A Conversation With Herbie Hancock & John McLaughlin
By Bret Primack
(Reprinted from JazzTimes magazine: May 1996)
Herbie Hancock's first acoustic recording as a leader in too many years
is The New Standard. John McLaughlin's latest CD offering his usual
eclectic amalgam of guitar virtuosity is The Promise. Both are on the Verve
label and one bitter afternoon in New York, their planetary peregrinations
miraculously converged.
Although we are living in a time when most people are bombarded with more
information than they can possibly digest, I must, nevertheless, offer
these facts:
Herbie's group includes Michael Brecker, Dave Holland, Jack DeJohnette
and Don Alias, along with woodwinds, brass and strings that Herbie arranged
with Bob Belden.
John's collaborators include Michael Brecker (this guy really gets
around, doesn't he?), David Sanborn, Jeff Beck, Joey DeFrancesco, Al Di
Meola and Paco de Lucia along with some verse by Dante and Garcia Lorca.
The New Standard features Herbie's take on nine pop anthems, tunes like
"NorwegianWood," "You've Got It Bad Girl," "Stronger Than Pride" and
"Scarborough Fair" with one majestic solo piano original, "Manhattan."
Aside from the John Lewis standard "Django" and Jimmy RowIes "The
Peacocks," The Promise features John's compositions in a multitude of
settings including his current trio, with DeFrancesco and Dennis Chambers.
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BP: When did you first meet?
JM: On a Miles session.
BP: Which one?
HH: In A Silent Way.
BP: What do you remember about that session?
HH: I remember John coming outside after we finished and leaning over to me
and saying,'Herbie, was that OK what we did?' He said, 'I have no idea what
we were doing.' So I said, 'welcome to a Miles Davis session' (laughs).
JM: It was incredible.
HH: Yeah. You could never tell what was going on with Miles. You'd always
leave the session not knowing if they got anything of any value because it
was always so different.
JM: Of course I grew up with the records of Miles and Herbie. In fact, I
was just talking to Herbie about some of the records that I love to this
day, they're so phenomenal and so advanced. Like the Avery Fisher Hall
concerts from 1964. It was strange because I grew up listening to a
different kind of music. I grew up listening to what Miles did with Trane,
and then ESP, Nefertiti, Live in Berlin, some out things, straightahead,
but crazy.
And here, what we played wasn't like that at all. Right off, I was
nervous. Miles wasn't into that other stuff, well he was into it, but he
was looking for something else and since he didn't really know what he was
looking for, I didn't know, nobody knew, and so when he started giving me
these obscure suggestions like, play the guitar like you don't know how to
play.
HH: Did he tell you that?
JM: Yeah.
HH: Right, I remember. The innocence. He wanted the innocence.
JM: And these guys are saying, yeah, that's a new one. We didn't hear that
one before.
HH: (laughs)
JM: I was in awe, I was in awe of Miles. He was my hero since I was 15
years old. It's like when you meet your hero after so many years, you're
not in a normal state of mind. You're nervousä
HH: I remember you were nervous. But you didn't play like you were nervous.
JM: Well, he cooled me out when he said that. I just started to do the
thing in E, "In A Silent Way," and I played the whole thing very open in E
major. Miles didn't even wait, he had the recording light on and I just
started playing these real simple things, and then Wayne came in with the
melody and then Miles and Wayne together. But when Miles had Teo Maceo
(the producer) play the take back, I was really in shock at how Miles had
made me play in a way that I had not been aware of. He had a way of pulling
something out me that I would have never figured out myself, which is
uncanny. Of course in subsequent sessions with him I could see that Miles
had an incredible gift. Sometimes he'd come in and not have a clear idea of
what he wanted himself, not even a concept. Or maybe just a concept and no
notes. So we'd go in there and he'd write something on a bag on the way
over in a taxi and at the session, he just sang something. Just a sound.
HH: Right, with no pitch or anything.
JM: And you'd make your own sense out of it. But I remember that day. It
will stay engraved in my memory. It was one of the most beautiful days of
my life, maybe the most beautiful day.
HH: Miles' sessions were not typical of anybody else's sessions. They were
totally unique. You never knew, when you came out of there, what you did,
or whether it was good. It never sounded good to me. It always sounded
interesting but you wondered, what were we doing? I just grew to accept it.
Because when the records came out, they would come out sounding really
nice.
