Posts Tagged ‘Popdose Interview’

The Popdose Interview: Béla Fleck

bela_banjo_article1Musical genres can be helpful for fans: They allow music to be categorized; grouped with other artists that sound similar. If you like Metallica, you will probably like Slayer. If you like Chet Atkins, you should check out Tommy Emmanuel. (If you like James Ingram and Michael McDonald, please, check out Jeff Giles.)

Genres also allow people to make broad generalizations about what sort of music they like (e.g. “I love metal” or “I like everything except country”). Whether such statements are good or bad is subjective, but as a musician myself, I think they are limiting. I tend to hear music structurally, and find things to like and dislike in every genre. I don’t want to do away with genres, but I do appreciate artists who run up against the walls from time to time, and expose people to music that they have never heard before.

Few musicians in history have done more to blow up boundaries between styles of music than virtuoso banjo player Béla Fleck. Nominated for more different Grammy award categories than anyone in history (and a nine-time winner), Fleck has ripped the banjo from its strict confines as a bluegrass instrument and stretched its boundaries into almost every genre of music. Combining an improviser’s soul with a virtuoso’s technique and dedication to his craft, Fleck crosses between jazz, bluegrass and classical music with ease and aplomb.

Though some fans doubtless believe that the banjo sprang fully formed from Earl Scruggs‘ hands in the 1940s, the truth is the roots of the instrument are in West Africa, in traditional instruments like the Akonting. In 2005, Béla Fleck went to four countries in Africa with a film crew, with the goal of meeting, playing and recording with traditional African musicians, to seek out the roots of the banjo and to expose his sizeable fan base to new and beautiful music, which has a hard time reaching American ears. The result is Throw Down Your Heart, both an album available now, and an award-winning documentary tracing Béla’s journey, which debuts in New York on April 24.

On March 27, Béla was kind enough to take a few minutes to talk to us about the film, the album, and a few other matters before his soundcheck for that evening’s concert.

Let’s talk about Throw Down Your Heart. I read that you had some concept of wanting to go to Africa after you found out that the banjo’s roots were African, but talk a little about how it actually came together in 2005 and how you actually got out there.

Yeah, I’ve been loving African music for a long time, and every time I hear something acoustic or rhythmically interesting I get excited and I want to know more about it. So along with that, knowing the banjo originally came from there, combined to be an irresistible thing to do, but it took until 2005 to do it. That was a year the Flecktones took a year off – the first year we took off in 15 or 17 years of being a band. We had always been full-time. So I was looking for something really fun and different to do that year, that I normally wouldn’t have time to do. It’s impossible to take six weeks in the middle of a Flecktones year, so all of a sudden I had the time, and this was the project I most wanted to do. I guess part of me was thinking it would be quite a big effort. If I’m going to be traipsing around Africa, I’d rather do it in my 40s than my 60s. (more…)

The Popdose Interview: Gary “Dream Weaver” Wright

Gary Wright, The Dream Weaver, has two new EPs out, Waiting To Catch The Light, a set of new-age compositions, and The Light of a Million Suns, several cuts that harken back to 1980s pop in the new-jack swing vibe as well as Mr. Mister and soul stylings of the era. Our own Mojo Flucke sat down with him to discuss his greatest hits as well as where he’s headed in 2009.

Tell me about the remake of “My Love is Alive” with your son Dorian on The Light of A Million Suns–what inspired that?

I had always liked the song, and there was this producer that I knew …he had done more real pop, kind of hip-hop things, and he was crazy about the song and so he actually put a lot of the track together for me. I thought his take on it was really cool.

My son Dorian’s got a great voice, and I wanted to do something with him, so I decided to do a duet. I think it really turned out good. Eric Clapton did something like that with “Layla” when he did a remix. Sometimes songs are good but they just need a dusting off and they need a new kind of look. Sometimes it doesn’t happen, and people don’t like it, and other times, you know, it’s good. So I just took that chance.

What was the feel you were striving for? A Michael Jackson/Justin Timberlake/new jack swing kind of thing?

Yeah, yeah, exactly.

Tell me about your new record, Waiting to Catch The Light. How would you describe the sound and style of music?

