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QUESTION METHOD: SAM MILTICH
Samuel
"Sammo" Paul Miltich was born
on March 12, 1985. He grew up in Northern Minnesota
and has lived there his whole life. His entire
family is musical. Family gatherings in the Miltich
home consist of family members and friends sitting
in a circle playing and singing. Sam began showing
his musical aptitude at an early age — first
with the piano, later playing bass and tuba for
school bands.
At age 14 Sam began to study the guitar seriously.
When he was 15, Sam heard the music of Django
Reinhardt for the first time. He knew then that
he would dedicate his life to the music of the
great gypsy-jazz guitarist and the art of the
gypsy-jazz guitar. Sam's mentor is Paul “Pazzo”
Mehling of the Hot Club of San Francisco. Paul
gave Sam a Maurice DuPont guitar after the two
met in San Francisco. Sam has played in and around
the state of Minnesota, as well as around the
world.
1. Which was the first record you bought with
your own money?
I think it was Gorilla, by James Taylor.
2.
Which was the last record you bought with your
own money?
The Cats and the Fiddle — That Killin'
Jive.
3.
What was the first solo you learned from a record
— and can you still play it?
"I'll See You in My Dreams" by Django
Reinhardt — and still I play it every gig.
4.
Which recording of your own (or as a sideman)
are you most proud of, and why?
As a leader, May Rain
by Sam Mltich and the Clearwater Hot Club.
It was my second self-produced album, and I am
proud of it because of the whole process —
picking songs, practicing them, getting the musicians
together, making honest decisions in the studio,
keeping only the best, throwing stuff out, editing,
making the finances work, and in the end creating.
I have always felt no regret whatsoever, and am
proud of every note I played and every decision
I made.
As a sideman, most definitely The Hot
Club of San Francisco’s Postcards from
Gypsyland, because throughout the
whole session — from the musicians, to the
producer, to the engineers — there was nothing
but pure musicality. We all strived for that goal,
I believe we reached it.
5.
What's the difference between playing live and
playing in a studio?
I find that in live performance almost anything
can happen, and if you loosen up the "chains"
and become open to "mistakes," that’s
when some of the most interesting and hippest
moments happen — especially in a ensemble
setting. I both fear and love that feeling of
playing on the edge, because you know you might
just fall off. But, man, when you are soloing
and you can ride that thin line, and pull it all
back together at the end — Jesus, what a
high!
In the studio, I find myself listening to every
minor detail. The squeaks, the scratches, the
fretboard noise. So I find it hard to really hear
the music. I need a day or two away from it to
really decide if a take is worthy, unless you
know — and we all know — when something
just doesn't fly. However, listening to the those
details really helps you grow also.
I think Louis Armstrong really figured out in
the early days of recording that if you record
yourself you become immortal. You’d better
make sure that when people are listening long
after you’re gone that you left something
great behind. I try to record music that is timeless
— music that could be listened to 100 years
down the line and still touch people’s hearts.
6.
What's the difference between a good gig and a
bad gig?
How many girls are in the audience. Ok, that’s
only half the truth! A good gig is when you are
playing for just the sake of the music. It shouldn't
matter if you have one person in the audience
or ten thousand.
A bad gig is when I become too self-conscious
and can't dig my own playing in that given moment.
I guess it’s that thing of truly concentrating
and putting every fiber of your being into the
music.
7.
What's the difference between a good guitar and
a bad guitar?
A good guitar has good tone, and stays in tune.
Also, I think a guitar needs to be played a lot
before it gets its true character. Especially
acoustic guitars. If it’s well crafted by
a luthier, that determines a lot too. But, then
again, Willie Nelson digs his ax! In the end,
all that matters is if you can make it sing.
8.
You play electric and acoustic. Do you approach
the two differently?
Yes. It’s all in the right hand. Your tone
on an acoustic guitar absolutely depends on your
right hand technique. I always feel that if you
don't have your right hand together, you might
as well chop your left hand off, because no one
will be able to hear it anyway!
I find with electric, I tend to play faster, just
because I can. Don't know if that’s is a
good thing though!
9. Do you sound more like yourself on
acoustic or electric?
I approach the instruments differently, and I
think I have two voices. I play more acoustic,
so people would probably recognize that more as
"my sound."
10.
Do you sound like yourself on other people's guitars?
Not as much. I find that I play my best on my
Maurice DuPont guitars. I just am so used to it,
I am not as conscious of the guitar. When I am
not so conscious about the guitar, I am more conscious
about the music.
11.
Which living artist (music, or other arts) would
you like to collaborate with?
Evan Price. He is the shit. He is the best jazz
violinist I have ever heard, and I always feel
that when I am playing with him we are coming
at the music from a similar place. I get to play
with him in the HCSF, but I also dream of doing
a record with him where I get to be the lead guitarist
and band leader.
Beyond music, maybe Stanley Tucci or Woody Allen.
I would love to do a Django/New Orleans thing
with Woody in one of his movies! Or maybe do a
Hot Club/trad-jazz score for a Stan Tucci comedy!
12.
What dead artist (music, or other arts) would
you like to have collaborated with?
Lester Young, or Django Reinhardt — though
I think I wouldn't want to as much with Django,
because I would be so intimidated by him that
I couldn't play my best.
13.
What's your latest project about?
I am dreaming of two records I want to do. One,
I want to do a solo acoustic-guitar record. Solo
pieces by Django, and contemporary gypsy guitarists,
also pieces by Carl Kress, Oscar Aleman, and Garoto.
Such soulful music that comes out of a solo guitar.
I want to do a gypsy-jazz album with two kick-butt
rhythm guitarists, Ari Munkres on bass, and then
have Clint Baker play trumpet, have Evan Price
and Olivier Manchon play violin, and have singer
Regina Pontillo sing on it.
I also want to record duets, à la Kress/McDonough,
with Paul Mehling. I wouldn't want to do just
the standard gypsy-jazz repertoire. We’d
do stuff that would fit into the repertoire, like
a Hot Club-style arrangement of "Tickle Toe"
by the Basie band, maybe some Sydney Bechet tunes
— "Georgia Cabin" perhaps —
maybe do some gypsy jazz standards, some Brazilian
choros in a gypsy-jazz style, maybe some Oscar
Aleman stuff with those crazy string arrangments,
and maybe do a Django tune as a tango. Something
nutty! I would try and stay true to the style,
but do something different then all the standard
tunes that just seem to get redone ad nauseam.
But this is all just a dream, not a latest project
— something I hope to be an upcoming project!
Web site: http://www.clearwaterhotclub.com/
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