JM: In the mid-'60s, I was a European waiting for Miles' records to come
out. Of course I knew about Herbie from the first release with Miles,
wasn't it Miles in Europe?
HH: Yeah, I was on that, but I did one called Seven Steps to Heaven before that.
JM: The European musicians would be waiting for the records to come out and
we'd just hear the most avant garde music and we'd all be saying, 'oh,
listen to that,' because it was always the most refreshing, beautiful
music. Of course we couldn't have imagined what was going on in the studio
so it's very interesting to hear now, retrospectively, what was going on in
the studio in view of my experience in '69. It was like a different form.
Like an unknown quantity.
HH: I just trusted it.
JM: I'm glad you did. (both laugh)
HH: I know that somehow it was going to turn out OK because Miles never had
anything that was a disappointment.
JM: You know it's very funny, to be sitting here talking to you. I have the
record, L'Cote Jazz Miles and Miles in Paris, these old bootlegs which came
out later and I listen to "My Funny Valentine" or "Stella by Starlight,"
where Herbie does the introduction dramatically different every time.
Musically for me, I must say categorically, how happy I am to be here
associated with Herbie today because I have such admiration for him as a
musician. What he was doing 30 years ago, as an individual and collectively
with the group-wow, I've listened to I don't know how many versions of
these tunes and every time is just like a musical shock because it was so
different. Of course, we know that Miles was a driving force with all of
us, he was guiding all of us into places we didn't know existed because the
way he'd turn a phrase of the melody and you'd hear Herbie playing
accompaniment and then Herbie would play in a completely different wayä
HH: (laughing) I would have to.
JM: For someone like myself who's a musician who has made a comparison of
these kinds of interpretations, it's just astounding. And I hate to say I
don't hear that today, Bret. I don't hear that today. I don't know what
happened, if people have become more conservative or something but I don't
hear this wonderful lyricism and harmonic adventure in music. OK, Miles is
not with us, we know. But it's become more conservative.
HH: It's almost like nobody took that and at least started there and see
what happens, is there something beyond that.
JM: There are people who have repeated that kind of thing, the concepts, too.
HH: Mostly some of the earlier ones, not that later stuff. They haven't
figured it out yet. Some of the stuff, I don't remember how we did it. Even
the things that are on the Plugged Nickel set. I don't know how we did some
of that.
JM: I don't know either.
HH: Some of that was really some strange stuff, but it was fascinating.
JM: That's amazing music. When I think that music was played 30 years ago.
HH: It's pretty out.
JM: That was really an exceptional period. When you think music being made
in the late '50s by Miles and Gil and Trane and Cannonball and all those
groups, the whole thing, that tremendous school that came out, but it
seemed to for us, foreigners, looking from afar, when Bill came in, and
thenä
HH: Wynton Kellyä
JM: Right and then Victor came in for a while. Beautiful.
HH: Yeah,Victor Feldman.
JM: For us, it was like non-stop, then something happened, a kind of
conservatism. It was just so thriving, but I have faith in the music. I'm
not knocking today, I'm criticizing the conservatism that I find in music.
HH: I have a theory about these times. TechnoIogy has made so much
information available but what the technological community has not done is
to make any attempt for us to figure our how we're going to assimilate all
this information. It's coming in so quickly, faster than we can really
assimilate it. Music videos on MTV are the perfect example. Everything is
quick visual and sound bytes. Same thing on TV, people's attention span is
not really long at all.
JM: It's getting shorter and shorter.
HH: Exacty. There's so much stuff going onä
JM: Maybe hit records will become ten seconds long.
HH: Could be. I think a lot of young people being brought up in this scene
feel a sense of ruthlessness. There's nothing to plant them deeply down in
the soil somehow so they can bend and sway from there. A lot of this look
backwards in society and musically is to find some of the real roots,
because they can't find them here.There are roots in the past, but not so
much now. Maybe this explains their need to do that, and if that's the
case, it's OK.
JM: There are great musicians today. I don't mean to lionize Miles or
Coltrane even though they were my personal heroes 'cause they don't need me
to lionize them. They're already lions.
HH: That was a different time too. It was very fertile for jazz, very exciting.
JM: Yes it was.
HH: The scene was in the clubs more than in the concerts, so there was a
personal element.