That was actually done quite a while back–10 years ago or something. I had always wanted to make a kind of spacey, meditation-inducing kind of an album, and a lot of the New Age stuff I heard was, like, people that weren’t even musicians. They’d buy an instrument and they’d just hold the note down and, you know… And I thought, because my background was really in synthesizers — I was sponsored by Moog and was really the first artist to ever get involved with technically cutting a Mini Moog down and then wearing that thing around my neck when I was performing. (more…)

The Popdose Interview: Marti Jones

Marti Jones Dixon's painting Self at 40-SomethingLast week Marti Jones was back in Washington, DC – the city where she and I had our greatest moments together during her career in pop music. (Actually, she was always on a stage with a band and her husband, while I was in the audience with my wife, but whatever – we’ll always have DC, Marti.) This time she wasn’t in town for a concert; she was preparing for the display of several of her paintings as “ambiance” (her word) on the set of a new play, After the Garden: Edith Beale Live at Reno Sweeney. The play re-creates a series of cabaret-style performances given in 1978 by the eccentric Beale – whom you might remember as “Little Edie,” the younger half of the peculiar mother-daughter duo portrayed in the 1975 documentary and 2006 Broadway musical Grey Gardens. Jones, serendipitously, had chosen the Beales as subject matter for her painting a couple years ago, and as a result she’s now receiving some of her biggest exposure to date as a visual artist.

It’s been a long time – nearly 20 years — since Jones had a major-label record deal, and nearly as long since she and Don Dixon ceased being regulars on the touring circuit. Over the last couple weeks Popdose has cast a spotlight on her music career, including a review of her recorded output last week and a recollection of her tours with Dixon the week before. Jones recently agreed to rehash her career during a phone interview, while sitting around her home outside Canton, Ohio. Perhaps because far too few music writers have sought her out recently – or perhaps because she (like Dixon, who’s also been quite generous to Popdose in recent months) is simply a terrific human being — our conversation resembled a reunion between old friends more than a run-of-the-mill interview.

Popdose: Are you in your studio today?
Marti Jones: No, but later I’m heading off to a recording studio. Dixon roped me into putting a generic female voice on a recording of our friend Jim Wann’s new play – it’s called The Great Unknown. [Wann is a longtime colleague of Dixon’s – the two performed with Bland Simpson as the Coastal Cohorts in their musical King Mackerel and the Blues Are Running.] I have to sing a song about climbing Mount Everest in my high-button shoes! His songs are always fun to sing, and this one’s great – Dixon keeps singing it to me as he dances around the room. And I’m getting paid – this time – which is nice.

Marti Jones Dixon's painting Edie (screaming)Painting takes much more of your time than music these days. How did you go from pop star to painter?
My whole life, I wanted to be a painter. My grandmother was a painter, and my parents would always encourage me to take after her. I majored in art at Kent State, but meantime I had also started singing in clubs, and I did that for a livelihood through college. Then, you know, the music thing happened, and I had to put off the painting. I was actually very frustrated by it, and I would think all the time about picking it back up. But when I’d come home from a tour I would only be in one place for a couple days, and it was hard to grab onto anything and stick with it. (more…)

Popdose Interview: Duckman creator Everett Peck

duckman-1-and-2Animation fans rejoice, for Duckman, the irreverent animated show that aired on USA in the ’90s has finally arrived on DVD. CBS/Paramount has released all four seasons of the groundbreaking television series on two excellent box sets that are available now. Anyone who is a fan of Family Guy or Adult Swim should rush out and purchase these beautifully made DVDs — they include all 70 episodes of the cult show that starred Jason Alexander as Duckman, a lazy, sarcastic, obnoxious private eye who lives with his dead wife’s sister, his two kids, and his flatulent, mute mother-in-law.

Duckman premiered in March of 1994, and although it was never able to achieve the type of fame The Simpsons did (due in part to having its time slot changed several times), it did last for four seasons and was nominated for three Emmys. Controversial at the time for its dark, adult themes and overt sexual references, Duckman was a show that broke new ground in television animation. Never intended for children, it instead was an attempt to capture the twisted and funny going on’s that took place in the head of creator Everett Peck and the show’s producers/head writers, Jeff Reno and Ron Osborn. In addition, the show was co-produced and animated by Klasky Csupo, the eccentric company responsible for the original Simpsons shorts (and the first three seasons), as well as Rugrats, The Wild Thornberrys and several other Nickelodeon shows. The heavily European influence that was the Klasky Csupo trademark look fused well with Peck’s illustration style creating an imaginative, offbeat and colorful world.

duckman-3-and-4 As the DVDs reveal, Duckman was a fast-paced, biting comedy that took on the sacred cows of the establishment and made pointed social commentary about society, the media in particular. Alexander was perfectly cast to take on the rat-a-tat-tat pace of dialogue which required him to go from manic, over-the-top screaming to quiet, reflective monologues at a moment’s notice. Playing against Alexander’s brilliance are veteran voiceover actor Gregg Berger as Cornfed, Duckman’s no nonsense partner (he’s a pig) and Nancy Travis as Bernice, the identical twin sister of Duckman’s dead wife. The show was also significant for attracting numerous big-name guest stars, including Ben Stiller, David Duchovny, Carl Reiner and Brendan Fraser.

