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QUESTION METHOD: ANDRE BUSH
Guitarist/composer André Bush’s
grounding in jazz along with his extensive
experience in rock and pop combine to
give him a unique musical outlook. Bush’s
playing reconciles these disparate worlds,
ultimately establishing a natural and
logical extension of the jazz-guitar
tradition. On his latest album, Start
from Silence, Bush joins
forces with master pianist Art Lande
and an all-star band to perform his complex-yet-accessible
original compositions. Challenging rhythms,
beautiful harmonies, poignant lyricism,
and brilliant improvisation come together
in this unique, cohesive album.
1.
Which was the first record you bought with your
own money?
AC/DC’s Back in Black, and it's still
one of my favorite albums. I listen to it all the
time while driving, which seems to be the only way
I listen to music anymore. There is a focused, raw
energy to that album. Obviously great writing, incredible
band vibe and performance. What gets me most is how
solid everyone's time is, and uniform in its execution.
It sounds like one person playing everything, in
a way. I mean, you can talk about Tower of Power
all you want, but this is seriously funky music.
It swings hard
— as hard as any jazz record I've ever heard.
Now, don't misunderstand me. I'm not in any way implying
that the harmonic or melodic language is on par with,
say, Speak No Evil, but it's not supposed
to be — this is rock music. The rhythmic language
is sheer perfection. Also, I really like the way
Mutt Lange took AC/DC’s basic format to another
level through sheer force of will, cleaning up all
the performance-level rough edges apparent on previous
albums, and delivering the message to much wider
audience in the process.
2.
Which was the last record you bought with your
own money?
Jonatha Brooke’s Back in the Circus.
I can't say enough about her as a songwriter, lyricist,
vocalist — everything. This album is the full
realization of everything that makes her great. The
pure vulnerability and emotional nudity of this album
are exceptional. She is the Virginia Wolfe of songwriters.
I'd practically off someone to do a project with
her. If anyone out there knows her, pass the message.
I'd strum rhythm guitar behind her for $20 a week
on the road, just to hear her do her thing on a nightly
basis. My major musical crush of the last few months.
I hope I'm not alone.
3.
What was the first solo you learned from a record
— and can you still play it?
"Hotel California.” The question itself
will send me back to the woodshed to relearn it!
4.
Which recording of your own (or as a sideman) are
you most proud of, and why?
Gotta be the new album, Start from Silence.
Two things happened for me on this album. First, I
got to spend a lot of time working with [pianist] Art
Lande developing this music. He is a musical hero of
mine, going back many years. One album in particular
that he’s on — Miracles, by the great French-Vietnamese
guitarist Nguyên Lê — was particularly
inspirational in my formative years as a player/composer.
It features Nguyên in a quartet setting with
Art, [drummer] Peter Erskine, and [bassist] Mark Johnson.
Not too shabby. I learned a lot from Art, but especially
important was seeing how hard he works on realizing
the development and direction of music. Not so much
particular notes, but the shaping of solos, compositions,
and even entire albums. I had never dug in to that
area quite so deeply before meeting Art.
Secondly, I feel that my composing reached a new level.
I felt less and less like I had something to prove
with every tune. That’s ego. Rather, I could
sit in a place of peace and contentment and allow my
honest artistic perspective to emerge without agendizing
every last musical maneuver.
5.
What's the difference between playing live and
playing in a studio?
It’s night and day. There are factors to playing
live that do not exist in the studio. One is the audience,
which is fairly important to me, but not a major factor.
Then there’s the-music-over time equation, which
is to say, on a CD you can listen to a solo over and
over, forever, whereas in a live situation once it's
gone, it's gone. That’s how I prefer it. For
me, making CDs and playing live have almost no relationship
at all, other than the fact that you may be playing
tunes from your CD on a live gig.
6.
What's the difference between a good gig and a
bad gig?
How it feels for me. I guess that's the way it has
to be for everyone. I mean, if it sucks for me, it
probably sucks for anyone listening too, although you
never know. What I do know is, when I'm at my most
happening, I transcend the instrument, my body, and
the gig. I enter a zone where the differences between
you and I, audience and player, player and instrument
all cease to exist. It’s not really a qualitative
distinction, because every slice of life can be reflected
in that zone, including pain, joy, melancholy and indifference.