JM: That's true. Society was different. Where the fears of the '60s had to
do with the war, the civil rights movement, the fear today is, am I going
to lose my job?
HH: Right. Exactly.
JM: That kind of fear is more insidious.The fear is a lot more clear cut.
In the '60s, nobody worried about being unemployed.
HH: The kinds of things you're talking about are all very personal, having
to do with your family, where some of the things in the '60s were about
society in general. That puts a whole different slant on things. People are
afraid to spend money now because they don't know how long they're going to
be working.
BP: Is that a planetary thing or just in this country?
JM: It's the same in Europe.
HH: It's getting that way in Japan too.
JM: Just look at record sales. They're like a luxury item and the first
thing that gets hit when there's a crisis is record salesäbut there's no
crisis in musicä
BP: Aren't there more artists now, as opposed to the '60s? The seeds you
planted have blossomed and now there are musicians all over the world
playing this music.
HH: There are a lot of records coming out, in every field of music, not
just jazz.
JM: But that's great, more people are listening to music. There's no crisis
in music. People can listen to it now in the bathroom, in the bedroom, in
the car, they've got the speakers everywhere.
HH: Back in the '60s, they didn't even have cassettes.
JM: That's right.
HH: Nowadays people jog and listen to music. Workout and listen to music.
They've got these headphones on all the time. It's just the normal scene.
JM: I think maybe it's relative to this thing about the spread of
information. A CD is reproducible in high quality on DAT or mini-diskette
or even great audio casssettes now so you can reproduce the information,
the musical information from the CD very easily. We are swimming in
information, musical and non-musical.
BP: Do you think technology can be a tool of empowerment so that musicians
not on your skill level can nevertheless play music because of the
technological things they can plug into? Perhaps more people today are
participating than just listening.
HH: That would be the good news, not that people shouldn't listen, but if
they are participating, that's good. If the technology is not only
available, but if it's friendly enough and attractive enough to encourage
people to create somehow, whether it's good or badä
JM: It's good and it's bad in my opinion and the good thing is that it
allows us to print music very quickly, prepare scores very easily and very
quickly. But the other side is that I see people shutting themselves in
their rooms instead of being out playing with people. There's no substitute
for communicating with brothers and sisters or least a similar spirit,
which is really what the nature of music is. You make music with people for
people.
HH: We used to have a lot more jam sessions.
JM: People tend to just be in the studio with sequencers and stuff.
HH: They can do everything themselves. But there's no sense of group
empathy or communication.
JM: I did a Master Class in Paris a couple of months ago, just for
guitarists at one of the best schools in Paris. There were eight guitar
players and we were in a club with a very good rhythm section, all between
21 and 28 with very high level of playing except for one thing. They don't
play with the rhythm section. They're just off into their own thing.
Nothing else exists, which is a trait, a tendency of what happens when you
play with a computer or a sequencer all the time. Playing music is
beautiful, but to play together is one of the great lessons that we learned
from Miles and Trane and Herbie and Tony and all the guys who've done it.
To play together. So that's the downside I see. Otherwise, technology is
great.
BP: Could the Internet develop into a way for people to come together and play?
HH: It's possible.
JM: You'd miss that flesh and blood man.
HH: It's different than creating in the same location, certainly.
JM: How could you see somebody sweating next to you?
HH: It's primitive now, but when you get to the point here you could see
someone's face on your screen while you perform with them, that's a step in
the right direction. The way to really do it is with virtual reality, where
you actually get the full 3-D image of a person. Wear these glasses and
actually see the band around you. Wouldn't that be far out, have it in 3-D?
JM: Wearing those shades?
HH: You'd be cool. Those things will come. Now, it's very primitive. But
talking about the good side of technology, look how far it's come. I just
wish more attention could be placed on the human being. We've been looking
at machines for so long, I really wish the technology community would look
at human beings first for a change, let's balance the thing out.
I've started something called the Rhythm of Life Foundation to encourage
the technological community to develop ideas and software that directly
effect the advancement of humanity. Look at the human condition and say,
how can we use
technology to address the needs of humanity. That hasn't been done.
Everything has focused on what the technology is capable of doing and
making tools and then taking human beings and saying, what can you do with
that. Spreadsheets and business things.
JM: There have been some advancements, like solar heating for African
countries that don't have oil.
HH: But I'm talking about responsibility, a sense of responsibility.