The first set compiles seasons 1 & 2 and includes running commentary over the first episode by Peck and Alexander, as well as “What the Hell Are You Starin’ At,” a great documentary short about the Duckman featuring interviews with all of the main players. The second box collects all of seasons 3 & 4 (48 episodes in all). Extras include footage of the original pitch pilot that Gabor Csupo funded to get Duckman up and running. (more…)

Popdose Interview: Sarah Negahdari of the Happy Hollows

In just two short years, the Happy Hollows have racked up some impressive milestones since their formation in L.A. – they’ve released two EPs (with a full-length album on the way), filmed about a half-dozen videos, played opening slots for sold out West coast appearances by the Silversun Pickups and Deerhoof, and have just played their first East coast date at New York’s annual CMJ festival on October 25.

In the midst of preparing for the release of the band’s new EP, and in the run-up to the CMJ appearance, Popdose seized the opportunity to catch up with the zany leader of this feisty Pixies-inspired band of indie rockers with the Fugazi-esque rhythm section, Sarah Negahdari. The original plan was to pass the phone between Sarah, bassist Charlie Mahoney and drummer Chris Hernandez, but as life took over, the plan didn’t quite work out that way. Instead, Sarah talked our ear off all by herself, getting us caught up with the history of the Happy Hollows, their new EP Imaginary (it’s free!), growing up with hippie parents, making a video with tiger cubs, and all sorts of other fun stuff.

Sarah Negahdari: Hello?

Popdose: Hi, is this Sarah?

SN: Yes! Hi, is this Michael?

PD: This is! How are you doing?

SN: Hey! How are you doing?

PD: I’m doing alright! You got the whole band together?

SN: No. (sounding disappointed) It’s been such a crazy day for Chris and Charlie, and they live so far away from me, and they can’t get here and they’re so sorry.

PD: Ohhhh, well definitely send them my regards.

SN: Oh, they are so sorry, they tried really hard.

PD: Well, maybe you can speak for them at certain points.

SN: OK.

PD: …and if not, I’m sure maybe we can hook up again another time.

SN: Good, cool. (laughs) Thanks you again so much for the Popdose interview! We’re gonna put a link to it really soon when we’re gonna start pushing for our EP. (more…)

Popdose Interview: The Weisstronauts’ Pete Weiss

This Boston-based group–with a three-lead-guitar attack–is the best instrumental band you’ve never heard of. Loaded with seasoned studio talent, the group evades categorization, moving gracefully from surf to lounge to alternative country in the laid-back Chet Atkins style to edgy White Stripes covers. In between, throw in some Moog-fueled sonic experiments for good measure. At the heart of it all is an affinity to garage-rock of the 1960s, and a clear love and respect for the greatest instrumentalists of the era like Booker T & the MGs, The Ventures, and Dick Dale & the Del-Tones. The group’s fourth CD in eight years, Instro-Tainment, comes out June 3. We recently caught up with ringleader/guitarist/producer of note Pete Weiss of Verdant Studio to get the 411 on a number of issues, including how they snagged ex-Velvet Undergrounder Doug Yule as a part-time Weisstronaut. We have no MP3’s here but the band is quite generous, offering a load of different tracks downloadable at its home page, Sonicbids, and its MySpace page.

I love the new record, congratulations. How long did it take you to make that thing? It’s been a couple years since the last one.
That’s a tough question. There were really productive spurts separated by long periods of time where we just had trouble getting everyone together in the same place at the same time. Then there was kind of a long delay in getting the artwork. It actually came together very quickly, we had kind of realized it had been at least two years since our last album and that we didn’t have any new material. So we challenged one another to write some new material in a short period of time.

Everyone rose to the occasion; every member of the band either wrote at least one song himself or participated in the writing process, which was a little bit different for us. Once the songs were assembled, we recorded them quickly, over two long weekends, and I mixed it all in my spare time, basically.

I’d noticed that, before, you’d written a lot of the tunes, and it seemed kinda like a Pete Weiss vehicle, at least from the outside looking in; this one’s a more collaborative effort.
Well, it’s kind of tough to generalize like that because I am sort of the benevolent dictator of the organization (laughs). I do get veto power, and sort of executive producer privileges. In the past it’s been more of mixed bag; I’ve had a handful of songs and then some of the other guys would have a song, or there would be a lot of co-writing, which makes it interesting. This one was a little less co-writing, and more like, just individual songs that came from individual guys. There certainly was collaboration on how to arrange them.

So this was your White Album.
(Laughs) I think so, yes. Or at least beige. (more…)