong addition for guitar
education was a sight-reading/ensemble class that I had started.
As we all know guitarists are notoriously weak in that area so
I brought in materials from lot’s sources that drew on classical
and recording session music that forced everyone to focus on an
ensemble approach and really learning to read across the whole
fingerboard no matter what style of music you aspire to.
JGL: In your experience as an educator, what are the most important
elements of jazz guitar study that young people (or any student
of jazz guitar) need to acquire early on to sustain the dream
of becoming a professional musician? Are there any common issues
or problems that you encounter regularly that happen when beginners
first start out learning jazz guitar?
JB: Perseverance, consistency, and a sense of
humor. Jazz guitar can become so “deep” that you can
lose your perspective and get discouraged easily. You have to
be relentless in your quest to keep learning but still have fun.
In terms of starting out one thing I think helps is always try
to look at anything on the guitar in more than one way. In other
words if you find a voicing or phrase you like, learn to play
it in a different position. It’s amazing how your knowledge
of the guitar will increase just by “repeating yourself”
in a less familiar area of the fingerboard. After a while you’ll
do it automatically and the instrument can suddenly just “open
up”.
JGL: Do you teach privately, and if so, how does one go about studying
with you? Is there a particular level of student you are looking
for?
JB: Of course. Anyone can contact me at the
underhilljazz website: http://underhilljazz.com.
Most people come to me who already have some basic knowledge and
I feel I can be most effective when they know basic harmony, scales
etc. etc.
JGL: Apart from the instructional video with John Abercrombie you
also have a new CD with you and Abercrombie in a duo setting.
How did your association with Abercrombie come about and what
is it about Abercrombie that made you want to work with him apart
from other guitar players?
JB: John is one of my favorite players and people.
He embodies all the elements of a truly great jazz player –
deeply swinging, an original “point of view”, always
listening with a big sense of humor and great technique. I thought
that many people don’t know John’s playing in a “straight-ahead”
context so it was great fun to do something with him kind of in
that context – thus our CD “Animations”.
JGL: Speaking of guitar duos, you will be playing in a duo setting
with NY jazz guitarist Joe Giglio in early September, 2005. What
are your thoughts about the guitar duo and how do you go about
playing in such a situation given the sonic similarities?
JB: As I mentioned before, the duo is where
it all sort of began for me and is still the most challenging
of contexts for exactly the reasons you mentioned - that “sonic
sameness”. Thus, you need to think compositionally and always
be listening. Perhaps switching from finger style to pick, walking
bass lines, “Freddie Green” style comping, improvising
single lines simultaneously, etc. etc. Obviously it all needs
to make sense in a musical context within a particular tune say,
and that’s the challenge. Duo playing can really represent
a compilation of all you know and want to say as a guitarist but
most importantly really delineating your total point of view as
a jazz player. I hope that makes sense, as it can be a truly vast
context to play in.
JGL: Many of the jazz guitarists I have interviewed and talk with
have day jobs which allow them to do what they love, which is
to play jazz guitar, but it also provides them and their families
a steady pay check. What are your thoughts on this subject and
will you be doing both the day gig and the jazz guitar gig or
will you be focusing more on one than the other?
JB: That’s a really practical question
for all musicians to answer individually and the answer can change
dependant on your life’s demands at the moment. Years ago
I totally bought in to my identity as a “jazz guitarist”
almost to a fault in that I let no other force distract me from
that goal – guitar, guitar, guitar. In doing so (while necessary
to develop that individual point of view we spoke about) you block
other areas of growth in your life. For me, now, my day gig if
still offering up a huge potential for learning (both technically
and personally) so I really feel that enhances the music and I’ll
continue that at least for now.
JGL: Your technique is based on a finger-style approach where the
guitar is approached more like a piano where comping chord fragments
and melodies are played simultaneously. Was this how you have
always approached the guitar?
JB: It really developed from listening to pianists
and trying to emulate that concept/feel on the guitar. I also
did a lot of solo gigs and found that roots and fifths were often
times completely unnecessary to improvising in a solo context
so I set out to systematically explore two/three note voicings
that create the impression of fuller harmony with a much more
swinging approach. By the way in solo playing the “beat”
rules so anything you can harmonically imply, keeping that swing
priority really sounds great. It’s much easier to insert
smaller voicings that punctuate the “groove” rather
than big, fat, ponderous voicings that actually bog down the music.
Less is always more here and this concept promotes playing a lot
less notes (you technically can’t physically play as much)
and we all need pointers as guitarists to do that.
JGL: What was your practice routine like when you were beginning
and how has it developed over the years?
JB: In the beginning like most people, hours,
and hours – totally essential to master certain technique.
I would do an hour or so of just sight-reading, then an hour of
specific technical or harmonic idea I was working on, and then
tunes – either new ones or applying new stuff to older material.
Then, after many years, and as you play more gigs etc. practicing
can be more of the experience of preparing yourself to play in
performance. In other words it may not involve the guitar at all
or often times less of it. Getting your mind clear is most important
and whatever that takes for you individually is paramount.
JGL: In your bio it states that "John believes that the harmonic
aspect of the guitar has not been explored to its fullest and
strives to exploit this area in all live performances and teaching".
Could you expand on this statement?
JB: I’ve always been drawn to the chordal
aspect of the guitar but in an improvised way – not in worked
out “chord melody solos”. Much like learning scales
I love to build vocabulary of voicings that can be used to represent
a numbers of sounds and try to call on them freely during a tune
– I call them “harmonic synonyms” and there’s
lots on the guitar. Lenny Breau’s playing pointed to what
was possible in this area and I really like Mick Goodricks book,
“The Advancing Guitarist” as well.