DeveIoping software to help human beings develop more of a sense of
responsibility. Kids need that. Adults need it too. More self worth. More
self-respect.
BP: Against the backdrop of all these changes, in society and technology,
how do you see your roles as musicians?
JM: I feel very privileged to be a musician. But we're all born from the
same mother, Mother Earth, and that's it. As a musician, that's the real
world for me. Playing music, you can be who you really are.You can have
violent emotions or you can be tender or sensual, whatever. Music is
beautiful, whether it's Trane or from the North Pole or Africa, it doesn't
matter because it's music and it's real. That's why music is much more the
real world than society. I would like society to reflect much more the
rarity of the musical world.
HH: I always hope that as a performer I'm able to come out with something
that not only makes people feel inspired but even beyond that, I always
hope that what happens on the stage makes people feel like they can do it.
Like no matter what happens, this would be the ultimate, they can make
something positive happen. Feel like going to work the next day, even
knowing the boss is a jerk, feel like, they can change that, I'm going to
turn that around. That kind of theme, be part of that.
We're not going to get rid of problems. I think there's a great beauty to
having problems. That's one of the ways we learn. This is something I
learned from Miles, first. I had this experience that I've talked about a
lot of times. I was playing with Miles and we were doing this concert in
Stuttgart. This was one of the nights when the band was hot. The stuff was
burning, Tony Williams was smoking, Wayne wasä
JM: Scrambling those eggs.
HH: And sweating. And Miles was just playing like God-like stuff that he
played. It was just smoking. And then, at this one point, which was like a
peak in Miles' solo, I hit this chord that was so wrong. It was just awful.
It was in the wrong place and it was like boom, I just felt like I
destroyed the music. And Miles took his breath and played some notes that
made my chord right.
JM: Damn.
HH: I don't know where he found these notes but he just wiped away the
chord being wrong. He made this chord fit. I was dumbfounded. I couldn't
even play for about two minutes. He just blew me away and what it taught me
was that Miles didn't hear it as a mistake. He just heard it as an event.
He just trusted it and did his musician thing and found the notes that fit
that thing. I said, wait a minute, this is a lesson not just for music but
for life. Things that happen to you are events. It's what you do with them
that determine whether they're going to be problems or solutions. This is
the kind of thing that I hope to develop more in my life and spread. And
it's not something for just musicians, it's something that everyone can
spread.
JM: I'm on your side. We've got to encourage responsibility. We're all in
it together. We need each other desperately. Now more than ever.
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HERBIE'S EQUIPMENT: Steinway &Sons 9 foot Hamburg Concert Grand. Apple
Computers (various). KorgT1, O1/Wfd. Wavestation A/D, M1Roland MK-80, D550,
JD990. E-mu Proteus 1, 2, and 3. Studio Electronics SE-1 and Midi
mini-moog. Ensoniq ASR-10, DP-4. Rane SM-82 Mixers (2). Aquila Systems MR2
Midi wireless system. New England Digital (NED) Synclavier 3200. Waveframe
Audioframe. Aleses ADATS (3). Yamaha VL-1, NS-10m's, Pro Mixer O2R.
Opticode Studio 5's (2) StudioVision Pro. Mark of the Unicorn (MOTU) Midi
Time Piece, Digital Performer. Lexicon PCM70, 480L. Meyers HD-1's. Euphonix
CS-2000 mixing console. Silicon Graphics (SGI)-Indy. Bag End ELF Monitor
System. Shure Microphones (various).
Steinberg Joens Cubase. Emagic Logic Audio. Bryston Amps & Crossover.
Hampton & White Control Room. Sprint Drums T-1 line.
JOHN'S GEAR: Abraham Wechter acoustic guitar equipped with a Fishman
Hexaphonic transducer capable of providing a separate output signal for
each of the guitar's six strings. Those signals are sent to his Photon
Guitar synthesizer (made by Phitech). MIDI connections are forwarded to two
book-sized Yamaha TX- 7 synthesizers. The signal from a Fishman Piezo
transducer used to pick up the guitar's acoustic sound is sent through a TC
digital 31-band equalizer and BBS DPR 901 dynamic equalizer. In addition,
John McLaughlin uses two Lexicon reverbs (PCM 70 and LXP 1) and a Neumann
KM 85 microphone with a Klark Teknik DN 360, 31 band equalizer. He plays
D'Addario strings.
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