But when I'm sucking, or the gig is sucking, or I'm
not happy with who I'm playing with —
again, not a qualitative distinction, they may not
be happy with me either — all I'm thinking about
is getting paid and getting home to watch the Daily
Show. I guess the magic trick we all have to pull off
as professional performers is to never let the audience
see the difference.
7.
What's the difference between a good guitar and
a bad guitar?
Wow — that’s an interesting question for
me right now. I finally fell out of love with my Klein
this year, and have been exploring all kinds of other
guitars. I really like this Schecter C-1 Elite that
I've been playing, and my slew of acoustics, especially
my Godin. Sounds like I'm talking about a love interest,
no? Anyway, I recently hooked up with California Custom
Guitars, which is a fairly new company. I freakin'
love them! We're currently working on developing one
to my specs, taking all the aspects of several guitars
that I love into consideration. This stuff is so subjective,
though. Unless a guitar truly blows, I can usually
find some good notes in it.
8.
You play electric and acoustic. Do you approach
the two differently?
Yes, I think of them as separate instruments —
like drums and, say, violin. I have to, because the
nature if each is so different. The envelope of the
note, decay, relative dynamic range, attack, and so
on is such that you may as well think of them as different
instruments. Also, I tend to think of "acoustic
guitar" as pure steel or nylon. As soon as we
get into signal processing, it's electric to me. The
way I approach them technically is way different. My
touch is about half as light on electric guitar.
9.
Do you sound more like yourself on acoustic or
electric?
I would like to think of them as a unified voice. But,
truth be told, probably acoustic. I'm getting closer
on electric, though. Acoustic guitar of the classical
variety was my first love, and I guess I hear everything
through the filter of my first experiences, guitar-wise.
10.
Do you sound like yourself on other people's guitars?
Now I finally do, but I don't think I could have given
an honest “yes” until maybe three or four
years ago. I was in Las Vegas on a recent tour and
crossed paths with one of my oldest buddies plays,
who plays guitar and is the musical director for Tom
Jones. His name is Brian Monroney — killer player,
great musician. Anyway, after my show I stopped by
his, and we hung out in the theater at the MGM, where
Tom plays. I played a bit on Brian's set-up and was
amazed at how much I still sounded like me, in a foreign
room, with a foreign axe and rig. That is a very different
space than I was in just five years ago, or maybe even
more recently.
Another anecdote that I think of all the time involves
you, Adam. About seven or eight years ago, if you recall,
we had a jam session in San Francisco at the home of
bassist Jon Evans. [Readers may know Jon from Tori
Amos' band.] I remember you playing this beat up piece-of-shit
little guitar that was sitting around and being amazed
how good it sounded in your hands. I'm not just saying
this because it's your interview. I share that story
with students all the time!
11.
Which living artist (music, or other arts) would
you like to collaborate with?
Jonatha Brooke, Nguyên Lê, Jack DeJohnette,
Herbie Hancock, Wayne Shorter, whoever wrote the screenplay
for American Beauty, Steven Soderberg, Gillian Anderson.
Wait, did you say collaborate? Okay, scratch that last
one.
12.
What dead artist (music, or other arts) would you
like to have collaborated with?
Miles [Davis]. It’s an obvious answer, but even
still. Picasso would have been cool, to improvise to
him sculpting or painting. I would have loved to have
met and talked music with Béla Bartók,
Igor Stravinsky, John Coltrane. Oh, and e.e. cummings!
And John Kennedy Toole, the guy who wrote A Confederacy
of Dunces.
13.
What's your latest project about?
I'm currently promo-ing my album Start from Silence
and my book Modern Jazz Guitar Styles, which are both
available at my site. I have two projects mapped out
for the future — "Are Three Gypsies Mark
B. or Tom's Cat?" will be the title of a forthcoming
album. The cryptic and slightly annoying title is an
anagram on four composer/band names. Anyone who guesses
correctly gets one of my guitars. It can't be someone
I told already! Secondly, I'm planning a trio project
for guitar, Paul McCandless, and Jonatha —
if either of them will have me — featuring compositions
on some of my poetry. It’s a children's album,
but I might be unable to edit my proclivity for profanity
enough for that.
Web
site: www.andrebush.com
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