JGL: Could
you talk a bit about how you approach a tune improvisationally?
Are there worked out patterns, or is it right off the top of your
head?
JB: Both, in that we all have a working knowledge
of what we know on the fingerboard and no one play 100% of totally
inspired content all the time. Like great cooking - you take some
ingredients that you know as “yours” and try some
different combinations in putting them together in a new creative
combination. Then, if you get moments of real inspiration and
you find yourself playing somewhere on the instrument or something
previously unknown – great! That’s what it’s
all about. Years of practicing the essentials – chords,
scales (vertically and horizontally), tunes etc. still rules however
before you can experience the freedom of basically forgetting
about all that and just playing.
JGL: You have played live and or recorded with some top name jazz
singers such as Peggy Lee, Sylvia Syms, Rosemary Clooney, Mark
Murphy and Tony Bennett and have also performed with jazz legends
George Mraz, Tom Harrell, John Abercrombie, Red Mitchell, Grady
Tate and the Great Basie Eight including Clark Terry, Buddy Tate
and "Sweets" Edison. How did these associations come
about and what helped you get the gigs? Was there lots of competition?
JB: Although I felt really ready for each of
these opportunities there was a certain random chance to each
setting as well. That’s why it’s essential to always
be musically ready – ready for whatever may come up because
often we are not in control of when opportunities will present.
Just being around NY was/is a huge help as well. You never know….
JGL: Your debut CD as a leader, “Very Early” was a
favorite of mine (and still is) when I first began exploring jazz
guitar back in the very early 80's and I'm pleased to see that
your catalogue of recorded material has grown to nine CD's as
a leader. Is "Very Early" still available? I've worn
my copy out, and how has your recording career helped in establishing
your presence in the jazz guitar community?
JB: Thanks for the kind comments and unfortunately
“Very Early” has been out of print for years but I
certainly have fond memories of doing it. Recording (especially
your own music) is somewhat of a crapshoot. I’ve never really
had a “record deal” in the traditional sense but always
managed to put out projects after completion in some form or another.
The problem with giving up your project is most jazz labels will
get sold/swallowed up by a larger conglomerate etc. and the project
goes out of print and you don’t own the master any more.
With the internet and lower costs of digital production today
I find it much more enticing to release, nurture, develop, your
own projects that will last remain yours – for better or
for worse. I would caution though don’t necessarily expect
to make money at least initially. Sometimes the reality is a recording
project can be just an additional calling card to your overall
musical “package” that you bring to the table, and
today that’s essential.
JGL: You now have your own record label "Underhill Jazz",
and have released two records on this label so far "It Was
A Very Good Year" and the Abercrombie/Basile duo album "Animations".
What was the impetus to start your own record label and how is
it working out for you so far? What are your future plans for
Underhill Jazz? Are you looking for talent or is it more of a
personal venture?
JB: Underhill Jazz will definitely continue
in that we’ll probably do one project a year for now. I
have some DVD ideas from an educational standpoint as well that
I hope to put together on the next project. Initially a home for
my own projects I do hope to release others on Underhill in the
future.
JGL: You have recorded a theme album for King Records in Japan
that is all Sinatra tunes where you play alongside jazz greats
Michael Brecker, Grady Tate, and once again John Abercrombie.
How did this album come to pass and has it made it stateside?
What was the response both publicly and critically?
JB: I’ve always been a huge Sinatra fan
and his “great American songbook” has been a constant
source of new tunes, interesting phrasing etc. etc. for years.
I always wanted to put together a project of “today’s”
jazz players interpreting that material and thought it to be a
good commercial idea as well (this was prior to Sinatra’s
passing and before any of the subsequent tributes). Unfortunately
after almost a year of trying I could not get it released here
in the States but King Records in Japan put it out. Since that
time I think Musical Heritage still has it available as a mail
order item. I’d love to approach a Volume II of that with
a real budget – Mmmm…. maybe a future Underhill project.
JGL: If
you could only pick one individual or group to play with (alive
or dead), who would that be and why?
JB: I’d love to be in Las Vegas in 1966 playing Freddie Green’s
chair during the recording of “Sinatra at The Sands”
w/ Count Basie’s Band. What an ass-kicking groove all around
with a real joyous vibe. And stunning, live, one take, Sinatra
performances as well…. just a crazy thought after recently
hearing “Fly Me To The Moon” and “You Make Me
Feel So Young” again recently…
JGL: Has your impressions and experiences of being a Jazz Guitar
player been what you had expected when you first decided to become
a musician?
JB: I think so. I certainly have no regrets
as my experiences and travels here have changed my perspectives
on lots of things in my life. I spend lots of time around non-musicians
lately and I can see a huge gapping hole in people’s experience’s
that deeply affect their views on the life and the world in general.
Guitarists and jazz musicians in general have a very unique “take”
on things that I appreciate more and more as I get older.
JGL: Where would you like to see jazz guitar go in the coming years?
JB: I recently heard Wayne Kranz play (after
many years) and love what he is doing. Sort of combining a fingerstyle,
open, funk feel with lots of chordal input in a trio setting.
JGL: Any advice for the younger guy or gal who is thinking about
playing jazz guitar?
JB: By all means go for it. Whether professionally
or just as a hobby. It will change your life in ways you can’t
possibly see initially – all for the better.
JGL: Apart from music what other pursuits do you enjoy tackling?
JB: I’d love to study film. What an incredible
medium to communicate to people ideas, emotions etc. etc. Also
I’m a big boxing fan and want to get involved with being
a professional boxing judge. I’ve had that on the burner
for a few years and look forward to pursuing it in the next few
years.
JGL: Thank
you John for participating in jazzguitarlife.com. It is most appreciated.
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